I am very pleased to announce that Dr. Larissa Shimoda became an
Associate Editor for AJP-Lung effective January 1st, 2015.
Larissa Shimoda is an Associate Professor of Medicine in
the Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine at the Johns Hopkins
University School of Medicine. Dr. Shimoda received her BS, MS and PhD degrees
in Biomedical Engineering from Marquette University and received postgraduate
training in Pulmonary Physiology in the Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care
Medicine at Johns Hopkins.
Dr. Shimoda’s research focuses on His research aims to integrate
basic research on intracellular signaling and intercellular communication
pathways to the level of the intact organ and organism. His publications have
provided significant new insight into the mechanisms contributing to the
pathophysiology of acute lung injury, lung edema, and pulmonary hypertension. In
the best tradition of translational science, he aims to apply this knowledge
for the development and preclinical testing of new therapeutic strategies for
the treatment of these diseases.
Dr. Küebler has been a member of the AJP-Lung Editorial Board since 1999 and is
currently the Chairman of the Respiration Section of the American Physiological
Society. His research aims to integrate basic research on intracellular
signaling and intercellular communication pathways to the level of the intact
organ and organism. His publications have provided significant new insight into
the mechanisms contributing to the pathophysiology of acute lung injury, lung
edema, and pulmonary hypertension. In the best tradition of translational
science, he aims to apply this knowledge for the development and preclinical
testing of new therapeutic strategies for the treatment of these diseases.
Dr. Küebler has been a member of the AJP-Lung Editorial Board since 1999 and is
currently the Chairman of the Respiration Section of the American Physiological
Society. His research aims to integrate basic research on intracellular
signaling and intercellular communication pathways to the level of the intact
organ and organism. His publications have provided significant new insight into
the mechanisms contributing to the pathophysiology of acute lung injury, lung
edema, and pulmonary hypertension. In the best tradition of translational
science, he aims to apply this knowledge for the development and preclinical
testing of new therapeutic strategies for the treatment of these diseases.
Dr. Küebler has been a member of the AJP-Lung Editorial Board since 1999 and is
currently the Chairman of the Respiration Section of the American Physiological
Society. the cellular mechanisms involved in the
pathogenesis of pulmonary hypertension. She has a keen interest in cellular
responses to both acute and prolonged hypoxia and the role of the transcription
factor, hypoxia-inducible factor 1, in the lung vasculature. Dr, Shimoda has been a member of the AJP-Lung
Editorial Board since 2006 and is currently the Chair of the Respiration
Section of the APS.
Sadis Matalon, Editor-in-Chief,
American Journal of Physiology-Lung Cellular and Molecular
Physiology
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