Dr. Abigail Koppes,
Principal Investigator

Tori Duback

Although many consider the central nervous system (CNS) to be immune privileged, that is not always true.  Stem cell derived products have the potential to impact the course of CNS diseases, but there are variable rates of survival and function due to the immune responses associated with disease onset through damaged blood-brain barrier. To improve survival of transplanted cells, current therapies incorporate a battery of immunosuppression medication, which can be challenging to administer to some patients, have compliance issues, and can be a significant source of adverse events. Furthermore, variable timing of immunosuppression has been linked to graft failure. Thus, better understanding how therapeutic cells can evade host immune response could lead to development of future CNS therapeutics having improved cell survival, engraftment, and persistence. Tori’s work will incorporate aspects of Sana Biotechnology’s hypoimmune platform to evaluate the engraftment, survival, and ability to evade the immune system of stem cell derived products both in vitro and in vivo to increase understanding regarding the biological impacts of cell therapies in the CNS.

Tori joined ABNEL in the fall of 2022 as a Chemical Engineering Industry PhD student with Sana Biotechnology. Prior to her graduate studies at Northeastern University, Tori completed her bachelor’s degree at Salem State University and master’s degree at University of New Hampshire. Her master’s research was done in the integrative and organismal biology department under the direction of Dr. Winsor Watson, titled “Localization of circadian clock neurons and investigation of how they influence the expression of specific behaviours in the marine mollusk, Melibe Leonina.” After her master’s degree, Tori worked at Boston Children’s Hospital in the structural biology lab under Dr. Steven Harrison and currently works as a scientist in the translational sciences group at Sana Biotechnology.

M.S. Neurobiology and Neurosciences
University of New Hampshire ’17
Durham, NH

B.S. Biology
Salem State University ’19
Salem, MA

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Jessica Snyder Defends her Thesis

Jessica Snyder Defends her Thesis

On July 31st, Jessica Snyder successfully defended her thesis "Bioengineering the intestinal niche on a chip: investigating signal transmission between the epithelium and enteric neurons". This success has officially earned her the title of doctor. Dr. Snyder has...

Bryan Schellberg Successfully Proposes

Bryan Schellberg Successfully Proposes

Bryan Schellberg, graduate student of both Drs. Abigail and Ryan Koppes, successfully defended his research proposal this past May. This defense earned him the title of "PhD Candidate"! We all look forward to watching Bryan's work unfold as he fulfills his proposed...