People

Punit Sundaramurthy, MSc

Associate Specialist
Medicine

Skyler Sung

Junior Specialist
Microbiology and Immunology

Gloria Tavera, MD, PhD

Clinical Fellow
Medicine

Jonathan Terdiman, MD

Professor
Medicine

Dr. Jonathan P. Terdiman is a Professor of Clinical Medicine and Surgery and the Chief of the Gastroenterology Division at UCSF Health. He earned his undergraduate degree from Princeton University in 1985 and his medical degree from the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1989. Dr. Terdiman then completed his residency in internal medicine and fellowships in critical care medicine and gastroenterology at UCSF before joining the faculty in 1996.

Jessica Thai

Nurse Practitioner

Xiaoli Tian, PhD

Asst Professional Researcher
Anesthesia

Dara Torgerson, PhD, MSc

Associate Professor
Epidemiology and Biostatistics

I co-lead the Torgerson-Hernandez Lab (THeLab) along with Dr. Ryan Hernandez at UCSF. Our group is focused on developing computational approaches to study the interplay between human evolutionary history and environmental contributions to complex disease in the context of genetic ancestry. My background is in population genetics and bioinformatics, and I have specific expertise in integrative genomic and metabolomic studies of respiratory disease in diverse human populations.

Jessie Turnbaugh, PhD

Director, Gnotobiotics
Hooper Foundation

Peter Turnbaugh, PhD

Professor
Microbiology and Immunology

I lead an interdisciplinary group of microbiome researchers committed to understanding host-associated microbes, reducing these complex microbial ecologies to molecular mechanism, and applying these lessons to improve the practice of medicine. Our three major topics of interest right now are pharmacology, nutrition, and phage biology. While we love sequencing and gnotobiotic mice, our work is question-driven not limited to a specific approach.

Vaibhav Upadhyay, MD, PhD

Assistant Professor
Medicine

I'm a K08 funded physician scientist studying impact of gut microorganisms on human health and applying multi-omic technologies to the study of chronic diseases with clinical focus in pulmonary medicine.

Martin Valdearcos, PhD

Assistant Professor
Diabetes Center

Microglia are emerging as critical regulators of brain homeostasis with an expanding array of functions beyond their established roles as immune sentinels such as synaptic remodeling, neuronal excitability, and myelin plasticity. These highly dynamic cells continuously monitor their microenvironment for alterations, and distinct populations and activation states have been identified based on brain anatomical location, sex, and age.

Erin Van Blarigan, ScD

Associate Professor
Epidemiology & Biostatistics

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