Dr. Aaron Ericsson
Aaron
Ericsson, DVM is Comparative Medicine Resident/Post-Doctoral Fellow
at Research Animal Diagnostic Laboratory,
University of Missouri.
Aaron earned his B.A. in English, with an emphasis on medieval
literature, from the University of Iowa in 1994. After several years
working in the field of veterinary medicine, he completed a Doctorate of
Veterinary Medicine magna cum laude in 2006, and a residency in
Comparative Medicine in 2009, both at the University of Missouri. He is
nearing the completion of a Ph.D. in Area Pathobiology, utilizing animal
models of human diseases to benefit the health of both animals and
humans.
His primary interest is mucosal immunology and, in particular, the role
of the innate immune system and the gut microbiota in gastrointestinal
diseases such as Inflammatory Bowel Disease and Colorectal Cancer. His
Ph.D. studies focus on the role of Dendritic Cells in the initiation and
maintenance of gastrointestinal inflammation, as well as noninvasive
methods of detecting epithelial changes in gene expression predictive of
colon cancer such as fecal biomarkers of epithelial
dysplasia.
Aaron has extensively utilized primary cell culture techniques
focusing on cells of the mucosal immune system, flow cytometry and
intracellular cytokine staining, real-time reverse transcription
polymerase chain reactions, and genetically modified animals. He is
well-versed in the innate immune system and its role in autoimmune
diseases, general veterinary pathology, and laboratory animal pathology.
Read
MU Researchers Believe Discovery Could Lead to Testing that
Displaces Colonoscopies.