Professor Matt Kaeberlein
Matt Kaeberlein, Ph.D.
is recognized globally for his research on the basic biology of aging. The
premise of his research is that understanding the molecular mechanisms of aging
will lead to interventions that slow the onset and progression of age-related
chronic conditions, such as cancer, diabetes, kidney disease, heart disease,
Alzheimer’s and others. Matt earned received his Ph.D. from the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology in 2002 and performed his post-doctoral research in the
Department of Genome Sciences at the University of Washington. He was
appointed as an Assistant Professor of Pathology in 2006 and was promoted to
Associate Professor in 2011.
Matt coedited the
Handbook of the Biology of Aging, Eighth Edition and
has authored more than 140 publications in top scientific journals,
including 19 published in Nature and Science, his work has also been featured in
the popular press. He has been recognized with several awards,
including a Breakthroughs in Gerontology Award from the Glenn Foundation, an
Alzheimer’s Association Young Investigator Award, an Ellison Medical Foundation
New Scholar in Aging Award, an Undergraduate Research Mentor of the Year Award,
and a Murdock Trust Award.
In 2011, he was named the Vincent Cristofalo Rising
Star in Aging Research by the American Federation for Aging Research and
appointed as a Fellow of the Gerontological Society of America, and in 2012 he
joined the Board of Directors of the American Aging Association. He
currently serves on the editorial boards for Science, Aging Cell, Cell Cycle,
PloS One, Frontiers in Genetics of Aging, BMC Longevity and Healthspan, F1000
Research, Ageing Research Reviews, and BioEsssays.
In addition to his primary appointment, he is the Director of the Dog
Aging Project, co-Director of the University of Washington Nathan Shock Center of
Excellence in the Basic Biology of Aging, the founding Director of the Healthy
Aging and Longevity Research Institute, and the current President of the
American Aging Association.
Watch
Matt Kaeberlein on aging research and
Matt Kaeberlein (Spring 2012 Seminar Series).
Read
Look to large bodies to understand long life spans.
Read his
Google Scholar profile,
LinkedIn profile, and
Wikipedia profile.
Follow his Twitter feed.