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Nervous System and Brain Disorders
Dr. Yoni Haitin
Ion channels in disease
Proteins are molecular machines essential for all cellular activities When they malfunction due to genetic mutations or environmental effects, they also underlie and facilitate many human diseases . As the roles of these crucial cellular building blocks are tightly related to their atomic structures, deciphering diseaserelated mechanisms requires scrutinizing proteins’ utmost fundamental molecular properties . Dr. Haitin focuses on studying ion channels and prenyltransferases , two https://haitinlab.com / types of radically different enzyme families By utilizing cutting -edge biochemical and biophysical approaches, they delineate the structural mechanisms underlying functional regulation of these key protein families . Moreover, given the emerging pivotal roles these proteins play in numerous diseases, they use high -throughput screens to identify novel modulators, which may prove beneficial for future development of targeted therapeutic strategies .
Dr. Haitin , PhD, completed his Ph.D. studies at Tel Aviv University and his postdoctoral training at the University of Washington, where he was awarded the Human Frontier Organization Long Term Postdoctoral Fellowship. Haitin has established a structural -physiology research program at the Department of Physiology and Pharmacology at the School of Medicine. Dr. Haitin serves as the secretary of the Israeli Society for Physiology and Pharmacology and is on the editorial board of PLoS One . He heads the Joint Undergraduate Program with the Faculty of Life Sciences.