Principal Investigator
Hiroaki Kiyokawa, MD, PhD
Asia Owais, MBBS, MS
Asia earned her MD from Dow Medical College, Karachi, Pakistan. She is currently pursuing a MS in Neurobiology from the Graduate School, Northwestern University. Her research focuses on studying the substrates of ubiquitin ligase, E6-AP relevant to Angelman Syndrome and Autism Spectrum Disorder using iPSC derived neurons.
AsiaOwais2018@u.northwestern.edu
Maysa Shemmiyeva, MD
Maysa earned her MD from International Kazakh-Turkish University named after Khoja Ahmet Yassawi Faculty of Medicine and completed her residency in General Surgery. She is currently PGY-1 at Valley Health Hospital. She joined the Kiyokawa lab in 2019 and is interested in targeting chaperone-associated ubiquitination inhibitor BAG2 in Tripe Negative Breast Cancer.
maysa.shemmiyeva@northwestern.edu
Cade Brittain
Cade earned his BA from Lake Forest College studying Neuroscience and Chemistry. His current research focuses on biochemically analyzing the UBE3A/E6AP ubiquitin ligase relevant to Angelman Syndrome, Autism Spectrum Disorder and viral oncogenesis. He plans to pursue a MD/PhD degree in the near future.
cade.brittain@northwestern.edu
Xianpeng Liu, PhD
Xianpeng earned a PhD in molecular genetics from Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences. He worked in Kiyokawa lab as a postdoc until 2017 and played a leading role in developing the OUT technology in collaboration with Jun Yin lab at Georgia State University. He is currently Research Assistant Professor of Surgery, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University. Xianpeng investigates biological responses to lung transplantation, while he continues collaboration with Dr. Kiyokawa.
Xianpeng.liu@northwestern.edu
Alison Rogozinski
Alison earned her BS in Biomedical Engineering from Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology. While she works in Kiyokawa lab, she is pursuing a MS degree at Illinois Institute of Technology. Her current research is focused on the roles of ubiquitination enzymes in human cancers and therapeutic interventions. Alison plans to pursue a PhD degree in biomedical sciences.
alison.rogozinski@northwestern.edu