top of page

Gross Lab

at The University of Texas at Austin

We use zebrafish to study how eyes develop, degenerate, and regenerate—advancing genetic and imaging-driven paths to protect and restore vision.

wp2114069.jpg

Our Research

Our research focuses on vertebrate eye development, disease modeling and regeneration utilizing the zebrafish as a model system. Combining forward genetic screens with reverse genetic and embryological manipulations we hope to understand the molecular, cellular and developmental events that regulate eye formation and visual function, ocular diseases and regenerative responses. Current areas of interest in the lab include studies focusing on the development of the retina, lens and retinal pigmented epithelium (RPE), elucidation of the cellular mechanisms that regulate ocular morphogenesis, the molecular regulation of retina and RPE regeneration and neuroprotection. Our research combines molecular, cellular, genomic, biochemical, transgenic and in vivo imaging techniques to address these questions. It is our hope that these studies will ultimately lead to a better understanding of visual system disorders and the development of new therapeutic interventions.

What We Do

What We Do

Projects

figure-2_orig.jpg

Retinal Regeneration

4340792_orig.jpg

Eye Morphogenesis

max-lll-12hpi-mpeg1rng-mtz-08152018-002-deconvolved-typeautomatic-nd2-rgb-100um-scale-bar-

RPE Regeneration

2969852_orig.jpg

Retinal Development

cartoon-copy-edit_orig.jpg

RGC Neuroprotection

2-18i_orig.jpg

Eye Evolution

Gross Laboratory

 

JT Patterson Labs Building
2415 Speedway,

University of Texas at Austin

Austin, TX 78712

bottom of page