Michael Rudnicki

Michael Rudnicki

OC, PhD, FRS, FRSC

Senior Scientist, Regenerative Medicine

Ottawa Hospital Research Institute

Director, Sprott Centre for Stem Cell Research

Ottawa Hospital Research Institute

Professor, Department of Medicine and Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine

Faculty of Medicine

Scientific Director

Stem Cell Network

Contact

613-739-6740

Sandy Martino Research Administrative Assistant smartino@ohri.ca

Bio

Michael Rudnicki is a Senior Scientist and the Director of the Sprott Centre for Stem Cell Research at the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute. He is Professor in the Department of Medicine at the University of Ottawa. Dr. Rudnicki is CEO and Scientific Director of the Canadian Stem Cell Network (SCN). Dr. Rudnicki’s achievements have been recognized by numerous honours including being named a Tier 1 Canada Research Chair, an International Research Scholar of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute for two consecutive terms, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, an Officer of the Order of Canada, and a Fellow of the Royal Society (London). He has been a founder in several spin-off biotechnology companies including Satellos Bioscience.

Research Goals and Interests

Stem Cell Biology, Myogenesis, Satellite Cells, Molecular Biology, Transcriptional Regulation, Transcriptional Networks, Gene Expression, Signal Transduction, Differentiation, Molecular Genetics.

Dr Rudnicki's laboratory works to understand the molecular mechanisms that regulate the determination, proliferation, and differentiation of stem cells during embryonic development and during tissue regeneration. The lab has conducted leading studies into both embryonic myogenesis and the function of muscle stem cells (satellite cells) in adult regenerative myogenesis. In particular, they have worked extensively to understand the molecular mechanisms that regulate the function of satellite cells in skeletal muscle. Towards this end, the lab employs molecular genetic and genomic approaches to determine the function and roles played by regulatory factors. They identified Pax7 as a transcription factor required for the specification of satellite cells, and identified Wnt7a signaling as playing an important role in muscle stem cell function. Research has led to the publication of over 200 peer reviewed articles in scientific journals that include Cell, Nature, Nature Cell Biology, Cell Stem Cell, Genes & Development, and PLoS Biology.

For further information on Dr. Rudnicki's research projects please visit: http://rudnickilab.ca

Current Lab Members

Graduate Students
Ohanes Ashekyan, PhD candidate
Ehsan Javandoost, PhD candidate
Matteo Lofaro, MSc candidate
 
Postdoctoral Fellows
Marie Catenacci, PhD
Corentin Guilhot, PhD
Derek Hall, PhD
Wen Pan, PhD

Research Associate
Shanti Rayagiri, PhD

Lab Manager
Johnathan Smid, PhD

Technicians
Dallas Bennett
Haripriya Gurunathaswamy 
Dorna Khoobbakht
Charis McPherson
Hong Ming
Jacob Monast
Fan Xiao

Undergraduate Students
Ines Achour
Elaheh Koleini
Tony Lin
Joseph Varner


News


Publications

Control of glioblastoma tumorigenesis by feed-forward cytokine signaling

2016-01-01

Concise Review: Epigenetic regulation of myogenesis in health and disease

2016-01-01

Satellite Cells in Muscular Dystrophy - Lost in Polarity

2016-01-01

Efficacy of mesenchymal stromal cell therapy for acute lung injury in preclinical animal models: A systematic review

2016-01-01

Satellite cells and skeletal muscle regeneration

2015-01-01

Current Operating Funding

Canadian Institutes of Health Research
"Muscle Stem Cell Function in Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy"

Muscular Dystrophy Association, USA
"Mobilizing Muscle Stem Cells to Treat DMD"

National Institutes of Health, USA
"Genetic regulation of skeletal muscle repair"


Related Research at The Ottawa Hospital