Konstantina Alexandropoulos

Assistant professor
Medicine, Clinical Immunology
Mount Sinai School of Medicine
United States of America

Biography

Konstantina Alexandropoulos had done her PhD from City University of New York (CUNY) Massachusetts Institute of Technology Rockefeller University. Now she is associate professor in clinical and medical immunology at Icahn school of medicine.

Research Intrest

Autoimmunity, Cell Adhesion, Cell Motility, Chemokines, Chemotaxis, Epithelial Cells, Immunological Tolerance, Immunology, Inflammation, Integrins, Lipid Signaling, Migration, Protein Kinases, Signal Transduction, T Cells, Tolerance, Trafficking, Transplantation

List of Publications
Donlin LT, Danzl N, Wanjalla C, Alexandropoulos K (2005) Deficiency in Expression of the Signaling Protein Sin/Efs Leads to T lymphocyte Activation and Mucosal Inflammation. Mol. Cell. Biol 25: 11035-11046.
Natarajan M, Stewart JE, Golemis E, Pugacheva E, Alexandropoulos K, etal (2006) HEF1 is a necessary and specific downstream effector of FAK that promotes the migration of glioblastoma cells. Oncogene 25: 1721-1732.
Regelmann AG, Danzl NM, Wanjalla C, Alexandropoulos K (2006) The hematopoietic isoform of Cas-Hef-1-associated signal transducer regulates chemokine-induced inside-out signaling and T cell trafficking. Immunity 25: 907-918.
Alexandropoulos K, Regelmann A (2009) Chat-H/CasL: A novel adapter complex that regulates T lymphocyte physiology. Imm. Rev.232 :160-174.
Danzi N, Donlin L, Alexandropoulos K (2010) Regulation of Medullary Thymic Epithelial Cell Differentiation and Function by the Signaling Protein Sin . J. Exp. Med. 207: 999-1013.