Principal Investigator

Terrance T. Kummer, MD, PhD

Terrance T. Kummer, MD, PhD

Associate Professor of Neurology

Terrance T. Kummer, MD, PhD, is an Associate Professor of Neurology at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, a clinical neurointensivist in the Barnes-Jewish Hospital Neurological and Neurosurgical intensive Care Unit, the Director of the EXPLORE program in the Gateway Curriculum, and the Director of the Neurotrauma ICU. Dr. Kummer received his MD and PhD from Washington University in St. Louis where he studied synaptogenesis at the neuromuscular junction. He completed his clinical training in Neurology and Neurocritical Care at Harvard Medical School (Massachusetts General Hospital and Brigham and Women’s Hospital) before returning to St. Louis in 2012. Dr. Kummer’s initial work at WashU revealed a novel injury mechanism in subarachnoid hemorrhage—axonal injury—that linked this deadly form of brain hemorrhage to traumatic brain injury (TBI). The application of MRI-based measurements, validated in preclinical models against gold-standard histological analysis, permitted confirmation of these findings in human patients. Dr. Kummer now focuses on identifying and measuring the key loci of cellular injury in TBI and Alzheimer’s disease with a particular interest in synaptic and other forms of CNS gray matter injury. The lab developed a novel imaging technique to quantify synapses called SEQUIN, and applied this technique to identify synaptic loss after TBI. We are now using SEQUIN to better understand the mechanisms of synaptic injury in TBI, and the relationship between this process and subsequent neurodegeneration. Dr. Kummer was born and raised in Rochester, Minnesota, and completed his undergraduate studies at the University of Minnesota.

Personnel

Past Personnel

Satvik Reddy

Undergraduate student

Satvik Reddy is an undergraduate from Washington University working towards a biology degree. He joined the lab in the summer of 2019 and is working on methods to eliminate autofluorescence from SEQUIN datasets.

Maverick Salyards

Undergraduate student

Maverick Salyards’ work involves characterizing the role of neuroinflammation, and in particular microglia, on gray matter endpoints after brain injury. Salyards is also interested in the development of the SEQUIN method. He was awarded a BioSURF award to conduct his research in the Kummer lab. Salyards is now conducting clinical research in psychiatry at UT Southwestern.

James Sorrell

Technician

James Sorrell is a former technician with the Kummer lab. Sorrell received his undergraduate degree from Drury University, and worked with Dr. David Brody before joining the Kummer lab in 2014. Sorrell is now employed at the Skandalaris center at Washington University, where he is a venture analyst, and has co-founded several startups, including Pro-Arc Diagnostics, a local biotech company that developed a blood-based diagnostic.

Weimin (Sherry) Yuan, PhD

Technician

Sherry Yuan is a technician in the Kummer lab. She completed her graduate work at the University of Florida where she worked with Dr. Donald W. Dickson on complex plant-nematode interactions. She has also studied Krabbe disease under Dr. Gustavo Maegawa at the University of Florida.