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About Jason Podrabsky

I am a Professor of Biology interested in how the environment affects embryonic development, and how these effects can persist in an individual and their offspring. One main area of focus for my work is on the importance of oxygen for supporting metabolism during development and in adult organs such as the heart and brain. This work has implications for improving our ability to understand and treat tissue damage due to heart attack and stroke. I believe that nature has already solved most of the problems associated with human diseases through adaptation of organisms to extreme or unique environments – and I am searching for “Nature’s solutions” to these global health issues. For example, embryos of annual killifish from Venezuela that can survive for months in the complete absence of oxygen by arresting their development, stopping their heart, and entering a coma-like state of dormancy. The mechanisms these embryos use to survive extreme conditions may help us understand how to devise interventions to improve human performance in extreme environments, or provide mechanisms to engineer human cells and tissues to function in novel and stressful environments.

Positions

Present Interim Vice President, Portland State University Research & Graduate Studies
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Present Professor, Portland State University Biology
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Present Professor, Portland State University Center for Life in Extreme Environments
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Curriculum Vitae


Disciplines



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Education

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1999 PhD, University of Colorado Boulder ‐ Biology
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1993 BS, Oregon State University ‐ Biology
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Research Works (42)