GRADUATE STUDENTS

POST-DOCTORAL & RESEARCH FELLOWS

Sam Jordan

Sarnoff Research Fellow

Sam joined the Rentschler Lab in July 2022. Sam is a medical student and a visiting researcher from Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. He received his B.S. in Chemistry from Rhodes College in Memphis, TN. He is currently in his second year of the Sarnoff Fellowship.

Brian  Zenger, MD, PhD

Brian Zenger, MD, PhD

Physician Scientist Training Program Candidate

Brian joined the Rentschler Lab in July 2023. Brian is from Salt Lake City, Utah. He completed his BS and MD/PhD at the University of Utah in Biomedical Engineering. His research dissertation research focused on detection of acute myocardial ischemia from the torso surface using electrocardiographic imaging (ECGI) confirmed with translational animal models. His current research interests include radiotherapy treatment for ventricular tachycardia combined with ECGI and cardiac computational simulation. His clinical interests are in cardiac electrophysiology. In his free time you will find him outside with his partner and two dogs running, skiing, biking, hiking, or on the water.”

STAFF MEMBERS

UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS

Aryan  Kumar

Aryan Kumar

Undergraduate Student

Aryan joined the Rentschler Lab in November 2022. He is currently pursuing a degree in Biology with a minor in Healthcare Management.

Sneha  Manikandan

Sneha Manikandan

Sneha joined the Rentschler Lab in September 2023. She is pursuing a degree in Chemistry: Biochemistry with a minor in Mathematics and German. She is currently working on a project investigating radiotherapy treatment for ventricular tachycardia. Outside of the lab, she likes to run, spend time with friends, and volunteer!

ALUMNI

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    Jesus Jimenez, MD, PhD

    Jesus Jimenez, MD, PhD

    Clinical Fellow

    Jesus was a Cardiology Fellow and a trainee on the T32 Training Grant.  He joined the Rentschler Lab in July 2018.  He received his M.D., Ph.D in 2013 from the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, then completed his internal medicine residency training and adult general cardiology training at Barnes-Jewish Hospital/Washington University School of Medicine. His research focused on the interplay between electrophysiology and heart failure, specifically investigating how gene expression dictates electrophysiological properties in both normal and diseased hearts. Jesus is currently an instructor of medicine in the Cardiovascular Division at Washington University School of Medicine.

    Brittany Brumback, MS, PhD

    Brittany Brumback, MS, PhD

    PhD Student

    Brittany received her Ph.D. in Biomedical Engineering in July 2022. She is a former NSF GRFP awardee. She joined the Rentschler Lab in May 2017 and received her M.S. in Biomedical Engineering from Washington University in St. Louis in May 2018. She received her B.S. in Biomedical Engineering from The George Washington University in May 2016 where she was an undergraduate research fellow in Dr. Igor Efimov’s cardiovascular engineering lab. Her thesis research focused on studying left/right differences in gene expression that regulate electrophysiology in the context of development and disease in both mouse and human ventricles. Her research spanned across mouse models, adult human donor hearts, and iPSC-derived cardiomyocytes. One of her goals was to sort the different heart field progenitor pools early during iPSC-derived cardiomyocyte differentiation to create a platform for translating mouse studies on chamber-specific differential response to drugs, signaling pathways, and mutations. She has studied abroad at the University of Melbourne in Australia and conducted summer research in Brazil. She is passionate about traveling and extreme sports such as bungee jumping, skydiving, glacier climbing, and white-water rafting. Brittany is currently a consultant for ClearView Healthcare Partners, a life science consulting firm.

    Rich Gang Li, PhD

    Rich Gang Li, PhD

    PhD Student

    Rich Li received his PhD in Biomedical Engineering in August 2020. He started in the Rentschler lab in May 2015. He received his B.S. in Biomedical Engineering and Mathematics from Washington University in St. Louis in 2012. Rich’s thesis is on the role of Wnt signaling in cardiac development, disease, and electrophysiology. Specifically, he combines molecular and electrophysiological techniques to ask whether perturbing Wnt developmentally or in the adult can lead to arrhythmias. Additionally, he was interested in whether canonical Wnt signaling is altered in cardiac injury or disease, by using both human organotypic slices and mouse models. Outside of the lab, Rich enjoys board games, cooking and fitness. You can find him occasionally running with his friends or partying with his dog Rizzo. Rich is now completing his postdoctoral fellowship at Baylor College of Medicine.

     

    Kailin Baechle

    Kailin Baechle

    Undergraduate Student

    Kevin Tiankai Yin

    Kevin Tiankai Yin

    Undergraduate Student & Research Technician II

    Kevin joined the Rentschler Lab in June 2016 as an undergraduate student. Kevin graduated with his B.S. in Biology from WashU in May 2019, and he remained in the lab as a Research Technician II. He is currently an MSTP student at WashU. His research interest included molecular mechanisms underlying the interaction between Wnt signaling and cardiac diseases. He is originally from China, but has lived in Singapore, Malaysia, studied abroad in England, and currently lives in St. Louis. In his spare time, he captains the WashU rugby team, enjoys watching movies, and climbs active volcanoes.

    Kentaro Takahashi, MD, PhD

    Kentaro Takahashi, MD, PhD

    Postdoctoral Research Fellow

    Kentaro joined the Rentschler Lab in December 2017 as a postdoctoral research associate.  After he graduated medical school at Tokyo Medical and Dental University (TMDU) and worked for 5 years as a cardiologist in Japan, he started his career in basic research at Tetsushi Furukawa Lab in TMDU in 2011. He came from Japan after earning his PhD at TMDU in 2016. His research focused on revealing the pathophysiology of atrial arrhythmias by elucidating  transcription network and epigenetic modulation which can regulate the gene expression of ion channels. He is currently a postdoc at SUNY Upstate Medical University. He loves playing with his son, and listening to jazz/classical music.

    Kate Lipovsky-Durkee, PhD

    Kate Lipovsky-Durkee, PhD

    PhD Student

    Kate Lipovsky received her PhD in the Developmental, Regenerative, and Stem Cell Biology program in May 2020. She joined the Rentschler Lab in March of 2014. She received her B.S. in Biology with double minors in Philosophy and Psychology from Bradley University in 2013. Her fascination with cardiovascular research began when she was 9 years old and her father received a successful heart transplant after undiagnosed atrial fibrillation led to multiple strokes and subsequent heart failure at the age of 40. Her project involved understanding the effects of cardiomyocyte-specific Notch signaling activation on electrical remodeling and atrial arrhythmogenesis in the adult. She is interested in pursuing a career in which she can apply insights of molecular mechanisms underlying cardiac development and disease towards innovative approaches to cardiac regenerative medicine. When not in the lab, she enjoys running and hiking with her husband Philip and spending time with her two cats, Mr. Miogi and Zoe. Kate is now a postdoctoral scholar at UC San Diego.

    Quisha Guo, PhD

    Quisha Guo, PhD

    Staff Scientist

    Quisha joined the Rentschler Lab in 2018. She is currently working for Boehringer Ingelheim in New York.

    Aditi Kandekar, PhD

    Aditi Kandekar, PhD

    Postdoctoral Research Fellow

    Aditi joined the Rentschler Lab in September 2013 after completing her PhD at Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine. Her research focused on Wnt and Notch signaling in various regions of the heart in relation to disease. She is currently a consultant in science education and communication at the Gyan Prakash Foundation.

     

     

    John Yun Qiao , PhD

    John Yun Qiao , PhD

    PhD Student

    John received his PhD in Biomedical Engineering in the Rentschler Lab where he was co-mentored by Dr. Stacey Rentschler and Dr. Igor Efimov. After graduation he went on to be a senior scientist at Abott studying arrhythmia management and is currently a signal processing engineer at CoreMap.