Miguel Quiros

Miguel Quiros

Department of Pathology, University of Michigan

Affiliated withUniversity of Michigan

Research Area

Biography

Dr. Miguel Quiros did his undergrad studies in microbiology at the University of Costa Rica. He obtained his PhD in Molecular and Cellular Physiology at the Center for Research and Advanced Studies in Mexico City, Mexico. During his PhD he specialized in epithelial cell junctions and their physiological regulation. His research focuses on the resolution phase of intestinal inflammation. His current projects include: (a) establishing a defined matrix to grow mini-guts with the potential to be engrafted into ulcerated tissue from IBD patients and promote epithelial recovery; (b) characterizing the kinetics of cytokine release during the resolution phase of inflammation and describe the cascade of events that lead to recovery of homeostasis; (c) studying the effect of specialized pro-resolution mediators on intestinal epithelial wound healing. Dr. Quiros was awarded with the CCFA 2016 Shanti Sitaraman, MD, PhD, Young IBD Investigator Award for his research on the role of Resolvin E1 on intestinal epithelial wound healing.

JoVE Journal Publications

ArticleTotal : 1
Year
Generation of Murine Primary Colon Epithelial Monolayers from Intestinal Crypts
Publication title

Cited by 12

2021

Other Publications

Article
Year
Annexin A1-containing extracellular vesicles and polymeric nanoparticles promote epithelial wound repair.

The Journal of clinical investigation| PubMed ID: 25664854

2015
2015
Intestinal epithelial claudins: expression and regulation in homeostasis and inflammation.

Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences| PubMed ID: 28493289

Macrophage-derived IL-10 mediates mucosal repair by epithelial WISP-1 signaling.

The Journal of clinical investigation| PubMed ID: 28783045

2017
Innate immune cell-epithelial crosstalk during wound repair.

The Journal of clinical investigation| PubMed ID: 31329162

2019
Formyl peptide receptor 2 regulates monocyte recruitment to promote intestinal mucosal wound repair.

FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology| PubMed ID: 31585047

Resolvin E1 is a pro-repair molecule that promotes intestinal epithelial wound healing.

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America| PubMed ID: 32300016

2020
2020