Description
The Keppler lab is embedded in the Division of Rheumatology and Immunology at the Medical University of Graz, and focuses on translational immunology, working at the interface between basic research and clinical practice. The group is particularly interested in cell-cell and cell-niche interactions the interplay between tissue niches, metabolism and immune cells during health and disease. To address these questions, they employ in vitro culture systems of immune cells (human and mouse), adipocyte spheroid cultures, diverse co-culture systems as well as preclinical models of autoimmune diseases. To analyse cell-cell interactions during inflammation, the group further improves immunological state-of-the-art single-cell analysis methods like advanced multi-colour flow cytometry and mass cytometry (CyTOF) but also modern imaging techniques like whole organ imaging (using our EMOVI protocol) and image cytometry. They furthermore established collaborations with physicists and microscopists to develop new approaches in order to achieve a more systemic analysis of autoimmune disorders.
More specifically, current and future studies of the Keppler lab aim at elucidating the role of B cells and plasma cells as modulators of the inflammatory niche during autoimmunity.
(Description adapted from working group website: see link above)