• Conor McClenaghan
  • Conor McClenaghan
  • Assistant Professor
  • Department: Department of Pharmacology
  • Graduate Program(s): Cellular and Molecular Pharmacology
  • Major Research Interest(s): Disease genetics, Drug Discovery, Pathogenesis, Signaling
  • Research Techniques: Biophysics, Cell Biology
  • Research Organism(s): Cell lines, in vitro, Mice
  • Rotation Faculty
  • Phone: 1.8484459865
  • Robert Wood Johnson Medical School
  • Center for Advanced Biotechnology & Medicine CABM, Room 341
  • 679 Hoes Lane West
  • Piscataway, NJ 08854-8021
  • Key Words: Ion channels and disease
  • Lab Site URL

We are interested in how ion channels work, what happens when they break, and how can we fix them? Ion channels are proteins, found in cell membranes, which open and close to allow the movement of charged atoms (ions) into and out of cells. This movement of ions underlies the electrical currents critical for a vast range of biological processes. Your heartbeat, muscles, brain, and the regular function of all your other cells, rely on the precise activities of these ion channels.

When ion channels function abnormally, human disease can arise. We are interested in understanding how ion channels normally work in healthy physiology, how channels behave abnormally in disease, and how dysfunctional ion channels can be targeted therapeutically.

Publications