Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy
Itzhak Fischer, Ph.D Chair
The Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy at the
Drexel University College of Medicine
provides an outstanding academic environment for pursuing multidisciplinary
training and research in neuroscience.
The department has recently expanded by recruiting 6 new faculty members and
has currently 36 research grants, including 26 NIH grants, with over $4 million
in annual direct cost as well as several endowments.
Recent grant awards included the renewal of the spinal cord Program Project, several major NIH grants and subcontracts.
The department offers postdoctoral training
through a NIH training grants and graduate student training through the Neuroscience
program for outstanding individuals preparing for a research career in the
biomedical sciences.
The Department promotes a highly interactive and collaborative environment and shared facilities that encourages
training, research and lab meetings outside the confines of one laboratory, thus providing flexibility and diversity
in the training process.
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Current faculty research interests include the following areas:
- Spinal Cord Research with emphasis on regeneration, neuroprotection and recovery of function after spinal cord injury.
- Cellular and Developmental Neurobiology with emphasis on neuronal cytoskeleton, guidance molecules, the neuromuscular junction, neuronal migration, and growth cones.
- System Neurobiology with emphasis on how circuits of neurons dynamically encode sensory and motor movement information.
- Computer Vision Laboratory is pursuing a research program in imaging and computer vision methods for neuroinformatics and neurocartography.
- Joint Neuroengineering program with the Biomedical engineering school of Drexel University.
- Bone Biology Research with an emphasis on bone quality, structure and adaptation during growth, aging and disease.
Training can be obtained in all aspects of advanced microscopy and imaging,
tissue culture, transplantation techniques, gene therapy and sequencing, behavioral
neurobiology, kinematics, intracellular recording, patch clamping, computer modeling
of neurobiological processes and robotics.
The Department has well equipped shared facilities for confocal microscopy, electron microscopy,
image acquisition and processing, small animal surgery, behavioral analysis, biochemistry
and molecular biology. Research training is also supplemented by a seminar series featuring
faculty, postdoctoral fellows and outside speakers. Journal clubs and discussions of research
findings are scheduled regularly and often shared among individual laboratories.
The Department is also responsible for 3 major courses given to medical students that include
Medical Neuroscience,
Gross Anatomy and
MicroAnatomy.
For ongoing recruitment the Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy in the College of Medicine is inviting applications for tenure-track faculty positions (click here!) and postdoctoral fellowship funded by a NIH training grant (click here!).


