Metadata
Title
Adele Doyle Group
Category
general
UUID
882ea14a3dcb455ca36dbaec57fc685f
Source URL
https://physics-of-life.tu-dresden.de/team/pol-groups/doyle
Parent URL
https://physics-of-life.tu-dresden.de/contact
Crawl Time
2026-03-18T08:01:36+00:00
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Adele Doyle Group

Source: https://physics-of-life.tu-dresden.de/team/pol-groups/doyle Parent: https://physics-of-life.tu-dresden.de/contact

Mechanobiology of Stem Cells

© Mitchell Foster and Adele Doyle

Our Research Mission

Cells in living organisms are surrounded by physical cues, such as mechanical forces, material properties and electrical cues. These cues vary depending on their location in the body, so that different cells experience a variety of types, magnitudes, and dynamics of mechanical input. The ability of cells to take reliable decisions about cell behavior based on local physical cues is a key component of equilibrium in living organisms. However, the origin of specialized mechanosignaling in cells is not well understood. How do stem cells and other progenitor cells determine how to respond to physical cues in site-appropriate ways? When is specialized mechanosignaling necessary for successful embryonic development and organism homeostasis?

Our group studies how stem cells learn to respond to mechanical forces and electrical cues during the development and maintenance of the nervous and cardiovascular organ systems. We use approaches from biology, engineering, and computer science to study the molecular circuits that enable specialized mechanosignaling. We seek quantitative insights to help design cell and regenerative medicine therapies for neural and vascular applications.

We’re hiring!

We have multiple open positions for postdocs, graduate students and techs in our new PoL lab. If you are interested and would like to join us, please email me! More info soon.

Research Avenues

More Information

Doyle Lab at UC Santa Barbara