Greg Mohl

Gregory Mohl, PhD

Postdoctoral Scholar
Fields of Interest: 

Greg received his bachelor's degree in Microbiology from Brigham Young University where he developed a new class of influenza inhibitors. He completed his PhD degree at UCSF in Martin Kampmann's Lab. In the Kampmann lab, he studied how the V337M tau mutation perturbs differentiating iPSC-derived neurons. Greg works with the Clelland Lab at the Memory and Aging Center to develop new methods for screening nanoparticle delivery of gene editing therapies.  

 

 

 

Publications: 

The disease-causing tau V337M mutation induces tau hypophosphorylation and perturbs axon morphology pathways.

bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology

Mohl GA, Dixon G, Marzette E, McKetney J, Samelson AJ, Serras CP, Jin J, Li A, Boggess SC, Swaney DL, Kampmann M

Novel influenza inhibitors designed to target PB1 interactions with host importin RanBP5.

Antiviral research

Mohl G, Liddle N, Nygaard J, Dorius A, Lyons N, Hodek J, Weber J, Michaelis DJ, Busath DD

Divalent copper complexes as influenza A M2 inhibitors.

Antiviral research

Gordon NA, McGuire KL, Wallentine SK, Mohl GA, Lynch JD, Harrison RG, Busath DD