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Clinical and Translational Science Center

CTSC Leadership

Lars Berglund, M.D., Ph.D.  Lars Berglund, M.D., Ph.D.
(916) 703-9120
lars.berglund@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu
CTSC Leadership Roles
Program Director
Translational Technologies, Resources and Methodologies
Pilot and Collaborative Studies
Clinical Research Resources and Facilities

Dr. Berglund is a Professor of Medicine, Associate Dean for Research, and Director of Clinical and Translational Science Center at UC Davis, and also serves as a Staff Physician at the Sacramento VA Medical Center. He received his Ph.D. in 1977 and his M.D. in 1981, both from University of Uppsala, Sweden. His internship and residency in Internal Medicine and Clinical Chemistry were completed at the Karolinska Institute, Stockholm Sweden, where he served as a faculty member in the Department of Clinical Chemistry (1986-1993). Dr. Berglund was recruited to Columbia University as a Florence Irving Associate Professor of Medicine, and and became Professor of Medicine in 2000. He served as Associate Director for the Columbia University GCRC from 1997. In 2002, he was recruited to UC Davis and in 2004 he became the first Program Director of the UC Davis GCRC. Dr. Berglund became the first Assistant Dean of Clinical Research at UC Davis in 2004, and Associate Dean of Clinical and Translational Research in 2006. The same year he became the first Director of the NIH-funded UC Davis CTSC. In 2009, Dr. Berglund assumed the position as Associate Dean for Research in the UC Davis School of Medicine.

As CTSC Director, Dr. Berglund ensures that administrative, patient care and research reporting procedures are carried out in conformity with NIH, UC Davis, and Department of Veterans Affairs policies. In addition, he sets goals and standards for the CTSC, encourages investigators to utilize the CTSC and fosters collaborations between clinical and basic science investigators.

Dr. Berglund’s research focus is in the area of lipoprotein metabolism and cardiovascular disease and his research is funded by NHLBI. He has published more than 170 peer-reviewed papers and is a member of the Editorial Board of Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis and Vascular Biology, the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, and Metabolic Syndrome and Related Disorders. He is a member of the NIH AIDS, Clinical Research and Epidemiology (ACE) study section, the American Heart Association Peer Review Committee and the Clinical Guidelines subcommittee of the Endocrine Society.

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  Michael Gillis, M.B.A.
(916) 703-9136
michael.gillis@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu
CTSC Leadership Role
CTSC Associate Director for Administration

Michael Gillis is the Associate Director for Administration and provides programmatic, administrative and operational leadership for the Clinical and Translational Science Center (CTSC) at UC Davis.  Mr. Gillis is tasked with assisting the Program Director in creating a comprehensive, integrated academic home for clinical and translational science. Mr. Gillis is responsible for overseeing program execution and fostering coordination and collaboration among the various program components that comprise the center and growing the research enterprise.  In addition to developing and implementing process improvement initiatives to promote efficient and effective utilization of institutional resources, he works collaboratively with stakeholders from various campus entities, consortium partners, industry sponsors and local hospitals.  He also represents UC Davis on various national and regional consortium committees and initiatives.  Mr. Gillis completed his undergraduate degree at the University of California, Davis and earned a Master in Business Administration from Saint Mary’s College of California.

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Photo Not Available  Alice F. Tarantal, Ph.D.
(530) 752-6680
aftarantal@ucdavis.edu
CTSC Leadership Roles
Translational Technologies, Resources and Methodologies
Pilot and Collaborative Studies

Dr. Tarantal is the Director of the Translational Technologies, Resources and Methodologies Program. Dr. Tarantal is a professor in the Departments of Pediatrics and Cell Biology and Human Anatomy. She serves as a Staff Scientist and Unit Leader in the Reproductive Sciences Unit at the California National Primate Research Center, and is Director and P.I. of the NHLBI-supported Center for Fetal Monkey Gene Transfer for Heart, Lung, and Blood Diseases, and an NIH Center of Excellence in Human Translational Stem Cell Research. Dr. Tarantal has extensive experience with successful pilot and feasibility programs in both centers and also within the Primate Center Pilot Project Program.

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Sridevi Devaraj, Ph.D.  Sridevi Devaraj, Ph.D.
(916) 734-6594
sridevi.devaraj@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu
CTSC Leadership Role
Translational Technologies, Resources and Methodologies

Dr. Devaraj serves as Co-director of the Translational Technologies, Resources, and Methodologies Program, and is the Director of Toxicology at the UC Davis Medical Center. Dr. Devaraj is an associate professor in the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, the Core Laboratory director of the CCRC, and is an active researcher in basic and clinical science focused on oxidative stress, inflammation, diabetes, and vascular disease. At the CCRC, she coordinates sample collection, processing, storage, and transport of biological specimens to investigators, thus facilitating clinical research. In addition, she oversees the Cardiovascular Core Laboratory for the CCRC where testing of novel biomarkers is performed. Through her familiarity with studies across the translational spectrum, Dr. Devaraj is well qualified to provide guidance to investigators.

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Thomas Huser, Ph.D.  Thomas Huser, Ph.D.
thomas.huser@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu
CTSC Leadership Role
Translational Technologies, Resources and Methodologies

Thomas Huser is serves as Co-Director of the Translational Technologies, Resources, and Methodologies Program. Huser is an Associate Professor in the Department of Internal Medicine and Chief Scientist for the NSF Center for Biophotonics Science and Technology (CBST) at the University of California at Davis. Until November 2005, he was a group leader for Biophotonics and Nanospectroscopy at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in Livermore (LLNL), CA. Huser obtained his Ph.D. in physics from the University of Basel, Switzerland, where he worked on near-field optical microscopy. At UC Davis he applies fluorescence and Raman spectroscopy to biological and medical problems at the single molecule to single cell levels.

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Fitz-Roy Curry, Ph.D.  Fitz-Roy Curry, Ph.D.
(916) 703-9149
fitz-roy.curry@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu
CTSC Leadership Role
Pilot and Collaborative Studies

Dr. Curry is a senior investigator in translational research whose scientific and leadership skills are widely recognized as Professor and former Chair of the Department of Physiology and Membrane Biology, Professor of Bioengineering and Associate Dean for Basic and Translational Research in the School of Medicine. He has more than 25 years of experience as P.I., reviewer, and mentor on NIH research and training programs in the area of vascular biology. Dr. Curry chairs the UC Davis Health System Research Award Committee, which evaluates pre-R01 level pilot projects, and he has extensive experience evaluating pilot project funding promoting interdisciplinary research for new faculty linked to the UC Davis Cancer Center, the Vascular Institute, as well as the UC Davis-associated Veterans Affairs (VA) and Shiner’s Hospitals.

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Photo Not Available  Sergio Aguilar-Gaxiola, M.D., Ph.D.
sergio.aguilar-gaxiola@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu
CTSC Leadership Roles
Pilot and Collaborative Studies
Community Engagement

Dr. Aguilar-Gaxiola is a professor of Clinical Internal Medicine and serves as Director of the Community Engagement program and Center for Reducing Health Disparities. He is an internationally renowned expert on mental health in ethnic populations, and was recently honored with a National Minority Health Community Leadership Award (Hispanic Community) from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, one of ten that recognize excellence and outstanding accomplishments of pioneering leaders dedicated to improving health in specific minority populations. He is P.I. of the Mexican American Prevalence and Services survey, the largest mental health study conducted in the U.S. on Mexican Americans, and the coordinator for Latin America and the Caribbean of the WHO (World Health Organization) Mental Health survey. In this capacity, he coordinates the work of the National Mental Health Institute surveys in Mexico, Columbia, Brazil, Peru, Costa Rica and Portugal. His experience in developing culturally and linguistically sensitive diagnostic mental health measures and translating research into practical information for consumers and their families will strengthen the CTSC Community Engagement program.

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Linda Ziegahn, Ph.D.
(916) 703-9210
linda.ziegahn@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu

CTSC Leadership Roles
Community Engagement

Linda Ziegahn, Ph.D, is currently the Community Engagement Coordinator with the Center for Reducing Health Disparities and the Clinical and Translational Science Center.  She earned a doctorate in Adult Education from Michigan State University.  Through her work at UC Davis Medical Center, Dr. Ziegahn is able to apply her academic preparation in adult learning, community development, and intercultural communication to the many training and coaching situations that arise when clinical researchers, practitioners, and the community at large come together to engage in dialogue around the translational research process. Prior experience includes teaching and administration for 12 years at Antioch University, where she directed the Individualized Liberal and Professional Studies program and chaired the Intercultural Relations Master of Arts program; three years at Syracuse University in the Department of Adult Education; and consultant work in Rwanda, Lesotho, Ivory Coast, and Bangladesh. 

 

 

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Photo Not Available  Hien Nguyen, M.D., M.A.S.
hien.nguyen@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu
CTSC Leadership Role
Biomedical Informatics

Dr. Nguyen serves as the Co-Director of Biomedical Informatics. He is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Internal Medicine, where he is a faculty member for both the Division of Infectious Diseases and the Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, His research interests include applied biomedical informatics, outpatient parenteral antimicrobial therapy, and nosocomial infections. He is the Medical Director of Electronic Medical Records, where he helps lead the implementation and integration of the Electronic Medical Record for the Health System. He received his medical degree from the University of California, Los Angeles and masters in clinical research from the University of California, Davis.

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Kent Anderson  Kent Anderson, M.S.
(916) 703-9123
kent.anderson@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu
CTSC Leadership Role
Biomedical Informatics

Kent Anderson manages the biomedical informatics team of the CTSC. Mr. Anderson oversees the design, development and implementation of specialized databases, tools and applications to support clinical and translational research at UC Davis and acts as a representative to the national consortium of CTSA award recipients to develop resources to benefit all represented CTSA institutions. Mr. Anderson facilitates the use of novel information technology and computing methods to assist Investigators in managing and evaluating the clinical data necessary to support their research program. Mr. Anderson works closely with the Biomedical Informatics program director to help investigators make the most efficient use of informatics services and resources.

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Photo Not Available  Laurel Beckett, Ph.D.
(530) 754-7161
laurel.beckett@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu
CTSC Leadership Role
Design, Biostatistics and Clinical Research Ethics

Dr. Beckett serves as Director of the Study Design and Biostatistics program. Dr. Beckett has since held faculty positions at Harvard Medical School and Rush School of Medicine in Chicago, among other institutions. Three years ago she was recruited by the UC Davis School of Medicine to build a new division of biostatistics in the Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine. Under her leadership, the division has grown from two people, including Beckett, to five full-time biostatisticians plus support staff and graduate students. And as more grants flow in with the division's assistance, she hopes to further expand the program.

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Patrick Romano, M.D.  Patrick Romano, M.D.
patrick.romano@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu
CTSC Leadership Role
Design, Biostatistics and Clinical Research Ethics

Dr. Romano serves as Co-director of the Study Design and Biostatistics program and is a Professor of General Internal Medicine and General Pediatrics. In this capacity, he assists Dr. Beckett in providing consultative and mentoring services to junior investigators, especially those whose research focuses on translation from clinical settings to populations. His training and experience in clinical epidemiology and health services research enable him to advise colleagues on complex issues related to study design and implementation. His personal research interests focus on measuring and improving health care quality, risk-adjusting health care outcomes, and using data to improve the quality and effectiveness of medical care.

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  Alexander Kon, M.D.
alexander.kon@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu
CTSC Leadership Role
Design, Biostatistics and Clinical Research Ethics

Dr. Kon is the Bioethics Director for Study Design and Biostatisics core. Dr. Kon is a faculty member in the Department of Pediatrics and in the Program in Bioethics, and his research focuses on informed consent for research with emphasis on research involving children. Dr. Kon serves on the CCRC Advisory Committee where he provides a bioethics review for all CCRC applications and works with investigators to determine whether children ought be included in specific research projects. Dr. Kon is also the co-Instructor of Record for the Responsible Conduct of Research course and is an active teacher of students, residents, fellows, and junior faculty members. Dr. Kon completed his Fellowship in Medical Ethics at the University of California in San Francisco (2000) and currently serves as the chair of the UC Davis Medical Center Hospital Ethics Committee. He is a Greenwall Foundation Faculty Scholar in Bioethics and an officer of the American Society for Bioethics and Humanities, and he has published widely on bioethics topics.

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Ted Wun, M.D., FACP  Ted Wun, M.D., FACP
(916) 734-3771
ted.wun@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu
CTSC Leadership Roles
Regulatory Knowledge and Support
Participant and Clinical Interactions Resources

Dr. Wun is the co-Director of the Regulatory Knowledge and Support and the Participant Clinical Interactions core programs. He is also Medical Director of the CTSC Clinical Research Center. He is Professor of Medicine in the Division of Hematology and Oncology and has served as the Instructor of Record for the Responsible Conduct of Research Course for the CTSC Mentored Clinical Research Training Program. Dr. Wun is a member of the Society of Research Subject Advocates and together with Dr. Schmidt, he has refined assessment of DSMPs and risk-benefit ratios for CTSC studies. He conducts independent investigations in the areas of hematology, oncology, and sickle cell disease and is the Chief, Section of Hematology and Oncology for the VANCHCS.

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David Asmuth, M.D.  David Asmuth, M.D.
(916) 734-8516
david.asmuth@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu
CTSC Leadership Roles
Clinical Research Resources and Facilities 

Dr. Asmuth is an Associate Professor of Medicine, who currently serves as Co-Director for the CRC, and will serve as the co-Director of the CRRF program. As an active member of the Institutional Review Board for over 10 years, he is intimately aware of the ethical and regulatory issues as they relate to human subject clinical research. Dr. Asmuth’s research focuses on HIV/AIDS pathogenesis and treatment, HIV/HCV co-infection pathogenesis and treatment, and, more generally, on pathogen-specific cell-mediated immune responses. His well-established collaboration with Dr. Berglund and long-standing familiarity with diverse research investigators increases the potential for the CRRF program’s adoption by many types of researchers across campus. Together, Drs. Berglund and Asmuth provide the required skills, experience, and continuity to assure success of the CRRF program.

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Nicole Mullen, R.N., M.S.N.  Nicole Mullen, R.N., M.S.N.
(916) 843-9426
nicole.mullen@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu
CTSC Leadership Roles
Clinical Research Resources and Facilities 

Nicole Mullen provides planning and operational oversight of the Clinical Research Resources and Facilities (CRRF)  core and the Clinical Research Center (CCRC) services available to investigators. Ms. Mullen oversees all aspects of clinical research resources and services, such as space allocation, nursing, laboratory, nutritional, and physiology lab, offered through the CTSC. Ms. Mullen monitors the conduct of clinical trials and data collection efforts supported by the CRRF program resources to ensure that federal regulations, professional standards, hospital polices, and Institutional Review Board (IRB) approved research protocols are not violated or compromised. Ms. Mullen completed her undergraduate nursing degree at Samuel Merritt College and earned a Master of Science in Nursing degree from Duke University. She is a member of Sigma Theta Tau International Honor Society of Nursing and is working collaboratively at the national level to create a professional organization and certifcation to recognize the specialty practice of clinical research nursing.

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Frederick Meyers, M.D. MACP  Frederick Meyers, M.D. MACP
(916) 734-8596
fred.meyers@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu
CTSC Leadership Role
Research Education, Training, and Career Development

Dr. Meyers serves as Director of the Research Education and Training Program. Dr. Meyers is a Professor and Chair of the Department of Internal Medicine His research focuses on cancer medicine. He has conducted studies in the molecular biology of advanced cancer and conducted many clinical trials in investigational cancer therapy. Currently he works in health services research of cancer care, specifically in palliative care/ supportive care as a model of quality. His current NCI grant investigates the simultaneous provision of palliative care and cancer investigational therapy to patients in Phase I or II trials. Dr. Meyers has served as director of the UC Davis Cancer Center clinical trials group, building a premier organization. He is committed to education of scholars from diverse backgrounds. He serves on national committees that deal with educational policy. He has extensive mentoring experience, having been a major professor for two PhD candidates who now have University appointments. He has mentored oncology fellows, several of whom have University appointments, and has begun to develop trainees in Palliative Care. Dr. Meyers has multiple junior faculty mentees as Department Chair and he sponsors two individuals for Robert Wood Johnson generalist physician awards in primary care. He is pleased to be the PI on the Mentored Clinical Research Training Program within the CTSC and PI of the stem cell training grant. Dr. Meyers is a member of the CTSC Oversight and Governance Committee.

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Richard L. Kravitz, M.D., M.S.P.H.  Richard L. Kravitz, M.D., M.S.P.H.
(916) 734-1248
richard.kravitz@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu
CTSC Leadership Role
Research Education, Training, and Career Development

Richard L. Kravitz, M.D., M.S.P.H. is Professor and Co-vice Chair for Research in the Department of Internal Medicine. He is a general internist and health services researcher whose interests include physician behavior, health communication, and preparing patients to become more effective agents for quality of care. His work on direct-to-consumer advertising was recently honored as Best Published Research Paper of the Year by SGIM and Article of the Year by AcademyHealth. He is a recipient of the UC Davis SOM Research Award, Ambassador of Diversity Award, and Dean's Mentoring Award. In addition to directing the K12 program, Dr. Kravitz is Instructor of Record for the K30 Summer Course in health services research methods.

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  Nicholas Kenyon, Ph.D.
(916) 734-3564
nicholas.kenyon@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu
CTSC Leadership Role
Research Education, Training, and Career Development

Dr. Kenyon is an Associate Professor in Residence of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, UC Davis School of Medicine. He has had extensive experience directing and/or co-directing research training programs, clinical training programs, basic science research projects, clinical research trials and grants, and core clinical centers. He is Director of the UC Davis CTSC T32 Pre-Doctoral training program, and Associate Director of the Pulmonary and Critical Care fellowship program. His experience leading core clinical centers includes serving as Co-Director of the UC Davis Asthma Network, Head of the UC Davis CTSC Novel Translational Technologies working group, and the Research Subject Advocate of the CTSC Clinical Research Center.

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Photo Not Available  Jen Greenier, Ph.D.
(916) 703-9142
jennifer.greenier@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu
CTSC Leadership Role
Research Education, Training, and Career Development

Jen Greenier is responsible for the day-to-day operation, facilitation and coordination of educational programs at the CTSC. Dr. Greenier earned a Master's Degree in Marine Science from Moss Landing Marine Labs and a Ph.D. in Genetics at the University of California, Davis, and is a member of the UC Davis Institutional Review Board. Dr. Greenier leads a team of program managers responsible for implementing training grants that are collectively designed for research career development for medical students, graduate students, post-doctoral fellows, and junior faculty. Working in concert with CTSC core directors and co-directors, faculty, collaborating institutions, consortium partners and staff, Dr. Greenier is responsible for implementing a strategic plan to establish and maintain a comprehensive educational program that will lead to successful career development in clinical and translational science.

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Julie Rainwater  Julie Rainwater, Ph.D.
(916) 734-2827
julie.rainwater@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu
CTSC Leadership Role
Evaluation and Tracking

Julie Rainwater is the Director of the Evaluation and Tracking Program. Dr. Rainwater works with each CTSC program to help them develop their specific evaluation plans and rigorously assess progress toward their objectives. She also serves as representative to the national consortium of CTSA award recipients and leads a national working group using Social Network Analysis to study the evolving scientific collaborations among translational researchers. Dr. Rainwater earned her Ph.D. in Sociology at Stanford University and is a Senior Researcher at the Center for Healthcare Policy and Research. She has more than a decade of experience in program evaluation, health services research, survey methods, and large-scale project management. She currently serves as the lead evaluator for several research grants and training programs at the UC Davis School of Medicine and Health System.

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Photo Not Available  Kate Marusina, Ph.D., M.B.A.
(916) 703-9177
kate.marusina@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu
CTSC Leadership Role
Research Facilitation and Industry Alliance 

Dr. Kate Marusina serves as Manager, Research Facilitation and Industry Alliances. In this role, Dr. Marusina assists with corporate partnering for both basic research and clinical trials. The tasks include preparation of partnering materials, active search for the strategic industry partners, the assistance in negotiating the scope of work and streamlining the path from a contact to a contract. Dr. Marusina also represents UC Davis CTSC on the National CTSA level in Public-Private Partnerships and IND/IDE Support task groups. Prior to UC Davis Dr. Marusina was a part of the Business Development Group of Novozymes Biotech Inc, a wholly owned subsidiary of Novozymes A/S, Denmark, a global leader in industrial enzymes with over $1 billion in worldwide revenues. As a part of the global BusDev team, she was responsible for the U.S. activities in partnering and technology/product licensing. From 1998 to 2000, Dr. Marusina served as Product Manager of Clontech, then a Becton Dickinson Company, based in Palo Alto, California. Among other portfolio products, she was responsible for the global strategy for the Creator, a universal gene cloning platform, and for the release of the Infusion, now a leading system for high throughput cloning. Earlier, Dr. Marusina was a Territory Sales Manager for Stratagene, La Jolla, CA. She received my Bachelor of Science degree in Biochemistry from the Leningrad State University, Russia, Ph.D. in Molecular Immunology and MBA with specialization in Marketing, both from the University of Cincinnati, OH. She did postdoctoral Fellowship at Howard Hughes Medical Institute, UCSF, and San Francisco CA.

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