— Current Members —
Esteban Mazzoni
Principal Investigator
As an undergraduate, I joined a research team investigating the molecular cascade during normal to tumorigenic cellular transformation. This early incursion into research made it clear that understanding embryonic development is required to gain insights into malignant cellular transformation. Therefore, I took advantage of the powerful Drosophila genetics to understand neuronal differentiation during my Ph.D. Since my postdoctoral research, I have aimed to apply basic developmental biology principles and a “model organism” mindset using stem cell differentiation to understand mammalial cell fate decisions.
Ernesto Stivala
Post doctorate
Ernesto is an MD PhD from the Universidad de Buenos Aires, where he also trained as a psychiatrist, with a master’s degree in Psychoneuropharmacology from Universidad Favaloro. His research focuses on understanding the differential sensitivity of neurons in neurodegenerative diseases such as ALS and FTD. Outside the lab, he is a passionate Boca Juniors fan and member, always waiting for the next match.
Henry Thomas
Post Doctorate
Henry is interested in the mechanisms that control gene expression and allow each cell to access the genetic information required for its function. After completing his undergraduate studies at the LMU in Munich, Germany, Henry joined the lab of Christa Buecker at the Vienna Biocenter Center in Austria for his PhD where he studied how sequences in the genome - called enhancers - mediate transcriptional activation. He is now combining the expertise of the Mazzoni and the Lionnet labs to apply single-molecule imaging approaches and study the very proteins that interpret these enhancer sequences: so-called transcription factors.
Yingzhen Pei
PhD Student
Yingzhen is from China. He completed his undergraduate studies at Peking University in Beijing, China. His biggest interest is developmental biology. Additionally, his favorite topics are stem cell, cancer, immunology, neuroscience, aging and regeneration. Yingzhen is currently working on the CRISPR screening project in the lab to investigate transcription factors important for motor neuron differentiation.
Bhavana Ragipani
PhD student
Bhavana graduated from New York University with a Bachelors in Neural Science in 2018 and Masters in Biology in 2019. During her time at NYU she worked in the Ercan Lab studying the molecular mechanism of X chromosome specific condensin complex in C. elegans. In the Mazzoni Lab she is working on understanding formation and regulation of epigenetic memory in Hox clusters during motor neuron differentiation by taking advantage of synthetic DNA technologies. Tackling questions on how interactions between chromatin and transcription can initiate and maintain early gene patterning from transient signals.
Emma Nguyen
PhD student
Emma graduated from University of California, San Diego in La Jolla with a major in Molecular Biology in 2020. During her time at UCSD, she studied the selfish chromosome PSR in Nasonia vitripennis at the Akbari Lab. She is currently interested in learning the cell intrinsic differences between spinal motor neurons and cranial motor neurons that result in differential sensitivity during Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) disease progression.
Omar Qassab
PhD student
Omar carried out his undergraduate studies in Biology at New York University in 2021, during which he studied the role of calcium signaling in regulating gene expression at the Blau Lab. He then stayed at NYU to pursue his PhD. Omar joined the Mazzoni Lab in 2022 to investigate HOX transcription factor diversification.
Sheila Alizadeh
PhD student
Sheila is a second-year doctoral student advised by Dr. Esteban Mazzoni and Dr. Dan Littman. She completed her undergraduate at Northwestern University with a major in Biophysics and Biochemistry, and a minor in Chemistry in 2022. During her undergraduate, she worked in the labs of Dr. Moriaki Yasuhara, Dr. Holger Russ, and Dr. Reza Vafabakhsh in the broad topics of evolution, immunology, and biophysics respectively. Presently, she studies mechanisms of epigenetic memory as they appear in T cell differentiation.
Sophie Li
MD/PhD student
Sophie graduated from Georgia Tech in 2019 with a degree in Biomedical Engineering. In the Davis Lab at Emory University, she worked on 3D printing functional heart valves capable of growth and remodeling. Afterward, she studied how cytotoxic T cells change across the human lifespan at the National Institute on Aging before beginning medical school at NYU in 2020. Sophie joined the Mazzoni Lab in 2023 to uncover the transcription factors that control cell fate in the ventral spinal cord. She is broadly interested in the application of stem cells for regenerative medicine.
Cadmus Cai
PhD Student
Cadmus graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 2023 with a degree in Biochemistry and a minor in Environmental Sciences. In the Edmondson Lab, he studied the critical glycosylation gene PMM2 and how its dysfunction led to varying degrees of lasting structural and functional deficits in the developing brain. This sparked a continued interest towards understanding the principle mechanisms that govern development. Cadmus joined the Mazzoni Lab in 2024, where he is now utilizing a synthetic HoxA cluster to understand the rules that govern mammalian Polycomb recruitment: a fundamental, yet poorly understood mechanism of gene regulation.
Albert Tan
Lab Technician
Albert grew up in New York City and graduated from New York University in 2022 with a B.A. in biology. He joined the Mazzoni Lab at the end of his freshman year and now works as the lab technician. He is interested in using stem cell-derived neurons to study neurodegenerative diseases.