Adrian Rothenfluh, Ph.D.
Principle Investigator
Background: I have worked with Drosophila for over 25 years. First, studying the bicoid morphogen at the University of Basel in Switzerland, and then as a graduate student, investigating the circadian clock at Rockefeller University in New York City. Ever since then, I’ve been fascinated with flies’ behavior. For my postdoc I switched coasts, to study responses to drugs of abuse in Drosophila at UCSF.
After that, I ran a lab for 9 years at UTSW, in Dallas, and then moved here to the U in the fall of 2016. My primary appointment is in Psychiatry, but I’m also an adjunct in Human Genetics and Neurobiology & Anatomy. I’m part of the Molecular Medicine Program, and the Neuroscience Graduate Program.
Project(s): The molecular and neural mechanisms of behavior, and how it goes wrong. But see the individuals below for some specifics.
IN-takes: I like include research seminars, binge-worthy Netflix offerings, home-made potato gnocchi with butter and Gruyere cheese (a lot of work, but worth it), and I like a martini, the dirtier, the better.
OUT of the lab: I like to enjoy the mountain views, and getting beaten by my kids at Clue and backyard badminton.