The Genoplastic Surgery Lab (University of Michigan, Section of Plastic Surgery), led by Dr. David Brown, is a basic-translational plastic surgery research laboratory focused on genetic modification of tissues for regenerative medicine, limb loss, and wound healing. Our work sits at the intersection of regenerative biology and gene therapy, using an approach we call genoplastic surgery, a framework for shaping surgical tissues at the molecular level to enable improved repair and regeneration.
Our primary model system is mouse digit regeneration, which stands as one of the few examples of complex tissue regeneration in mammals. We study conserved genes and regulatory sequences that control regeneration and leverage them to build gene therapy vectors and regulatory-element directed expression systems toward the long-term goal of proximal digit and limb regeneration. Additional projects explore gene therapy for other plastic surgery applications, including wound healing and postamputation pain.
We are seeking postdoctoral fellows to drive a project from conception through publication, integrating in vivo mouse work with modern molecular profiling (e.g., single-cell and spatial transcriptomics, ATAC-seq) and quantitative imaging (including confocal microscopy). Start date is July 1st, 2026.