Environmental Health Center

Precision Regenerative Medicine

Chronic disease is most prevalent in the elderly and ultimately stems from a multifactorial combination of aging, genetic predisposition, and lifelong epigenetic priming that together can limit the regenerative capacity of our organs. Our Research Unit, Precision Regenerative Medicine (PRM) works on the mechanistic dissection of human lung biology and aims at pioneering regenerative reprogramming therapy in chronic lung disease patients that will increase the healthspan and resilience of aged and diseased lungs.  

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Our Research in a nutshell

Modern single-cell analysis technologies rapidly generate a growing number of cell type and cell state atlases in the healthy and diseased lung. Emerging spatial methods further position the associated gene programs in the context of tissue architecture and enable the systematic deciphering of local cell communication programs. Under disease conditions, ectopic or aberrant cell types or -states regularly emerge, but their significance is often unknown. An outstanding challenge for medical research is 1) to define early deviation points of the lifelong cellular state trajectories from normal to early disease, 2) to explain causative cellular and molecular aberrations driving the disease, 3) to identify suitable intervention junctions to reprogram altered tissue states back to homeostasis and 4) to analyze cellular modes of responsiveness to therapeutic intervention.  

Lung disease is the second most common cause of death globally. Even though the lungs' regenerative capacity, which is mediated through different stem cell populations, is very high, the ability for organ regeneration is often lost in the aging process and various chronic lung diseases. We aim to advance experimental systems medicine by analyzing lifelong trajectories spanning pediatric lung health all the way to lung aging to identify individuals at respiratory risk and early stages of disease.  

Together with our network of clinical collaborators we leverage single cell multi-omics technologies for observations of cellular and molecular events in different patient cohorts and aim at linking these observations to electronic health records and patient (epi-)genetics. We also work on reverse translation of these ground truths observed in patient samples to human organotypic models as well as mouse models of disease. Using functional single cell genomics and proteomics coupled with generative AI, we interrogate cellular circuit mechanisms in the pre-clinical model systems and going forward aim to translate these insights into preventative and regenerative therapy regimes.  

People at PRM

Herbert Schiller Director PRM
Prof. Dr. Herbert Schiller

Director

View profile
Martin portrait
Dr. Martin Mück-Häusl

Deputy Director

Lin Yang
Dr. Lin Yang

Postdoctoral Fellow

Rizqah Kamies portrait
Dr. Rizqah Kamies

Postdoctoral Fellow

Misako Nakayama
Dr. Misako Nakayama

Postdoctoral Fellow

Lena Cords PostDoc PRM
Dr. Lena Cords

Postdoctoral Fellow

Safouane Kadri
Dr. Safouane Kadri

Postdoctoral Fellow

Jelmer Vlasma selfie
Dr. Jelmer Vlasma

Postdoctoral Fellow

Dr. Harish Narasimhan

Postdoctoral Fellow

Yuexin Chen
Yuexin Chen

PhD student

Ahmed Agami PhD PRM
Ahmed Agami

PhD student

Prerna Karthaka
Prerna Karthaka

PhD student

Porträt Sai Rama Sridatta Prakki
Sai Rama Sridatta Prakki

PhD student co-supervised with Prof. Dr. Fabian Theis, ICB

Zhenda Wang portrait
Zhenda Wang

PhD student

Anja Michl
Anja Michl

PhD student

Simrah Khan
Simrah Khan

PhD student

Yifan Yang

PhD student

Zimmermann_Lea_Portrait
Lea Zimmermann

PhD student co-supervised with Prof. Dr. Fabian Theis, ICB

Valentina Beliaeva

PhD student co-supervised with Dr. Malte Lücken, ICB

Niklas
Niklas Jonathan Lang

MD student

Daniela Haas PRM
Daniela Haas

Project Assistant

Niyeti Qazi
Niyeti Qazi

Science Operations Manager

Sarah portrait
Sarah-Irina Pfeifer-Nigisch

Lab Manager

Thanya portrait
Thanya Sekhar

Technical Assistant

Mrunal portrait
Mrunal Pande

Technical Assistant

News

Lung Cell Atlas

AI, Environmental Health, PRM, Computational Health,

Helmholtz Munich and Parse Biosciences Collaborate on Human Lung Tissue Perturbation Atlas

Helmholtz Munich and Parse Biosciences have entered into a collaboration to generate one of the most comprehensive lung disease perturbation atlases to date. The project uses a human lung ex vivo tissue slice culture model derived from both healthy…

Human lung model with a of disease, generative Ai

AI, Environmental Health, PRM, Computational Health, ICB,

New Collaboration to Advance Drug Discovery for Pulmonary Fibrosis

Helmholtz Munich and Boehringer Ingelheim have started a research collaboration to identify new avenues for the treatment of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis that could improve outcomes in people living with this severe and progressive lung disease.…

Abstraktes Bild einer Lunge_AdobeStock_976967892

Awards & Grants, Environmental Health, PRM, LHI,

Helmholtz Munich Researchers Honored with DGP Research Prizes for Pneumology Research

At the 65th Annual Congress of the German Society for Pneumology and Respiratory Medicine (DGP) in Leipzig, two Helmholtz Munich researchers were recognized for their outstanding scientific contributions to the field of pneumology. Dr. Lin Yang was…

bronchiolus_querschnitt_helmholtz_1920x640px

Environmental Health, PRM, LHI,

RESPIRE-EXCEL: EU funds asthma and COPD research at LHI and PRM

The international consortium RESPIRE-EXCEL has received 3.3 million euros from the EU’s Horizon Europe program. Scientists from Helmholtz Munich (Institute of Lung Health and Immunity and Precision Regenerative Medicine) are among those to receive…

Lena Cords

Awards & Grants, Environmental Health, PRM,

German Study Prize of the Körber Foundation Awarded to Lena Cords

Dr. Lena Cords, a researcher at Helmholtz Munich, has been awarded the German Study Prize by the Körber Foundation in the category of natural and technical sciences for her doctoral thesis at the University of Zurich and ETH Zurich. The prize is…

Lena Cords EMBO Fellowship

PRM,

EMBO Postdoctoral Fellowship awarded

schniering-lang-dgp-pneumologie-news

Environmental Health, PRM, LHI,

DGP-Research Prize 2024 for best basic scientific work

Janine Gote-Schniering and Niklas Lang (LHI) described the cellular changes in the early stages of pulmonary fibrosis.

HMGU_Icon_Environm_Health

Featured Publication, Environmental Health, PRM, LHI,

Diversity Matters: Fibroblast Heterogeneity in Pulmonary Fibrosis

Various tissue fibroblast types with distinct properties shape the architecture of the specialized niches of the lung (e.g. airways, alveoli, vasculature). In a significant breakthrough, a team led by Gerald Burgstaller and Herbert Schiller from…

Pulmonary capillary network in human precision cut lung slices (hPCLS)

AI, New Research Findings, Environmental Health, PRM, LHI,

Accelerating Drug Development for Lung Diseases: New Insights from Single-Cell Genomics

To mechanistically understand the root causes of lung disease, and identify drugs that target specific pathways, the scientists around Prof. Herbert Schiller and Dr. Gerald Burgstaller from Helmholtz Munich are collecting deep molecular insights from…

Lung health and immunity by Lin Yang HI_Website-News-images_BSIC2023_Winner_Main-Image

Awards & Grants, Environmental Health, PRM, LHI, ITERM,

Best Scientific Image Contest 2023: Scientists From Helmholtz Munich Awarded

In January 2023, Helmholtz Imaging called for the Best Scientific Image for the third consecutive time. The winners were announced during the award ceremony on June 15, 2023, at the 3rd Annual Helmholtz Imaging Conference 2023. Lin Yang from the…

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Datasets and Webtools

Our Research Unit in Numbers

24
Employees
78
Publications
6
Post Docs
9
PhDs
8
Nationalities

Contact

Herbert Schiller Director PRM
Prof. Dr. Herbert Schiller

Director

View profile

Martin portrait
Dr. Martin Mück-Häusl

Deputy Director

Funders and Consortia

  1. German Center for Lung Research (DZL) - Deutsches Zentrum für Lungenforschung (dzl.de)
  2. Single Cell Omics Germany - Single Cell Omics Germany
  3. Human Cell Atlas consortium - Home (humancellatlas.org)
  4. DiscovAIR consortium funded by the European Commission - DiscovAIR
  5. SkinTerm consortium funded by the European Commission - Home - SkinTERM
  6. TRR 359 PILOT funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG) - TRR 359 PILOT | perinatal immunity immunology TRR 359 PILOT (perinatal-immunity.de)
  7. GRK 2338 funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG) - RTG 2338 Targets in Toxicology - LMU Munich (uni-muenchen.de)
  8. Human Lung Cell Atlas 1.0 consortium funded by the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative - Human Lung Cell Atlas 1.0 - Chan Zuckerberg Initiative
  9. MPII consortium funded by the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative - Mapping the Pediatric Inhalation Interface: Nose, Mouth, and Airways, - Chan Zuckerberg Initiative
  10. COVIPA consortium funded by the Helmholtz Association and the Federal Ministry of Education and Research - Virological and immunological determinants of COVID-19 pathogenesis - lessons to get prepared for future pandemics (dkfz.de)
  11. Postdoctoral Fellowships funded by the European Respiratory Society - ERS (ersnet.org)EMBO – Excellence in life sciences and Home - Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions (europa.eu).

Research Collaborators

  1. Prof. Fabian J Theis – Helmholtz Munich, Germany
  2. Prof. Matthias Mann – Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry, Germany
  3. Prof. Richard Scheltema – University of Liverpool, UK
  4. Prof. Purushothama Rao Tata – Duke University, USA
  5. Prof. Wim Wuyts & Dr. Laurens De Sadeleer – KU Leuven, Belgium
  6. Prof. Scott Budinger & Prof. Alexander Misharin – Northwestern University Chicago, USA
  7. Prof. Melanie Königshoff – University of Pittsburgh, USA
  8. Prof. Christos Samakovlis – SciLife Lab, Sweden
  9. Prof. Martijn Nawijn – University of Groningen, Netherlands

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