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Brian Johnson

Brian Johnson , PhD

Assistant Professor
Pharmacology & Toxicology, Biomedical Engineering
3315 iQ Building

Education

Postdoc, Biomedical Engineering, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 2014
PhD, Molecular and Environmental Toxicology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 2007
BS, Biological Sciences, Michigan Technological University,

Publications

Spatially dependent tissue distribution of thyroid hormones by plasma thyroid hormone binding proteins. Pflugers Archiv : European journal of physiology (2025)

The Asymmetry Within: A Renewed Look at Cupids Bow in Unilateral Cleft Lip. The Journal of craniofacial surgery (2024)

Crowdsourcing AOP development: Leveraging the thesis literature review to identify knowledge gaps and facilitate research translation Current Research in Toxicology (2024)

A minimal human physiologically based kinetic model of thyroid hormones and chemical disruption of plasma thyroid hormone binding proteins. Frontiers in endocrinology (2023)

Fresh tissue procurement and preparation for multicompartment and multimodal analysis of the prostate tumor microenvironment The Prostate (2022)

A Microphysiological Approach to Evaluate Effectors of Intercellular Hedgehog Signaling in Development. Frontiers in cell and developmental biology (2021)

A bioengineered organotypic prostate model for the study of tumor microenvironment-induced immune cell activation. Integrative biology : quantitative biosciences from nano to macro (2020)

Engineered Perineural Vascular Plexus for Modeling Developmental Toxicity. Advanced healthcare materials (2020)

Modeling chemical effects on breast cancer: the importance of the microenvironment in vitro. Integrative biology : quantitative biosciences from nano to macro (2020)

Mri-based cancer lesion analysis with 3d printed patient specific prostate cutting guides. American journal of clinical and experimental urology (2019)

In the News

PhmTox Researchers Part of a Team Honored by NIH for Microphysiological model

Two researchers from Michigan State University's Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology were part of a team that won a prestigious award from the National Institutes of Health.