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Meet the 2025 Lupus Research Alliance Award Recipients

The Lupus Research Alliance (LRA) announced the recipients of the 2025 Empowering Lupus Research (ELR) Career Development Award and Postdoctoral Award.

ELR Career Development Awardees

Joel Babdor, PhD, University of Pennsylvania

The gut microbiome produces molecules called microbiome-derived molecules (MDMs), which have been linked to lupus development and severity. Dr. Babdor recently identified 11 MDMs strongly associated with increased interferon (proteins that help the body fight viral infections) activity, a key driver of lupus. Using animal models and immune cell experiments, he will investigate how these MDMs affect lupus onset, immune activation, and response to lupus treatment. Findings from this study could contribute to personalized lupus therapies based on individual microbiome profiles.

Titilola Falasinnu, PhD, Stanford School of Medicine

More than half of people with lupus suffer from chronic pain, yet the mechanisms are poorly understood. Dr. Falasinnu will analyze large-scale health data from millions of individuals using machine learning methods to uncover patterns and potential biomarkers associated with chronic pain in lupus patients. Her findings could lead to new methods to predict individuals who may be at risk for suffering chronic pain and help guide new, targeted approaches to managing pain.

Vanessa Sue Wacleche, PhD, The Pennsylvania State University

Lupus involves overactive T and B immune cells, which can mistakenly target the body. Dr. Wacleche has identified a unique group of CD4+ T cells that express high levels of a molecule called CD96 at the cell surface and may help regulate immune responses. She will explore how these cells affect immune protection, potentially informing the development of therapies that enhance protective immune functions rather than broadly suppressing immunity. 

Daniel Zegarra-Ruiz, PhD, University of Virginia School of Medicine

Lupus is often associated with gut dysbiosis, which is an imbalance of intestinal bacteria. In some cases, harmful bacteria can escape the gut, contributing to disease progression. Dr. Zegarra-Ruiz will study how disease-associated gut bacteria contribute to lupus by altering the gut environment, leaving the gut and entering into other organs, and promoting immune dysfunction. He will also explore how diet influences these gut bacteria, with the goal of tailoring dietary and microbiome-targeted therapies to reduce disease severity.  

These four individuals will be awarded the ELR Career Development Award, which provides each recipient up to $600,000 over up to four years to help establish a competitive research program.

ELR Postdoctoral Awardee

Carolina Chiale, PhD, The Regents of the University of California, San Diego

Excessive type I interferon (IFN-I) production is a hallmark of lupus, largely driven by specialized immune cells called plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs). Dr. Chiale will screen thousands of chemical compounds, including U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved drugs, to identify molecules that regulate IFN-I production by pDCs and validate promising candidates in human cells and lupus mouse models. This study could lead to targeted therapies with fewer side effects.