Barbara Stopschinski, M.D.
Principal Investigator & Instructor
Dr. Stopschinski is from Essen, Germany and graduated from Medical School at Ruhr University in Bochum, Germany in 2010. During this time, she completed her medical thesis with a focus on actin nucleation at the Max Planck Institute for Molecular Physiology in Dortmund, Germany. She then completed four years of residency training in neurology at the University Hospital in Aachen, Germany. Dr. Stopschinski joined the Diamond laboratory in the Center for Alzheimer’s and Neurodegenerative Diseases here at UTSW as a postdoctoral fellow between 2015-2019, working on mechanisms of cellular tau uptake in tauopathies. She completed her residency in Neurology at UTSW in June 2023 and joined the UTSW faculty in July 2023 as an Instructor and Fellow in behavioral neurology, at which time she also started her laboratory. As a physician-scientist, Dr. Stopschinski seeks to connect basic and translational science with her work in patient care. Her research is focused on the molecular and cellular mechanisms driving tau uptake and propagation and the mechanisms connecting neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration in tauopathies. Her clinical work is dedicated to patients with cognitive and memory impairment due to Alzheimer’s Disease and other neurodegenerative conditions. She also focuses on neuroinflammatory diseases such as autoimmune and viral encephalitis.
Shubhangi Pandey
Research Associate
Shubhangi comes from Gujarat, India where she earned a master's in microbiology and a doctorate in microbiology and biophysics from The Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda, Gujarat. While working on her doctorate, she studied growth-promoting and quality-improving aspects of biofuel formation in microalgae using biophysical tools like Raman spectroscopy and fluorescence microscopy. Shubhangi previously worked on protein biophysics and biochemistry to study membrane protein structure, folding, and aggregation. She joined Dr. Stopschinski in 2023 as her first lab member to bring together multiple disciplines of science and answer the unseen facets of neurodegenerative and neuroinflammatory diseases and their interdependency.
Mitch Dietzen
Research Technician II
Mitch received his B.A. in Biology from the University of Arkansas and his Masters in Cellular Molecular Biology from the University of Missouri in Kansas City. Before joining UTSW, he was an associate scientist at Catalent Pharma Solutions in Kansas City, testing the efficacy of well-known vaccinations, and maintaining FDA quality practices.