Cody Warren

PhD, MPH

Assistant Professor

Contact

warren.802@osu.edu 614-247-5792 Veterinary Medicine Academic Building
1900 Coffey Road
Columbus, OH 43210
Map Link

Department

Veterinary Biosciences

Infectious Disease Molecular Epidemiology Laboratory (IDMEL)

I take graduate students through the Comparative Biomedical Sciences Graduate Program, the Biomedical Sciences Graduate Program and the Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology Program. Graduate students from outside departments are welcome to contact me directly about opportunities for rotations.

Inquiries about postdoctoral opportunities are always welcome.

Undergraduates interested in research opportunities should reach out to me directly. Additional information on undergraduate research can be found on Ohio State’s Undergraduate Research website.

Professional Training and experience

  • Assistant Professor, Department of Veterinary Biosciences, The Ohio State University
  • Postdoctoral Fellow, University of Colorado Boulder
  • PhD, Microbiology, University of Colorado Denver Anschutz Medical Campus
  • MPH, Infectious Disease and Vaccinology, University of California Berkeley
  • BS, Microbiology, California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo
  • AA, Social Sciences, Sacramento City College

Research Interests

  • Mechanisms of cellular entry by emerging and pre-emergent animal viruses
  • Genetic determinants of successful cross-species virus transmission events
  • Coevolution of virus-host interactions
  • Mechanisms of restriction factor activity and virus evasion strategies
  • Development of iPSC-derived models of inaccessible human and nonhuman primate cell types for the study of virus biology
  • Development of reverse genetic systems to create novel  infectious virus clones 
  • Model virus systems: Simian arteriviruses, HIV/SIV, influenza A virus, and flaviviruses

The vast majority of newly emerging infectious diseases can be traced back to wild animals. Of these zoonoses, viruses pose the greatest pandemic threat. The overall research goal of the Warren lab is to better understand how viruses adapt to infect new host species. We aim to use knowledge gained through the analysis of virus structure, function, and host interactions to identify fundamental biological processes that influence disease emergence.

 

The research projects in the Warren lab follow several lines of investigation that center around the study of the evolution and biology of virus host switching, and the molecular characterization of animal viruses with potential for zoonosis.

 

Virus-receptor interactions and their evolution. In order to initiate an infection, viruses must bind to specific receptor molecules on target cells. Most viruses are exquisitely fine-tuned to the receptors encoded by their natural host. Thus, subtle differences in receptor sequences that distinguish the old and new host may impose species barriers to virus host switching. The Warren lab seeks to define rules of virus-receptor engagement that predict which viruses have the potential to cross species barriers.

 

Intracellular factors dictate virus tropism and host switching potential. After a virus binds to its receptor, restriction of infection may also occur at multiple stages of the viral replication cycle within target cells. Most notably, host cellular factors induced by interferon (cellular immunity factors) act as barriers to virus host switching. Research in the Warren lab explores how viruses evolve to antagonize or evade cellular immunity factors.

 

Evaluating the zoonotic potential of novel viruses discovered in animals. Ambitious efforts are underway to sequence and catalog animal viromes—using genome sequencing tools and metagenomic analyses to identify animal viruses of high risk for zoonosis. My lab will establish experimental tools and pipelines to broadly study animal viruses of potential zoonotic concern.

  • Member, Infectious Diseases Institute, The Ohio State University
  • Member, Center for Retrovirus Research, The Ohio State University
  • Member, American Society of Virology
  • Member, American Society of Immunology
  • Review Editor for Frontiers in Virology, Emerging and Re-emerging Viruses
  • Member, Center for RNA Biology, The Ohio State University