Skip to main content
Home
Toggle menu

Give Now

  • For Patients
  • School Of Medicine
  • About
    • Leadership
    • Department Directory
    • News
    • Events
    • Annual Report
    • Nashville
  • Divisions
    • Allergy, Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine
    • Cardiovascular Medicine
    • Diabetes, Endocrinology and Metabolism
    • Epidemiology
    • Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition
    • General Internal Medicine and Public Health
    • Genetic Medicine and Clinical Pharmacology
    • Geriatric Medicine
    • Hematology and Oncology
    • Infectious Diseases
    • Nephrology and Hypertension
    • Rheumatology and Immunology
  • Education
    • Overview
    • Internal Medicine Residency Program
    • Physician-Scientist Training Program
    • Internal Medicine-Pediatrics Residency Program
    • Fellowship Programs
    • EXCellence In TEaching Pathway
    • Physician-Scientist Doctoral Program
    • Medical Students
    • Alumni
    • Medicine Grand Rounds
  • Research
    • Overview
    • Clinical Trials
    • Publications
    • Research Centers and Labs
  • Faculty
    • Open Faculty Positions
    • Professional Development
  • Clinical Initiatives
    • Digital Health
    • Physician Builder Program

User Detail

Jeffrey Franklin, PhD

Research Assistant Professor of Medicine

Division of Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition
Jeffrey Franklin
Professional Bio
Jeffrey Franklin, PhD, is a Research Assistant Professor of Medicine in the Division of Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition, Department of Medicine, at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. He received his PhD at Vanderbilt University in Molecular Biology working in Bacteriophage T4 molecular genetics (advisor Gisela Mosig, PhD). He received postdoctoral training in developmental neurobiology at the NIH using the zebrafish model system (advisor Tom Sargent, PhD) and at Northwestern Medical School on Notch signaling in mouse neurogenesis (advisor Jeff Nye, MD, PhD). Dr. Franklin has worked in the Coffey lab at Vanderbilt as a senior scientist since 2000. His scientific interests are broad and include how carcinogenesis alters signaling in stem cells leading to cancer and the roles that cell secreted vesicles, called exosomes or extracellular vesicles (EVs), non-membranous nanoparticles and secreted RNAs, play in altering the tumor microenvironment and in driving metastasis. An integral area of his research concerns the function that EGFR ligands carried by EVs in regulating specialized EGFR signaling and how non-coding RNAs (miRNAs and long-non-coding, including circular ncRNAs) have in influencing stem cell and altered neoplastic signals. He and fellow researchers found that EVs and secreted nanoparticles called exomeres and supermeres carry numerous specific signaling protein cargos and miRNAs, mRNAs and long non-coding RNAs and their trafficking can be regulated by mutant oncogenic KRAS; some of these secreted RNAs and proteins have the ability to mediate drug resistance of tumors. Dr. Franklin has been part of the Extracellular RNA Communication Consortium (ERCC) in phases 1 and 2, common fund initiative. Current work within the consortium concerns novel methods of purifying and analyzing secreted RNA carriers, including the use of flow cytometric methods. He is also part of a PO1 program project focused on colorectal cancer (CRC) progression and drug resistance driven by EVs and secreted RNAs (PI Alissa Weaver, MD, PhD, Project 3 Robert Coffey, MD). He is also part of the group developing a precancer atlas of CRC that uses multiplex imaging of tissue correlated with single cell RNA analysis to provide a precancer and progression model for adenomas (PIs, Robert Coffey, MD; Ken Lau, PhD, and Martha Shrubsole, PhD). Part of his work concerns the genes that control intestinal stem cell growth and differentiation and how abnormal signaling in CRC is associated with alterations in stem cell gene function. Regulation of the intestinal stem cell niche requires crosstalk between WNT and EGFR signaling pathways. Dr. Franklin and fellow researchers have found that a negative regulator of EGFR, LRIG1, is a tumor suppressor that controls intestinal stem cell function, defines a quiescent stem cell population and helps to establish the WNT/EGFR signaling homeostatic niche. Part of this work is the basis the GI SPORE (PI Robert Coffey, MD), which he participates in. Dr. Franklin has helped to train four graduate students and nine postdoctoral fellows.
Publications
View Publications

Education

PhD - Molecular Biology - Vanderbilt University, 1992

Contact

Email 
Kimryn.Rathmell@Vumc.Org 
Address 
777 Preston Research Building 
2220 Pierce Ave 
Nashville, TN 37232-6307

Submitted by admin on Thu, 06/01/2023 - 04:28

1161 21st Ave S
Nashville, TN 37232

(615) 322-5000

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About
  • Divisions
  • Education
  • Research
  • Faculty
  • Intranet

Support Our Work

Start a fundraiser or donate to the Department of Medicine.

Give Now

Vanderbilt Health is committed to fostering an environment where everyone has the chance to thrive and is committed to the principles of equal opportunity. EOE/Vets/Disabled.

Copyright © Vanderbilt University Medical Center

sfy39587stp18