Research Bio
David D. Moore is a molecular metabolic biologist whose work has defined how nuclear hormone receptors regulate liver physiology and whole-body energy homeostasis. His laboratory has uncovered fundamental mechanisms by which nuclear hormone receptors coordinate transcriptional, translational, and organelle-level programs that govern lipid metabolism, fasting responses, xenobiotic detoxification, and proteostasis. His research spans molecular biology, metabolic physiology, and systems approaches to reveal how dietary and environmental inputs remodel hepatic function, with major implications for obesity, diabetes and metabolic liver disease.
Moore is Professor of Nutritional Sciences and Toxicology and mentors students and trainees across metabolism, gene regulation, and translational bioscience. He is an elected member of the National Academy of Sciences and a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Research Expertise and Interest
nuclear receptor molecular biology, gene regulation
In the News
New Fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science
Teaching
Field Study in Food and Nutritional Sciences [NUSCTX 197]
Field Study in Food and Nutritional Sciences [NUSCTX 197]
Supervised Independent Study and Research [NUSCTX 199]
Advanced Topics in Metabolic Biology [NUSCTX 250]
Nutritional Sciences and Toxicology Research [NUSCTX 299]
Honors Research [NUSCTX H196]
Supervised Research: Biological Sciences [UGIS 192C]
Experimental Nutrition Laboratory [NUSCTX 170]
Experimental Nutrition Laboratory [NUSCTX 170]
Field Study in Food and Nutritional Sciences [NUSCTX 197]
Directed Group Study [NUSCTX 198]
Supervised Independent Study and Research [NUSCTX 199]
Research Seminar [NUSCTX 293]
Nutritional Sciences and Toxicology Research [NUSCTX 299]
Honors Research [NUSCTX H196]
Supervised Research: Biological Sciences [UGIS 192C]
Field Study in Food and Nutritional Sciences [NUSCTX 197]
Supervised Independent Study and Research [NUSCTX 199]
Field Study in Food and Nutritional Sciences [NUSCTX 197]
Field Study in Food and Nutritional Sciences [NUSCTX 197]
Supervised Independent Study and Research [NUSCTX 199]
Advanced Topics in Metabolic Biology [NUSCTX 250]
Nutritional Sciences and Toxicology Research [NUSCTX 299]
Directed Group Study [NUSCTX 98]
Honors Research [NUSCTX H196]
Supervised Research: Biological Sciences [UGIS 192C]