Sabhya Rana, PhD

Assistant Professor, Department of Neuroscience

684 Biomedical Research Tower
460 W. 12th Ave.
Columbus, OH 43210
614-366-6569
Sabhya.Rana@osumc.edu

Research focus

Breathing is essential to life, yet this vital motor behavior is highly vulnerable to disruption in neurological disease and injury. The Rana laboratory investigates the neural control of breathing, which refers to how the brain and spinal cord coordinate this life-sustaining function, and how these circuits are altered following injury or disease.

As a principal investigator at the Belford Center for Spinal Cord Injury at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, a central focus of our work is respiratory dysfunction after spinal cord injury (SCI), where breathing complications are the leading cause of morbidity and mortality. Current clinical interventions, such as mechanical ventilation, respiratory muscle training, and diaphragm pacing, can provide temporary support but are often ineffective in restoring natural respiratory motor control. This underscores a critical need for new therapeutic strategies that directly target the underlying neural circuits.

My research aims to enhance the plasticity and function of neural pathways using pharmacological and neuromodulation-based approaches, combined with targeted rehabilitation. To achieve this, my team and I employ a highly interdisciplinary approach, incorporating in vivo neurophysiological recordings in awake and anesthetized animals, non-invasive spinal stimulation techniques, pharmacological interventions, genetic gain and loss-of-function strategies, and targeted rehabilitation protocols. These diverse methodologies enable a comprehensive understanding of respiratory neural circuits and the development of innovative therapeutic strategies for improving breathing in SCI models.

Through this work, our long-term goal is to develop innovative therapies that restore the full complement of breathing behaviors (e.g. room air breathing, cough), reduce reliance on mechanical ventilation, and improve quality of life for individuals with SCIs and other neurological disorders.

Research interests

  • Neural and Glial Circuits
  • Neurotrauma
  • Cellular and Molecular Mechanisms

Education and training

  • BS: Biology, University of California, Irvine, CA
  • PhD: Neuroscience, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN
  • Postdoc: Neuroscience and Physiology, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL

More about my research