People
Robin Carrell, PhD
Emeritus Professor of Haematology
Trinity College, University of Cambridge
Cambridge, England
Dr. Robin Carrell is a medical researcher from New Zealand whose studies, defined and named the serpins, a family of proteins that control key functions in life. With colleagues, he elucidated the structure of more than 20 serpins and demonstrated how their ability to change their shape modifies their function. He showed how this enables serpins to modulate cellular functions, most notably in the blood, including control of coagulation, carriage of hormones and regulation of blood pressure. He also demonstrated how mutations in serpins that affect their ability to change shape predispose humans to a range of diseases, including emphysema, thrombosis, and hypertension. The demonstration that the same mutations in a brain-specific serpin caused neurodegeneration has opened new insights into the molecular pathology of the late-onset dementias. Robin’s earlier work in Christchurch, New Zealand, on the stabilization of the haemoglobin molecule led to the cofounding in 1985 of biotechnology company Canterbury Scientific. A year later, he won the Hector Medal of the Royal Society of New Zealand, having been elected a Fellow (FRSNZ) in 1980.
Angie Carreno Martinez, MD
Medical School: Universidad Industrial de Santander
Graduation Year: 2019
Subspecialty: Genetics
Andrew Carroll, MD
Newborn Medicine
Medical school: Creighton University
Residency: Saint Louis University School of Medicine
Jodi Carter, MSN, RN, CPNP
Nurse Practitioner, Allergy and Pulmonary Medicine
- Phone: 314-454-2694
- Email: carter_j@kids.wustl.edu
Adem Cemerlic, MD
Medical School: University of Sarajevo
Graduation Year: 2021


