Vascular Surgery Resident
University of Michigan
Ann Arbor, Michigan
Dr. Mangum completed his undergraduate training with a BS in Biology at Davidson College in 2010. Afterwards, he attended medical school at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he was a part of the MSTP program. There, he earned his PhD in Pathology in 2017 and completed his dissertation research on genetic and epigenetic regulation of vascular smooth muscle cell differentiation. In 2019, he graduated from UNC School of Medicine and matched into the Integrated Vascular Surgery Residency Program at the University of Michigan, where he is currently a 4th year vascular surgery resident in his first year of research fellowship. His clinical interests include abdominal aortic aneurysms, mid-aortic syndrome, and genetic arteriopathies. His research interests include transcriptional gene regulatory networks underlying AAA formation, atherosclerosis, and restenosis, Smooth muscle cell differentiation, Macrophage-Smooth muscle cell interactions, Epigenetics in vascular disease, Functional characterization of GWAS variants, and Transcription factor protein-protein interactions.
The STAT3-SETDB2 Axis Dictates NFκB-mediated Inflammation in Macrophages During Wound Repair
Wednesday, June 19, 2024
9:37 AM – 9:45 AM CT