Department of Otolaryngology

Christopher L. Cunningham, PhD

  • Assistant Professor

Dr. Cunningham received his Ph.D. in Neuroscience from University of California, Davis, and completed postdoctoral fellowships in Neuroscience at The Scripps Research Institute and Johns Hopkins University. He is currently an Assistant Professor in the Department of Otolaryngology and the Pittsburgh Hearing Research Center at the University of Pittsburgh.

Education & Training

  • Brigham Young University, Idaho, 2008 - BS
  • University of California, Davis, 2013 - PhD
  • The Scripps Research Institute, 2016 - Postdoctoral
  • Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 2021 - Postdoctoral

Academic Affiliation

Department of Otolaryngology

Representative Publications

Research Interests

The Cunningham Lab is interested in understanding the neural and sensory biology of the vertebrate auditory system. Many unique and highly specialized proteins with exquisitely precise subcellular localizations are critical for each step of sound processing. Hearing loss is the most common sensory deficit, and multiple forms of hearing loss involve aberrant proteostasis—improper assembly, trafficking, and/or regulation of key auditory proteins.  We utilize mouse models of human deafness for our experiments. The similarities between the rodent and human auditory systems allow for a panoply of experimental manipulations that aim to uncover basic biological mechanisms and translational insights relevant for human health. The lab utilizes cutting-edge techniques including the generation and analysis of novel genetic mouse models combined with biochemistry, molecular biology, histology, viral vectors and high-resolution fluorescent microscopic imaging. Ultimately, we hope to utilize our findings toward the development of new therapies for hearing loss and deafness. To this end, we are developing gene therapy strategies that can treat hearing loss.