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Singhvi
Aakanksha Singhvi, PhD

Aakanksha Singhvi, PhD

  • Associate Professor, Basic Sciences Division, Fred Hutch

Background

Dr. Aakanksha Singhvi studies glial cells, which are critical to the correct functioning of our nervous system. Every time a neuron connects to another neuron, a glial cell is there to make sure that signals transmit properly between them. Glia themselves also communicate with neurons and influence their shape and activity. Disruptions in communication between neurons and glia underpin many neurological disorders, including Alzheimer’s and autism. Dr. Singhvi seeks to understand the molecules involved in glia-neuron communication, and how glia influence neuron shape and function, and, ultimately, animal behavior.

Education

Postdoctoral, Glia-neuron interactions, The Rockefeller University

Developmental Neurobiology, University of California, Berkeley

MSc Fellow, National Center for Biological Sciences, India

Biochemistry, St. Xavier’s College, Gujarat University, India

Research Interests

Molecular mechanisms of glia-neuron interactions in the nervous system.

Current Projects

How glia and neurons communicate with each other to regulate sensory perception, neuronal physiology, neural circuit activity, memory formation and animal behavior

To map glia-neuron interactions at a molecular and mechanistic level, in health and disease

"New data is the best thrill ever! I will drop everything for that. And if it’s not something we expected, that’s even more exciting!"

— Dr. Aakanksha Singhvi

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Stories

All news
Fred Hutch senior staff scientist honored by Genetics Society of America Dr. Irini Topalidou receives first-of-its-kind mentorship award June 18, 2026
Mapping molecules of an unsung brain cell Fred Hutch researchers create a gene-expression map of glial cells in tiny worms, adding the missing component that completes for the first time an atlas of the entire nervous system of a multicellular adult animal at the molecular level July 1, 2025
Kuni Foundation awards $7M to drive adult oncology research forward Vancouver, Washington-based foundation supports innovative early-stage research on new potential therapies June 30, 2025