Cleveland Clinic Lerner Research Institute Logo
Cleveland Clinic Lerner Research Institute Logo
  • About
  • Science
    • Laboratories
    • Office of Research Development
    • Clinical & Translational Research
      Participating in Research
    • Departments
      Biomedical Engineering Cancer Biology Cardiovascular & Metabolic Sciences Florida Research & Innovation Center Genomic Medicine Immunotherapy & Precision Immuno-Oncology
      Infection Biology Inflammation & Immunity Neurosciences Ophthalmic Research Quantitative Health Sciences Translational Hematology & Oncology Research
    • Centers & Programs
      Advanced Musculoskeletal Imaging Angiogenesis Center Cardiovascular Diagnostics & Prevention Computational Life Sciences Consortium for Pain Genitourinary Malignancies Research Genome Center
      Microbiome & Human Health Musculoskeletal Research Northern Ohio Alcohol Center Pathogen & Human Health Research Populations Health Research Quantitative Metabolic Research Therapeutics Discovery
  • Core Services
    • Ohio
      3D Printing Bioimage AnalysisBioRobotics & Mechanical Testing Cell Culture Cleveland Clinic BioRepository Computational Oncology Platform Computing Services Discovery Lab Electron Microscopy Electronics Engineering
      Flow CytometryGenomic Medicine Institute Biorepository Genomics Glassware Histology Hybridoma Immunohistochemistry Immunomonitoring Lab Instrument Refurbishing & Repair Laboratory Diagnostic
      Lerner Research Institute BioRepository Light MicroscopyMechanical Prototyping Microbial Culturing & Engineering Microbial Sequencing & Analytics Resources Media Preparation Molecular Biotechnology Nitinol Polymer Proteomics & Metabolomics Therapeutics Discovery
    • Florida
      Bioinformatics
      Flow Cytometry
      Imaging
  • Education & Training
    • Graduate Programs Molecular Medicine PhD Program Postdoctoral Program
      Research Intensive Summer Experience (RISE) Undergraduate & High School Programs
  • News
  • Careers
    • Faculty Positions Research Associate & Project Staff Postdoctoral Positions Technical & Administrative Engagement & Belonging
  • Donate
  • Contact
  • About
  • Science
    • Scientific Programs
    • Laboratories
    • Office of Research Development
    • Clinical & Translational Research
      Participating in Research
    • Departments
      Biomedical Engineering Cancer Biology Cardiovascular & Metabolic Sciences Florida Research & Innovation Center Genomic Medicine Immunotherapy & Precision Immuno-Oncology
      Infection Biology Inflammation & Immunity Neurosciences Ophthalmic Research Quantitative Health Sciences Translational Hematology & Oncology Research
    • Centers & Programs
      Advanced Musculoskeletal Imaging Angiogenesis Center Cardiovascular Diagnostics & Prevention Computational Life Sciences Consortium for Pain Genitourinary Malignancies Research Genome Center
      Microbiome & Human Health Musculoskeletal Research Northern Ohio Alcohol Center Pathogen & Human Health Research Populations Health Research Quantitative Metabolic Research Therapeutics Discovery
  • Core Services
    • All Cores
    • Ohio
      3D Printing Bioimage Analysis BioRobotics & Mechanical Testing Cell Culture Cleveland Clinic BioRepository Computational Oncology Platform Computing Services Discovery Lab Electron Microscopy Electronics Engineering >
      Flow CytometryGenomic Medicine Institute BiorepositoryGenomics Glassware Histology Hybridoma Immunohistochemistry Immunomonitoring Lab Instrument Refurbishing & Repair Laboratory Diagnostic
      Lerner Research Institute BioRepository Light MicroscopyMechanical Prototyping Microbial Culturing & Engineering Microbial Sequencing & Analytics Resources Media Preparation Molecular Biotechnology Nitinol Polymer Proteomics & Metabolomics Therapeutics Discovery
    • Florida
      Bioinformatics
      Flow Cytometry
      Imaging
  • Education & Training
    • Research Education & Training Center
    • Graduate Programs Molecular Medicine PhD Program Postdoctoral Program
      Research Intensive Summer Experience (RISE) Undergraduate & High School Programs
  • News
  • Careers
    • Faculty Positions Research Associate & Project Staff Postdoctoral Positions Technical & AdministrativeEngagement & Belonging
  • Donate
  • Contact
  • Search

Adeline (Lynn) Hajjar Laboratory

❮Cardiovascular & Metabolic Sciences Adeline (Lynn) Hajjar Laboratory
  • Adeline (Lynn) Hajjar Laboratory
  • Principal Investigator
  • Research
  • Our Team
  • Publications
  • Careers
  • Research News

Principal Investigator

Adeline (Lynn) Hajjar Headshot

Adeline (Lynn) Hajjar, DVM, PhD

Staff
Director of Gnotobiotics Facility
Email: [email protected]
Location: Cleveland Clinic Main Campus

Research

Humans are in constant contact with the collection of microorganisms that live in and on us called microbiota. These interactions are essential to our health although perturbations in the mix of microbiota or the products they produce can lead to disease. How this happens is complex and poorly understood for most diseases; however, the use of germfree mice, i.e. mice that are sterile and totally devoid of all microbial life, has aided in determining mechanisms of action. The Gnotobiotics Facility provides resources and support to perform studies where the role of distinct microbial members can be determined. In the Hajjar Lab, we study how microbiota alter immunity by using germfree mice and introducing different collections of microbiota to determine which ones alter immune responses. Currently, we are studying how the gene mutated in cystic fibrosis selects for different microbiota that then drive changes in barrier function and immune responses.


Biography

Adeline (Lynn) Hajjar, DVM, PhD, is Director of the Gnotobiotics Facility in the Center for Microbiome and Human Health at the Lerner Research Institute. She is also Associate Staff in the Department of Cardiovascular and Metabolic Sciences and Associate Professor of Molecular Medicine in the Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine. 

Dr Hajjar was born in Beirut, Lebanon and initially came to the US in 1975 due to the civil war and moved here permanently during college. She earned her DVM from the University of Illinois, Urbana, and her PhD from the Department of Microbiology at the University of Washington, Seattle. She remained at the University of Washington for postdoctoral training in the Department of Immunology and established an independent laboratory in 2009 in the Department of Comparative Medicine. She also helped establish and then became the director of the gnotobiotics core at the University of Washington, before joining the Cleveland Clinic in 2018. Dr Hajjar has over 20 years of research experience concentrating in areas of Toll-like receptor biology and inflammatory responses as well as mouse models of infection, including Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, Yersinia pestis, and Bordetella pertussis, with a particular interest in overcoming mouse-human differences in innate immunity by creation of humanized mouse models. In addition to her service duties, she currently maintains a small research laboratory investigating the role of the gut microbiome in cystic fibrosis.

In her free time, Lynn loves to eat and can be found searching for that perfect poke bowl. She also enjoys bird-watching and going for walks with her dog and wife, and even one cat in a stroller.


Education & Professional Highlights

Appointed
2018

 

Graduate School - University of Washington
Microbiology
Seattle, WA USA
1995

Residency - University of Washington
Seattle, WA USA
1992

Veterinary School - University of Illinois
Urbana, IL USA
1988

Undergraduate - University of Illinois
Urbana, IL USA
1986

"CIMER Trained Mentor" indicates the principal investigator has completed mentorship training based on curriculum from the Center for the Improvement of Mentored Experiences in Research, aimed at advancing mentoring relationships and promoting cultural change in research.

 

Research

Research

Research Overview

Host-microbiota interactions are an indisputable component of homeostasis and uncovering how the host selects for a distinct microbiota as well as how the microbiota alters the host inflammatory responses has been a recent research direction for our lab. By performing fecal-microbiota transplants (FMT) into our germfree cystic fibrosis (CF) mouse model compared to non-CF mice we demonstrated that the CF gut selects for unique microbiota and that these in turn alter the balance of Th17/Treg immune cells. We aim to define the mechanisms and consequences of this selection, to determine whether and how to alter the selection, and ultimately to develop new treatment approaches aimed at manipulating the microbiota to lessen the consequences of pathogenic inflammation in CF.

Our Team

Our Team

Publications

Selected Publications

View publications for Adeline (Lynn) Hajjar, DVM, PhD
(Disclaimer: This search is powered by PubMed, a service of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. PubMed is a third-party website with no affiliation with Cleveland Clinic.)


CFTR dysregulation drives active selection of the gut microbiome. Meeker SM, Mears KS, Sangwan N, Brittnacher MJ, Weiss EJ, Treuting PM, Tolley N, Pope CE, Hager KR, Vo AT, Paik J, Frevert CW, Hayden HS, Hoffman LR, Miller SI, Hajjar AM. PLoS Pathogens 16(1):e1008251, 2020. PMC6994172

 

Ferreting out the role of infection in cystic fibrosis lung disease.Hoffman LR, Hajjar AM. Am J Respir Crit Care Med197:1243-1244, 2018.

 

Expression level of human TLR4 rather than sequence is the key determinant of LPS responsiveness. Hajjar AM, Ernst RK, Yi J, Yam CS, Miller SI. PLoS One12(10):e0186308, 2017. PMC5636155

 

Bordetella pertussis lipid A recognition by Toll-like receptor 4 and MD-2 is dependent on distinct charged and uncharged interfaces. Maeshima N, Evans-Atkinson T, Hajjar AM, Fernandez RC. J Biol Chem290:13440-13453, 2015. PMC4505591

 

Humanized TLR7/8 expression drives proliferative multisystemic histiocytosis in C57BL/6 mice.Snyder JM, Treuting PM, Nagy L, Yam C, Yi J, Brasfield A, Nguyen LPA, Hajjar AM. PLoS One9(9):e107257, 2014. PMC4168129

 

Temporal and anatomical host resistance to chronic Salmonella infection is quantitatively dictated by Nramp1 and influenced by host genetic background. Loomis WP, Johnson ML, Brasfield A, Blanc MP, Yi J, Miller SI, Cookson BT, Hajjar AM. PLoS One9(10):e111763, 2014.PMC4211889

 

Humanized TLR4/MD-2 mice reveal LPS recognition differentially impacts susceptibility to Yersinia pestis and Salmonella enterica. Hajjar AM, Ernst RK, Fortuno III ES, Brasfield AS, Yam CS, Newlon LA, Kollmann TR, Miller SI, Wilson CB. PLoS Pathog, 8(10):e1002963, 2012. PMC3469661

 

Human Toll-like receptor 4 recognizes host-specific LPS modifications. Hajjar AM*, Ernst RK*, Tsai JH, Wilson CB§, Miller SI§. Nature Immunol3:354-359, 2002. *contributed equally, §shared senior authorship.

Careers

Careers

Training at Lerner Research Institute

Our education and training programs offer hands-on experience at one of the nationʼs top hospitals. Travel, publish in high impact journals and collaborate with investigators to solve real-world biomedical research questions.

Learn More

Research News

Research News

...
$12M Grant to Study Gut-Heart Disease Link

The grant will explore the critical link between microbial pathways and the development of cardio-metabolic diseases.



Subscribe to get the latest research news in your inbox.

About Lerner

About Us Careers Contact Us Donate People Directory

Science

Clinical & Translational Research Core Services Departments, Centers & Programs Laboratories Research News

Education & Training

Graduate Programs Molecular Medicine PhD Program Postdoctoral Program RISE Program Undergraduate & High School Programs

Site Information & Policies

Search Site Site Map Privacy Policy Social Media Policy

9500 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio 44195 | © 2025 Lerner Research Institute