
Biography
Geraldine earned a B.A. in Human Developmental and Regenerative Biology at Harvard University in 2014 and continued to work and teach at the Harvard Stem Cell Institute for two years before joining the Wellcome Trust PhD programme in Cell Therapies and Regenerative Medicine at King's in 2016. She is currently studying novel interactions between innate lymphoid cells and the intestinal epithelium in an in vitro hydrogel-organoid co-culture system, a collaborative project with Dr Eileen Gentleman.
Research

Neves Lab
The Neves lab aims understand how the different cellular compartments of the gut communicate with each other, to then be able to direct those conversations to promote gut homeostasis.

Gentleman Lab
The Gentleman lab works at the interface of stem cell biology, chemistry and materials science to develop innovative biomaterials for regenerative medicine.
News
Gut and lung organoids open the door to innate immune cell therapies
King’s researchers have found an innovative approach for expanding and maturing innate immune cells in a dish.

King's College London student named 2021 Schmidt Science Fellow
Host-Microbiome Interactions student Geraldine Jowett has been selected for the fourth Schmidt Science Fellows cohort of postdoctoral fellows.

Rare immune cells drive gut repair, but can tip toward cancer or fibrosis in inflammatory bowel disease
Scientists from King’s College London have discovered an unexpected tissue reparative role for a rare immune cell type in the gut.

Research

Neves Lab
The Neves lab aims understand how the different cellular compartments of the gut communicate with each other, to then be able to direct those conversations to promote gut homeostasis.

Gentleman Lab
The Gentleman lab works at the interface of stem cell biology, chemistry and materials science to develop innovative biomaterials for regenerative medicine.
News
Gut and lung organoids open the door to innate immune cell therapies
King’s researchers have found an innovative approach for expanding and maturing innate immune cells in a dish.

King's College London student named 2021 Schmidt Science Fellow
Host-Microbiome Interactions student Geraldine Jowett has been selected for the fourth Schmidt Science Fellows cohort of postdoctoral fellows.

Rare immune cells drive gut repair, but can tip toward cancer or fibrosis in inflammatory bowel disease
Scientists from King’s College London have discovered an unexpected tissue reparative role for a rare immune cell type in the gut.
