In the summer of 2017, Xiaorong Liu came to the University of Virginia as an assistant professor of biology and psychology, though it was not her first time on Grounds.
In room 264 of Gilmer Hall, where she taught her first undergraduate psychobiology course, she recalls sticking labels on the same lab benches 20 years earlier as a graduate student.
In 1997, Liu received her doctorate from UVA as part of a lab studying how retinal neurons in the eye coordinate with circadian activity, passing visual information to the brain. Over the last two decades, Liu has continued studying the retina, a piece of tissue in the back of the eye responsible for processing visual information.
Following her doctorate, Liu conducted post-doctoral research at the University of California, San Francisco, from 2003 to 2007, then moved on to Northwestern University as a research assistant professor in neurobiology and physiology, where she began her own laboratory in 2008 studying the development and function of the visual system. Gradually shifting from development to disease, Liu started a tenure-track position in ophthalmology at Northwestern in 2011, where she expanded her research to investigate the degeneration of the visual system in mouse models due to glaucoma.
Now an associate professor going on five years of research and collaboration at UVA, Liu has published six research articles this year alone, the of which was featured in the Journal of Neuroscience. As part of a trifecta of technological development, animal models and clinical application, Liu has established a new retinal imaging technique that will enable earlier diagnosis of the world’s leading cause of irreversible blindness.
Specifically, Liu is looking at glaucoma, a disease caused by pressure buildup in the eye resulting in the death of retinal ganglion cells, the neurons that reside on the retina’s inner surface and are responsible for transmitting light to the rest of the brain. The disease, which affects up to 10% to 15% of the adult population, initially causes black spots in one’s vision where neurons have died, and progresses toward tunnel vision and eventual blindness. Unlike other eye conditions that can be fixed by a transplant, such as cataracts or cornea damage, retinal ganglion cell death is irreversible.
“Neural damage is probably the most impactful damage to your vision,” Liu said. “When neurons die, they die. It is like brain damage, and you cannot rebuild your brain.”

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