Michael C. Henson, Ph.D., Associate Vice President for Research and Dean of the Graduate School / Professor of Agricultural Sciences
Bio
Michael C. Henson was appointed Professor, Associate Vice
President, and Dean of the Graduate School at Morehead State University in July
2012. He holds BS and MS degrees from the
University of Tennessee, the PhD degree from the University of Arkansas, and
further training through a National Research Service Award as NIH Postdoctoral
Fellow in Perinatal Endocrinology at the University of Maryland School of
Medicine in Baltimore, where he later served as Research Assistant
Professor. He then became Assistant
Professor and was later promoted to Associate Professor of Obstetrics and
Gynecology at the Tulane University School of Medicine in New Orleans, where he
was Director of Ob-Gyn Research, Chief of the Section of Perinatal Research,
and Affiliate Scientist at the Tulane National Primate Research Center. During that time he also held adjunct faculty
appointments in the Departments of Physiology and Anatomy, and membership in
the Interdisciplinary Graduate Program in Molecular and Cellular Biology. In 2004, Dr. Henson was honored by Tulane University
as Dissertation Director of the Year and was recognized as a Newcomb College
Fellow and as a Fellow of the Tulane Center for Evidence-Based Global Health for
his contributions to women’s health research.
He later moved to Purdue University Calumet in Hammond, Indiana as
Professor and Head of the Department of Biological Sciences, where he chaired the
University’s Research Board. He then became
Interim Dean of the School of Engineering, Mathematics, and Science and served
in that capacity until coming to MSU.
Dr. Henson’s research in reproductive physiology originally
focused on the roles of microminerals in fertility and then on the
neuroendocrine regulation of lactation and steroid hormone production in cattle
and sheep. The NIH, CDC, and private foundations
supported his later investigations in humans and nonhuman primates at the
University of Maryland and Tulane University Schools of Medicine, which
described estrogen’s role in maintaining progesterone synthesis during
pregnancy via the low-density lipoprotein receptor, as well as the potential
for secondary cholesterol sources to fuel the progesterone production needed to
maintain threatened pregnancies until normal term. Interests in fetal toxicology resulted in
identifying cadmium, a metal that is an industrial pollutant and constituent of
tobacco smoke, as an inhibitor of progesterone synthesis that linked maternal
exposure to premature labor and miscarriage.
His interests also include leptin, which is a protein hormone that
regulates energy utilization and promotes conceptus development. Work in his laboratory defined leptin
dynamics with advancing pregnancy and suggested a role for the hormone in
regulating fetal lung maturation.
Dr. Henson has taught many courses in the life sciences at
undergraduate, graduate, and professional levels and is certified by the National Society of Experiential
Education in the Fundamentals of Theory and Best Practice in Experiential Education,
and in Teaching and Learning Experientially.
He has served as an invited peer reviewer for the NIH, NSF, MRC (UK), Canadian
Diabetes Association, USDA, for over forty scientific journals, on five
editorial boards, and has been honored with membership in Sigma Xi – the
Scientific Research Society. His research
is illustrated in well over one hundred peer-reviewed scientific papers, chapters,
and presentations at scientific meetings, and in book editorships, published
progress reports, funded research grants, invited lectures, and the personal
mentorship of more than fifty graduate trainees.