Michael Kotlikoff
American veterinarian and academic
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Michael I. Kotlikoff is an American biomedical researcher and veterinarian who has been the president of Cornell University since March 2025. He served as interim President from July 1, 2024. He was the provost of Cornell from 2015 to 2024. Since 1986, his academic research on cardiovascular biology, optogenetics, mouse genetics, and ion channel function has been funded by the National Institutes of Health.
University of California, Davis (PhD)
Michael Kotlikoff | |
|---|---|
| 15th President of Cornell University | |
| Assumed office July 1, 2024 Interim July 1, 2024 – March 21, 2025 | |
| Preceded by | Martha Pollack |
Acting | |
| In office March 6, 2016 – April 25, 2016 | |
| Preceded by | Elizabeth Garrett |
| Succeeded by | Hunter R. Rawlings III |
| Personal details | |
| Education | University of Pennsylvania (BA, VMD) University of California, Davis (PhD) |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Anatomy and physiology |
| Thesis | Dynamic mechanical properties of the canine trachea in situ (impedance, propagation) (1984) |
Early life and education
Kotlikoff is Jewish.[1] He received a Bachelor of Arts with a major in literature in 1973 and a Doctor of Veterinary Medicine in 1981, both from the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. He received a Ph.D. in physiology from the University of California, Davis, in 1984.[2][3]
Career
University of Pennsylvania
From 1985 to 2000, Kotlikoff worked as a faculty member at the University of Pennsylvania's Veterinary and Medical Schools.[citation needed] From 1996 to 2000, he served as chairman of the university's Department of Animal Biology and director of its Center for Animal Transgenesis and Germ Cell Research from 1998 to 2000.[citation needed] His work helped establish the identity and function of ion channel proteins in muscle cells, and his laboratory helped create and progressively improve Green Fluroescent Protein (GFP)-based optogenetic sensor molecules, termed GCaMPs, and created the first transgenic mouse expressing an optogenetic sensor.[citation needed]
Cornell University
In 2000, he was recruited by Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, to chair the newly formed Department of Biomedical Sciences, and to chair its Mammalian Genomics Initiative.[citation needed] As chair, Kotlikoff expanded departmental research, oversaw the university's strategy to develop core mouse facilities, and established and oversaw the university transgenesis facility.[citation needed] In 2007, Kotlikoff was appointed dean of Cornell's College of Veterinary Medicine, where he maintained its research laboratory, raised funds, oversaw the renovation of the college's main buildings, expanded research programs, partnered with City University of Hong Kong to establish the Jockey Club College of Veterinary Medicine and Life Sciences, the first accredited veterinary college in Asia. He also supported the expansion of clinical programs, including establishing Cornell's first community-based academic referral practices, Cornell University Veterinary Specialists, and Ruffian Equine Center.[citation needed]
Kotlikoff's laboratory currently works on cardiovascular biology and heart repair, and he leads a National Heart Lung and Blood Resource, the Cornell Heart, Lung, Blood Resource for Optogenetic Mouse Signaling,[4] which develops combinatorial mouse resources for in vivo biology. His laboratory reported development of the first mouse strain to express genetically=encoded Ca2+ sensing molecules and the first in vivo recording of heart cell calcium signaling. In 2007, Kotlikoff's lab demonstrated the limited lineage potential of c-kit+ heart cells using a mouse line they developed expressing green fluorescent proteins in c-kit+ cells.[citation needed] This finding contradicted claims that c-kit+ precursor cells in the heart can act as heart stem cells after injury or isolation and transplantation.[citation needed] Numerous subsequent studies have confirmed these findings.[citation needed] In 2012 they showed that neonatal mammalian heart cells do have the potential to support neomyogenesis following heart infarction shortly after birth.[5]
In 2015, following an international search, Cornell president Elizabeth Garrett announced Kotlikoff's appointment as Cornell's 16th provost.[6] During Garrett's illness and following her death, Kotlikoff served as Cornell's acting president until April 2016, when Hunter R. Rawlings III was appointed as the university's interim president.[7][8] As provost, Kotlikoff oversaw the establishment of Cornell's Samuel Curtis Johnson Graduate School of Management, Cornell Computing and Information Science program, Cornell Jeb E. Brooks School of Public Policy, the Cornell Tech campus on Roosevelt Island, reorganization of the social sciences into multi-college departments, and the Cornell Veterans Initiative. In 2020, Kotlikoff and then-President Martha E. Pollack led Cornell's response to the COVID-19 pandemic, which included a university-wide diagnostic program driven by epidemiologic data, and resulted in one of the open residential campuses being able to host in-person classes and experiencing low level of infection.
President of Cornell University
On July 1, 2024, following the retirement of Cornell University president Martha E. Pollack as the university's 14th president, Kotlikoff began a two-year term as interim president of Cornell University.[9][10]
On March 21, 2025, Kotlikoff was formally appointed as Cornell University's 15th president.[11]
On November 7, after Cornell's federal funding was cut earlier in the year, Kotlikoff came to an agreement with the Trump administration for $30 million in exchange of the return of federal funding and ending several civil rights complaints against the university. He also agreed to invest an additional $30 million "in research programs that will directly benefit U.S. farmers through lower costs of production and enhanced efficiency, including but not limited to programs that incorporate AI and robotics, such as Digital Agriculture and Future Farming Technologies." [12]
Driving incident
After an organized debate on the Israel-Palestine conflict at Cornell on April 30, 2026, featuring guest speaker Norman Finkelstein, Kotlikoff was questioned by students on the walk from Goldwin Smith Hall to the parking lot at Day Hall. Students continued questioning him as he entered his car. Kotlikoff's vehicle accelerated into one student and, after hitting him, turned and rolled over another demonstrator's foot.[13] In a later university statement, forwarded to current students, faculty, and staff,[14] Kotlikoff claimed that students were "banging on [the car's] windows" and "shouting". Video evidence published by the Cornell Daily Sun showed no instances of either action.[15]
The Cornell American Association of University Professors Chapter called for an independent investigation.[16] The executive board of the Cornell Graduate Students Union and its affiliated labor union, the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America Local 2300 called on Kotlikoff to resign.[17] An investigation conducted by the Cornell Board of Trustees concluded that no criminal charges were merited against Kotlikoff or the students involved.[18]