
Roger Keith Reeves
Professor in SurgeryOverview
Dr. Reeves obtained his Ph.D. at the University of Alabama-Birmingham studying dendritic cell biology in lentivirus infections, then completed his postdoctoral training in lentivirus vaccinology, natural killer cells, and innate immunity at the New England Primate Research Center, Massachusetts General Hospital, and Harvard Medical School (HMS). He later became faculty at HMS and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center through the rank of Associate Professor. Upon being recruited to Duke University in 2021, Dr. Reeves became a tenured Professor in the Department of Surgery and the Department of Pathology and Director in the Duke Center for Human Systems Immunology. He currently serves as Editor-in-Chief of the journal AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses and is the immediate past chair of the NIH HIV Immunopathogenesis and Vaccine Development study section. Dr. Reeves also previously sat on NIH F13 fellowship study sections, has served on the HVTN ESI Advisory board for over a decade, and currently is Director of the Duke Center for AIDS Research Developmental Core, collectively mentoring dozens of trainees at all levels. Dr. Reeves’ research has been continuously supported by NIH for well over 15 years, having served as PI on multiple R and P grants in addition to participating in consortia grants such as the HIV Vaccine Trials Network and BEAT-HIV Delaney Cure Collaboratory. Considered a global expert in natural killer cell biology, his research has provided some of the most detailed characterizations of NK cell responses against viruses, and his team was the first to identify memory and memory-like NK cells in humans and nonhuman primates. With over 100 publications in the field and over 60 as senior author, Dr. Reeves’ group continues to focus on cutting-edge approaches to harness NK cells in the context of vaccines and immunotherapeutics for HIV, CMV, HCV, influenza, SARS-CoV-2, congenital CMV, and cancer.
Positions
Professor in Surgery in the School of Medicine
2021 School of Medicine
Director, Center for Human Systems Immunology in Innovation and Comparative Immunobiology in the School of Medicine
2021 School of Medicine
Professor of Pathology in the School of Medicine
2022 School of Medicine
Member of the Duke Cancer Institute in the School of Medicine
2025 School of Medicine
Member of the Duke Human Vaccine Institute in the School of Medicine
2023 School of Medicine
Education
B.S., Mississippi State University 2002
2002 Mississippi State University
Ph.D., University of Alabama, Birmingham 2007
2007 University of Alabama, Birmingham
Associate Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School 2017 - 2021
2021 Harvard Medical School
Adjunct Faculty, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, CENTER FOR VIROLOGY AND VACCINE RESEARCH 2021 - 2030
2030 Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center