Overview
| Specialty | Internal Medicine |
|---|---|
| Subspecialty | Nephrology |
| Gender | Male |
| paul.klotman@mssm.edu | |
| Education and Training | MD, Indiana University |
| B.S., University of Michigan | |
| Chief Medical Resident, Duke University Medical Center | |
| Residency, Internal Medicine, Duke University Hospital | |
| Fellowship, Nephrology, Duke University Hospital | |
| Awards | 2009 Special Recognition Award The Mount Sinai Medical Center |
Paul Klotman, M.D., Chairman of the Samuel Bronfman Department of Medicine and Murray M. Rosenberg Professor of Medicine is one of the world's leading experts on the actions of HIV in the kidney. His achievements in research include developing the first small animal model of HIV associated nephropathy (HIVAN) using transgenic techniques, demonstrating that HIV directly causes HIVAN, discovering that HIV can be found in human renal epithelium, proving that the kidney is a reservoir for replicating virus and that the renal epithelium serves as a compartment distinct from peripheral blood.
As Chief of the Division of Nephrology at Mount Sinai from 1994 through 2001 he led the Division through a period of growth including greatly expanding its research portfolio, recruiting outstanding new faculty and enhancing the fellowship program.
In 2001 he was selected to be Chairman of the Samuel Bronfman Department of Medicine. Under his leadership, the Department has risen to be among the top twenty in the country in terms of funding from the National Institutes of Health, redesigned the curriculum of the residency program to create one of the top medical residencies in the country, created many clinical programs to bring state-of-the-art care to patients, and branched out into new areas in both research and patient care.
As a teacher and mentor, Dr. Klotman has also been extremely successful. He has trained 20 clinical fellows, postdoctoral fellows, and students in his laboratory since 1984 and his trainees include three division chiefs, several full professors and many funded investigators in academic programs and industry.
His laboratory has received awards from the American Federation for Clinical Research and he has been elected to both the American Society of Clinical Investigation and the Association of American Physicians. He is on the editorial boards of national and international journals and has served on and chaired numerous study sections including those from the National Institutes of Health, the American Heart Association, the National Kidney Foundation, and the VA research service.
Dr. Klotman received his M.D. from Indiana University and then trained in medicine and nephrology at Duke University Medical Center. He remained at Duke as a faculty member, rising to the rank of Associate Professor of Medicine before moving to the NIH where he became Chief of the Molecular Medicine Section in the Laboratory of Developmental Biology and later Chief of the Viral Pathogenesis Laboratory in the NIDR/NIH. In 1994, he joined the faculty at Mount Sinai School of Medicine.
Paul Klotman, MD is actively engaged in Panthera, an organization dedicated to the conservation of wild cats and was recently honored for his contributions to cat conservation at a Panthera reception. Find out more in Inside Mount Sinai.

