He was the Alter E. Geller Professor for Research in Immunology at Duke University[1] Tedder received his Ph.D. in molecular cell biology from the University of Alabama in 1984 and completed his postdoctoral training as a research fellow in pathology at Harvard Medical School.
He was a faculty member at Dana–Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard Medical School from 1985 to 1998 before joining Duke University in 1993 as its founding chairman of immunology.
[2] Tedder studies the structure and function of B lymphocyte cell surface molecules that regulate B cell function, activation, and signal transduction.
He currently has 401 total publications and 25 issued patents relating to B cells and their products, including CD19, CD20, CD22, CD83, and L-selectin.
The drug Tedder developed at Cellective Therapeutics, inebilizumab,[5] has now been approved for NMSOD use in the United States[6] under the clinical name Uplizna.