I am a researcher in T-cell biology and development of new methods (bioinformatics algorithms and wet lab protocols), with special emphasis on immunotherapy and CAR T cells.
Our research group tries to understand how T cells function, in health and disease. T cells are particularly important against cancer, and genetically modified T cells (CAR T cells) is a promising therapy. We use our maps of gene regulation to develop new ways of programming T cells to fight diseases such as cancer.
To our aid we use modern unbiased measurement methods ("multi-omics" and single-cell) that helps us collect large amounts of information without deciding in advance which genes we should look at. As such we hope to obtain insights not possible with traditional targeted methods. Furthermore we use modern synthetic biology such as the CRISPR-Cas9 technology to reprogram genes, to be able to tell in detail how they function. We hope the genes we discover will be the key to hard-to-cure diseases such as cancer.
See our website for more information as well as the MIMS website
Bioinformatics and advanced molecular biology