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Peter K. Sorger, Ph.D.,
Chairman
Douglas Lauffenburger, Ph.D.
Dan R. Littman, M.D., Ph.D.
Gavin MacBeath, Ph.D.
James D. Marks, M.D., Ph.D.
Barrett Rollins, M.D., Ph.D.
Louis Weiner, M.D.
Michael Yaffe, M.D., Ph.D.
Peter
K. Sorger, Ph.D. is a Professor of Systems Biology at Harvard Medical School
and holds a joint appointment in MIT’s Dept. of Biological Engineering and Center for Cancer Research. A former Marshall and Markey scholar, he holds an A.B, from
Harvard College and Ph.D. from the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology,
and Trinity College, Cambridge, UK. Dr. Sorger's lab consists of 26 graduate students, postdoctoral fellows and staff
scientists involved in both computational and experimental biology. One of
the long term goals of the lab's research is to identify molecular lesions that cause genomic instability and promote tumorigenesis, to determine their frequency in normal and cancerous cells and to develop improved means to kill diseased tissues. A second goal in the Sorger Lab is to understand the pathways of mammalian cell
signaling from a systems – rather than a component by component – perspective. Dr. Sorger has published over 70 scientific
papers and holds several patents. Co-founder and first Director
of the MIT Computational and Systems Biology Program (CSBi), Dr.
Sorger is also a member of the Broad Institute, the MIT Center for
Cancer Research and the Board of Directors of Applied Precision,
LLC.
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Douglas
A. Lauffenburger, Ph.D. is Uncas & Helen Whitaker
Professor of Bioengineering and Director of the Biological Engineering
Division at MIT, and also holds appointments in the Department of
Biology and the Department of Chemical Engineering. Dr. Lauffenburger's
BS and PhD degrees are in chemical engineering from the University
of Illinois and the University of Minnesota, in 1975 and 1979 respectively.
His major research interests are in cell engineering: the fusion
of engineering with molecular cell biology. A central focus of his
research program is in receptor-mediated cell communication and
intracellular signal transduction, with emphasis on development
of predictive computational models derived from quantitative experimental
studies, for cell cue/signal/response relationships important in
pathophysiology with application to drug discovery and development.
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Daniel
Littman, M.D., Ph.D. is a Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Investigator and Coordinator of the Molecular Pathogenesis program
at the Skirball Institute for Biomolecular Research at New York
University School of Medicine. He was formerly Professor of Microbiology
and Immunology at the University of California, San Francisco. He
holds M.D. and Ph.D. degrees from Washington University in St. Louis.
His research interests are in the areas of T lymphocyte development,
lymphoid organogenesis, and HIV pathogenesis. He has applied mouse
genetic approaches towards gaining insights into each of these areas.
His contributions have led to new therapeutic approaches for AIDS
and autoimmune diseases. Dr. Littman is a Fellow of the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences and is a Member of the National Academy
of Sciences. He was awarded the 2004 New York City Mayor's Award
for Excellence in Science and Technology.
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Gavin
MacBeath, Ph.D. is an Assistant Professor in the Department
of Chemistry and Chemical Biology at Harvard University. Dr. MacBeath
received his B.Sc.(Hons.) degree in Genetics from the University
of Manitoba in 1991 and his Ph.D. in Macromolecular and Cellular
Structure and Chemistry from The Scripps Research Institute in 1997,
training with Professor Donald Hilvert. Over the past four years,
Dr. MacBeath has pioneered the development of protein microarray
technology and is currently using this technology to gain a more
integrated understanding of how protein networks control complex
biological processes. He is also interfacing protein microarray
technology with high-throughput screening to extend the field of
chemical genomics. Dr. MacBeath is an associate member of the Broad
Institute of MIT and Harvard and is a founding member of Merrimack
Pharmaceuticals.
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James
D. Marks, M.D., Ph.D. is Director of the Medical-Surgical
Intensive Care Unit, San Francisco General Hospital and Professor
of Anesthesia and Pharmaceutical Chemistry at University of California,
San Francisco. He holds a Ph.D. from the MRC Laboratory of Molecular
Biology, Cambridge, UK on the making of human antibody fragments
in bacteria and bacteriophage. His research interests include the
development of phage display technology for production of human
antibodies and the development of techniques for increasing antibody
affinity. He has published more than 75 scientific papers and acts
as a referee for top-ranking international journals including Nature
Biotechnology, Nature Medicine, Journal of Molecular Biology, Gene,
Blood, and Human Antibodies and Hybridomas. Dr. Marks is the co-inventor
on 4 major phage display patents.
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Barrett
Rollins, M.D., Ph.D. is a Chief Scientific Officer
at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (DFCI) and Professor of
Medicine at Harvard Medical School. Dr. Rollins received his MD
in 1979 and PhD in 1980 from Case Western Reserve University and
completed his internship and residency in internal medicine at Beth
Israel Hospital, Boston. He served a clinical fellowship in medical
oncology at DFCI and a postdoctoral research fellowship with Dr.
Charles Stiles. Since joining DFCI in 1989, Dr. Rollins has worked
in the area of white blood cell trafficking and maintained a clinical
interest in lung cancer.
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Louis Weiner, M.D. joined Fox Chase Cancer Center in 1984. Since 1994 he has been Chairman, Department of Medical Oncology, and has been a Senior Member in the Division of Medical Sciences at Fox Chase Cancer Center since 1995. In 2002 he was named the G. Morris Dorrance Jr. Endowed Chair in Medical Science, and was appointed as Fox Chase’s first Vice President for Translational Research. Dr. Weiner’s research centers on the use of antibody-based molecules to target tumors, with emphasis on understanding the principles of tumor targeting, and the use of antibodies to initiate host immune-mediated tumor lysis. Dr. Weiner received a B.A. with Honors in Biology from the University of Pennsylvania in 1973, and the M.D. from Mount Sinai School of Medicine in 1977.
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Michael
Yaffe, M.D., Ph.D. is
an Associate Professor of Biology and Biological Engineering at MIT's Center
for Cancer Research. His research focuses on the regulation of cell signal transduction systems relevant
to inflammation and human cancer. Dr. Yaffe has concentrated
on identifying novel modular domains that control the assembly of multi-protein signaling complexes, and
in the development of bioinformatics tools for analyzing proteomic
data. Dr. Yaffe received his M.D. in 1989 and a Ph.D. in Biophysical
Chemistry in 1987 from Case Western
Reserve University.
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