Principal Investigator

Kevin Haigis 

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Chief Scientific Officer, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
Associate Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School


During his graduate training at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Dr. Haigis studied the somatic genetics of intestinal tumor initiation under the guidance of Dr. William Dove. In his post-doctoral work, Dr. Haigis studied the oncogenic properties of the RAS GTPases in the laboratory of Dr. Tyler Jacks in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Center for Cancer Research (now the David H. Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research).

Contact: kevin_haigis at dfci dot harvard dot edu

 

Executive Support

Jenny Thurber 

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Executive Support Specialist I 
Contact:
jennifer_thurber at dfci dot harvard dot edu
Work: 857-215-0447

 

Senior Scientist / Lab Manager

Deborah Burkhart 

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Education:
S.B. in Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (2003)
S.B. in Literature, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (2003)
Ph.D. in Cancer Biology, Stanford University (2009)

Research Interests:
Throughout my education and training, my main interests have been in the development and study of mouse models of cancer, more specifically using mouse models to understand the molecular mechanisms involved in tumor evolution and the implications for potential therapies.

Contact: deborahl_burkhart at dfci dot harvard dot edu

 

Scientists

MOON HEE YANG 

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Education:
B.S. in Biology, Sookmyung Women's University (2001)
M.S. in Biology, Sookmyung Women's University (2003)
Ph.D. in Biology (Genomics), Sookmyung Women's University (2007)
Research Topic: Regulation of Ras oncogenicity by post translational modification
Research Interests: Cancer biology, cell biology, posttranslational modification, cancer mouse model, CRISPR

Contact: moonhee_yang at dfci dot harvard dot edu

 

OLESJA POPOW 

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Education:
B.S. in Biomedical Science, University of Marburg, Germany (2010)
M.S. in Biomedical Science, University of Groningen, The Netherlands (2012)
Ph.D. in Cancer Biology, University of Dundee, UK (2016)
Research Topic:  Analysis of proteome-wide changes in KRas-mutant cells and tissue by mass spectrometry (Co-advised by Steven Gygi, HMS)
Research Interests: Cancer biology, cell biology, proteomics
Project Description:
Title: Tissue-specific oncogenic activity of KRas.
Oncogenic KRAS mutations occur frequently in some human cancers (e.g. pancreas, colon, lung), but are rarely detected in other cancer types (e.g. liver, kidney, brain). Based on this and other observations we hypothesize that some tissues are sensitive to the oncogenic activity of mutant KRas whereas other tissues are resistant. To identify the tissue-specific mechanisms underlying KRas sensitivity and resistance I am measuring the effects of mutant KRas expression on the (phospho-)proteome by mass spectrometry in a variety of tissues from genetically engineered mice. In addition, I am using proximity labeling and AP-MS to better understand how post-translational modifications and the interactome of KRas contribute to its distinct signaling outputs in different tissue contexts.

Contact: olesja_popow at dfci dot harvard dot edu

 

Postdoctoral Fellows

Elif Kon 

Education:
BS Genetics and Bioengineering, Yeditepe University, Turkey (2012)
MS Biotechnology, Yeditepe University, Turkey (2013)
PhD Biomedical and Pharmaceutical Science, Universite Catholique de Louvain, Belgium (2019)
Research Topic: 
Research Interests: signal transduction and cell biology
Project Description:
Contact:  elif_kon at dfci dot harvard dot edu

 

Stefania Bovo Minto 

Education:
BS in Biomedical Sciences, Barao de Maua University, Brazil (2013)
MS in Pathology, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil (2016)
PhD in Pathology, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil (2021)
Research Topic: Organoid engineering may help in the study of drugs selection to each kind of oncologic patient. Thus, our project aims to discover new possible target genes that could be used in the cancer therapy field.
Research Interests: Organoid engineering, heterozygous point mutations, CRISPR, cancer mouse model, cancer biology.
Project Description: Creating organoid lines carrying heterozygous point mutations in a variety MAPK signaling genes using next generation CRISPR tools.
Contact:  stefania_bovominto at dfci dot harvard dot edu

 

Ryan Collins 

Education:
PhD in Bioinformatics and Integrative Genomics, Harvard University (2022)
AB in Genetics, Dartmouth College (2013)
Research Topic: Inherited genetic modifiers of RAS-driven cancers.
Research Interests: genome biology, structural variation, data science/statistics, gene regulation, genetic variant interpretation, medical genetics
Project Description: Family history--and thus inherited genetics--is one of the strongest risk factors for cancer, with identical twins being ≥16 times more likely to develop RAS-driven cancers than unrelated individuals. At DFCI, I am working with the Haigis, Van Allen, and Gusev laboratories to map the interactions between somatic and inherited genetic risk factors for RAS-driven cancers in DFCI's unique clinical and genomic datasets. By studying these RAS-driven cancers with an interdisciplinary lens grounded in both inherited and somatic genetics, we hope that this work might enable cancer screening tailored to an individual’s inherited risk and may nominate new targets for prevention or treatment.
Contact:  ryan_collins at dfci dot harvard dot edu

 

Michael McGill 

Education:
BA Biology, Saint John's University  (2019)
PhD Genetics and Genomics, Texas A&M University (2023) - including Graduate Certificate in Bioinformatics and Computation Biology
Research Topic: 
Research Interests: 
Project Description:
Contact:  michael_mcgill at dfci dot harvard dot edu

 

Yawen Zheng 

Education:
Ph.D. Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, School of Medicine, Zhejiang University, China (2023).
Joint-Ph.D. Cancer Biology, Radiation Oncology Department, University of Michigan,USA (2020-2022)
Research Topic: Investigating the correlation between oncogenic KRAS and metabolism
Research Interest: Cancer metabolism, cancer biology and cancer immunology

Contact: yawen_zheng at dfci dot harvard dot edu

 

Graduate Students

Kidist Ashami   

Education:
B.A. in Biology, Berea College
Research Topic: The role of tumor microenvironment in metastasis of colorectal cancers.
Research Interest: Cancer Biology, Immuno-oncology, tumor immune microenvironment (TIME), metastatic cancers, Microsatellite instability (MSI)
Project description:
While MSI+ metastatic cancer patients have demonstrated high response rate to immune check point blockage (ICB) therapies, MSS colorectal cancers have long been considered resistant to immunotherapies. Also, approximately 95% of metastatic CRCs are classified as MSS and do not exhibit an immunogenic phenotype. Thus, I am interested in investigating the role of TIME on metastasis of colorectal cancers and in identifying therapeutic targets for combinatorial therapeutic approaches to enhance the efficacy of ICB therapies in MSS metastatic CRCs.

Contact: kidisth_ashami at dfci dot harvard dot edu

 

Amanda May 

Education:
B.S. Duke University - Major Biology (Concentration in Pharmacology), minor in Chemistry (2021)
Research Topic: Cancer Pharmacology and Biochemistry
Research Interest: cancer, drug discovery, pharmacology
Project description:
To attempt to find promising therapeutic targets for the RAS mutant A146T, that will ultimately aid in cancer therapies.

Contact: amandae_may at dfci dot harvard dot edu

 

Research Technicians

Samuel Park 

Education:
B.A. in Biology from Amherst College, (2022)
Contact:
samuel_park at dfci dot harvard dot edu