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INFORMATION FOR

    Ping Mu, PhD

    Associate Professor of Urology
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    Additional Titles

    Chief, Division of Urologic Sciences, Urology

    Mu Lab

    Our lab is dedicated to uncovering the molecular mechanisms that drive resistance to targeted and immune therapies in prostate and other cancers.

    About

    Titles

    Associate Professor of Urology

    Chief, Division of Urologic Sciences, Urology

    Biography

    Dr. Ping Mu is the Division Chief of Urological Sciences and an Associate Professor with tenure in the Department of Urology and Department of Pathology at Yale School of Medicine and a member of the Yale Cancer Center. His lab focuses on uncovering the molecular mechanisms driving resistance to targeted and immune therapies in prostate and other cancers. The lab also pioneers innovative therapeutic strategies to overcome these resistances, employing state-of-the-art techniques, including 3D-cultured organoids, single-cell sequencing, and spatial transcriptomics. Ping's recent work has been featured in top-tier journals such as Science (2017), Cancer Cell (2020, 2023), Cancer Discovery (2024), Nature Cancer (2022), Nature Genetics (2015), and Oncogene (2024).

    Ping earned his Ph.D. in Biomedical Sciences from Weill Medical College of Cornell University, followed by postdoctoral training under Dr. Charles L. Sawyers at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. In mid-2018, he established his own independent laboratory at UT Southwestern as an assistant professor in the Department of Molecular Biology. His remarkable contributions to the cancer research field led to his rapid promotion to tenured associate professor before moving his lab to Yale.

    Throughout his career, Ping has been the recipient of numerous prestigious awards and grants, including three NIH R01 Awards (one of which was an R37 MERIT Award), the NIH K99/R00 Pathway to Independence Award, a DoD Idea Development Award, a DoD Idea Expansion Award, two CPRIT awards, as well as distinguished honors like the AACR NextGen Star Award, the Prostate Cancer Foundation Young Investigator Award, the Welch Foundation Research Award, the SBUR Young Investigator Award, and the SAU Rising Star Award.

    When not immersed in science, Ping channels his creativity into a wide range of hobbies—from 3D printing, soccer, and photography to officiating weddings and mastering handyman tasks. He even dabbles in stand-up comedy and pest control. Above all, he cherishes spending time with his son, who dreams of a career of testing waterslides professionally, and his two mischievous corgis, who have a knack for chewing through anything in their path.

    Last Updated on December 08, 2025.

    Appointments

    Education & Training

    Postdoctoral Research Associate
    Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (2018)
    PhD
    Weill Medical College of Cornell University , Biomedical Sciences (2013)
    BS
    Peking University , Biotechnology (2007)

    Research

    Overview

    Our lab is dedicated to uncovering the molecular mechanisms that drive resistance to targeted and immune therapies in prostate and other cancers. We are also pioneering innovative therapeutic strategies to overcome these resistances, utilizing a range of state-of-the-art techniques, including 3D-cultured organoids, single-cell sequencing, and spatial transcriptomics. Our recent work has been published in top-tier journals such as Cancer Cell (2020, 2023), Cancer Discovery (2024), Nature Cancer (2022), and Oncogene (2024).

    Exciting Research Directions in the Lab:

    1. Mechanisms of Therapy Resistance and Tumor Evolution in Prostate Cancer

    Our lab investigates the molecular mechanisms driving therapy resistance in prostate and bladder cancers, with particular emphasis on lineage plasticity, epigenetic rewiring, and mutagenesis. We aim to unravel how lineage transitions contribute to resistance and to identify novel combination strategies that can prevent or reverse these adaptive states. By leveraging CRISPR-based Perturb-seq in 3D organoid models, we systematically dissect the function of novel tumor suppressors and oncogenes and uncover resistance drivers to AR-targeted and immune therapies. These efforts are complemented by studies on tumor evolution, heterogeneity, and the mechanisms promoting genomic instability under therapeutic pressure.

    2. Tumor Microenvironment, Immune Modulation, and Spatial Heterogeneity

    Understanding how prostate and bladder cancers interacts with and remodels its microenvironment is central to our research. We study how tumor-intrinsic factors modulate immune evasion and reprogram stromal and immune cell populations to support resistance. To achieve spatial and single-cell resolution, we perform integrative single-cell and spatial transcriptomic profiling of clinical specimens. These analyses, coupled with advanced machine learning, allow us to construct detailed cellular atlases of prostate tumors and their microenvironments, guiding the discovery of microenvironment-informed therapeutic strategies.

    3. Translational Platforms: AI-Driven Precision Medicine and Patient-Derived Organoids

    Our lab develops and applies proprietary AI models tailored for prostate and bladder cancers, integrating single-cell and spatial transcriptomic data from FFPE samples and patient-derived organoids to predict molecular subtypes and therapy response. These tools power a precision oncology framework that enables data-driven treatment selection. In parallel, we generate patient-derived 3D organoids as functional avatars to test therapeutic efficacy and resistance. By combining organoid-based drug testing with AI-guided prediction, we aim to deliver individualized, evidence-based treatment strategies for prostate cancer patients.

    Medical Research Interests

    Biomarkers, Tumor; Cell Biology; Cell Line, Tumor; Cell Lineage; Computational Biology; Developmental Biology; Drug Resistance; Drug Screening Assays, Antitumor; Genes, Tumor Suppressor; Medical Oncology; Metabolism; Molecular Biology; Molecular Targeted Therapy; Oncogene Proteins; Organoids; Prostate; Urology; Urology Department, Hospital

    Research at a Glance

    Research Interests

    Research topics Ping Mu is interested in exploring.

    Publications

    Featured Publications

    2025

    Academic Achievements & Community Involvement

    Honors

    • honor

      Prostate Cancer Foundation Challenge Award

    • honor

      R01 Research Award

    • honor

      R01 Research Award

    • honor

      R37 MERIT Award

    • honor

      AACR NextGen Stars Award

    Get In Touch

    Contacts

    Administrative Support

    Locations

    • 300 George Street

      Academic Office

      Fl 6, Rm 6204

      New Haven, CT 06511