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Mark Robinson, PhD

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Associate Research Scientist

Appointments

Hematology
Primary

About

Titles

Associate Research Scientist

Biography

During my PhD at Cardiff University I developed novel bioinformatics methods to analyze nucleosome maps generated by MNase-digest sequencing in order to understand the roles of chromatin remodelers in controlling developmental expression programs through nucleosome positioning. Following my PhD I moved to the lab of Dr. Niklas Feldhahn at Imperial College London where I first became interested in hematological oncology research. Our work mapping DNA-damage and enhancer reprogramming in transformed B-cells helped to explain why lineage specific markers recurrently mutated in B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL). I also performed topology mapping to identify oncogenic enhancer co-option, uncovering the mechanisms of MECOM expression and function underlying the dismal prognosis of this subset of acute myeloid leukemia patients. To further my interest in computational hematology-oncology I joined the lab of Dr. Markus Müschen in 2019 working alongside bench scientists to identify novel therapeutic vulnerabilities of B-cell malignancies. Through integrative analysis of clinical, transcriptional, proteomic and phosphoproteomics data in B-ALL and mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) models I helped uncover an unexpected mechanism of lipid-raft formation leading to PI3K amplification loop downstream of the B-cell receptor. Working alongside Dr. Lai Chan, my identification of mutational segregation between patient cohorts with STAT5- and ERK-pathway driven B-ALL helped lead to the development of a concept of oncogene convergence. This work showed that convergence on a single oncogenic driver was essential for development of B-ALL, and that activation of divergent pathways subverts oncogenesis. This convergence theory gives rise to the exciting possibility of combining divergent pathway activation synergistically with principal driver inhibition as a novel therapeutic strategy. By extending this analysis to study all major oncogenic pathways pan-cancer I now aim to identify whether oncogenic convergence is unique to B-ALL, or whether it represents a new hallmark of cancer that can be exploited to design personalized combination therapies.

Appointments

  • Hematology

    Associate Research Scientist
    Primary

Other Departments & Organizations

Education & Training

Postdoctoral Fellow
City of Hope (2020)
Postdoctral Associate
Imperial College London (2019)
PhD
Cardiff University, Molecular Biology & Bioinformatics (2017)
BSc
Cardiff University, Biomedical Sciences (2012)

Research

Research at a Glance

Yale Co-Authors

Frequent collaborators of Mark Robinson's published research.

Publications

2023

2021

2020

2019

Academic Achievements and Community Involvement

Get In Touch

Contacts

Academic Office Number
Mailing Address

Müschen Lab

300 George Street, 6th Floor, CMCO

New Haven, CT 06511

United States