CPRIT Graduate Scholars Program Alumni
CPRIT Graduate Scholars alumni earn their Ph.D. degrees from the MD Anderson UTHealth Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences in various facets of cancer research and establish themselves as leaders in the cancer research community in academia and industry.
Graduation Pending
Yasaman Barekatain, M.S.
Dr. Raghu Kalluri Laboratory- Medical Physics Program
ORCiD: 0000-0002-4454-1496
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2021-2022
Current Position: GSBS Ph.D. student
Yasaman received her bachelor’s degree in Physics from Isfahan University of Technology, Iran, and her master’s degree in Physics from the University of Delaware in 2017. She is currently in the medical physics program at GSBS. She joined the Kalluri Lab as a Ph.D. student in 2021 to complete her thesis work. Since joining GSBS, Yasaman has received Schissler Foundation Fellowship and Dr. John J. Kopchick Fellowship. Her Ph.D. work is developing non-invasive methods to diagnose metabolic genomic alterations and exploiting exosomes as oncometabolite biomarkers in brain tumors.
Yasman is currently working to complete her Ph.D. at the Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences.
Wen-Hao Hsu, M.S.
Dr. Ronald DePinho Laboratory- Cancer Biology Program
ORCiD: 0000-0001-9050-8227
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2021-2022
Current Position: GSBS Ph.D. student
Wen-Hao (Howard) Hsu received his master’s degree in Science in Oral Biology from Taiwan University. During his graduate studies, he focused on the biological functions of pluripotency genes and growth factors in head and neck cancer progression. He found that connective tissue growth factor activates NANOG, SOX2, and POU5F1, and inhibits metastasis in head and neck cancer. After graduation he worked at as a research technician in National Yang-Ming University and was trained extensively in stem cell biology, genetics, and epigenetics. He joined the GSBS for his Ph.D. training in 2018. For his thesis research, he is investigating the role of telomere dysfunction using a colorectal cancer mouse model, especially studying for the genomic and transcriptomic events driving metastasis in colorectal cancer. He expects his work to contribute to clinical prevention and therapy of colorectal cancer metastasis.
Wen-Hao is currently working to complete his Ph.D. at the Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences.
Jiexi Li, M.S.
Dr. Ronald DePinho Laboratory-Cancer Biology Program
ORCiD: 0000-0003-1508-5732
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2020-2021
Current Position: GSBS Ph.D. student
Jiexi received her B.S. in Biological Sciences from the Huazhong University of Science and Technology in China and her M.S. in Biology from New York University. Her master's research focused on investigating the role of hypoxia-induced microRNA-451 in glioblastoma. In 2016, she joined GSBS for her Ph.D. In the DePinho lab, Jiexi is using in vivo colorectal cancer models to study the epigenetic factors that govern colorectal cancer liver metastasis in a gender specific manner.
Jiexi is currently working to complete her Ph.D. at the Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences.
Anupallavi Srinivasamani, M.S.
Dr. Michael Curran Laboratory - Immunology Program
ORCiD: 0000-0002-7799-1696
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2020-2021
Current Position: GSBS Ph.D. student
Annupallavi earned an integrated B.S. and M.S. in Biotechnology from the University of Pune in India. As part of her B.S. studies, she assigned a genetic location to a novel hydrophobin like protein found in yeast with wide-ranging applications in bio-industries. She was awarded the 2013 Indian Academy of Sciences Summer Scholarship to study the virulence factors of Strep at the National Institute of Immunology (New Delhi, India). In 2015, she was selected for the Khorana Scholarship Program to study the development of NK cells at the University of Wisconsin (Milwaukee, WI). Her M.S. research focused on chromosome biology at the Max Planck Institute for Molecular Physiology, wherein she characterized the mechanism of recruitment of kinases to the kinetochore of mammalian cells during mitotic cell division. She joined the GSBS in 2016, where she has been an active member of the Immunology Program ever since. Her Ph.D. work has focused on the distinct role of and translational relevance of PD-L2 in immunobiology of the PD-1 signaling pathway.
Anupallavi is currently working to complete her Ph.D. at the Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences.
2023 Graduates
Mi Li, Ph.D.
Dr. Khandan Keyomarsi Laboratory - Cancer Biology Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2020-2023
Current Position: Postdoctoral Fellow at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center-Keyomarsi Laboratory
Dr. Li earned his BS from Sichuan University in Chengdu, China, where he later served as a research technician for several years before joining MD Anderson Cancer Center. At Sichuan University, Mi studied lung cancer metastasis and developed an in vivo model to study bone metastases of human lung cancer. Next, Mi served as a research intern and research assistant in the neuro-oncology department at MD Anderson, where he studied amino acid metabolism before joining the GSBS for his graduate work. During his graduate studies, Mi researched DNA damage responses induced by overexpression of cyclin E isoforms. In 2023, Mi graduated with his Ph.D.
Dr. Li currently works as a Postdoctoral Fellow in the Keyomarsi laboratory at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas.
Ye Ethan Li, M.D., Ph.D.
Dr. Katy Rezvani Laboratory - Immunology Program
ORCiD: 0000-0001-7727-0875
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2022-2023
Current Position: Postdoctoral Fellow at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center-Rezvani Laboratory
Ethan completed his medical degree in 2013 at the Tongji Hospital, affiliated to Huazhong University of Science and Technology (Wuhan, China), including 3 years of specialty training in Obstetrics and Gynecology. He subsequently moved to the United States and earned his Master of Science Degree in Tumor Biology at Georgetown University in 2015 (Washington D.C.) In 2019, Dr. Li enrolled in the Ph.D. Immunology program at GSBS. After joining Dr. Rezvani’s lab as a Ph.D. student in 2019, his research focused on identifying immune suppressive factors in cancer immunity and developing novel strategies to advance the efficacy of anti-tumor cell therapy. While at GSBS, Ethan received Andrew Sowell-Wade Huggins Scholarship in Cancer Research in 2020, and the Student InterCouncil (SIC) Positive Impact Scholarship in 2021. In 2023, Dr. Li graduated from GSBS with his Ph.D.
Dr. Li currently works as a Postdoctoral Fellow in the Rezvani laboratory at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas.
Sonia Patel, B.S.
Dr. Jonathan Heymach Laboratory - Cancer Biology Program
ORCiD: 0000-0002-6494-7872
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2021-2022
Current Position: Postdoctoral Fellow at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center-Heymach Laboratory
Sonia received her Bachelor’s degree in Biology from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. After graduating, she worked as a research technician in Dr. Oliver Dorigo’s lab at Stanford University School of Medicine. Since coming to GSBS in Fall 2018, Sonia has joined the Cancer Biology Program and has been working in Dr. John Heymach’s lab in the Department of Thoracic Head & Neck Medical Oncology. Her Ph.D. work sought to elucidate the immunological mechanisms which drive resistance to immunotherapy in the EGFR-mutant NSCLC tumor environment. In 2023, Sonia graduated with her Ph.D. from GSBS.
Sonia is currently working as a Postdoctoral Fellow in the Heymach Laboratory at The University of Texas MD Andrson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas.
2022 Graduates
Rakhee Bajaj, Ph.D., M.S.
Don Gibbons Laboratory - Cancer Biology Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2021-2022
Current Position: Manager of Strategy and Buisness Development at Sathgen Biotech
Dr. Bajaj received a dual Bachelor’s degree in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology from Michigan State University. During this time, Rakhee worked as an undergraduate research assistant to Dr. Zachary Burton on elucidating the mechanism-of-action of some of the most fundamental proteins in Biology, RNA Polymerases. She then worked as a cancer research fellow at the Advanced Center for Treatment, Research, and Education in Cancer (ACTREC) in Mumbai, India. Rakhee graduated with a Master’s in Human Genetics from University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, in May 2016. Under the mentorship of Dr. Thomas Glover, she engineered a fluorescence-based assay to visually detect copy number variants (CNVs) that got her nominated for the highly prestigious Barbour Scholarship awarded to outstanding young scientists at the university. Rakhee joined the Cancer Biology PhD program at the UT MDA UTHealth GSBS in August 2016 and graduated in May 2022. During her graduate studies, she received several awards for her research, and scientific communication achievements including the T. C. Hsu Scholarship.
Dr. Bajaj currently works as a Manager of Strategy and Business Development at Sathgen Biotech in Mumbai, India.
Rachel Babcock, Ph.D.
Stephanie Watowich Laboratory - Immunology Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2019-2022
Current Position: Postdoctoral Fellow at Texas Tech University
Dr. Babcock earned a B.S. in Cell and Molecular Biology from Texas Tech University. As an undergraduate, she was part of the Center for the Integration of STEM Education and Research Undergraduate Research group and the Honors Undergraduate Research Scholars group. She performed research in Dr. Jannette Dufour’s laboratory investigating a novel cell-based treatment of type I diabetes, in which she delineated mechanisms of Sertoli cell immune privilege after transplantation. As a summer intern at UT Southwestern, she also studied mechanisms of pre-term pregnancy. These experiences led her to pursue her graduate studies here at MD Anderson. She completed her graduate studies in May 2022.
Dr. Babcock is currently a Postdoctoral Fellow at Texas Tech University Health Science Center.
Rodney Cheng-En Hsieh, M.D., Ph.D.
Michael Curran Laboratory - Cancer Biology and Immunology Programs
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2021-2022
Current Position: Assistant Professor, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital
Dr. Hsieh earned his M.D. degree from Chang Gung University in Taiwan in 2010. He completed his radiation oncology residency training in Chang Gung Memorial Hospital in Taiwan in 2015 and was actively involved in patient care and oncological research for gastrointestinal and head and neck cancers. He joined MD Anderson as a Visiting Scientist in Dr. Sunil Krishnan’s lab in February 2018 and subsequently enrolled in GSBS Cancer Biology and Immunology Ph.D. programs in Dr. Michael Curran’s lab for translational cancer research training. Rodney was awarded Ralph B. Arlinghaus Ph.D. Scholarship at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in 2019 and the Best Abstract Award on Gastrointestinal Cancer Section at the 60th Annual Meeting of American Society for Radiation Oncology in 2018. He completed his Ph.D. in May 2022.
Dr. Hsieh currently serves as an Assistant Professor in the Department of Radiation Oncology at Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, Taiwan.
Sunada Khadka, Ph.D.
Ronald DePinho Laboratory - Immunology Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2020-2021
Current Position: Scientific Lead at Loxo Oncology at Lilly
Dr. Khadka received her B.A. in Biology from Wesleyan College in 2016. As an undergraduate she worked with Dr. Holly Boettger Tong to investigate the molecular mechanism underlying uterine leiyomyoma and completed her Honors Thesis on the topic “The effects of ALL-TRANS retinoic acid on collagen accumulation in uterine leiomyomas”. She was selected to participate as a summer scholar at Novartis Institutes for Biomedical in 2015 where she worked in the Cardiovascular and Metabolism DA with Dr. Nigel Casson to identify a novel protein implicated in the therapeutic management of obesity. In the summer of 2015, she was selected to participate in the CPRIT CURE summer program at MD Anderson Cancer Center where she worked in the lab of Dr. Ronald A. DePinho to identify novel therapeutic targets in castration resistant prostate cancer. These two summer research experiences reinforced her passion for biomedical research, and she sought to obtain her graduate training at MD Anderson. At GSBS, she earned multiple fellowships and awards including the Larry Deaven Fellowship in Biomedical Research, (2019-2021) Caroline Ross Endowment Fellowship (2019) and R.W. Butcher Achievement Award (2019).
Dr. Khadka completed her Ph.D in May 2022 and currently works as a Scientific Lead at Loxo Oncology at Lilly in San Francisco, California.
Parin Shah, Ph.D., M.S.
Anirban Maitra Laboratory - Immunology Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2021-2021
Current Position: Manager, Human Immune Monitoring Core
Dr. Shah earned his Bachelor’s in Pharmacy and a Master’s in Pharmacology. As a graduate student, his work focused on developing targeted drug-delivery nanoparticles to enhance drug-delivery efficiency and overcoming cellular resistance by lowering tumor apoptotic threshold. Following graduation, he worked at Dana Farber Cancer Institute and Broad Institute delineating mechanisms of resistance to therapies using single-cell approaches. Parin joined GSBS in 2017 and is an active member of the Immunology program. During this time, he has earned Steve Lasher and Janiece Longoria Graduate Student Research Award (2020) and Tata Scholarship (2021). Dr. Shah graduated in December 2021.
Dr. Shah currently serves as a Manager for the Human Immune Monitoring Core at Columbia University.
Hannah Savage, Ph.D.
Keri Schadler Laboratory - Cancer Biology Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2019-2020
Current Position: Postdoctoral Fellow at The University of California-Irvine
Dr. Savage received her B.S. in Biology from Northern Illinois University. During her undergraduate studies, she had the opportunity to participate in the university’s undergraduate research program. During these four years, Hannah investigated glioblastoma tumor autophagy and metabolic pathways in response to various pharmacological stimulation. This experience strongly affirmed her passion for cancer research and brought her to MD Anderson to pursue a graduate degree. Dr. Savage completed her graduate studies in 2022.
Dr. Savage is currently working as a Postdoctoral Fellow in the Lawson laboratory at The University of California-Irvine.
Emily Thompson, Ph.D.
Erik Cressman Laboratory - Medical Physics Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2020-2022
Current Position: Medical Physics Resident, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
Dr. Thompson earned her B.S. degree in Radiological Health Engineering from Texas A&M University where she also received a minor in Mathematics and certificates in Safety Engineering and Business Management. As an undergraduate student, Emily worked at the Michael DeBakey Institute studying effects of low-dose ionizing radiation on the mesenteric lymphatic system in the labs of Dr. Christopher Quick and Dr. Ranjeet Dongonkar. Since joining the Ph.D. program in Medical Physics at the UT MD Anderson GSBS in 2016, she earned several awards for her research including the Waltrip Imperial Guard Alumnae Scholarship (2016 – 2020), American Legion Auxiliary Fellowship in Cancer Research (2019), Society for Thermal Medicine Scholar-In-Training Award (2019), and the SIR Foundation Allied Scientist Training Grant (2020). Dr. Thompson completed her graduate studies in May 2022.
Dr. Thompson currently serves as a Medical Physics Resident at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center.
2021 Graduates
Erin Atkinson, Ph.D.
Bin Wang Laboratory - Genetics & Epigenetics Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2015-2019
Current Position: Genetics Counseling Student
Dr. Atkinson earned a dual B.S. in Biology, specializing in Evolution and Ecology and B.A. in Spanish, specializing in Hispanic Studies, from the University of Texas at Austin. As an undergraduate, she participated in the UT Austin Freshman Research Initiative in the Discovering Signals Stream with Drs. Greg Clark and Stan Roux. She continued research in Dr. Juenger's laboratory working with ethanol tolerance research in Drosophila models and with Dr. Juenger looking at the genetic basis and evolutionary significance of water-use traits in the model system Ipomopsis agreggata. Erin worked in a clinical pathology laboratory for two years, then joined GSBS. Here, she has won many awards and is active in student leadership.
Dr. Atkinson currently serves as Genetics Counseling Student at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center.
Taylor Chrisikos, B.S.
Stephanie Watowich Laboratory - Immunology Program
TTChrisikos@mdanderson.org - ORCID: 0000-0001-8966-4046
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2017-2019
Current Position: Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Massachusetts General Hospital
Dr. Chrisikos earned his B.S. in Pharmacology and Toxicology from The State University of New York at Buffalo (University of Buffalo), where he examined if ethanol and paraquat have synergistic effect of mouse microglia proliferation and activation with Dr. Rabin. He also worked on determining the effect of humanized anti-Thomsen-Friedenreich-antigen (anti-TF-ag) antibodies on mouse tumor cell proliferation. His Ph.D. research focused on further understanding the mechanism of regulation of innate and adaptive immunity by tumor microenvironments.
In 2021, Dr. Chrisikos started his Postdoctoral Fellowship at Massachusetts General Hospital.
Alexandria Cogdill, Ph.D., M. Eng.
Dr. James P. Allison Laboratory & Dr. Jennifer Wargo Laboratory - Immunology Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2019-2021
Current Position: Director of Business Development and Corporate Strategy at Immunai
Dr. Cogdill received her Bachelor’s degree in Molecular Biology from the University of North Carolina at Pembroke, where she also lettered as a NCAA varsity athlete in women’s volleyball. Following graduation, Alexandria worked as a cancer research fellow first at the National Institutes of Health (at the National Cancer Institute), then at Harvard Medical School in affiliation with the Massachusetts General Hospital; mentored by Drs. Steven Rosenberg and Jennifer Wargo, respectively. Next, Alexandria worked full time at the University of Pennsylvania in the Center for Cellular Immunotherapies (CCI), directed by Dr. Carl H. June while in graduate school. In May 2016, she graduated summa cum laude from the School of Engineering and Applied Science at the University of Pennsylvania with a Master’s in Bioengineering and Engineering Entrepreneurship. Since joining the Immunology PhD program at the UT MD Anderson UTHealth Graduate School in August 2016, Alexandria has received a number awards recognizing her academic, research, and community outreach achievements, including the Student InterCouncil Academic Achievement Award (2020), the Dr. John J. Kopchick Fellowship (2019), the American Legion Auxiliary Fellowship in Cancer Research (2018), the R.W. Butcher Achievement Award (2017), and the Schissler Foundation Fellowship (2016). Recently, Alexandria completed a Fulbright Research Fellowship in Paris, France under the advisement of Prof. Laurence Zitvogel examining domestic and international differences in cancer responsiveness as it relates to the gut microbiome.
Dr. Cogdill currently works as the Director of Business Development and Corporate Strategy at Immunai in New York.
Pranavi Koppula, M.S.
Dr. Boyi Gan Laboratory - Genetics & Epigenetics Program
PKoppula@mdanderson.org - ORCiD: 0000-0002-7567-1891
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2018-2020
Current Position: Scientist, Translational Science at
Forma Therapeutics
Dr. Pranavi received an integrated B.S. and M.S. in Biotechnology from the University of Pune in India. During her B.S. studies, she investigated mitochondrial-mediated apoptosis induced by flavonoids isolated from corn and signal transduction mechanisms by which flavones induce cell death in cancer cell lines. She was a 2011 Summer Research Fellow at the Indian Institute of Technology, where she analyzed the thermodynamics and physical chemistry properties of drug-protein interactions. Her M.S. research focused on the functional diversification of fat bodies in the regulation of metabolic homeostasis in Drosophila melanogaster and resulted in a dissertation titled "Analysis of metabolic pathways in aging." Since joining the Ph.D. program in Cell Biology at the MD Anderson UTHealth Graduate School in 2015, Pranavi has been the recipient of several awards, including the Dr. John J. Kopchick Research Award (2018) and the Steve Lasher and Janiece Longoria Graduate Student Research Award in Cancer Biology (2018).
Dr. Pranavi completed his Ph.D. in September of 2021 and currently serves as a Scientist of Translational Science at Forma Therapeutics in Massachusetts.
Akash Mitra, Ph.D., B.S.
Dr. Andrew Futreal Laboratory - Quantitative Science Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2019-2021
Current Position: Bioinformatics Scientist at Guardant Health
Dr. Mitra earned his B.S. in Biotechnology and Bioinformatics from Rutgers University, New Brunswick. As an undergraduate, he interned in pharmaceutical/medical device companies in process and validation engineering. Akash has held leadership roles in multiple student organizations at GSBS and the TMC Consulting Club.
Dr. Mitra is currently works as a Bioinformatics Scientist at Guardant Health in Houston, Texas.
Naveen Ramesh, Ph.D., M.S.
Dr. Nicholas Navin Laboratory - Biostatistics, Bioinformatics, and Systems Biology
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2018-2021
Current Position: Bioinformatics Scientist at Personalis
Dr. Ramesh earned his Bachelors of Technology in Biotechnology at Sathyabama University (Chennai, India), where he focused his undergraduate research on the characterization of genome-based barcoding of Justicia gendarussa and Justicia tranquebariensis. He moved to the United States and completed a M.S. in Biostatistics with a minor in Epidemiology at The University of Texas at Houston School of Public Health (Houston, TX). Under the mentorship of Dr. Fuli Yu, he focused on the theoretical investigation of the feasibility and accuracy of SNP discovery in extremely low-coverage NGS-based cohort studies.
Dr. Ramesh currently works as a Bioinformatics Scientist at Personalis in California.
Iman Sahnoune, Ph.D., M.A.
Dr. George Calin Laboratory - Neuroscience Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2020-2021
Current Position: Postdoctoral Fellow at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center-Calin Laboratory
Dr. Sahnoune earned her Bachelor’s degree in Biochemistry and Master’s degree in Neuroscience from the University of Houston. Her Master’s thesis was completed in collaboration with the Baylor College of Medicine, where she researched the impacts of radiation therapy on the developing brain. Her research experience has also incorporated the use of imaging techniques in the characterization of therapeutic response in several tumor types. In her time at GSBS, Iman served in multiple leadership and outreach roles throughout the GSBS and the Neuroscience Program.
Dr. Sahnoune is currently a Postdoctoral Fellow in the Calin lab at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center.
Sanjana Srinivasan, Ph.D., MPH
Dr. Guilio Draetta Laboratory - Quantitative Sciences Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2019-2021
Current Position: Postdoctoral Fellow at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
Dr. Srinivasan earned her B.S. in Psychology and Biology from the University of Toronto, where she focused her research on examining the role of androgen receptors in olfactory and sexual preferences in rats in the lab of Dr. Ashley Monks. She then earned her Master’s in Public Health in Epidemiology from the University of Texas School of Public Health. Here, under the supervision of Dr. Eric Boerwinkle developing genetic risk scores associating chronic diseases to the incidence of Alzheimer’s disease. She also worked as a Graduate Research Assistant in MD Anderson’s Department of Behavioral Science with Dr. Karen Basen-Engquist where she helped design and conduct diet and exercise interventions for cancer survivors. Sanjana joined the GSBS in 2016, where she was an active member of the Quantitative Sciences program.
Dr. Srinivasan is currently a Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center.
2020 Graduates
2019 Graduates
Rhea Kang, B.S., Ph.D.
Francesca Cole Laboratory - Genetics & Epigenetics Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2017-2019
Current Position: Scientist III at Luminex Corp
Dr. Kang double majored in Biology (B.A.) and Nutritional Sciences (B.S.) at The University of Texas at Austin. Her research involved elucidating temporal, spatial, and qualitative features of individual homologous recombination (HR) pathways that facilitate or hinder that pathway's ability to compensate for the loss of others. Her primary goal was to establish a novel system that could interrogate HR pathways in vivo, in mammals, and at native genomic loci to define the kinetics and molecular features associated with particular HR pathways. She also assessed which HR pathways were utilized in the absence of others to determine potential therapeutic targets. Dr. Kang defended her Ph.D. dissertation, titled "Higher order chromosome organization and recombination dynamics of meiotic prophase I in mouse spermatocytes" in Spring 2019.
Dr. Kang currently serves as a Scientist III at Luminex Corp in Austin, Texas.
Vincent Bernard, B.S., M.S., Ph.D.
Anirban Maitra Laboratory - Cancer Biology Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2015 - 2018
Current Position: Resident at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
Dr. Vincent Bernard earned his B.S. in Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering and continued on to earn an M.S. in Biotechnology, both from Johns Hopkins University. While in graduate school, he won numerous awards, including The President's Research Scholarship, American Legion Auxiliary Fellowship, and The Sylvan Rodriguez Foundation Scholarship. Dr. Bernard defended his Ph.D. dissertation, titled "Genetic Evolution and Prognostic Determinants of Pancreatic Cancer on Longitudinal Liquid Biopsies" in Summer 2018.
Dr. Bernard currently works as a Resident at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas.
2018 Graduates
Erin Williams Lopez, B.A., Ph.D.
Andrew Gladden Laboratory - Genetics & Epigenetics Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2017-2018
Current Position: Medical Science Liaison at Biofrontera Group
Dr. Erin Williams Lopez completed dual majors of a B.A. in Biology and a B.A. in Mathematics from the University of San Diego. During her undergraduate career she did research on the specification of serotonergic neurons in C. elegans in the lab of Curtis Loer, Ph.D. As a graduate student at MD Anderson Cancer Center, Erin was involved in many leadership and outreach activities including coordinating outreach events for the Outreach club. She won several awards, including the Rosalie B. Hite Fellowship, People's Choice at the GSBS Student Research Day Elevator Speech Competition, the John P. McGovern Award for Presentation Skills, the Student InterCouncil Academic Achievement Award, the Sylvan Rodriguez Foundation Scholarship Honoring George M. Stancel, Ph.D., and the American Legion Auxiliary Fellowship. Dr. Williams Lopez defended her Ph.D. dissertation titled, " The Role of Merlin and Apicobasal Polarity in Endometrial Development and Homeostasis" in Spring 2018.
Dr. Williams Lopez is currently a Medical Science Liaison in the area of dermatology with Biofrontera Group.
Nicolas Veland, B.S., Ph.D.
Taiping Chen Laboratory - Genetics and Epigenetics Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2015-2018
Current Position: Postdoctoral Research Scientist at MRC London Institute of Medical Sciences since 2018.
Dr. Nicolas Veland earned his B.S. in Biology from the Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia in Peru. During his undergraduate years, he engaged in undergraduate research in molecular epidemiology in Leishmaniasis with Dr. Jorge Arevalo and Malaria with Dr. Dionica Gamboa. Nicolas won many awards as a graduate student, including the Andrew-Sowell-Wade Huggins Scholarship in Cancer Research and the Julia Jones Matthews Cancer Research Scholar Award at MD Anderson Cancer Center. Dr. Veland defended his Ph.D. dissertation titled, "The Regulation of DNA Methylation in Mammalian Development and Cancer" in Spring 2018. He has authored and co-authored numerous publications, and presented his research at numerous conferences around the world.
Dr. Veland is currently a Postdoctoral Research Scientist in the Lymphocyte Development Group at MRC London Institute of Medical Sciences. His current research interests are focused on understanding epigenetic mechanisms during normal mammalian development and in diseases, using stem cells as models. When he's not in lab, Nicolas enjoys hiking with his family and playing soccer.
Ashvin Jaiswal, B.S., M.S., Ph.D.
Michael Curran Laboratory - Immunology Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2017-2018
Current Position: Scientist I at MedImmune Astra Zeneca since 2018.
Dr. Jaiswal earned his B.S. in Pharmaceutical Sciences from Amravati University in India. He then moved to the U.S. and earned his Master's degree from Idaho State University. Ashvin earned a number of awards during his time at the MD Anderson UTHealth Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, including the Andrew Sowell-Wade Huggins Endowed Scholarship, the Steve Lasher and Janiece Longoria Graduate Student Research Award in Cancer Biology, and the Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer (SITC) Presidential Travel Award. He defended his Ph.D. thesis, titled "Tumor Immunotherapy: Mechanisms of Acquired Resistance and Characterization of Immune Related Toxicities" in Spring 2018. During his graduate studies, Ashvin identified and characterized the resistance mechanisms tumors use to evade immunotherapeutic responses by establishing a murine model of melanoma designed to elucidate the molecular mechanisms underlying immunotherapy resistance. Ashvin collaboration with other graduate student in his laboratory to investigate 4-1BB agonist antibodies in the induction of liver toxicity. Together, they found that activation of 4-1BB on liver myeloid cells is essential to initiate hepatitis. Once activated, these cells produce interleukin-27 that is required for liver toxicity. CD8 T cells infiltrate the liver in response to this myeloid activation and mediate tissue damage. Co-administration of CTLA-4 and/or CCR2 blockade may minimize hepatitis, but yield equal or greater antitumor immunity. Of the CPRIT Graduate Scholar Program, Ashvin says: It provided a seminar platform where scholars could present their work and get feedback from professors and other scholars. Many times, scholars would also receive advice about career paths and opportunities. The CPRIT Graduate Scholar Award not only gave me confidence, but also career advice.
Dr. Jaiswal currently works as a Scientist in the Research Oncology Department for MedImmune. In this role, he works on identification, characterization, and validation of immuno-oncology targets and engages in basic tumor immunology. He loves to spend time with his wife, who is a computer engineer, and his young daughter and often plays badminton in his spare time.
2017 Graduates
Whijae Roh, B.S., M.S., Ph.D.
Andrew Futreal Laboratory - Cancer Biology Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2015 - 2017
Current Position: Postdoctoral Fellow at Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard
Dr. Whijae Roh earned his B.S. in Biology from Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology and dual M.S. degrees in Biomedical Engineering and Biostatistics from the University of Michigan. He worked for a few years as Associate Research Engineer at Bioneer, Inc. in Korea and then as Assistant Research Scientist at the Genomic Medicine Institute at Seoul National University College of Medicine before moving to Houston to pursue his Ph.D. in Cancer Biology. Whijae defended his Ph.D. dissertation, titled "Integrative Cancer Immunogenomic Analysis of Serial Melanoma Biopsies Reveals Correlates of Response and Resistance to Sequential CTLA-4 and PD-1 Blockade Treatment" under the mentorship of Dr. P. Andrew Futreal and co-mentorship of 2018 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine awardee, Dr. James P. Allison. He collected pre/on/post-treatment tumor samples and performed whole exome sequencing, mRNA expression profiling, IHC, and TCR-seq from a cohort of melanoma patients treated with sequential CTLA-4 and PD-1 blockade. His research found that mRNA expression signatures from on-treatment tumor biopsy can be useful as a biomarker of response and increased copy number alterations were associated with higher resistance.
Dr. Roh is currently a Postdoctoral Fellow in the Getz laboratory at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard University in Cambridge, MA. He is particularly interested in understanding the spatial and temporal patterns of tumor progression under various sources of selective pressures, such as therapy and tumor microenvironment, in individual cancer patients towards developing and delivering personalized cancer diagnosis and treatment. In his current role at the Broad Institute, Dr. Roh investigates survival mechanisms of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in the bloodstream by high-throughput sequencing of CTCs, CTC lines cultured ex vivo, and CTC-derived mouse models. Dr. Roh looks forward to spending time with his wife and son when he leaves the lab each evening.
Iman Doostan, M.D., Ph.D.
Khandan Keyomarsi Laboratory - Cancer Biology Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2012-2017
Current Position: Assistant Professor of Medicine at University of Miami
Dr. Iman Doostan earned his M.D. from Isfahan University of Medical Sciences in Iran, where he also completed his general physician internship. He served two years as a general practitioner at Omid Cancer Hospital before moving to the United States to complete his Ph.D. in Cancer Biology at the MD Anderson UTHealth Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences. His Ph.D. project focused on low molecular weight forms of cyclin E (LMW-E) and their use to identify hormone-receptor positive tumors that are unresponsive to neoadjuvant aromatase inhibition (AI) therapy. His work showed that the mechanism of resistance is through bypass of the G1 to S phase transition, resulting in the inability of AIs to induce a cytostatic effect. His research showed that LMW-E expression in tumors from patients who received neoadjuvant AI therapy is associated with diminished response and poor recurrence-free interval. Furthermore, xenografts with induced LMW-E expression became unresponsive to letrozole. Lastly, LMW-E expression overcame cell cycle inhibition by AIs in a CDK2/Rb-dependent manner and inhibition of CDK2 by dinaciclib reversed LMW-E-mediated resistance. Collectively, these findings suggest that cell cycle deregulation by LMW-E mediates resistance to AIs and a combination of CDK2 inhibitors and AIs may be an effective treatment in patients with HR-positive tumors that express LMW-E. He defended his Ph.D. dissertation, titled "Cytoplasmic Cyclin E Mediates Resistance in to Aromatase Inhibitors in Breast Cancer" in Fall 2017.
Iman reflects on the impact the CPRIT Graduate Scholar Program has had in his career "As a physician working in a cancer hospital abroad, I was involved in treating patients with advanced stage of cancer that are often resistant to current treatment regiments. I realized understanding the biology of cancer cells and identifying pathways of resistance are important to develop novel treatments in order to improve survival of these patients. This motivated me to apply for graduate school and enroll in cancer biology program at University of Texas, MD Anderson Cancer Center. Throughout my graduate study, CPRIT funding enabled us to further explore one of the mechanisms of resistance to aromatase inhibitors, the main treatment for post-menopausal hormone receptor positive breast cancer patients."
Dr. Doostan completed his Internal Medicine Resident Physician at New York Medical College in Manhattan, NY and currently serves as Assistant Professor at the Miller School of Medicine and Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center at the University of Miami in Miami, FL. His interest in hematology-oncology dates back to his initial years of medical school when he volunteered in translational research projects in oncology. Oncology and cancer care is Dr. Doostan's passion and he enjoys taking care of cancer patients and seeking research opportunities to improve early diagnosis, identification of biomarkers of response, and development of novel treatments. Outside of the hospital and laboratory, he enjoys spending time with his family and playing violin and basketball.
Xin (Kathy) Hu, Ph.D.
Ralf Krahe Laboratory; Roel Verhaak Laboratory - Biostatistics, Bioinformatics, and Systems Biology Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2012-2013
Ph.D. dissertation defended in Spring 2017.
Current Position: Senior Database Administrator, Department of Institutional Analytics & Informatics for MD Anderson Cancer Center since 2017.
Dr. Hu defended her PhD thesis, titled "Integrative analysis of omics data in adult glioma and other TCGA cancers to guide precision medicine) in Spring 2017.
She currently serves as Senior Database Administrator for the Department of Institutional Analytics & Informatics at MD Anderson Cancer Center.
Ting-Hsiang (Richard) Huang, Ph.D.
Jessica Tyler Laboratory - Genes & Development Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2011-2013 - ORCiD: 0000-0001-8739-0571
Ph.D. dissertation defended in Spring 2017.
Current Position: Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center since 2017.
Dr. Huang's Ph.D. work discovered that chromatin assembly of newly synthesized histones via the human histone chaperones ASF1A and CAF-1 plays critical roles in determining DNA damage responses while cells encounter DNA damage. The work, published in Mol. Cell journal, shows the blocking replication-dependent chromatin assembly mediated by ASF1A and CAF-1 causes a reduction of Rad51 loader MMS22L/TONSL binding to ssDNA, leading to impaired homologous recombination. In addition, ASF1A is involved in preventing DNA breaks from extensive resection. He also found that ASF1A phosphorylation enhances its interactions with histones and MMSL22L/TONSL and sebsequently promotes the formation of Rad51-SSDNA nucleofilament. The ChIP analysis of histone H3 occupancy around a single DSB in yeast demonstrated chromatin transiently exists on resected DNA, implicating a possibility that chromatin assembly occurs on ssDNA in mammals. Therefore, he proposed a model that histone chaperone-mediated transient chromatin assembly on ssDNA serves as an intermediate platform to recruit DNA repair machinery to proceed homologous recombination. His second project elucidated a potential mechanism by which ATM and DNA-PKcs are activated in the context of chromatin upon DSBs. He showed that replication-dependent chromatin assembly participates in the prolonged activation of ATM whereas loss of chormatin assembly increased DNA-PKcs phosphorylation in response to DSBs. Histone H4K16ac that is known to induce ATM activation is downregulated by depletion of histone chaperones. In addition, cells lacking chromatin assembly showed the increased DNA-PKcs loading on chromatin, further emphasizing the critical roles of chromatin assembly in the process of DNA repair. He defended his Ph.D. dissertation, titled "Investigation of the roles of ASF1 and CAF-1-mediated chromatin assembly in the human DNA damage response" in Spring 2017.
Following his PhD graduation and completion of the CPRIT Graduate Scholar Program, Dr. Huang completed a short postdoctoral fellowship at Weill Cornell School of Medicine before accepting his present postdoctoral fellowship position at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York.
Archana Nagaraja, Ph.D.
Anil Sood Laboratory - Cancer Biology Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2014-2017 - ORCiD: 0000-0002-2851-9272
Ph.D. disertation defended in Spring 2017.
Current Position: Scientist at Senti Biosciences since 2017.
Dr. Nagaraja defended her Ph.D. thesis titled "Tumor-cell derived inhibin, beta A is essential for adrenergic effects on fibroblast activation" in the Spring of 2017.
She accepted an industry position directly after graduation and is presently a Scientist with Senti Biosciences.
David H. Peng, Ph.D.
Don Gibbons Laboratory - Cancer Biology Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2014 - 2017 - ORCiD: 0000-0003-0511-1888
Ph.D. dissertation defended Summer 2017.
Current Position: Postdoctoral Fellow, NYU Langone Health since 2019.
Dr. Peng (L) is pictured with his Ph.D. Mentor, Dr. Don Gibbons (R)
Dr. Peng defended his Ph.D. thesis titled "Role of GSH metabolism in mediating stromal-leukemia interaction and promoting cell survival and drug resistance in chronic lymphocytic leukemia" in Summer 2017.
Following his Ph.D. defense, Dr. Peng stayed on in the Gibbons laboratory for two additional years as a postdoctoral fellow. He is currently a Postdoctoral Fellow at NYU Langone Health in New York.
Smruthi Vijayaraghavan, Ph.D.
Khandan Keyomarsi Laboratory - Cancer Biology Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2016 - 2017 - ORCiD: 000-0002-8131-0988
Current Position: Scientist at Janssen Pharmaceuticals since 2018.
Dr. Vijayaraghavan defended her Ph.D. thesis, titled "Targeting autophagy to improve efficacy of CDK4/6 inhibition in breast cancer" in Spring 2017.
Following her defense, Smruthi completed a short postdoctoral fellowship in the Keyomarsi laboratory at MD Anderson before moving on to a postdoctoral scientist position in Immuno-Oncology (Oncology Discovery Area) at Janssen Pharmaceuticals. She currently serves as a scientist in the Oncology Discovery area at Janssen Pharmaceuticals.
2016 Graduates
Christopher M. Walker, B.S., Ph.D.
James Bankson Laboratory - Medical Physics Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2012-2016 - ORCiD: 0000-0002-6381-8737
Ph.D. dissertation defended Fall 2016.
Current Position: Medical Physics Fellow at MD Anderson Cancer Center since 2016.
Dr. Christopher M. Walker earned his B.S. in Physics from Trinity University and his Ph.D. in Medical Physics from the MD Anderson UTHealth Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences. His PhD project focused on developing methods for quantitative measurement of hyperpolarized agents to overcome restrictions imposed by the transient hyperpolarized state and the complexity inherent in biological systems. Dr. Walker's research designed a novel simulation architecture that combined classical chemical kinetics with the basic physics of nuclear magnetic resonance and coupled them to multiple perfusion models towards creating an infrastructure where acquisition strategies can be developed, compared, optimized and validated. Simulation results showed that changes in the acquisition strategy used will affect the resulting quantification of chemical exchange rates and suggested that any bias that is imposed by the acquisition strategy can be avoided by using optimized pulse sequences. To validate these predictions, a phantom system was developed that allows controllable chemical conversion of hyperpolarized pyruvate into lactate with a variability less than 20%. Using this phantom system, studies showed that poorly optimized pulse sequences significantly reduced the measured value of the chemical exchange rates, whereas optimized pulse sequences showed no significant difference in chemical exchange measurements. In order to test simulation predictions for a perfused system, an animal cohort with orthotropic anaplastic thyroid cancer was scanned with multiple sequences. Again, optimized sequences showed no significant difference in measured exchange rates while poorly designed sequences significantly underestimated the exchange rates, which is consistent with the simulation results. These validation studies suggest that this simulation architecture will be a powerful tool for developing and optimizing acquisition and quantization methods for hyperpolarized magnetic resonance imaging. He defended his Ph.D. dissertation, titled "Novel Simulation to Avoid Bias in Measurement of Hyperpolarized Pyruvate: Demonstrated in Phantom and In Vivo" in Fall 2016.
Of the CPRIT Graduate Scholar Program, Chris describes "As a medical physics student I had only a cursory exposure to cancer biology. The CPRIT program gave me the opportunity to expand upon that greatly through the additional course work as well as the journal club and annual meeting. While by no means comprehensive, the additional cancer biology understanding has been invaluable to my work as an imaging scientist given the rapid translation from anatomic imaging to functional and molecular imaging that is now critical cancer management."
Dr. Walker is currently a Medical Physics Fellow at MD Anderson Cancer Center in the Department of Imaging Physics, where he splits his time between conducting research in hyperpolarized MRI and serving cancer patients as a clinical medical physics resident. His current research focuses on development and optimization of the entire hyperpolarized imaging chain using a broad range of model systems from simulation to clinical data to ensure that measurements made with hyperpolarized MRI are robust enough that they can plan a critical role in personalized cancer management. He currently provides research support to ongoing clinical research to determine the specificity and sensitivity of hyperpolarized MRI in prostate cancer.
Marco L. Leung, B.S., Ph.D.
Nicholas E. Navin Laboratory - Genes & Development Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2014-2016 - ORCiD: 0000-0003-3312-8468
Ph.D. dissertation defended Spring 2016.
Current Position: Assistant Clinical Laboratory Director, Center for Applied Genomics at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia since 2018.
Dr. Marco L. Leung received his B.S. in Molecular Genetics from the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, where he served as a Research Assistant in the Department of Immunology for a year following his degree. He then joined the MD Anderson UTHealth Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, where he earned his Ph.D. in Biomedical Sciences under the mentorship of Dr. Nicholas E. Navin. Marco's thesis project was to delineate tumor evolution and resolve intratumor heterogeneity by developing novel single cell sequencing methods and investigating the mechanisms by which colorectal tumors metastasize. He defended his Ph.D. dissertation titled, "Investigating Metastatic Lineage in Colorectal Cancer by Single Cell DNA Sequencing" in Spring 2016.
After his Ph.D., Dr. Leung completed an American Board of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ABMGG) Clinical Genetics Fellowship at the University of Chicago, where he learned to develop, perform, and interpret molecular assays relevant to the diagnosis and management of human genetic diseases. He currently serves as the Assistant Clinical Laboratory Director for the Center for Applied Genomics at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP). In his role at CHOP, Marco is involved in high-complexity molecular testing, including carrier screening, clinical exome sequencing, and molecular assay development. His current research focuses on novel technological development which can be adapted into clinical testing.
Shih-Shin (Olin) Chang, Ph.D.
Mien Chie Hung Laboratory - Cancer Biology Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2010-2011
Ph.D. dissertation defended in Spring 2016.
Current Position: Research Investigator II, Immuno-Oncology Discovery at Bristol-Myers Squibb since 2019.
Dr. Shih-Shin Chang defended his thesis titled "Functional regulation of Yap by Aurora A kinase in triple-negative breast cancer" in Spring 2016.
After a short postdoc at MD Anderson, Dr. Chang joined BioVision as an Associate Scientist, wher he was quickly promoted to Scientist I. He then served as Principle Scientist and then Director of Research and Development for AbVision, Inc. before moving to Bristol-Myers Squibb where he currently serves as Research Investigator II in the Immuno-Oncology Discovery area.
How-Wen Ko, M.D., Ph.D.
Mien Chie Hung Laboratory - Cancer Biology Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2012 -2015
Ph.D. dissertation defended in Spring 2016.
Current Position: Attending Physician in Pulmonary Medicine at Chang Guang Memorial Hospital (Taoyuan, Taiwan) since 2016.
Dr. Ko defended his Ph.D. thesis titled "GSK3beta-mediated EZH2 phosphorylation suppresses methylation of H3K27 and EZH2's oncogenic functions" in Spring 2016.
Following his Ph.D., Dr. Ko returned to his native Taiwan to practice as a physician scientist at Chang Gung Memorial Hospital. He specializes in pulmonary medicine.
Tze Yee Lim, Ph.D.
Rajat Kudchadker Laboratory - Medical Physics Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2012 - 2013 - ORCiD: 0000-0002-3397-5571
Ph.D. dissertation defended in Summer 2016.
Current Position: Assistant Professor, Medical Physics Department at MD Anderson Cancer Center since 2018.
Dr. Lim defended her Ph.D. thesis titled "Encapsulated contrast agent markers for MRI-based post-implant dosimetry" in Summer 2016.
She completed her Medical Physics Residency at The University of California at San Diego before returning to MD Anderson Cancer Center in 2018 as Assistant Professor of Medical Physics.
Shane Krafft, Ph.D.
Mary Martel Laboratory - Medical Physics Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2011-2013 - ORCiD: 0000-0002-4582-8587
Ph.D. defended in Summer of 2016.
Current Position: Assistant Professor, Medical Physics Department at MD Anderson Cancer Center since 2018.
Dr. Krafft defended his Ph.D. in Medical Physics titled "Utilizing computed tomography image features to advance prediction of radiation pneumonitis" in Summer 2016.
He completed his Medical Physics Residency at MD Anderson Cancer Centerin 2018 and currently serves as Assistant Professor in the Department of Medical Physics at MD Anderson Cancer Center.
Wen-Hsuan (Rose) Yu, Ph.D.
Mien-Chie Hung Laboratory - Cancer Biology Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2011-2012 - ORCiD: 0000-0002-0816-7409
Ph.D. dissertation defended in Summer 2016.
Current Position: Medical Science Liaison at Roche Pharmaceuticals since 2017.
Dr. Yu defended her Ph.D. thesis, titled "Development of rational combination therapy with PARP inhibitors and kinase inhibitors in TNBC" in Summer 2016.
After graduating, she returned to her native Taiwan as a Project Director for the Minestry of Science and Technology in Taipei before accepting her current position as Medical Science Liaison for Roche Pharmaceuticals in Taiwain.
Kaushik Thakkar, Ph.D.
Michelle Barton Laboratory - Genes & Development Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2015 - 2016 - ORCiD: 0000-0002-4900-3371
Current Position: Postdoctoral Fellow at Stanford University School of Medicine since 2016.
Dr. Thakkar defended his Ph.D. thesis, titled "TRIM24 orchestrates metabolic reprogramming and EMT in breast cancer" in Spring 2016.
He is currently a postdoctoral fellow in the Giaccia Lab at Stanford University School of Medicine.
2015 Gradutes
Dr. Le Huang, Ph.D.
Vicki Huff Laboratory - Genes & Development Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2010-2014
Ph.D. dissertation defended in Spring 2015.
Current Position: Research Scientist, Institute for Personalized Cancer Therapy (IPCT) at MD Anderson Cancer Center since 2019.
Dr. Huang defended her Ph.D. thesis, titled "Impact of differentiation status of kidney progenitors in Wilms Tumor development" in the Spring of 2015.
She worked for 4 years as a Senior Coordinator of Clinical Studies in Investigative Cancer Therapeutics at MD Anderson before moving to her current role as Research Scientist at the Institute for Personalized Cancer Therapy (IPCT) at MD Anderson.
Christa Manton, Ph.D.
Joya Chandra Laboratory - Cancer Biology & Experimental Therapeutics Programs
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2011 - 2015 - ORCiD: 0000-0003-1356-828X
Ph.D. dissertation defended in Spring 2015.
Current Position: Assistant Professor of Biology at Baker University since 2018.
Dr. Manton defended her Ph.D. dissertation, titled " Induction of caspase-dependent death by proteasome targeted therapy in glioblastoma" in Spring 2015.
She completed a postdoctoral fellowship under the direction of Dr. Danny Welsh at The University of Kansas Cancer Center and currently serves as Assistant Professor of Biology at Baker University.
Andria Schibler, Ph.D.
Sharon Dent Laboratory - Genes & Development Program (Science Park Campus)
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2014-2015
Ph.D. dissertation defended Summer in 2015.
Current Position: Postdoctoral Fellow and NIH CTRA Fellow at the National Institute of Health since 2016.
During her Ph.D., Dr. Schibler worked under the mentorship of Dr. Sharon Dent. Her project used budding yeast as a model system and found that a mitotic checkpoint was regulated by histone lysine (K) methylation and found that histone H3K4 dimethylation negatively regulated the spindle assembly checkpoint, Mad2, directly bound to methylated H3K4. Of her participation in the Graduate Scholar Program, Andria reflects "The CPRIT Graduate Scholar Program was a fantastic opportunity. It helped me to get into a great lab at NCI and also introduced me to many different types of cancer research. Drs. Keyomarsi and Watowich [Program Directors] were also instrumental in my continuation of academic research."
Dr. Schibler is currently a postdoctoral fellow and a CTRA fellow for the National Institutes of Health and National Cancer Institute. Her current research is under the direction of Dr. Tom Misteli and focuses on the identification of factors which regulate nuclear morphology, especially nuclear shape and size. When not in the lab, Dr. Schibler plays with her puppy named Chowder, enjoys riding her motorcycle, and learns to wind surf.
Mehrnoosh Tashakori, M.D., Ph.D.
Guillermina Lozano Laboratory - Genes & Development Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2011-2015
Ph.D. dissertation defended in Summer 2015.
Current Position: Hematopathology Fellow at MD Anderson Cancer Center since 2019.
Dr. Tashakori defended her dissertation, titled "In vivo significance of the MDM4 and p73 interaction during development and tumorigenesis" in Summer 2015.
Dr. Tashakori completed her medical residency in Pathology at Henry Ford Health System in Michigan before returning to MD Anderson Cancer Center, where she is currently training as a hematopathology fellow.
2014 Graduates
Alessandra Di Lorenzo, Ph.D.
Mark Bedford Laboratory - Epigenetics and Molecular Carcinogenesis Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2012-2014
PhD dissertation defended in Spring 2014.
Current Position: Professor, Department of Biology at Austin Community College since 2016.
Dr. Di Lorenzo defended her Ph.D. thesis, titled "Gain-of-function mouse models to investigate the biological roles of PRMT6" in the Spring of 2014.
After a 2 year postdoctoral fellowship at MD Anderson Cancer Center, Dr. Di Lorenzo accepted a faculty position at Austin Community College. She currently serves as Professor of Biology for the college.
Moonsup Lee, Ph.D.
Pierre McCrea Laboratory - Genes & Development Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2011-2013
Ph.D. dissertation defended in Fall 2014.
Current Position: Postdoctoral Fellow at National Cancer Institute since 2015.
Dr. Lee defended his PhD thesis titled "p120-catenin regulates REST and CoREST, and modulates mouse embryonic stem cell differentiation" in Fall 2014.
He currently serves as Postdoctoral Fellow under the mentorship of the Dr. Ira O. Daar laboratory at the National Cancer Institute.
Kalyan Nallaparaju, Ph.D.
Chen Dong Laboratory - Immunology Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2011-2013
PhD dissertation defended in Fall 2014.
Current Position: Senior Scientist, Immuno-Oncology at EMD Serono, Inc since 2018.
Dr. Nallaparaju defended his PhD dissertation titled "The role of dual specificity phosphatase-11 in innate and adaptive immune responses" in Fall 2014.
After earning his Ph.D., he served as Scientist I at Lio Biotechnologies. In 2016, he joined EMD Serono as a Scientist in the Immuno-Oncology area, where he was promoted and currently serves as Senior Scientist for Immuno-Oncology.
2013 Graduates
Deepavali Chakravarti, M.S., M.Sc., Ph.D.
Elsa Flores Laboratory - Cancer Biology Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2010 - 2013
Ph.D. dissertation defended in Spring 2013.
Current Position: Postdoctoral Fellow in the DePinho lab at MD Anderson Cancer Center since 2013.
Dr. Deepavali Chakravarti completed her Bachelors of Science in Microbiology at the University of Bangalore in Karnataka, India, where she also earned a Masters of Science in Biotechnology. She later earned her M.S. in Biology from the University of Houston - Clear Lake. She joined the Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences and joined the laboratory of Dr. Elsa Flores. She defended her Ph.D. thesis, titled "Investigating the roles of the p63 isoforms in the microRNA biogenesis pathway" in the Spring of 2013.
Next, Dr. Chakravarti joined the DePinho laboratory as a postdoctoral fellow at MD Anderson in the Department of Cancer Biology. She joined the CPRIT TRIUMPH Postdoctoral Fellowship Program (2014-2018) and currently serves as a postdoctoral fellow focused on telomere research in the context of cancer.
Qin Li, Ph.D.
Guillermina Lozano Laboratory - Genes & Development Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2010 - 2011
Ph.D. dissertation defended in Fall 2013.
Current Position: Postdoctoral Fellow - Moores Cancer Center at University of California at San Diego since 2014.
Dr. Li defended his Ph.D. thesis, titled "Therapeutic efficacy of p53 restoration in MDM2-overexpressing tumors" in the Fall of 2013.
He is currently a Postdoctoral Scholar in the Dr. Napoleone Ferrara laboratory at Moores Cancer Center at The University of California at San Diego.
William Munoz, Ph.D.
Pierre McCrea Laboratory - Genes & Development Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2010-2012
Defended Ph.D. dissertation in Fall 2013.
Current Position: Postdoctoral Research Associate at Stowers Institute for Medical Research since 2013.
Dr. Munoz defended his Ph.D. dissertation titled "Developmental and molecular functions of plakophilin-3" in Fall 2013.
He currently serves as Postdoctoral Research Associate at Stowers Institute for Medical Research in Kansas.
2012 Graduates
Chunlei Jin, M.B.B.S., M.S., Ph.D.
Jean-Pierre Issa Laboratory - Biomedical Sciences Program
CPRIT Graduate Scholar 2010-2012
Ph.D. dissertation defended Fall 2012.
Current Position: Associate Medical Director at Jiangsu Hengrui Medicine Co., Ltd. since 2017.
Dr. Chunlei Jin earned his M.B.B.S. in Clinical Medicine and his M.S. in Pharmacology both from Zhejiang University School of Medicine in Hangzhou, China. He then served as Clinical Project Manager in the Department of Research & Development at Hangzhou Jiuyuan Gene Engineering Co., Ltd. for a few years before moving to the United States to pursue his Ph.D. in Biomedical Sciences from the MD Anderson UTHealth Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences. He defended his Ph.D. dissertation titled, "TET1: A Unique DNA Demethylase for Maintenance of DNA Methylation Pattern in Fall 2012. He reflects on his participation in the CPRIT Graduate Scholar Program: "In the CPRIT program I had a solid scientific training in cancer research, which equipped me with a wide range of knowledge in cancer and important logical thinking ability. This prepared me well for industry, where I focus on designing phase I - III clinical trials of new anti-tumor drugs."
Dr. Jin currently serves as the Associate Medical Director at Jiangsu Hengrui Medicine Co., Ltd., in Shanghai, China. In his current role, he works on the clinical development of innovative anti-tumor therapies.
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