平特五不中

Robert Sladek

Sladek

Robert Sladek, M.D.

Associate Professor, Departments of Medicine and Human Genetics
平特五不中 and Genome Quebec Innovation Centre
740 Penfield, Room 6214, Montreal, H3A 0G1

Tel: 514-398-5458

robert.sladek [at] mcgill.ca

Biographical Sketch

Rob Sladek is Associate Professor of Human Genetics and Medicine (Endocrinology) at the 平特五不中 and G茅nome Qu茅bec Innovation Centre. He completed undergraduate degrees in Engineering Science and Medicine and a clinical fellowship in Endocrinology, all at the University of Toronto. His postdoctoral training explored the role of the Estrogen-related receptors in the regulation of fat metabolism (Err-alpha) and trophoblast formation (Err-beta); as well as and the application of high-throughput genomics technologies to study complex traits. He leads the Diabetes Gene Discovery Group 鈥 a project to identify risk loci for Type 2 diabetes that was sponsored by Genome Canada and G茅nome Qu茅bec. Rob's current research centers on developing and applying new technologies to study gene transcription networks and protein function in living cells in order to understand how genetic risk loci influencing T2D risk or the host response to tumors exert their effects.

Keywords

Genetics of Type 2 diabetes, transcriptional regulatory networks, chromatin structure, live-cell imaging, living microarrays, long-read sequencing technologies, single-cell genomics, proteomics of complex disease, nanotechnology, cancer cachexia

Research or Clinical Activities

Research in the Sladek lab focuses on learning how genetic mutations cause diabetes and other complex diseases. To do this, his group has developed new approaches to identify genetic changes across the whole human genome that are associated with Type 2 Diabetes and also to identify the effects of genetic variation on RNA splicing and gene activation in mouse strains and human populations. Current projects in the lab center on developing new experimental techniques to learn how genetic changes within individual genes and proteins can impair cell metabolism and cause diabetes. Reflecting the increasing impact of diabetes and obesity on global health, much of the group's research in the genetics of diabetes takes place as part of research teams that involve scientists in America, Europe and Asia.

Selected Recent Publications

Berard DJ, Michaud F, Mahshid S, Ahamed MJ, McFaul CM, Leith JS, B茅rub茅 P,听Sladek R, Reisner W, Leslie SR. Convex lens-induced nanoscale templating.听Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2014 Sep 16; 111(37):13295-300.

Boivin GA, Pothlichet J, Skamene E, Brown EG, Loredo-Osti JC, Sladek R, Vidal听SM. 鈥淢apping of clinical and expression quantitative trait loci in a听sex-dependent effect of host susceptibility to mouse-adapted influenza听H3N2/HK/1/68.鈥 Journal of Immunology. 2012 Apr 15; 188(8):3949-60.

Rajan S, Chu Pham Dang H, Djambazian H, Zuzan H, Fedyshyn Y, Ketela T, Moffat听J, Hudson TJ, Sladek R. 鈥淎nalysis of early C2C12 myogenesis identifies听stably and differentially expressed transcriptional regulators whose听knock-down inhibits myoblast differentiation.鈥 Physiological Genomics. 2012听Feb 1; 44(2):183-97.

Rajan S, Djambazian H, Dang HC, Sladek R, Hudson TJ. 鈥淭he living听microarray: a high-throughput platform for measuring transcription dynamics听in single cells.鈥 BMC Genomics. 2011 Feb 16; 12:115.

Rung J, et al. 鈥淕enetic variant near IRS1 is associated with type 2听diabetes, insulin resistance and hyperinsulinemia.鈥 Nature Genetics. 2009听Oct; 41(10):1110-5.

PubMed Publications 鈥

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