Chengran Yang, PhD
Postdoctoral Research Associate
- Email: chengranyang@wustl.edu
Chengran received his PhD in Human and Statistical Genetics at Washington University with Carlos Cruchaga. Before joining back the lab as a postdoc, he worked as a Scientist in Statistical Genetics/Computational Biology at Biogen.
Maulik Patel, PhD
Postdoctoral Research Associate
- Email: mppatel@wustl.edu
Maulik is a Postdoctoral Research Associate at Cruchaga lab and manages GWAS, RNA-Seq and neuro imaging data. Maulik received his doctoral degree in Bioinformatics from Gujarat University and his Master degree in Bioinformatics from Sardar Patel University. Before joining the lab, he worked as a Project Scientist in Xcelris Genomics for 5 years and as Application Scientist in Bioinnovation for 2.5 years. He collaborated with various universities in the development of pipelines for the analysis of large-scale de-novo assembly, transcriptome, metagenomics and targeted exome data. He also worked on various functional and network analysis of high-throughput multi-omics and metabolomics data. Recently, he designed a 94-gene panel for Alzheimer’s disease patients with a diabetic condition to understand early detection and progression of the diseases.
Thomas Marsh, MS
Graduate Student, Human and Statistical Genetics
- Email: marsh.t@wustl.edu
Thomas is a PhD student in the Human and Statistical Genetics program at Washington University in St. Louis. He came to St. Louis from Montreal, Canada. He completed a BA in Honours Psychology at Concordia University and a BSc in Honours Biology at McGill University. He completed an undergraduate thesis during both his undergraduate experiences; he assessed the involvement of estrogen in heroin addiction in female rats in the laboratory of Dr. Uri Shalev at Concordia University, and he assessed the involvement of specific Zasp proteins in the flight of Drosophila melanogaster in the laboratory of Dr. Frieder Shoeck at McGill University. He then completed an MSc in Human Genetics at McGill University in the laboratory of Dr. James Engert and Dr. George Thanassoulis. During his MSc, he used haplotype analysis to better understand the genetic underpinnings of calcific aortic stenosis and other cardiovascular diseases. His main interest is in using wet and dry lab techniques in tandem to uncover the genetic basis of neurological and psychological issues.
Dan Western, BS
Graduate Student, Human and Statistical Genetics
- Email: d.e.western@wustl.edu
Dan earned his Bachelor of Science degree in Genetics and Genomics from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. During his undergraduate education, he studied a mouse model of retinal degeneration, focusing on a deficiency of proteoglycans in the retina. Dan is utilizing multi-omic computational approaches to analyze sex-specific differences in Alzheimer disease diagnosis.
Bridget Phillips, BS
Graduate Student, Computational and Systems Biology
- Email: b.m.phillips@wustl.edu
Bridget earned her Bachelor’s degree in Genetics and Genomics with a minor in Mathematics from the University of Utah. During her undergrad, she studied the genetics of eye color variation in the domestic pigeon using computational approaches such as QTL mapping and RNA-Seq.
Joseph Bradley, BS
Graduate Student, Human and Statistical Genetics
- Email: josephbradley@wustl.edu
Joseph has a BS in Biology from Harris-Stowe State University in Mid-town St. Louis, MO. His Hobbies include gaming, music, and mixed martial arts.
Ciyang Wang, BS
Graduate Student, Molecular Genetics and Genomics
- Email: wangciyang@wustl.edu
Ciyang received her Bachelor’s degree in Biochemistry from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. During college, she worked on identifying the role of anticipatory UPR-triggered calcium in transcription regulation in ERα+ breast cancer utilizing approaches including ChIP. As a graduate student, she takes advantage of a comprehensive metabolomics dataset derived from brain tissues and uses metabolites as quantitative traits to decipher their roles in Alzheimer’s disease
Alvin Thomas, PhD
Postdoctoral Research Analyst
- Email: alvint@wustl.edu
Alvin leverages multi-omic, psychometric, and brain imaging data to understand the biology of cognitive resilience to Alzheimer’s disease and related disorders. The long-term goal of this line of work is to improve the health of aging populations. Alvin’s other interests include causal inference and deep learning. Alvin earned a BS with honors in Chemistry and Engineering from Washington and Lee University, a MSPH in Global Disease Epidemiology from Johns Hopkins University, and a PhD in Epidemiology from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He served in the AmeriCorps program and remains committed to diminishing poverty through research and service.