- Bach, Ingolf
- Baehrecke, Eric
- Benanti, Jennifer
- Bergmann, Andreas
- Brodsky, Michael
- Cantor, Sharon
- Castilla, Lucio H.
- Fazzio, Thomas
- Flavahan, William
- Gottlinger, Heinrich
- Green, Michael
- Haynes, Cole
- Kaufman, Paul
- Kelliher, Michelle
- Kim, Dohoon
- Lawson, Nathan D.
- Lewis, Brian
- Lodato, Michael
- Mao, Junhao
- Mercurio, Arthur
- Ruscetti, Marcus
- Shaw, Leslie
- Simin, Karl
- Socolovsky, Merav
- Tissenbaum, Heidi A.
- Torres, Eduardo
- Wang, Yong-Xu
- Wolfe, Scot A.
- Zhang, Hong
- Zhu, Julie
- Bach, Ingolf
- Baehrecke, Eric
- Benanti, Jennifer
- Bergmann, Andreas
- Brodsky, Michael
- Cantor, Sharon
- Castilla, Lucio H.
- Fazzio, Thomas
- Flavahan, William
- Gottlinger, Heinrich
- Green, Michael
- Haynes, Cole
- Kaufman, Paul
- Kelliher, Michelle
- Kim, Dohoon
- Lawson, Nathan D.
- Lewis, Brian
- Lodato, Michael
- Mao, Junhao
- Mercurio, Arthur
- Ruscetti, Marcus
- Shaw, Leslie
- Simin, Karl
- Socolovsky, Merav
- Tissenbaum, Heidi A.
- Torres, Eduardo
- Wang, Yong-Xu
- Wolfe, Scot A.
- Zhang, Hong
- Zhu, Julie
Karl Simin, Ph.D.
Professor | ||
Ph.D.: 2001, University of Utah | ||
Postdoctoral research: University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill | ||
Office: | UMass Chan Medical School 364 Plantation Street, LRB-413 Worcester, MA 01605 |
|
Phone: | 508-856-3959 | |
Email: | Karl.Simin@umassmed.edu | |
Research
The Simin lab is interested in genetic pathways that, when perturbed, increase cancer malignancy. The research involves bioinformatics along with molecular and cell biology techniques to engineer cell lines and mouse models that faithfully mimic human cancer evolution. With a greater understanding of the molecular basis of cancer progression we hope to identify potential new treatment avenues.