Graduate School of Medical Sciences
A partnership with the Sloan Kettering Institute

Ekta Khurana

Associate Professor
Niroshana Anandasabapathy

Bio

The research interests of the lab fall under the broad categories of genomics, computational biology and systems biology. We participate in multiple international genomics consortia and collaborate with scientists at Weill Cornell to develop novel approaches to understand the role of sequence variants in human disease. The decreasing costs of genome sequencing are leading to a growing repertoire of personal genomes. However, we are lagging behind in understanding the functional consequences of the millions of variants obtained from sequencing. This is also the case for somatic variants in cancer. An average cancer genome contains thousands of somatic variants – but the functional implications of these variants on cancer progression and growth are not clear. We develop integrative computational models to understand the relationship between genomic sequence variation and disease. The impact of sequence variants in non-protein-coding regions of the genome is especially less-well-understood. We have developed an approach, FunSeq, to prioritize noncoding variants. We continue to integrate large-scale data from multiple resources to identify the causal DNA point mutations and rearrangements leading to human disease, in particular cancer. 

Current Areas of Focus

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