Focus Areas in the Genomic Medicine Cycle
Major leadership positions
Assistant Professor, Harvard Medical School
Director, MGH Diabetes Genetics Clinic
Principal Investigator, MGH Center for Genomic Medicine
Associate Member, Broad Institute
MGH Department/Division
MGH Department of Medicine/Endocrine Division
MGH Unit(s)
Diabetes Unit
Overview
We focus on advancing precision diagnosis and management of metabolic diseases.
Our research focuses on uncovering the genetic basis of metabolic diseases, both rare and common forms, and translating findings into clinical care. We interrogate genetic data to identify novel diabetes genes, subtypes, and mechanisms of disease. Our research involves analyzing large-scale patient genomic data including from the UK Biobank, the Mass General Brigham Biobank, the Type 2 Diabetes Knowledge Portal, and many other collaborations. We are also involved in identifying patients with atypical diabetes though the Rare and Atypical Diabetes Network (RADIANT) study, where we lead patient recruitment at MGH. We work closely with a vibrant and collaborative environment at Mass General Hospital and the Broad Institute.
Priority Projects
- RADIANT Atypical Diabetes study – This NIDDK/NIH funded clinical study is aimed understanding rare and atypical forms of diabetes. Our team leads recruitment at MGH and employs whole genome sequencing to improve understanding of causes and classification of diabetes.
- Genetic subtyping of diabetes –We have pioneered the use of process-specific or “partitioned” polygenic scores to capture a person’s genetic risk for a given T2D disease process and have shown that these pPS are significantly associated with patient clinical phenotypes. Ongoing research is focused on using other forms of omics to further characterize genetic subtypes of diabetes. Additionally, we are interested in using electronic medical record data and machine-learning approaches to identify disease subtypes.
- Translation of genetics to clinical care – We study how the full spectrum of rare to common genetic variation informs on individual disease risk as well as disease subtype and prognosis. Our research includes analysis of rare variants causing diabetes as well as polygenic scores, including those for type 1 diabetes, type 2 diabetes, and process-specific scores.
Lab Members
Name: | Email: | Role: |
---|---|---|
Miriam S. Udler, MD, PhD | mudler [@] mgh.harvard.edu | Principal Investigator |
Lynette Desharnais, BS | ldesharnais [@] partners.org | Administrative Coordinator |
Aaron Deutsch, MD | ajdeutsch [@] mgh.harvard.edu | Post-doctoral Fellow |
Raymond Kreienkamp, MD | raymond.kreienkamp [@] childrens.harvard.edu | Post-doctoral Fellow |
Sara Cromer, MD | scromer [@] mgh.harvard.edu | Post-doctoral Fellow |
Lukasz Szczerbinski | LSZCZERBINSKI [@] mgh.harvard.edu | Post-doctoral Fellow |
Julie Gervis, PhD | jgervis [@] mgh.harvard.edu | Post-doctoral Fellow |
Kirk Smith | ksmith143 [@] mgh.harvard.edu | Staff scientist |
Chris Bryan | cjbryan [@] mgh.harvard.edu | Staff scientist |
Sarah Hsu | shsu8 [@] mgh.harvard.edu | Staff scientist |
Evelyn Greaux | egreaux [@] mgh.harvard.edu | Senior clinical research coordinator |
Saadhvi Kartik | skartik [@] bwh.harvard.edu | Clinical research coordinator |
Victoria Chen | vjchen [@] mgh.harvard.edu | Student |
Emmanuel Oshodi | eoshodi [@] mgh.harvard.edu | Student |
Micah Koss | mpkoss [@] mgh.harvard.edu | Student |
Cristina Fernandez Hernandez | cfernandezhernandez [@] mgh.harvard.edu | Student |
Lab/Contact Telephone
Udler Research Team 617-726-8720
Primary Email
mudler [@] mgh.harvard.edu