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Serena Nik-Zainal

Professor Serena Nik-Zainal

PRECISION eDyNAmiC
Professor of Genomic Medicine and Bioinformatics
University of Cambridge
UK

Meet Serena, a co-investigator on PRECISION and eDyNAmiC

Serena is Professor of Genomic Medicine and Bioinformatics and an NIHR Research Professor at University of Cambridge. Following a first-class degree in preclinical science, Serena obtained a medical degree from the University of Cambridge in December 2000, sponsored by Petroliam Nasional Berhad Malaysia (PETRONAS). She trained in general internal medicine before specializing in Clinical Genetics. She has been an Honorary Consultant in Clinical Genetics at Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust since February 2013 and recruited patients with DNA repair defects as part of the Insignia project until December 2018.
 
Serena undertook a PhD at Wellcome Sanger Institute (WSI) exploring cancer using next-generation sequencing (NGS) technology in 2009. She was heavily involved in development of the whole genome sequencing (WGS) somatic variation pipeline and the development of an array of analytical principles that revealed the underlying abnormal biology of tumors – including generalized mutational signatures, imprints left by mutagenic processes that have occurred through cancer development, a novel phenomenon of localized hypermutation termed “kataegis”, and was part of the team that developed the principles of constructing a cancer evolutionary tree from a single tumour sample.
 
In a post-doctoral role and as an early investigator, Serena continued bioinformatic exploration of large cancer datasets, leading production and analyses of the largest cohort of WGS cancers of a single tissue-type, of 560 breast cancers. She began pursuing experimental validation of mutational signatures, dissecting mechanisms of mutagenesis using cellular models. Human induced pluripotent stem cells were used to generate CRISPR-Cas9 knockouts of DNA repair genes and were systematically treated with a variety of environmental mutagens. The results of these endeavours have revealed new insights into mechanisms of mutagenesis in human somatic cells and serve as a reference resource of validated human mutational signatures.
 
Serena is now lead of the Genomic Medicine theme at the NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Campus. Her team continues to advance the whole cancer genomics field through a combination of computational and experimental approaches, to ultimately create clinical applications. With seven patent filings in recent years, they are unravelling mutational mechanisms, developing machine-learning based clinical algorithms, and actively connecting with clinical trials to validate their algorithmic tools. They are also deeply embedded with the UK 100,000 Genomes Project and have performed quality control and pan-cancer analyses/interpretation of more than 15,000 whole cancer genomes to date. 

PRECISION

eDyNAmiC