Louis M. Staudt

Louis Michael Staudt is a scientist at the National Cancer Institute, where he is co-chief of the Lymphoid Malignancies Branch and the director of the Center for Cancer Genomics.

Louis M. Staudt
Born1955
Alma mater
Scientific career
Institutions

Early life and education

Staudt was born in 1955 in Michigan.[1] Staudt graduated from Harvard College in 1976 with a BA in biochemistry. He received his MD and PhD in immunology from the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine in 1982. He did a postdoctoral fellowship at the Wistar Institute, and an internship in Internal Medicine. From 1984 to 1988, he worked in the laboratory of David Baltimore at the Whitehead Institute as a Jane Coffin Childs Fellow.[2][3]

Career

Staudt joined the National Cancer Institute in 1988.[2] His main area of research is the genomics of lymphoma. He has published over 250 papers.[4]

Staudt became director of the Center for Cancer Genomics in 2013.[4]

Awards

gollark: You could just... specifically handle those.
gollark: Because you *can* "hide" files that way, people *did* it, which is bad.
gollark: If we did not HAVE hidden files, it would likely be less common to foolishly hide stuff.
gollark: Not ALL of them.
gollark: Config files should be under `~/.config` (or, well, `~/config`), not randomly scattered under your home directory with names like `.vimrc` or `.apioform-config`.

References

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