Bertie Göttgens
University of Cambridge, UK
Bertie Göttgens graduated from Tübingen University in
1992 with a degree in biochemistry and received his DPhil in biological
sciences from the University of Oxford in 1994. He then moved to the University
of Cambridge Department of Haematology for postdoc training from 1994 to 2003
before becoming a Leukaemia Research Fund Lecturer and then a University
Lecturer (2003-2007). He was appointed Reader in Molecular Haematology in 2007
and since 2011 has been the University of Cambridge Professor of Molecular
Haematology. In 2019 he was appointed Deputy Director of the Wellcome – MRC
Cambridge Stem Cell Institute. Amongst other appointments he is an Associate
Editor of Blood and a former president of the International Society of
Experimental Hematology. He is a fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences and
a member of EMBO.
Bertie uses a combination of experimental and
computational approaches to study how transcription factor networks control the
function of blood stem cells and how mutations that perturb such networks cause
leukaemia. This integrated approach has resulted in the discovery of new combinatorial
interactions between key blood stem cell regulators, as well as experimentally
validated computational models for blood stem cells. Current research focuses
on (i) single cell genomics of early blood development, (ii) modelling the
transcriptional landscape of blood stem and progenitor cell differentiation,
(iii) transcriptional consequences of leukaemogenic mutations in leukaemia
stem/progenitor cells, and (iv) molecular characterisation of human blood
stem/progenitor cell populations used in cell and gene therapy protocols.