![]() |
HospitalsEmergency Care CentersImaging Centers |
![]() ![]() THE METHODIST HOSPITAL6565 Fannin Street | Houston, Texas 77030 ![]() METHODIST WEST HOUSTON HOSPITAL18500 Katy Freeway | Houston, Texas 77094 ![]() SAN JACINTO METHODIST HOSPITAL4401 Garth Road | Baytown, Texas 77521 ![]() METHODIST SUGAR LAND HOSPITAL16655 Southwest Freeway | Sugar Land, Texas 77479 ![]() METHODIST WILLOWBROOK HOSPITAL18220 State Highway 249 | Houston, Texas 77070 ![]() KIRBY EMERGENCY CARE CENTER2615 Southwest Freeway Suite 140 | Houston, Texas 77098 ![]() VOSS EMERGENCY CARE CENTER1635 South Voss Road | Houston, Texas 77057 ![]() BREAST IMAGING CENTER2615 Southwest Freeway Suite 110 | Houston, Texas 77098 ![]() IMAGING CENTER8333 Katy Freeway | Houston, Texas 77024 |
| Home > The Methodist Hospital Research Institute > Our Research > Neal G. Copeland Ph.D. |
![]() |
Neal G. Copeland, Ph.D.Senior Member E-mail: ncopeland@tmhs.org |
Education |
|
| B.S. | University of Utah | |
| Ph.D. | University of Utah | |
Postdoctoral Training |
||
|
Postdoctoral Fellow, Dana Farber Cancer Institute (Viral Oncology) |
||
|
|
||
Neal Copeland received his Ph.D. in Biochemistry from the University of Utah. Following postdoctoral studies at Harvard Medical School, he joined the staff of The Jackson Laboratory and then the National Cancer Institute-Frederick, where he was Director of the Mammalian Genetics Laboratory, the forerunner of the Mouse Cancer Genetics Program that he also directed. He moved to the Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology in Singapore in 2006, where he served as the Executive Director for most of his stay. In 2011 he returned to the US to serve as Director of the The Methodist Cancer Biology Program at The Methodist Hospital Research Institute. For more than 30 years he has co-headed a laboratory with Nancy Jenkins. The focus of their current research is cancer genetics. They have co-authored more than 780 papers and are among the 50 most cited biomedical research scientists in the world today. Both have served on numerous scientific advisory and editorial boards and they have consulted for several biotechnology and pharmaceutical companies. Both are also members of the US National Academy of Sciences.
Jenkins and Copeland have modeled many different types of human disease in the mouse, but the focus of their current research is exclusively cancer. They are using the Sleeping Beauty transposable element system to tag and clone genes involved in the initiation, progression and metastasis of cancer. It is hoped that a better understanding of the genetics of cancer will lead to the development of additional targeted therapies for the treatment of various forms of the disease.
Mouse models of cancer, insertional mutagenesis, forward genetic screens, high throughput sequencing, candidate cancer gene detection
Copeland NG, Jenkins NA. Harnessing transposons for cancer gene discovery. Nature Reviews Cancer. 2010;10:696-706.
Dupuy AJ, Rogers LM, Kim J, Nannapaneni K, Starr TK, Liu P, Swick BL, Largaespada DA, Scheetz TE, Jenkins NA, Copeland NG. A modified Sleeping Beauty transposon system that can be used to model a wide variety of human cancers in mice. Cancer Res. 2009;69:8150-8156.
Starr TK, Allaei R, Silverstein KAT, Staggs RA, Bergemann TL, O’Sullivan MG, Matise I, Dupuy AJ, Collier LS, Powers S, Thibodeau SN, Tessarollo L, Copeland NG, Jenkins NA, Cormier RT, Largaesapda DA. A transposon-based genetic screen in mice identifies genes altered in colorectal cancer. Science. 2009;323:1747–1750.
Dupuy AJ, Akagi K, Largaespada DA, Copeland NG, Jenkins NA. Mammalian mutagenesis using a highly mobile somatic Sleeping Beauty transposon system. Nature. 2005;436:221-226.
| Privacy & Disclaimer | | | Contact Us | | | Find a Doctor | | | Give to Methodist | | | Pay My Bill | | | Feedback | | | Site Map |
Academically Affiliated with Weill Cornell Medical College
© 2013. The Methodist Hospital System®, Houston, TX. All rights reserved.