Summary
Abraham Moller is a bioinformatician and microbiologist with a decade of experience bridging bench enzymology and computational genomics, currently supporting long-read and metagenomic sequencing efforts at NIH-affiliated centers. He earned a PhD in Microbiology and Molecular Genetics from Emory after combined BS/MS training at Miami University, and has deep experimental expertise in metallo-beta-lactamase biochemistry, DEER EPR spectroscopy, and kinetic analysis. His work increasingly focuses on bioinformatics—building toxin sequence/activity databases and developing methods to map environmental viruses to prokaryotic hosts—bringing together data engineering and biological insight. Abraham has translated his research into applied public-health contexts through postdoctoral studies on Gram-negative antibiotic resistance evolution and clinical volunteer experience, and now develops reproducible pipelines for genome assembly, SV calling, and methylation analysis. Notably, he combines hands-on molecular technique fluency with pragmatic pipeline and database development, making him effective at turning mechanistic hypotheses into scalable computational workflows.
9 years of coding experience
7 years of employment as a software developer
Master of Science (M.S.), Cell, Molecular, and Structural Biology (CMSB), Master of Science (M.S.), Cell, Molecular, and Structural Biology (CMSB) at Miami University
Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), Microbiology and Molecular Genetics at Emory University
4.0, 4.0 at Walnut Hills High School
Molecular Biology, 4.0, Molecular Biology, 4.0 at University of Pennsylvania
Wyoming Middle School