Summary
Daniel Munro is a computational biologist and Assistant Project Scientist with 11 years of experience applying quantitative genetics to dissect regulatory genomic variation across academic labs. He leads development and maintenance of public genomics resources (e.g., ratgtex.org, pantry.pejlab.org, demask.princeton.edu) that translate complex datasets into community-accessible tools. Based at UC San Diego and affiliated with Seattle Children's/University of Washington, he combines hands-on analysis, bioinformatics engineering, and cross-institutional collaboration. His work spans cancer and disease mutation modeling, proteomics, microbiome analysis, and gene regulatory variation from graduate research through successive postdoctoral and staff roles. Beyond the bench, he brings a practical maker’s mindset—building production web resources—and an uncommon personal interest in bioastronautics, having been a NASA human-subject participant.
11 years of coding experience
10 years of employment as a software developer
Bachelor of Science - BS, Biology, General, Bachelor of Science - BS, Biology, General at University of North Texas
Doctor of Philosophy - PhD, Quantitative and Computational Biology, Doctor of Philosophy - PhD, Quantitative and Computational Biology at Princeton University