Summary
Gabriel Starrett is a Stadtman Investigator at the National Cancer Institute who combines wet-lab expertise and bioinformatics to study how viruses induce genomic instability, point mutations, and epigenetic changes that drive cancer. With eight years of research experience spanning PhD work in Microbiology, Immunology and Cancer Biology and progressive roles at the NCI, he routinely integrates primary patient specimens, cellular models, sequencing, and computational analysis to answer mechanistic questions. His work bridges molecular virology and cancer genomics, producing publications tracked on ResearchGate and Google Scholar, and reflects a rare blend of hands-on experimental skill and data-driven insight. Based in Bethesda, he brings a translational focus—turning sequencing signals into biological hypotheses—while leading an independent tenure-track program investigating virus-associated mutagenesis.
8 years of coding experience
2 years of employment as a software developer
Bachelor of Science (B.S.), Medical Microbiology and Immunology, Bachelor of Science (B.S.), Medical Microbiology and Immunology at University of Wisconsin-Madison
University of Minnesota Twin Cities
English, Spanish