Cancer Institute A national cancer institute
designated cancer center
Profile http://med.stanford.edu/profiles/cancer/researcher/Gill_Bejerano/
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Gill Bejerano

Academic Appointments

Key Documents

Contact Information

  • Academic Offices
    Personal Information
    Tel (650) 723-7666
    Alternate Contact
    Kathy Fisher Admininstrative Associate Tel Work 650-725-6792

Professional Overview

Administrative Appointments

  • Technical Advisory Board, Numenta (2008 - present)
  • Member, Editorial Board, Gene (2007 - 2008)

Honors and Awards

  • New Faculty Fellow, Microsoft Research (2009)
  • Fellow, David & Lucile Packard Foundation (2008-2013)
  • Research Grant Award, Okawa Foundation (2008)
  • Searle Scholar, Searle Scholars Program (2008-2011)
  • Young Investigator Award, Human Frontier Science Program (2008-2011)
  • Alfred P. Sloan Fellow, Alfred P. Sloan Foundation (2008-2010)
View All 15honors and awards of Gill Bejerano

Professional Education

Ph.D.: Hebrew University, Computer Science (2004)
B.Sc.: Hebrew University, Physics, Mathematics, Computer Science (summa cum laude) (1997)

Postdoctoral Advisees

Jarrett CampAmir MarcovitzGeetu Tuteja

Graduate & Fellowship Program Affiliations

Scientific Focus

Current Research Interests

Only 2-3% of the 3 billion bases in the human genome is used to encode the genome's 20-25,000 protein coding genes. Recent genomics advances have revealed a multitude of cis-regulatory regions that occupy at least 3-5 times more of the genome. These roughly 1,000,000 promoters, enhancers, silencers and insulators regulate gene expression in every cell in our body, allowing different cells to express very different protein repertoires. We study this fascinating "control layer" of the human genome, with an aim to:

1. Identify cis-regulatory elements in the human genome and annotate them for function.
2. Map the cis-regulatory architecture controlling early limb, forebrain and placenta development, and understand its contribution to human disease.
3. Study the origins and evolution of regulatory genomic regions and reveal their contribution to vertebrate, mammalian and human specific evolution.

To address these challenges we use a potent combination of computational and experimental approaches. We write computational tools to discover cis-regulatory codes and trace their evolution; we run our tools on massive genomic datasets to generate testable hypotheses; and we perform molecular biology experiments to validate our hypotheses and generate novel ones. We work in small teams of experimentalists and computational tool users, who interact directly with our computational tool builders. Please see http://bejerano.stanford.edu/ for more details.

Publications

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