WANT A PROFILE LIKE THIS?
Create my FREE Plan Or learn about other options
Albert Cheng
PeerJ Editor
100 Points

Contributions by role

Editor 100

Contributions by subject area

Biochemistry
Cell Biology
Genetics
Molecular Biology

Albert Cheng

PeerJ Editor

Summary

Albert Cheng obtained his BSc in Biochemistry and MPhil in Biology from Hong Kong University of Science and Technology in 2005 and 2007, respectively. He studied neurotrophin signaling and C. elegans developmental genetics. He then pursued his PhD in Computational & Systems Biology at MIT in the labs of Profs Christopher Burge and Rudolf Jaenisch and worked on various topics on epigenetics, gene regulation and alternative splicing in stem cells, reprogramming, cancer metastasis, erythropoiesis and differentiation. Cheng and colleagues identified H3K27ac as a signature for active enhancers. He analyzed alternative splicing in epithetlial-mesenchymal transition, cancer metastasis as well as erythropoiesis and identified splicing factors regulating these processes. He constructed CRISPR-on, an artificial RNA-guided activator based on CRISPR/Cas. After graduating in 2014, he joined the Jackson Laboratory at Bar Harbor, ME, as one of the first JAX scholars where he continued to work on understanding and improving the CRISPR/Cas technology. In July 2015, he started his own lab as an assistant professor at the Jackson Laboratory for Genomic Medicine campus at Farmington, CT.

Bioengineering Biotechnology Cell Biology Genetics Genomics Molecular Biology Synthetic Biology

Editorial Board Member

PeerJ - the Journal of Life & Environmental Sciences

Work details

Assistant Professor

The Jackson Laboratory
July 2015
Genomic Medicine

Websites

  • Cheng Lab

PeerJ Contributions

  • Edited 1

Academic Editor on

September 18, 2023
Identification of two short peptide motifs from serine/arginine-rich protein ribonucleic acid recognition motif-1 domain acting as splicing regulators
Tao Jiang, Li Wang, Liang Tang, Azhar Zeb, Yanjun Hou
https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.16103 PubMed 37744237