Personal information

Regulation of gene expression; enhancers/CRMs; transcription factors; genomics; bioinformatics
Austria

Biography

We use experimental and computational techniques to study how gene regulatory information is encoded in the genome sequence. Using ChIP-Seq, in vivo and in vitro enhancer screens, sequence analyses, and machine learning, we aim to “crack” the regulatory code by predicting enhancer activity from DNA sequence, and thus to understand how transcriptional networks define cellular and developmental programs.

Activities

Employment (4)

Research Institute of Molecular Pathology (IMP): Vienna, AT

2015 to present | Senior Scientist
Employment
Source: Self-asserted source
Alexander Stark

Research Institute of Molecular Pathology (IMP): Vienna, AT

2008 to 2015 | Group Leader
Employment
Source: Self-asserted source
Alexander Stark

Broad Institute of MIT & Harvard and CSAIL MIT: Cambridge, MA, US

2005 to 2008 | Postdoc
Employment
Source: Self-asserted source
Alexander Stark

European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) : Heidelberg, DE

2004 to 2005 | Bridging Postdoc
Employment
Source: Self-asserted source
Alexander Stark

Education and qualifications (3)

European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) and University of Cologne: Heidelberg and Cologne, DE

2004 to 2004 | PhD
Education
Source: Self-asserted source
Alexander Stark

European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) : Heidelberg, DE

2001 to 2004 | PhD student
Education
Source: Self-asserted source
Alexander Stark

Eberhard Karls University: Tübingen, DE

2000 | Diploma in Biochemistry
Education
Source: Self-asserted source
Alexander Stark