Andrew Clark
Jacob Gould Schurman Professor and Nancy and Peter Family Investigator, Molecular Biology and Genetics
Chair, Computational Biology
Dr. Andrew Clark is a population geneticist focused on empirical and analytical problems associated with genetic variation in populations. He has several projects centered on the genetic basis for complex traits, especially in cases where there is a reasonably well understood gene regulatory network underlying the trait. By choosing phenotypes for which there is good information about an underlying gene regulatory network, we can then ask how variation at in the gene regulatory network is manifested as phenotypic variation. At the genetic level, we can collect data in the form of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and at the level of gene expression. The former should obey all the properties of variation prescribed by population genetics theory (which we test), and gene expression measurements are convenient intermediate phenotypes that give a picture of the state of the network. Genetic perturbations, in the form of natural variation across lines and RNAi, as well as environmental perturbations (like infecting with different bacteria) lend specificity to inferences of models connecting genotype to phenotype.
Particular research systems include both humans and Drosophila. The human work is focused on cardiovascular disease risk (collaboration with Charles Sing and Eric Boerwinkle), on population genetic applications of genome-wide SNP data, and on the phenomenon of genomic imprinting. We are also engaged in statistical inference of association using dense SNP genotyping arrays.
I also maintain a Drosophila laboratory, where students are studying the genetic and evolutionary basis for variation in innate immune efficacy, genetic variation in sperm competition, regulation of fat storage, and evolution of the Y chromosome.
Awards & Honors
- Elected to 2012 National Academy of Sciences
- Honorary Doctorate 2009 Oulu University, Finland
- Fellow 2000 American Association for the Advancement of Science
- Study Section Member 1997 NIH
- NATO and Marshall Postdoctoral Fellowships 1981
Courses Taught
- BIOMG 4870: Human Genomics
- BIOG 4990: Independent Undergraduate Research in Biology
- BIOG 2990: Introduction to Research Methods in Biology
- BIOEE 9990: Ph.D. Dissertation Research
- BTRY 4990: Undergraduate Research
Contact Information
227 Biotechnology Building
Ithaca, NY 14853
ac347 [at] cornell.edu
Additional Links
Andrew in the news
News
A seminal fluid protein transferred from male to female fruit flies during mating changes the expression of genes related to the fly’s circadian clock, an innovative technique has revealed.
- Molecular Biology and Genetics
- Biology
- Microbial biology
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- Molecular Biology and Genetics
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