February 5-28, 2022
Boston Convention & Exhibition Center
Boston, MA, USA
February 5-28, 2022
Boston Convention & Exhibition Center
Boston, MA, USA
Genome editing tools such as CRISPR-Cas9 are reshaping what is possible within biological sciences. This course will introduce the state-of-the-art in genome editing, the current limitations and the fundamentals of how to apply these technologies to enhance the pursuit of targets and therapeutics.
Scott T. Younger
Children’s Mercy Research Institute, Children’s Mercy Kansas City
Scott Younger is the Director of Disease Gene Engineering within the Genomic Medicine Center at Children's Mercy Kansas City. His laboratory is focused on dissecting the molecular mechanisms through which rare genetic variants identified in patients at Children's Mercy lead to disease. Younger joined Children's Mercy from the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard where his group worked on the development of new methodologies to expand the utility of CRISPR-based genetic screens. Prior to working at the Broad Institute he completed his postdoctoral studies at Harvard University as an American Cancer Society Fellow. He holds a Ph.D. in cell and molecular biology from UT Southwestern Medical Center. He also received an M.S. in biotechnology from the University of Texas at San Antonio and a B.S.I. in bioinformatics from Baylor University.
Samuel A. Hasson
Voyager Therapeutics
Sam Hasson is currently an Associate Director at Voyager Therapeutics (Cambridge, Massachusetts). A major aim of his work is to develop novel applications of AAV-based gene therapy in the CNS to transform the treatment of unmet medical needs. Prior to joining Voyager in 2020, Sam led groups within Amgen Neuroscience and Pfizer Neuroscience with a focus on the deconvolution of human disease genetics for drug target selection, employing genome editing technologies to enable this process. As a postdoc, Sam trained with Richard Youle and Jim Inglese at the National Institutes of Health.