Robin泭Dowell
- Professor
- MOLECULAR CELLULAR AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY

Robin Dowell merges genetics and computer science to investigate transcriptional regulation. In an antedisciplinary approach, Dr. Dowell ignores boundaries between disciplines to follow this biological problem wherever it leads. Dowells background is uniquely diverse; she holds bachelors degrees in both genetics and computer engineering from Texas A&M 勛圖厙, and received an M.S. in computer science and Ph.D. in biomedical engineering from Washington 勛圖厙 in St. Louis. As a graduate student, Dowell developed the , a communication protocol allowing researchers around the world to share annotations on genomic or protein sequences. 泭This was merely the start of a career long passion for creating innovative avenues for collaboration. 泭 Her doctoral work subsequently focused on computational approaches to structural RNA. 泭Following this, Dr. Dowell completed postdoctoral studies at MIT, where she began computational modeling of transcriptional regulation.
Dr. Dowell was recruited to the BioFrontiers Institute as an Assistant Professor in the in 2009. Her research group blends computational and experimental approaches to understand transcriptional regulatory networks. 泭Most of the Dowell labs efforts focus on transcription factors and improving our understanding of how they alter polymerase activity. 泭 For instance, the Dowell lab has shown that the profile of within the cell can infer changes in transcription factor activity between conditions. 泭 Much of this research hinges on the creation of new machine learning approaches to analyze vast sequencing datasets. 泭Dr. Dowell leverages her diverse background and frequently collaborates with faculty members across departments to answer biological questions with computational tools.
The BioFrontiers Institute has benefited greatly from Robin Dowells interdisciplinary nature. She is a co-founder of and holds a patent for the assessment of transcription factor activity. In addition to pursuing translational activities, Dr. Dowell is a dedicated educator. She led the development of a student team for the International Genetically Engineered Machine (iGEM) competition and has hosted a Short Read Sequence Analysis summer workshop for several years. 泭Dr. Dowell has been honored as a Kavli Foundation Fellow, a Linda Crnic Institute Investigator, and an Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Research Fellow. By following biological problems across disciplines, Dr. Dowell is improving data analysis and illuminating the relationship between genetics and transcriptional regulation.
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