Yvonne Tay
National University of Singapore, Singapore
Biography
Yvonne Tay has received her PhD in 2008 from the National University of Singapore and Genome Institute of Singapore (GIS). Her PhD work, which was supported by an A*STAR Graduate Scholarship led to seminal contributions to our understanding of the mechanisms of microRNA function. She was awarded the 2009 Philip Yeo Prize for Outstanding Achievement in Research by A*STAR in recognition of these breakthrough discoveries. After a two year Postdoctoral stint at A*STAR, she subsequently received a Special Fellow award from the Leukemia Lymphoma Society to continue her Postdoctoral training at Harvard Medical School and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. Her postdoctoral research in the Pandolfi Lab led to the discovery that protein-coding transcripts can co-regulate the tumor suppressor PTEN by competing for shared microRNAs. She has recently commenced her new appointments as an Assistant Professor in the Department of Biochemistry and Junior Principal Investigator at the Cancer Science Institute of the National University of Singapore in September 2014.
Abstract
Abstract : A microRNA-638/ferritin gene: Pseudogene network regulates iron storage in prostate cancer