Brent Richards
Associate Professor
Division of Endocrinology & Metabolism
McGill University
Canada
Biography
Brent Richards has trained in genetics, medicine, endocrinology, epidemiology and biostatistics. He currently practices endocrinology and runs a research program at McGill University. His research program is focused on the identification of the genetic determinants of common, aging-related diseases and the translation of these findings to improved clinical care. Dr. Richards was a CIHR Clinical Investigator and currently is an FRSQ Clinician Scientist. He has had the opportunity to participate in, and sometimes lead, genome-wide association studies recently published in Nature Genetics, The Lancet and PLoS Genetics. Brent is co-chair of the cohorts arm of the UK10K consortium where ~3,800 population-based participants have been whole genome-sequenced and these data will be made publicly available, along with 50 phenotypes.
Research Interest
The focus of our current research program is two-fold. The first is to identify the genetic determinants of common endocrine-related disease and the second is to translate this information into improved clinical care. Research conducted in the Richards Lab uses genomics technologies to identify novel biologic pathways that cause common disease. Many drugs currently exist that target these pathways and these drugs could represent new therapeutic options for disease. Our goal is to generate novel and personalized therapeutic options by repositioning existing, less expensive drugs to new indications. Recent studies involve a genome-wide scan to understand the efficacy of certain pharmaceuticals and the link between coronary artery disease and type 2 diabetes.
Publications
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JB Richards, Zheng HF, Spector TD. Genetics of Osteoporosis from Genome-Wide Association Studies: Advances and Challenges. Nature Reviews Genetics [IF: 31.4]. 2012 Jul 18;13(8):576-88. doi: 10.1038/nrg3228.
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M Ladouceur, Z Dastani, YS Aulchenko, MG Ehm, CMT Greenwood, JB Richards. The empirical power of rare variant association methods: Results from Sanger sequencing in 1,998 individuals. PLoS Genetics [IF: 9.2] 8(2): e1002496. doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1002496. 2012. This paper was described as a Research Highlight by Nature Genetics and Nature Methods and was a “Most Viewed†paper in PLoS Genetics.
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A Leong, W Rehman, Z Dastani, CM Greenwood, N Timpson, L Langsetmo, C Berger, METASTROKE, L Fu, BYL Wong, S Malik, R Malik, DEC Cole D Goltzman, JB Richards. The causal effect of Vitamin D binding protein (DBP) levels on calcemic and cardiometablic diseases: A Mendelian randomization study. PLOS Medicine [IF: 14]. Oct 29, 2014. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.1001751 . This paper received an Editorial from PLOS Medicine.