Mark A. Kay
Professor
Department of Genetics
Stanford University School of Medicine
United States of America
Biography
Mark A. Kay is Professor of the Department of Genetics. He studies gene/RNAi therapeutics and the mechanisms of non-coding RNA-induced gene regulation.
Research Interest
The goal of the Program in Human Gene Therapy is to develop gene transfer technologies and use them for hepatic gene therapy for the treatment of genetic and acquired diseases. The general approach is to develop new vector systems and delivery methods, test them in the appropriate animal models, uncover the mechanisms involved in vector transduction, and use the most promising approaches in clinical trials. Specifically, we work on a variety of viral and non-viral vector systems. Our major disease models are hemophilia, hepatitis C and B viral infections, and diabetes. The second major focus includes the role that small RNAs play in mammalian gene regulation.
Publications
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Lu J, Zhang F, Fire A Z, Kay M A (2017) Sequence-Modified Antibiotic Resistance Genes Provide Sustained Plasmid-Mediated Transgene Expression in Mammals. MOLECULAR THERAPY 25(5): 1187-1198.