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INFORMATION FOR

    Duy Phan, PhD

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    About

    Biography

    Duy is an MD/PhD student at Yale interested in functional genomics, developmental neurobiology, and pediatric neurosurgery. Duy previously majored in neuroscience at Johns Hopkins University, where he was a Goldwater Scholar and Woodrow Wilson Research Fellow. His NIH F30-funded PhD work, co-mentored by Kristopher Kahle and Nenad Sestan, focused on understanding the molecular genetic mechanisms of developmental brain disorders using unbiased functional genomic approaches in human patients paired with hypothesis-driven neurobiology studies in animal models. Duy's works have led to new understanding of genes involved in formation of the brain-cerebrospinal fluid interface and the embryological mechanisms underlying hydrocephalus, the most common reason for brain surgery in children. His findings have led to first-authored publications in Nature Neuroscience and Neuron and contributing author publications in Nature, Nature Medicine, Journal of Cell Biology, JAMA Neurology, and JAMA Pediatrics. Duy's long-term goals are to define the cellular and molecular pathology of nervous system disorders to thereby develop precision medicine approaches for the care of patients with developmental neurocranial malformations.

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    Departments & Organizations

    Education & Training

    PhD
    Yale University School of Medicine, Neuroscience (2021)
    BS
    Johns Hopkins University, Neuroscience (2018)

    Research

    Overview

    Medical Research Interests

    Brain; Cerebral Ventricles; Nervous System Malformations; Neural Tube

    Research at a Glance

    Yale Co-Authors

    Frequent collaborators of Duy Phan's published research.

    Publications

    2022

    2021