Baker Institute for Animal Health

DEDICATED TO THE STUDY OF VETERINARY INFECTIOUS DISEASES, IMMUNOLOGY, CANCER, REPRODUCTION, GENOMICS AND EPIGENOMICS

Charles Danko, PhD

Baker Institute for Animal Health

Department of Biomedical Sciences

Associate Professor in Life Science and Technology

Baker Institute for Animal Health

Academic Profile


Office: 607.256.5620
Email: cgd24@cornell.edu

Dr. Danko's Work

How do cells read and interpret DNA to regulate life?

Dr. Charles Danko is interested in how DNA, the basic blueprints for all living things, is interpreted by cells to produce living, breathing organisms. He also explores how diseases like cancer change these interpretations and impact health.

  • Understanding how evolution determines human and animal differences. The genes of humans, chimps, rhesus macaques, mice, and rats aren’t all that different, considering how diverse these creatures are. Danko and his collaborators are studying the roles of “gene enhancers” in evolution, small parts of the genome that can ramp-up or -down the number of times a gene is transcribed into RNA and ultimately translated into the proteins that make up the functional differences between the animals.
  • How cancer cells use genes differently. Glioblastoma cancer cells make up many serious brain tumors. To determine how to specifically target those cancers Danko and his team have studied the ways these cells turn their genetic instructions into action, by comparison with normal, healthy cells. They have identified the several proteins called “transcription factors” that drive the out-of-control growth of cancer cells, information that can be used to design cancer therapies specific to each type of cell and its associated cancers.