Pathogen Program
Supervisors
Leadership
Principal Scientist

Professor Gil McVean

Professor McVean's research focuses on understanding the molecular and evolutionary processes that shape genetic variation in populations and the relationship between genetic variation and phenotype. He played leading roles in international collaborations to characterise genomic variation, such as the 1000 Genomes Project, helped uncover remarkable processes that drive recombination and mutation in humans, and worked with multidisciplinary teams to discover and characteristic the mechanisms behind genetic drivers of risk to complex disease. He was the founding director of Oxford’s Big Data Institute, is co-founder of the Oxford spinout company, Genomics, and is President of the UK’s Genetics Society.

At EIT, Gil's focus is within the Pathogen Program, developing the data resources, genomic technologies, and analytical capabilities that support rapid diagnosis and treatment selection for infectious disease and enable global monitoring of current and emerging human pathogens. These challenges unite many of his long-standing research themes, including the building of population-scale genomic data resources, reference-guided genome assembly and interpretation, genealogical inference in recombining genomes, and mapping the relationship between genotype and phenotype for interpretation and prediction.

Awards and certifications

FMedSci

FRS

Weldon Prize

Francis Crick Prize

Publications

High-resolution African HLA resource uncovers HLA-DRB1 expression effects underlying vaccine response
High-resolution African HLA resource uncovers HLA-DRB1 expression effects underlying vaccine response
A common NFKB1 variant detected through antibody analysis in UK Biobank predicts risk of infection and allergy
Age-dependent topic modeling of comorbidities in UK Biobank identifies disease subtypes with differential genetic risk
Topic modeling identifies novel genetic loci associated with multimorbidities in UK Biobank
Optimal strategies for learning multi-ancestry polygenic scores vary across traits
The Type 2 Diabetes Knowledge Portal: An open access genetic resource dedicated to type 2 diabetes and related traits
Mouse fetal growth restriction through parental and fetal immune gene variation and intercellular communications cascade
Recommendations for improving statistical inference in population genomics
Join our team

We’re gathering the greatest minds.

EIT is growing rapidly and we are recruiting at pace. Thrive in a dynamic and fast-paced work environment, learning and growing every day alongside experts in science and technology.