Education
PhD Human Genetics, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
BSc Biological Sciences, University of Guelph
Courses Taught
- BIO392 Genetics
- BIO375 Cell Biology and Genetics Laboratory
- BIO495/BIO694 Advanced Genetics
- BIO499 Undergraduate Research
Research
Embryonic development is a sensitive time in our lives. Genetic variants or environmental perturbations during pregnancy can have lifelong consequences on offspring health and disease. The McClymont lab is particularly interested in how variants and environment, in isolation and in combination, can affect the embryonic development of different subclasses of neurons to cause neurodevelopmental, neurodegenerative, and neuropsychiatric disorders later in life.
Using a variety of genomics and epigenomics techniques in ex vivo, in vitro, and in vivo models, we are hoping to develop and explore projects to address these broad questions:
- Question 1: How do developing neurons respond to changes in the in utero environment?
- Question 2: How does genetic variation alter neurodevelopment in disease?
- Question 3: How does the environment and the genome interact to influence risk of disease?