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Mark M. Davis

Mark M. Davis
ForMemRS
Professor Mark Davis ForMemRS.jpg
Mark Davis at the Royal Society admissions day in London in 2016
Born (1952-11-27) 27 November 1952 (age 64)
Fields immunology
Institutions Stanford University
Alma mater
Thesis Programmed DNA rearrangements during differentiation : immunoglobulin class switching (1981)
Doctoral advisor Edward B. Lewis
Notable awards
Website
med.stanford.edu/profiles/mark-davis

Mark Morris Davis (born 27 November 1952) ForMemRS is Director and Avery Family Professor of Immunology in the Institute for Immunity, Transplantation and Infection at Stanford University.

Davis was educated at Johns Hopkins University and the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) where he was awarded a PhD in 1981 for research supervised by Edward B. Lewis.

Davis well known for identifying the first T-cell receptor genes, which are responsible for T lymphocytes ability to “see” foreign entities, solving a major mystery in immunology at that time. He and his research group have made many subsequent discoveries about this type of molecule, subsequently, specifically concerning its biochemical properties and other characteristics, including the demonstration that T cells are able to detect and respond to even a single molecule of their ligand-fragments of antigens bound to cell surface molecules. He also developed a novel way of labeling specific T lymphocytes according to the molecules that they recognize, and this procedure is now an important method in many clinical and basic studies of T cell activity, from new vaccines against cancer to identifying “rogue” T cells in autoimmunity. In recent years his has increasingly focused on understanding the human immune system, from developing broad systems biology approaches to inventing new methods to help unravel the complexities of T cell responses to cancer, autoimmunity and infectious diseases.

Davis has won numerous awards including:


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