Roger D. Cox PhD
Roger is currently a scientific advisor to the MRC Harwell Animal Welfare and Ethical Review Body (AWERB) and in addition advises on alternatives to animals in scientific research at the Mary Lyon Centre at MRC Harwell.
His career has been spent in human and mouse genetics research. He has extensive expertise in basic research into the genetics of metabolic disease (with a focus on type 2 diabetes, obesity and fat distribution), using in vivo physiological approaches in genetically altered mice.
He has a degree in Biochemistry from the University of Sussex (1982), and a PhD from the University of London (1986).
As a postdoc he worked at the Pasteur Institute in Paris France, investigating transcriptional regulation of skeletal muscle contractile protein genes (1986-1989) and then at the Imperial Cancer Research Fund (ICRF) in London, working on mouse genome mapping using backcross mice, yeast and P1 artificial chromosomes, and positional cloning (1989-1994).
In 1994 he became Head of the Physical Mapping and Gene Identification group at the Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics in Oxford working on various gene identification projects arising from genome wide association (GWA) studies.
Finally, in 1999 he established the genetics of type 2 diabetes group within the Mammalian Genetics Unit, MRC Harwell Institute, which he led until 2022.
He has over 163 publications with a Google Scholar h-index of 60 over all publications.
https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=sDcnvnwAAAAJ&hl=en