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Sarah Teichmann

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Parent: Human Cell Atlas Hop 5
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Sarah Teichmann
Sarah Teichmann
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NameSarah Teichmann
Birth date1975
NationalityBritish
FieldsComputational biology, Genomics, Bioinformatics
InstitutionsWellcome Sanger Institute, European Bioinformatics Institute, University of Cambridge
Alma materUniversity of Cambridge, University of Oxford
Known forSingle-cell transcriptomics, Human Cell Atlas contributions

Sarah Teichmann is a British computational biologist and genomicist known for pioneering work in single-cell transcriptomics, systems biology, and large-scale genomic consortia. She leads research integrating high-throughput sequencing, computational methods, and interdisciplinary collaboration to map cell types and regulatory networks across human tissues. Her work connects experimental platforms, international projects, and translational initiatives in molecular and cellular biology.

Early life and education

Teichmann was born in the United Kingdom and trained in the environments of leading institutions such as the University of Cambridge, the University of Oxford, and research centers influenced by figures associated with Wellcome Trust funding. She completed undergraduate and graduate studies with mentorship traditions linked to laboratories at European Molecular Biology Laboratory-affiliated programs and postgraduate supervision styles reminiscent of groups at MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology and Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. During doctoral training she engaged with computational approaches paralleling those developed at Stanford University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology, reflecting cross-Atlantic intellectual exchange with researchers from Harvard University and University of California, Berkeley.

Research and career

Teichmann's career spans leadership roles at the Wellcome Sanger Institute, the European Bioinformatics Institute, and the University of Cambridge, collaborating with consortia including the Human Cell Atlas, ENCODE Project, and the 1000 Genomes Project. Her laboratory developed pipelines for single-cell RNA sequencing, spatial transcriptomics, and integrative genomics, drawing methodological inspiration from studies at Broad Institute, Max Planck Institute, and EPFL. She has worked alongside investigators connected to Tony Hoare-style rigor in computation (conceptual parallels), experimental groups at Francis Crick Institute, and clinical partners such as National Health Service trusts, enabling translational projects with links to Cancer Research UK and pharmaceutical research at GlaxoSmithKline and AstraZeneca.

Teichmann contributed to atlasing immune cell diversity, leveraging approaches related to technologies from 10x Genomics and analytical frameworks used in studies by teams at Sanger Institute and Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute. Her group integrated protein-protein interaction maps, gene regulatory networks, and comparative genomics, building on foundational work by researchers at European Molecular Biology Organization and collaborations with teams from Stanford School of Medicine, Yale University, and University of California, San Francisco. She has been involved in policy and data-sharing dialogues engaging European Commission initiatives and standards promoted by Global Alliance for Genomics and Health.

Awards and honours

Teichmann's recognition includes fellowships and prizes connected to institutions such as the Royal Society, the Academy of Medical Sciences, and honors that align with awards given by EMBO and the Royal Society of Biology. She received accolades comparable to prizes awarded by the Gates Cambridge Trust-affiliated programs and was invited to lecture at venues including Royal Institution, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, and meetings like the International Congress of Genetics and the European Human Genetics Conference. Her leadership roles have placed her on advisory boards for bodies such as the Wellcome Trust, the European Molecular Biology Laboratory, and committees associated with the National Institutes of Health and European Research Council.

Personal life

Teichmann's personal background intersects with academic circles linked to the University of Cambridge and research communities influenced by alumni networks from University of Oxford and Imperial College London. She maintains collaborations with colleagues at institutions like King's College London and cultural organizations including the Royal Society and philanthropic foundations such as Wellcome Trust and Gates Foundation.

Selected publications and contributions

Teichmann authored and co-authored widely cited papers in journals and venues with editorial relationships to publishers associated with Nature Publishing Group, Cell Press, and Science journals. Her contributions include major datasets and analyses that supported the Human Cell Atlas roadmap, methods papers on single-cell transcriptomics reminiscent of work from teams at Broad Institute and Sanger Institute, and integrative studies connecting proteomics efforts at European Proteome Organisation with genomics consortia like ENCODE Project and the 1000 Genomes Project. Representative topics include immune cell atlases, developmental cell-type mapping, and computational frameworks for single-cell data integration that have been used by groups at Harvard Medical School, Stanford University School of Medicine, and University College London.

Category:British computational biologists Category:Women bioinformaticians