Jonathan Schmok
Graduate Student (Ph.D.)
Bioengineering
Summary
Jonathan is PhD student in the Bioengineering Program at UCSD and graduated from the University of British Columbia in Electrical Engineering with a Biomedical Engineering Specialization and a Minor in Commerce in 2017. He is supported by an NSERC Graduate Scholarship from the Canadian government. During college, Jonathan worked with Dr. Karen Cheung, assisting with automation of an experimental platform, and Dr. Martin McKeown, assisting with neural signal processing.
In the Yeo lab, Jonathan is excited to be working with a talented and diverse team on a variety of projects and to be developing a scientific portfolio spanning from data generation at the bench to designing new computational approaches. He focuses on utilizing high-throughput screening and synthetic biology approaches to investigate regulation of alternative splicing.
Education
BASc. Electrical Engineering: Biomedical Engineering Option, University of British Columbia, 2017
Contact
jschmok@ucsd.edu
Publications
Luo E. C., Nathanson J. L., Tan F. E., Schwartz J. L., Schmok J. C., Shankar A., Markmiller S., Yee B. A., Sathe S., Pratt G. A., Scaletta D. B., Ha Y., Hill D. E., Aigner S., Yeo G. W. “Large-scale tethered function assays identify factors that regulate mRNA stability and translation.” Nature Structural and Molecular Biology 2020.
Grist S. M., Nasseri S. S., Laplatine L., Schmok J. C., Yao D., Hua J., Chrostowski L., Cheung K. C., “Long-term monitoring in a microfluidic system to study tumour spheroid response to chronic and cycling hypoxia,” Scientific Reports 2019, 9, 1-13.
Grist S. M., Schmok J. C., Gaxiola A. D., and Cheung K. C. “Microfluidic platform with integrated thin-film optical oxygen sensors for transient hypoxia,” 2016 14th IEEE International New Circuits and Systems Conference (NEWCAS), Vancouver, BC, 2016, pp. 1-4.
Grist S. M., Schmok J. C., Liu M.-C. A., Chrostowski L., and Cheung K. C., “Designing a Microfluidic Device with Integrated Ratiometric Oxygen Sensors for the Long-Term Control and Monitoring of Chronic and Cyclic Hypoxia,” Sensors 2015, 15, 20030-20052.