Dr Duncan Murray discusses mycosis fungoides and sezary syndrome.
Dr Murray completed his PhD at the University of Birmingham, looking at the interaction between the immune system and malignant T cells in skin lymphoma.
He finds the interaction between a "good" and "bad" T cell fascinating. He has used multiple single-cell laboratory techniques to tease apart the two populations (including V-beta antibodies, single-cell T-cell receptor (TCR) and ribonucleic acid (RNA) sequencing and mass cytometry).
Skin lymphoma is an unusual disease in that key determinants of the patient's outcome sit very close together. Both anatomically and in phenotype. His current work focuses on what we can learn from high-dimensional single-cell data and the bioinformatic process to assist this.