Integrative Molecular Phenotyping
INTEGRATIVE MOLECULAR
PHENOTYPING
WHEELOCK LABORATORY
DEPARTMENT OF MEDICAL
BIOCHEMISTRY AND BIOPHYSICS
WHEELOCK LABORATORY
DEPARTMENT OF MEDICAL
BIOCHEMISTRY AND BIOPHYSICS
WHEELOCK LABORATORY
DEPARTMENT OF MEDICAL
BIOCHEMISTRY AND BIOPHYSICS
WHEELOCK LABORATORY
DEPARTMENT OF MEDICAL
BIOCHEMISTRY AND BIOPHYSICS
WHEELOCK LABORATORY
DEPARTMENT OF MEDICAL
BIOCHEMISTRY AND BIOPHYSICS
WHEELOCK LABORATORY

Danuta Dudzik

Danuta Dudzik graduated at the Pharmacy Faculty, Medical University of Bialystok, Poland, where she also got her specialization in pharmacy. In 2009 she obtained her PhD degree in Medical Science in the Department of Endocrinology, Diabetology and Internal Medicine at Medical University of Bialystok. She continued working as academic teacher and researcher in the same university at the Department of Pharmaceutical Biochemistry and then Department of Medical Pharmacology. In 2011 she moved as a post-doctoral researcher to the Center for Metabolomics and Bionalysis (CEMBIO), San Pablo CEU University in Madrid. She is working for the development and improvement of new strategies and methodologies for untargeted metabolomics approaches. Her main research interest is focused on the application of metabolomics for clinical studies, particularly in the field of maternal-fetal medicine. Her current ongoing projects are related to the metabolic fingerprinting of Gestational Diabetes Mellitus and inflammation in pregnancy, for identification of characteristics pattern of disease, understanding underlying molecular mechanisms, altered metabolic pathways for discovery of potential novel biomarkers of disease prediction. She has ongoing collaboration with Division of Maternal and Fetal Medicine University Hospital La Paz in Madrid. She has published 27 original papers in peer-reviewed journals, 3 review papers and presented over 45 international conference. She has been a part of editorial board of medical journals and she is a member of European Association for the Study of Diabetes and Metabolomics community.