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Dr Dylan Glubb
Dr

Dylan Glubb

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Overview

Background

After completing his BSc and MSc (Hons) at the University of Canterbury (NZ), Dylan worked for five years as a Research Scientist at Antisoma Research Limited (London, UK), developing antibody-enzyme fusion proteins for cancer therapy. He returned to New Zealand to carry out his PhD research into antidepressant pharmacogenomics at the University of Otago. Afterwards, he continued working at the University of Otago as a Research Fellow, studying the biological function of genes involved with inflammatory bowel disease. Dylan moved to the United States in 2009 to perform postdoctoral training, researching the functional genetics of the VEGF-pathway and its relationship with cancer at the University of Chicago and, subsequently, the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

In 2013, Dylan began working at QIMR Berghofer and has undertaken the functional follow-up of large-scale genetic studies of breast, endometrial and ovarian cancer to identify the likely causal variants and genes that mediate associations with cancer risk and survival. He has been awarded both internal and NHMRC grant funding to support these studies. Since 2019, Dylan has held an Honorary Associate Professorship at UQ

As of early 2021, Dylan has authored one conference report, two editorials, two book chapters, six reviews and 31 original research articles. He is first or last author on 20 of these publications and 27 of his publications have been cited at least 10 times. According to CiteScore, since 2010, 53% of his articles have been published in journals ranked in the top 10% and 19% of hispublications are in the 10% most cited publications worldwide.

Availability

Dr Dylan Glubb is:
Available for supervision
Media expert

Research interests

  • Gynaecological cancer genetics

    Primarily endometrial cancer

  • Functional genomics of gynaecological cancer

Research impacts

Large numbers of germline genetic variants have been found to associate with disease. A major roadblock in our understanding of how genetics contribute to disease has been a lack of knowledge of the molecular effects of variants. Thus, the aim of my research program is to use genetic analyses to assign function and gene targets to variants associated with disease-related phenotypes. Dylan's knowledge impact is evidenced by 19 articles, with an average of 27 citations per article and 12 articles in journals in top 10% of their field (e.g. Nature, Nat Genet, Am J Hum Genet). Key impacts include:

•Identifying >30 genes with evidence of targeting by disease-related variants (18 articles)

•Providing support for the new paradigm that multiple variants affect target gene expression at disease loci (Corradin et al. Nat Genet 2016)

•Calibrating a functional assay for diagnostic assessment of Lynch syndrome genetic variants of uncertain significance (Drost et al, Genet Med 2018; in top 2% of articles for online attention)

As evidence of significant influence beyond my field, Dylan’s research has:

•Led (in collaboration with Dr McHugh, University of Huddersfield) to screening of ~400,000 compounds by the European Lead Factory (EU public-private partnership; project #ELFSC13_03), identifying candidates that target ADM receptors for pain/depression therapy

•Been cited in 53 research areas (Web of Science)

As evidence of recognition of Dylan's research program across multiple countries/beneficiaries:

•His articles have been cited by researchers from 1912 institutions from 41 countries (Web of Science) and been downloaded 8,510 times (ScienceDirect)

•6 articles have been mentioned in 72 news stories in 11 countries, 7 have online attention scores in the top 10% (Altmetric)

•Dylan has spoken at 8 international meetings and received 6 international awards, including selection as one of 12 finalists (550 applicants) for the ASHG/Charles J. Epstein Award for Excellence in Human Genetics Research

Works

Search Professor Dylan Glubb’s works on UQ eSpace

63 works between 2000 and 2025

21 - 40 of 63 works

2020

Conference Publication

Using genetics to understand the relationship between non-cancerous gynaecological diseases and endometrial cancer risk

O'Mara, T. A., Kho, P., Mortlock, S., Montgomery, G. W., Spurdle, A. B. and Glubb, D. M. (2020). Using genetics to understand the relationship between non-cancerous gynaecological diseases and endometrial cancer risk. LONDON: SPRINGERNATURE.

Using genetics to understand the relationship between non-cancerous gynaecological diseases and endometrial cancer risk

2020

Journal Article

Variant effect on splicing regulatory elements, branchpoint usage, and pseudoexonization: strategies to enhance bioinformatic prediction using hereditary cancer genes as exemplars

Canson, Daffodil, Glubb, Dylan and Spurdle, Amanda B. (2020). Variant effect on splicing regulatory elements, branchpoint usage, and pseudoexonization: strategies to enhance bioinformatic prediction using hereditary cancer genes as exemplars. Human Mutation, 41 (10) humu.24074, 1705-1721. doi: 10.1002/humu.24074

Variant effect on splicing regulatory elements, branchpoint usage, and pseudoexonization: strategies to enhance bioinformatic prediction using hereditary cancer genes as exemplars

2020

Journal Article

Two integrated and highly predictive functional analysis-based procedures for the classification of MSH6 variants in Lynch syndrome

Drost, Mark, Tiersma, Yvonne, Glubb, Dylan, Kathe, Scott, van Hees, Sandrine, Calléja, Fabienne, Zonneveld, José B. M., Boucher, Kenneth M., Ramlal, Renuka P. E., Thompson, Bryony A., Rasmussen, Lene Juel, Greenblatt, Marc S., Lee, Andrea, Spurdle, Amanda B., Tavtigian, Sean V. and de Wind, Niels (2020). Two integrated and highly predictive functional analysis-based procedures for the classification of MSH6 variants in Lynch syndrome. Genetics in Medicine, 22 (5), 847-856. doi: 10.1038/s41436-019-0736-2

Two integrated and highly predictive functional analysis-based procedures for the classification of MSH6 variants in Lynch syndrome

2020

Journal Article

Candidate causal variants at the 8p12 breast cancer risk locus regulate DUSP4

Glubb, Dylan M., Shi, Wei, Beesley, Jonathan, Fachal, Laura, Pritchard, Jayne-Louise, McCue, Karen, Barnes, Daniel R., Antoniou, Antonis C., Dunning, Alison M., Easton, Douglas F. and Chenevix-Trench, Georgia (2020). Candidate causal variants at the 8p12 breast cancer risk locus regulate DUSP4. Cancers, 12 (1) 170, 170. doi: 10.3390/cancers12010170

Candidate causal variants at the 8p12 breast cancer risk locus regulate DUSP4

2019

Journal Article

Analysis of promoter-associated chromatin interactions reveals biologically relevant candidate target genes at endometrial cancer risk loci

O’Mara, Tracy A., Spurdle, Amanda B. and Glubb, Dylan M. (2019). Analysis of promoter-associated chromatin interactions reveals biologically relevant candidate target genes at endometrial cancer risk loci. Cancers, 11 (10) 1440, 1440. doi: 10.3390/cancers11101440

Analysis of promoter-associated chromatin interactions reveals biologically relevant candidate target genes at endometrial cancer risk loci

2019

Journal Article

Genome-wide association studies of endometrial cancer: latest developments and future directions

O'Mara, Tracy A., Glubb, Dylan M., Kho, Pik Fang, Thompson, Deborah J. and Spurdle, Amanda B. (2019). Genome-wide association studies of endometrial cancer: latest developments and future directions. Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers and Prevention, 28 (7), 1095-1102. doi: 10.1158/1055-9965.epi-18-1031

Genome-wide association studies of endometrial cancer: latest developments and future directions

2019

Journal Article

A functional assay–based procedure to classify mismatch repair gene variants in Lynch syndrome

Drost, Mark, Tiersma, Yvonne, Thompson, Bryony A., Frederiksen, Jane H., Keijzers, Guido, Glubb, Dylan, Kathe, Scott, Osinga, Jan, Westers, Helga, Pappas, Lisa, Boucher, Kenneth M., Molenkamp, Siska, Zonneveld, José B., van Asperen, Christi J., Goldgar, David E., Wallace, Susan S., Sijmons, Rolf H., Spurdle, Amanda B., Rasmussen, Lene J., Greenblatt, Marc S., de Wind, Niels and Tavtigian, Sean V. (2019). A functional assay–based procedure to classify mismatch repair gene variants in Lynch syndrome. Genetics in Medicine, 21 (7), 1486-1496. doi: 10.1038/s41436-018-0372-2

A functional assay–based procedure to classify mismatch repair gene variants in Lynch syndrome

2019

Journal Article

Assessing the role of selenium in endometrial cancer risk: a Mendelian randomization study

Kho, Pik Fang, Glubb, Dylan M., Thompson, Deborah J., Spurdle, Amanda B. and O'Mara, Tracy A. (2019). Assessing the role of selenium in endometrial cancer risk: a Mendelian randomization study. Frontiers in Oncology, 9 (MAR) 182. doi: 10.3389/fonc.2019.00182

Assessing the role of selenium in endometrial cancer risk: a Mendelian randomization study

2019

Journal Article

Editorial: establishing genetic pleiotropy to identify common pharmacological agents for common diseases

O'Mara, Tracy A., Batra, Jyotsna and Glubb, Dylan (2019). Editorial: establishing genetic pleiotropy to identify common pharmacological agents for common diseases. Frontiers in Pharmacology, 10 1038. doi: 10.3389/fphar.2019.01038

Editorial: establishing genetic pleiotropy to identify common pharmacological agents for common diseases

2019

Journal Article

Genetic variants of VEGFA and FLT4 are determinants of survival in renal cell carcinoma patients treated with sorafenib

Crona, Daniel J., Skol, Andrew D., Leppänen, Veli-Matti, Glubb, Dylan M., Etheridge, Amy S., Hilliard, Eleanor, Peña, Carol E., Peterson, Yuri K., Klauber-DeMore, Nancy, Alitalo, Kari K. and Innocenti, Federico (2019). Genetic variants of VEGFA and FLT4 are determinants of survival in renal cell carcinoma patients treated with sorafenib. Cancer Research, 79 (1), 231-241. doi: 10.1158/0008-5472.can-18-1089

Genetic variants of VEGFA and FLT4 are determinants of survival in renal cell carcinoma patients treated with sorafenib

2018

Journal Article

Identification of nine new susceptibility loci for endometrial cancer

O’Mara, Tracy A., Glubb, Dylan M., Amant, Frederic, Annibali, Daniela, Ashton, Katie, Attia, John, Auer, Paul L., Beckmann, Matthias W., Black, Amanda, Bolla, Manjeet K., Brauch, Hiltrud, Brenner, Hermann, Brinton, Louise, Buchanan, Daniel D., Burwinkel, Barbara, Chang-Claude, Jenny, Chanock, Stephen J., Chen, Chu, Chen, Maxine M., Cheng, Timothy H. T., Clarke, Christine L., Clendenning, Mark, Cook, Linda S., Couch, Fergus J., Cox, Angela, Crous-Bous, Marta, Czene, Kamila, Day, Felix, Dennis, Joe ... Thompson, Deborah J. (2018). Identification of nine new susceptibility loci for endometrial cancer. Nature Communications, 9 (1) 3166, 3166. doi: 10.1038/s41467-018-05427-7

Identification of nine new susceptibility loci for endometrial cancer

2018

Journal Article

The Vitamin D receptor gene as a determinant of survival in pancreatic cancer patients: Genomic analysis and experimental validation

Innocenti, Federico, Owzar, Kouros, Jiang, Chen, Etheridge, Amy S., Gordân, Raluca, Sibley, Alexander B., Mulkey, Flora, Niedzwiecki, Donna, Glubb, Dylan, Neel, Nicole, Talamonti, Mark S., Bentrem, David J., Seiser, Eric, Yeh, Jen Jen, Van Loon, Katherine, McLeod, Howard, Ratain, Mark J., Kindler, Hedy L., Venook, Alan P., Nakamura, Yusuke, Kubo, Michiaki, Petersen, Gloria M., Bamlet, William R. and McWilliams, Robert R. (2018). The Vitamin D receptor gene as a determinant of survival in pancreatic cancer patients: Genomic analysis and experimental validation. PLoS One, 13 (8) e0202272, 1-14. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0202272

The Vitamin D receptor gene as a determinant of survival in pancreatic cancer patients: Genomic analysis and experimental validation

2018

Journal Article

Erratum: Publisher Correction: Evidence that breast cancer risk at the 2q35 locus is mediated through IGFBP5 regulation (Nature communications (2014) 4 (4999))

Ghoussaini, Maya, Edwards, Stacey L., Michailidou, Kyriaki, Nord, Silje, Cowper-Sal Lari, Richard, Desai, Kinjal, Kar, Siddhartha, Hillman, Kristine M., Kaufmann, Susanne, Glubb, Dylan M., Beesley, Jonathan, Dennis, Joe, Bolla, Manjeet K., Wang, Qin, Dicks, Ed, Guo, Qi, Schmidt, Marjanka K., Shah, Mitul, Luben, Robert, Brown, Judith, Czene, Kamila, Darabi, Hatef, Eriksson, Mikael, Klevebring, Daniel, Bojesen, Stig E., Nordestgaard, Børge G, Nielsen, Sune F., Flyger, Henrik, Lambrechts, Diether ... Dunning, Alison M. (2018). Erratum: Publisher Correction: Evidence that breast cancer risk at the 2q35 locus is mediated through IGFBP5 regulation (Nature communications (2014) 4 (4999)). Nature communications, 9 (1) 16193. doi: 10.1038/ncomms16193

Erratum: Publisher Correction: Evidence that breast cancer risk at the 2q35 locus is mediated through IGFBP5 regulation (Nature communications (2014) 4 (4999))

2017

Journal Article

Enhancing the Promise of Drug Repositioning through Genetics

Pritchard, Jayne-Louise E., O’Mara, Tracy A. and Glubb, Dylan M. (2017). Enhancing the Promise of Drug Repositioning through Genetics. Frontiers in Pharmacology, 8 (DEC) 896. doi: 10.3389/fphar.2017.00896

Enhancing the Promise of Drug Repositioning through Genetics

2017

Journal Article

Association analysis identifies 65 new breast cancer risk loci

Michailidou, Kyriaki, Lindström, Sara, Dennis, Joe, Beesley, Jonathan, Hui, Shirley, Kar, Siddhartha, Lemaçon, Audrey, Soucy, Penny, Glubb, Dylan, Rostamianfar, Asha, Bolla, Manjeet K, Wang, Qin, Tyrer, Jonathan, Dicks, Ed, Lee, Andrew, Wang, Zhaoming, Allen, Jamie, Keeman, Renske, Eilber, Ursula, French, Juliet D, Qing Chen, Xiao, Fachal, Laura, McCue, Karen, McCart Reed, Amy E, Ghoussaini, Maya, Carroll, Jason S, Jiang, Xia, Finucane, Hilary, Adams, Marcia ... Easton, Douglas F (2017). Association analysis identifies 65 new breast cancer risk loci. Nature, 551 (7678), 92-94. doi: 10.1038/nature24284

Association analysis identifies 65 new breast cancer risk loci

2017

Journal Article

The association of CYP19A1 variation with circulating estradiol and aromatase inhibitor outcome: Can CYP19A1 variants be used to predict treatment efficacy?

Glubb, Dylan M., O'Mara, Tracy A., Shamsani, Jannah and Spurdle, Amanda B. (2017). The association of CYP19A1 variation with circulating estradiol and aromatase inhibitor outcome: Can CYP19A1 variants be used to predict treatment efficacy?. Frontiers in Pharmacology, 8 (April) 218, 1-8. doi: 10.3389/fphar.2017.00218

The association of CYP19A1 variation with circulating estradiol and aromatase inhibitor outcome: Can CYP19A1 variants be used to predict treatment efficacy?

2017

Journal Article

Analyses of germline variants associated with ovarian cancer survival identify functional candidates at the 1q22 and 19p12 outcome loci

Glubb, Dylan M., Johnatty, Sharon E., Quinn, Michael C. J., O'Mara, Tracy A., Tyrer, Jonathan P., Gao, Bo, Fasching, Peter A., Beckmann, Matthias W., Lambrechts, Diether, Vergote, Ignace, Edwards, Digna R. Velez, Beeghly-Fadiel, Alicia, Benitez, Javier, Garcia, Maria J., Goodman, Marc T., Thompson, Pamela J., Dörk, Thilo, Dürst, Matthias, Modungo, Francesmary, Moysich, Kirsten, Heitz, Florian, du Bois, Andreas, Pfisterer, Jacobus, Hillemanns, Peter, Karlan, Beth Y., Lester, Jenny, Goode, Ellen L., Cunningham, Julie M., Winham, Stacey J. ... Chenevix-Trench, Georgia (2017). Analyses of germline variants associated with ovarian cancer survival identify functional candidates at the 1q22 and 19p12 outcome loci. OncoTarget, 8 (39), 64670-64684. doi: 10.18632/oncotarget.18501

Analyses of germline variants associated with ovarian cancer survival identify functional candidates at the 1q22 and 19p12 outcome loci

2016

Journal Article

Five endometrial cancer risk loci identified through genome-wide association analysis

Cheng, Timothy H. T., Thompson, Deborah J., O'Mara, Tracy A., Painter, Jodie N., Glubb, Dylan M., Flach, Susanne, Lewis, Annabelle, French, Juliet D., Freeman-Mills, Luke, Church, David, Gorman, Maggie, Martin, Lynn, Hodgson, Shirley, Webb, Penelope M., Attia, John, Holliday, Elizabeth G., McEvoy, Mark, Scott, Rodney J., Henders, Anjali K., Martin, Nicholas G., Montgomery, Grant W., Nyholt, Dale R., Ahmed, Shahana, Healey, Catherine S., Shah, Mitul, Dennis, Joe, Fasching, Peter A., Beckmann, Matthias W., Hein, Alexander ... Spurdle, Amanda B. (2016). Five endometrial cancer risk loci identified through genome-wide association analysis. Nature Genetics, 48 (6), 667-674. doi: 10.1038/ng.3562

Five endometrial cancer risk loci identified through genome-wide association analysis

2016

Journal Article

CYP19A1 fine-mapping and Mendelian randomization: estradiol is causal for endometrial cancer

Thompson, Deborah J., O'Mara, Tracy A., Glubb, Dylan M., Painter, Jodie N., Cheng, Timothy, Folkerd, Elizabeth, Doody, Deborah, Dennis, Joe, Webb, Penelope M., Gorman, Maggie, Martin, Lynn, Hodgson, Shirley, Michailidou, Kyriaki, Tyrer, Jonathan P., Maranian, Mel J., Hall, Per, Czene, Kamila, Darabi, Hatef, Li, Jingmei, Fasching, Peter A., Hein, Alexander, Beckmann, Matthias W., Ekici, Arif B., Doerk, Thilo, Hillemanns, Peter, Duerst, Matthias, Runnebaum, Ingo, Zhao, Hui, Depreeuw, Jeroen ... Spurdle, Amanda B. (2016). CYP19A1 fine-mapping and Mendelian randomization: estradiol is causal for endometrial cancer. Endocrine-Related Cancer, 23 (2), 77-91. doi: 10.1530/ERC-15-0386

CYP19A1 fine-mapping and Mendelian randomization: estradiol is causal for endometrial cancer

2015

Journal Article

Comprehensive genetic assessment of the ESR1 locus identifies a risk region for endometrial cancer

O'Mara, Tracy A., Glubb, Dylan M., Painter, Jodie N., Cheng, Timothy, Dennis, Joe, Attia, John, Holliday, Elizabeth G., McEvoy, Mark, Scott, Rodney J., Ashton, Katie, Proietto, Tony, Otton, Geoffrey, Shah, Mitul, Ahmed, Shahana, Healey, Catherine S., Gorman, Maggie, Martin, Lynn, Hodgson, Shirley, Fasching, Peter A., Hein, Alexander, Beckmann, Matthias W., Ekici, Arif B., Hall, Per, Czene, Kamila, Darabi, Hatef, Li, Jingmei, Duerst, Matthias, Runnebaum, Ingo, Hillemanns, Peter ... Spurdle, Amanda B. (2015). Comprehensive genetic assessment of the ESR1 locus identifies a risk region for endometrial cancer. Endocrine-Related Cancer, 22 (5), 851-861. doi: 10.1530/ERC-15-0319

Comprehensive genetic assessment of the ESR1 locus identifies a risk region for endometrial cancer

Supervision

Availability

Dr Dylan Glubb is:
Available for supervision

Before you email them, read our advice on how to contact a supervisor.

Available projects

  • Genetic epidemiology of endometrial cancer

    Endometrial cancer is the most commonly diagnosed invasive gynaecological cancer in developed countries. In contrast with many cancers, the incidence and mortality of endometrial cancer is steadily increasing, largely due to increasing rates of obesity, the strongest risk factor for this disease. Through leadership of the Endometrial Cancer Association Consortium (ECAC), our lab runs the largest genetic study of endometrial cancer. To date, we have identified 16 genetic regions associated with endometrial cancer predisposition by genome-wide association study (GWAS), which account for ~25% of the genetic heritability attributable to common genetic variants (O’Mara et al, Nat Commun 2018). Incorporation of existing GWAS data with newly acquired GWAS datasets from international collaborators will identify further genetic regions associated with endometrial cancer risk. Additionally, we have approved access to large, well-phenotyped international datasets (e.g. UK Biobank, N = 500,000). This allows us unparalleled ability to examine the genetics of endometrial cancer, as well as explore its relationship with risk factors, such as obesity.

    Aims: To identify new genetic risk regions for endometrial cancer, by performing the largest GWAS meta-analysis for this disease. To use computational approaches to identify and explore risk factors of endometrial cancer. To use genetic data to construct and test risk prediction models for endometrial cancer.

    Approaches: This project will use standard GWAS pipelines to identify genetic variants associated with endometrial cancer risk, including imputation, QC and association testing. Post-GWAS analyses to explore novel regions could also be performed (e.g. eQTL analyses, integration with functional genomic datasets). The relationship between endometrial cancer and potential/known risk factors will be performed using approaches such as genetic correlation (LD Score Regression) and Mendelian randomization. Endometrial cancer risk prediction models will be constructed using polygenic risk scores in combination with endometrial cancer environmental risk factors and tested for efficacy in independent datasets.

    TO APPLY FOR THIS PROJECT, PLEASE CONTACT THE PROJECT SUPERVISOR/S

    • A/Professor Tracy O’Mara

      Tracy.OMara@qimrberghofer.edu.au

    • A/Professor Dylan Glubb

      Dylan.Glubb@qimrberghofer.edu.au

  • Identifying the regulatory targets of common endometrial cancer risk variants

    We and our international Endometrial Cancer Association Consortium collaborators have identified common genetic variation at 16 genomic regions that associates with endometrial cancer risk. Although we have identified potentially causal risk variants, at most regions we do not know which genes these variants target. However, we have conducted global (HiChIP) analyses of DNA looping to identify physical interactions between genes and regulatory elements at endometrial cancer risk regions in endometrial cancer cell lines. These experiments constitute an essential step for the translation of genetic findings into advances in our knowledge of endometrial cancer biology and the identification of potential targets for therapy.

    Aim: To identify high confidence gene regulatory targets of endometrial cancer risk variants using DNA looping analyses and other functional genomic datasets.

    Approach: Depending on the applicant’s expertise, this project could have either a wet-lab and/or a bioinformatics focus. We already have a wealth of endometrial cell DNA looping data that can be coupled with complementary datasets (gene expression, histone modification and transcription factor ChIP-seq) for bioinformatic analyses to prioritise regulatory target genes. To extend our findings from DNA looping analysis of endometrial cell lines, we are also interested in performing analysis of human endometrial organoids from normal, hyperplastic and tumoural endometrium. These organoids should provide experimental systems that better recapitulate the morphological and genomic features of human tissue.

    Outcome: Through the identification of high confidence gene targets at endometrial cancer risk regions, we will gain a deeper understanding of endometrial cancer aetiology and identify potential targets for endometrial cancer therapy.

    TO APPLY FOR THIS PROJECT, PLEASE CONTACT THE PROJECT SUPERVISOR/S

    • A/Professor Tracy O’Mara

      Tracy.OMara@qimrberghofer.edu.au

    • A/Professor Dylan Glubb

      Dylan.Glubb@qimrberghofer.edu.au

Supervision history

Current supervision

  • Doctor Philosophy

    From Association to Mechanism: Investigating the Functional Role of Endometrial Cancer Risk Variants Identified in GWAS

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Honorary Professor Amanda Spurdle

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

Contact Dr Dylan Glubb directly for media enquiries about:

  • Gene regulation
  • Gynaecological cancer genetics

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