Arianne is originally from the United States and received her undergraduate degree in Biochemistry from Columbia University (New York). During her PhD, she worked between the National Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµs of Health (USA) and the University of Cambridge. Her doctoral research examined the functional effects of genetic variants in TNF-family cytokines associated with autoimmune disease and sparked her interest in computational biology. Arianne then undertook a joint post-doctoral position between the labs of Prof Gillian Griffiths and Dr John Marioni (University of Cambridge and European Bioinformatics Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ). Supported by an MRC Skills Development Fellowship, her work used single-cell genomics to investigate early activation of naïve T cells.
In 2022, Arianne began as an MRC Career Development Award fellow and tenure track investigator at the Babraham Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ. Her research combines classical immunology with single-cell genomics and computational biology, with a long-term goal of understanding how T cells assimilate signals from pathogens and the immune environment to generate an appropriate response.