Nikolai Slavov is a advisor at Kernal Biologics. Prior to that, they were an assistant professor at Northeastern University, affiliate at Broad Institute, and scientist at Harvard University. Nikolai has also done postdoctoral research at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and Princeton University.
Slavov's laboratory develops methods for high-throughput Single Cell Proteomics by Mass Spectrometry (SCoPE-MS and SCoPE2) and uses them to quantify and understand protein networks that regulate cell fate and differentiation. They are particularly interested in the regulation of protein synthesis by specialized ribosomes.
Some of Slavov's selected primary research articles include: "A comparison of Bayesian and maximum likelihood approaches for inferring gene regulatory networks from microarray data" and "A method for inferring the activity of transcription factors from DNA binding ChIP-seq data."
Nikolai Slavov received their PhD in Coordination of growth-rate with metabolism and gene expression from Princeton University. Nikolai also holds a B.S. in Molecular Biology from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, an MS in Molecular Biology from Princeton University, and a degree in Systems Biology from University College Dublin. Nikolai is currently a Molecular Biology professor at Sofia University St. Kliment Ohridski and PMG.