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Portrait of Expery Omollo

Expery Omollo, PhD

Damon Runyon Postdoctoral Fellow · MIT

I am a systems biologist who studies how bacteria coordinate transcription, translation, and RNA decay to achieve precise gene expression.

About

I am a Damon Runyon Postdoctoral Fellow in the Gene-Wei Li lab at MIT Biology and HHMI. I study bacterial gene expression using systems level approaches, with a focus on how bacteria coordinate transcription, translation, and RNA decay to achieve precise control of gene expression.

For my postdoctoral work, I use system wide measurements and computational analysis to address these questions. During my PhD, I trained in biochemistry and structural biology and used in vitro assays and cryo-EM to study how bacterial RNA polymerase pauses, terminates, and responds to regulatory proteins during transcription.

Each of these projects is described in detail in the Research section.

Research

Transcription-Translation Coupling in bacteria

I study how RNA polymerase and ribosomes stay coordinated during gene expression.

Regulation of RNA polymerase by NusG

This project showed how NusG stabilizes a paused RNA polymerase in Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Study was published in Molecular Cell (2023) .

Mechanism of Intrinsic transcription termination

This project revealed the first atomic structures that show, step by step, how intrinsic termination occurs in bacteria. Results were reported in Nature (2023) .

Kinetics of Amyloid-β monomer folding and fibril nucleation

Monitored the folding and nucleation kinetics of denatured amyloid-β monomers using cysteine-mediated quenching of tryptophan autofluorescence.

Publications

Recent News

  • April 2025

    Received the Outstanding Alumni Award from the Charles Drew Science Program at Michigan State University.

  • May 2024

    Awarded the Damon Runyon Postdoctoral Fellowship.

  • November 2023

    PhD thesis published in ProQuest.

  • July 2023

    Won Best Poster Presentation at the Tuberculosis Drug Discovery and Development GRC in Barcelona.

  • April 2023

    Mechanism of NusG regulated transcription elongation published in Molecular Cell.

Curriculum Vitae

Download a full summary of my training research experience and publications.

Download CV

Contact

Email: omollo@mit.edu

MIT · Biology Department · Gene‑Wei Li Lab