NHLBI, Massachusetts, United States
Andrew D. Johnson (Ph.D.) is a tenured investigator in the NHLBI/NIH. He has co-authored >240 scientific manuscripts. Since 2009, Andrew and his Lab have been presenting at ISTH Scientific Sessions. Since 2007 Andrew has been as a Government (NIH) scientist. The primary focus of his Lab is understanding the sources of variability both genetic and environmental that influence human platelet responsiveness and platelet counts, and how these contribute to disease and disorders. A hallmark of the Lab is collecting large-scale datasets on platelet reactivity and OMICs in human populations, as well as collaborating with cellular and model organism biologists. Currently Andrew is the Chair (2022-2025) of the ISTH Thrombogenomics SSC with a major goal of expanding the global reach and connections of that SSC. He’s also served as an ISTH abstract grader and moderator, in teaching educational ISTH sessions and an ISTH Master class. Outside ISTH, Andrew has had many volunteer, grant review and leadership roles in The Framingham Heart Study, the American Heart Association, the NIH and ad-hoc Expert panels. He currently serves as Co-Chair of the NHLBI TOPMed Hematology & Hemostasis Working Group. Andrew has conducted peer review for >70 journals including numerous times for Platelets, JTH, Blood, Circulation, Circulation Research, and Thrombosis & Haemostasis. He has trained more than 25 students at undergraduate, graduate and post-doctoral levels with nearly all of them continuing on medical and academic scientific career paths. He views the mentor-mentee relationship as a bi-directional learning experience and aims to maximize the benefits to both people by fostering open and honest communication, a culture of DEIA, establishing their common goals and interests, providing a mixture of low/high risk-reward projects and timelines, engagement with peer review activities as vital learning, and promotion of a trainee-first-over-mentor ethic in opportunities for authorship and making recognized research presentations.
OC 08.5 - Impact of common medication use on platelet transcript levels.
Saturday, June 22, 2024
14:00 – 14:15 ICT
SSC 06.8 - Challenges of population studies for mild bleeding disorders
Saturday, June 22, 2024
16:00 – 16:15 ICT
SSC 08.1 - Session Welcome, SSC overview, GOLD variants update
Sunday, June 23, 2024
16:30 – 16:33 ICT
PB0791 - An approach for whole blood platelet flow cytometry and standardization across instruments
Monday, June 24, 2024
13:45 – 14:45 ICT
Monday, June 24, 2024
13:45 – 14:45 ICT
Tuesday, June 25, 2024
13:45 – 14:45 ICT
PB1177 - Developing 384-well plate platelet aggregometry
Tuesday, June 25, 2024
13:45 – 14:45 ICT