Professor Patricia B Munroe

Professor of Molecular Medicine, Centre Lead for Clinical Pharmacology and Precision Medicine
Centre: Clinical Pharmacology and Precision Medicine
Email: p.b.munroe@qmul.ac.ukTelephone: +44(0) 20 7882 3586Twitter: @munroe_patsy
Profile
ORCID iD: 0000-0002-4176-2947
Patricia graduated with a B.Sc. in Biochemistry, and M.Sc. in Biotechnology from the University of Galway, Ireland. She then worked at the Wellcome Trust Research Laboratories for six months before commencing a PhD in cardiovascular genetics at St Bartholomew’s Hospital. Patricia was awarded a PhD in Medicine in 1995 and following successful post-doctoral fellowships at University College London (NIH funded), she joined the William Harvey Research Institute as a Lecturer in 1998. In 2007 she was appointed Professor of Molecular Medicine.
Prof Munroe’s lab investigates the molecular basis of cardiac arrythmia’s, hypertension and heart failure. Our research includes genomic studies of cardiovascular risk factors as a route for elucidating disease mechanisms, the development of ‘omic biomarkers and clinical models for improved risk prediction, pharmacogenetics and personalised medicine.
She co-leads several international complex genetic disease consortia. Using meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and large-scale candidate gene studies she has discovered over 1000 genetic loci associated with hypertension. She has also identified hundreds of genetic loci for the electrocardiogram and cardiac magnetic resonance measures of heart structure and function. . As a member of the Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology (CHARGE) Consortium she co-leads projects leading to the discovery of loci for electrocardiogram markers and gene x environment interactions for cardiovascular risk factors. She is the Director of the Genome Centre at FMD and an Adjunct Professor at the Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, The University of Toledo, USA.
She was listed as a Highly Cited Researcher by Thomson Reuters in 2015, 2016, 2017 and 2018 (Top 1% in Molecular Biology & Genetics). She was elected as a Fellow of Academy of Medical Sciences in 2021.
Research
Group members
- Research staff: Dr Chris Bell, Dr Helen Warren, Dr Will Young
- PhD students: Hafiz Naderi, Richard Burns, Sandra Machlitt-Northen, Victoria Taylor-Bateman, Aled Jones, Mihir Sanghvi
Summary
My research group investigates the molecular basis of cardiac arrythmia’s, hypertension and heart failure.
Gene discovery projects for blood pressure, heart rate, ECG markers, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging markers and cardiometabolic traits. We perform genome-wide association studies (GWAS), exome and whole gene sequencing analyses to find new loci and detailed bioinformatic analyses to locate likely causative genetic variants and genes.
Functional studies of candidate genes from GWAS via excellent collaborations we use molecular, cellular biology techniques and “in vitro” models to understand the function of candidate genes from our work.
Risk modelling for cardiovascular disease. We are developing and testing polygenic risk scores and clinical models for improved risk prediction for cardiac arrhythmias, hypertension and heart failure and are using Mendelian Randomisation for assessing causal relationships.
Pharmacogenetics. Our focus is on blood pressure / anti-hypertensive drugs, lipids / statins). We perform GWAS and work closely with international pharmacogenetics consortia (ICAPS, CHARGE – PGX working group, and Genomic Investigation of Statin Therapy (GIST) consortium).
Sponsors
Collaborators
Internal
- Prof Andy Tinker
- Prof Steffen Petersen
- Prof Mike Barnes
- Prof Mark Caulfield
- Prof Adrian Hobbs
- Dr Claudia Cabrera
- Prof Amrita Ahluwalia
- Dr Caroline Roney
- Prof Michael Pluess
External
- Prof Pier Lambiase (UCL)
- Prof Andrew Morris (University of Manchester)
- Prof Alistair Young (Kings College)
- Dr Chris Newton-Cheh (Harvard University)
- Dr Borbala Mifsud (University of Qatar)
- Prof Nona Sotoodehnia (University of Washington, USA)
- Dr DC Rao (Washington University, USA)
- Dr Rosanne Jepson (Royal Veterinary College)
- Prof Shu Ye (Leicester)
- Professor Nilesh Samani (Leicester University)
Electrogenomics Group
Collaboration with University College London (UCL) for studies attempting to unravel the electrical and genetic causes of cardiovascular mortality. Visit the Electrogenomics Group webpage for more information.
News
- Discovery of New Genes Modulating the Tpe Interval: an Electrocardiographic risk marker for Sudden Cardiac Death in 2020.
- QMUL and UCL joint study identifies genes linked to impaired capacity to modulate heart rate during and after exercise in 2018.
- Scientists discover more than 200 genetic factors causing heart arrhythmias
- In January 2016 Patricia Munroe was named a Thomson Reuters Highly Cited Researcher, and in further recognition of her accomplishments, she has been listed in the 2015 World’s Most Influential Scientific Minds
- Webcast describing our gene discoveries for blood pressure and cardiovascular disease
- In collaboration with colleagues at the Royal Vetinary college, Professor Munroe and Dr Helen Warren were part of the team awarded a grant by PetPlan Charitable Trust for £87k to "unravel the genetic basis for blood pressure and kidney function in the cat"
Teaching
Undergraduate Education:
- BSc Pharmacology and Innovative Therapeutics (BScPhIT): Lecturer in Genetics, Principles of Drug Design, Advanced Human Genetics Disorders; Academic Advisor
- MBBS: SSC supervisor; Academic supervisor; OSCE examiner; PBL facilitator
Postgraduate Education:
- MSc Genomic Medicine: Lecturer; Project supervisor
- BHF MRes: Lecturer
- MSc Bioinformatics: Project supervisor
- PhD supervisor: Non-clinical and clinical fellows (BHF, MRC)
- Academic Clinical Fellows / Lecturers: Supervisor and mentor
- PhD examiner
External Education Activities:
- Imperial College London: Lecturer MSc Genes, Drugs and Stem Cells programme, External examiner
- University of Glasgow: External examiner
- PhD examiner
Disclosures
No disclosures.