Keith Jerome, MD, PhD

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Keith Jerome MD, PhD
faculty member

Keith Jerome, MD, PhD

Professor, Vaccine and Infectious Disease Division, Fred Hutch

Professor
Vaccine and Infectious Disease Division, Fred Hutch

Fax: 206.667.6179
Mail Stop: E5-110

Dr. Keith Jerome is a renowned virologist whose research focuses on viruses such as herpes simplex, HIV and hepatitis B that persist in their hosts. He studies the ways in which these viruses evade the immune system and potential therapies for these infections. Dr. Jerome and his colleagues are studying the uses of precision gene-editing tools like CRISPR/Cas9 to remove damaging viral genes that have tucked themselves into a person’s genetic code or to insert genes that can protect cells from invading viruses. He and his colleagues are exploring this approach in combination with blood stem cell transplants as a means of curing HIV. Dr. Jerome also studies the coronavirus that causes COVID-19. He and his University of Washington colleagues developed a diagnostic test for infection with the coronavirus that expanded local testing capacity, and his Fred Hutch laboratory aims to validate and deliver COVID-19 tests that could diagnose infection within minutes.

Other Appointments & Affiliations

Larry Corey Endowed Professor in Virology, University of Washington

Larry Corey Endowed Professor in Virology
University of Washington

Professor, Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, University of Washington

Professor, Laboratory Medicine and Pathology
University of Washington

Head, Virology Division, Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, University of Washington

Head, Virology Division, Laboratory Medicine and Pathology
University of Washington

Director, Molecular Virology Laboratory, Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, University of Washington

Director, Molecular Virology Laboratory, Laboratory Medicine and Pathology
University of Washington

Education

MD, Duke University, 1993

PhD, Immunology, Duke University, 1992

BS, Chemistry, Georgetown College, 1985

Current Projects

Novel proteins (CRISPR/Cas9 and meganucleases) as potential treatments for HIV, hepatitis B, and herpes simplex infections

Diagnostics for viruses posing the greatest threat to human health

In vivo delivery of gene therapy for HIV and other persistent viral infections

Hepatitis B Research Network Central Lab