Carmen Marsit
Professor
Rollins Professor
Faculty, Environmental Health
Jointly Appointed, Epidemiology
Dr. Carmen Marsit is the Rollins Distinguished Professor of Research and Executive Associate Dean for Faculty Affairs and Research Strategy at the Rollins School of Public Health. His research, teaching, and service is focused broadly on understanding the molecular mechanisms responsible for mediating the impact of the environment in human disease, utilizing to inter- and multi-disciplinary research methods. His laboratory studies a variety of molecular alterations, with a growing interest on –omics technologies, which may be responsible, in a significant part, for cancer, adverse pregnancy outcomes, and common and rare conditions of childhood including obesity, growth, and behavioral disorders. He has significant expertise in environmental epigenomics, incorporating studies of the impact of the environment, including chemical, physical, and psychosocial factors, on the mechanisms controlling the fundamental cellular process of gene expression control, and how alterations or variation to these features impact health and disease. This research program fits at the interface of basic and population sciences, providing a sound scientific basis to studying a mechanism underlying the environmental contribution to health outcomes. The overarching goal of this work is to both provide important biologic and mechanistic evidence to support policies related to the control of environmental contaminants, and to provide insights into novel prevention and intervention strategies.
Dr. Marsit received his Ph.D. in the Biological Sciences in Public Health at Harvard University, which was followed by a postdoctoral fellowship at the Harvard School of Public Health. Through these experiences he has obtained extensive training and expertise in molecular biology, genetics, epidemiology, biostatistics, environmental health and molecular epidemiology. Prior to joining the faculty in the Gangarose Department of Environmental Health at Emory in 2016, he held faculty appointments in Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at Brown University (2007-2011), and in Pharmacology and Toxicology and Epidemiology at the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth (2011-2016). His research program has been supported by a number of NIH R01 grants, and he has participated in the NIEHS/EPA Children's Environmental Health Center Research Program Projects at Dartmouth and Emory, as well as in a number of large, multi-center cohorts and consortium focused on Children's Environmental Health. He is Director of the NIEHS Environmental Health Core Center at Emory, the HERCULES Exposome Research Center (P30). Dr. Marsit also has a strong committment to the training of the next-generation of population researchers and serves as Director of the NIEHS-funded T32 Training Program in the Environmental Health Sciences and Toxicology and NIEHS-Fogarty D43 Emory-Georgia Clean Air Research Training Program.
For a full list of up to date publications, visit Dr. Marsit's Google Scholars page.
Contact Information
Atlanta , GA 30322
Phone: 404-712-8912
Fax: 404-727-8744
Email: carmen.j.marsit@emory.edu
Areas of Interest
- Bioinformatics
- Biomarkers
- Biomedical Sciences
- Cancer Prevention
- Environmental Health
- Epidemiology
- Epigenetics
- Genetics
- Genomics
- Maternal and Child Health
Education
- Bachelors of Science 2000, Lafayette College
- Ph.D. 2004, Harvard University
Affiliations & Activities
Director: Emory HERCULES Exposome Research Center, Emory T32 Training Program in the Environmental Health Sciences and Toxicology
Advisory Committee Chair: Environmental Health Disparities Research Center, University of Southern California, 2016-present
Advisory Committee Member: Columbia University NIEHS Center for Environmental Health in Northern Manhattan, 2016-present; University of Kentucky Superfund Research Program, 2018-present.
Member: International Society for Environmental Epidemiology; International Society for Exposure Science; American Association for Cancer Research; Project Tendr; Committee to Review the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality’s Ethylene Oxide Development Support Document of the National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine
Publications
- Kennedy EM, Hermetz K, Burt A, Everson TM, Deyssenroth M, Hao K, Chen J, Karagas MR, Pei D, Koestler DC, Marsit CJ., 2020, Placental microRNA expression associates with birthweight through control of adipokines: results from two independent cohorts, Epigenetics, ,
- Clarkson-Townsend DA, Kennedy E, Everson TM, Deyssenroth MA, Burt AA, Hao K, Chen J, Pardue MT, Marsit CJ, 2020, Seasonally variant gene expression in full-term human placenta, FASEB J, ,
- Everson TM, Marable C, Deyssenroth MA, Punshon T, Jackson BP, Lambertini L, Karagas MR, Chen J, Marsit CJ, 2019, Placental expression of imprinted genes, overall and in sex-specific patterns, associated with placental cadmium concentrations and birth size. , Environmental Health Perspectives, ,
- Everson TM, Armstrong DA, Guerin DJ, Punshon T, Jackson BP, Lambertini L, Chen J, Karagas MR, Marsit CJ, 2018, Cadmium-associated differential methylation throughout the placental genome: epigenome-wide association study of two US birth cohorts., Environmental Health Perspectives, 126,
- Deyssenroth MA, Gennings C, Liu SH, Peng S, Hao K, Lambertini L, Jackson BP, Karagas MR, Marsit CJ, Chen J., 2018, Intrauterine multi-metal exposure is associated with reduced fetal growth through modulation of the placental gene network, Environment International, ,
- Deyssenroth MA, Peng S, Hao K, Lambertini L, Marsit CJ, Chen J, 2017, Whole-transcriptome analysis delineates the human placenta gene network and its associations with fetal growth, BMC Genomics, 18, 520
- Green BB, Karagas MR, Punshon T, Jackson B, Robbins DJ, Houseman EA, Marsit CJ., 2016, Epigenome-Wide Assessment of DNA Methylation in the Placenta and Arsenic Exposure in the New Hampshire Birth Cohort Study (USA), Environmental Health Perspectives, 124, 1253-60
- Kingsley SL, Eliot MN, Whitsel EA, Huang YT, Kelsey KT, Marsit CJ, Wellenius GA, 2016, Maternal residential proximity to major roadways, birth weight, and placental DNA methylation, Environment International, 92-93, 43-9
- Stroud LR, Papandonatos GD, Parade SH, Salisbury AL, Phipps MG, Lester BM, Padbury JF, Marsit CJ. , 2016, Prenatal Major Depressive Disorder, Placenta Gluocorticoid and Serotonergic Signaling, and Infant Cortisol Response, Psychosomatic Medicine, 78, 979-90