Research Interests
Key words: human genetics and genomics, diabetes, obesity, lipids, complex diseases, genome-wide association studies, transcriptomics, and epigenomics
Identify Genetic Loci Associated with Complex Diseases and Traits
To identify genetic variants that confer disease susceptibility or influence variability in related traits, we conduct genome-wide association studies (GWAS) in human population studies. In recent years, we and our collaborators have used this approach to identify hundreds of new genetic loci associated with type 2 diabetes, obesity, cholesterol levels, metabolic traits, and cardiovascular risk factors. Large-scale meta-analyses and other multidisciplinary collaborations are key to many of these discoveries. We also study how genetic variants interact with environmental factors to influence the underlying biology of complex diseases and traits.
Characterize Disease- and Trait-Associated Variants
Loci identified by GWAS usually contain many variants in strong linkage disequilibrium with each other, and the genes responsible for most GWAS loci are unclear. We use computational approaches to identify candidate genes and candidate variants, especially at loci with putative regulatory mechanisms. Genome-wide data sets containing information about gene expression, chromatin structure, transcription factor binding, and epigenetic marks in human cells are important resources for identifying genes and regulatory regions. By generating and analyzing transcriptomic and epigenomic data sets, we identify regulatory elements and genes that vary due to genetic or environmental perturbation. We use these data to identify trait-associated variants likely to regulate gene regulation.
Investigate Molecular and Biological Mechanisms
For most loci identified by association studies, the underlying molecular and biological mechanisms remain unknown. Determining the biological basis for the associations of genetic loci with complex diseases and traits will improve our general scientific understanding of pathways contributing to disease etiology. We employ molecular and cellular biology techniques such as CRISPR/Cas-based genome editing to identify the functional variant(s) and gene(s) at these loci, explain the molecular mechanisms linking functional variant(s) to gene(s), and characterize the biological mechanisms linking gene(s) to metabolic traits.
Training:
- Faculty Mentoring Workshop for Biomedical Researchers
- Mental Health First Aid
Training Program Affiliations:
- Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
- Genetics and Molecular Biology
Publications
Karen Mohlke in UNC Genetics News

February 20, 2026
Department of Genetics Publications for January 2026
Department of Genetics faculty, postdocs, students and collaborators published 25 papers in January 2026.

February 20, 2026
Department of Genetics Publications for December 2025
Department of Genetics faculty, postdocs, students and collaborators published 37 papers in December 2025.

December 16, 2025
Department of Genetics Publications for November 2025
Department of Genetics faculty, postdocs, students and collaborators published 29 papers in November 2025.

December 11, 2025
Abdalla Alkhawaja and Dr. Kevin Currin are co-first authors on a newly published manuscript in the American Journal of Human Genetics
Abdalla Alkhawaja (Bioinformatics and Computational Biology Graduate Student in the labs of Karen Mohlke and Terry Furey, UNC Genetics) and Dr. Kevin Currin are co-first authors on a newly published manuscript in the American Journal of Human Genetics.

November 5, 2025
Department of Genetics Publications for October 2025
Department of Genetics faculty, postdocs, students and collaborators published 40 papers in October 2025.

October 29, 2025
Department of Genetics Hosts Wake Tech Community College (WTCC) Stem Academic and Research Training (START) Program Students
On October 24, 2025, the Department of Genetics hosted a group of 10 students from Wake Tech Community College (WTCC) who are part of the Stem Academic and Research Training (START) program.

October 13, 2025
Department of Genetics Publications for September 2025
Department of Genetics faculty, postdocs, students and collaborators published 33 papers in September 2025.

October 2, 2025
Mohlke Awarded New RC2 Grant from NIDDK
Dr. Karen Mohlke (Professor) received a new RC2 award from NIDDK, designed to fund ambitious, interdisciplinary, and high-risk/high-reward projects.

August 8, 2025
Department of Genetics Publications for June 29th – August 2nd, 2025
Department of Genetics faculty, postdocs, students and collaborators published 39 papers during June 29th - August 2nd 2025.

July 1, 2025
Department of Genetics Publications for June 1st – 28th, 2025
Department of Genetics faculty, postdocs, students and collaborators published 25 papers during June 1st - 28th 2025.