
Join to View Full Profile
1800 N Orleans StBaltimore, MD 21224
Dr. Harris is on Doximity
As a Doximity member you'll join over two million verified healthcare professionals in a private, secure network.
- Gain access to free telehealth tools, such as our “call shielding” and one-way patient texting.
- Connect with colleagues in the same hospital or clinic.
- Read the latest clinical news, personalized to your specialty.
Summary
- Dr. Daniel Harris is a general surgeon based in Baltimore, MD. He completed his medical degree from the University of Illinois College of Medicine in 2019 and a surgical residency at Johns Hopkins University. Dr. Harris holds a PhD in Biochemistry from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and a BS in Molecular Biology, graduating summa cum laude, from Loyola University Chicago. His research work includes several publications, notably in the fields of immunology and T cell receptor interactions, with some works cited over 70 times.
Education & Training
- Washington University/B-JH/SLCH ConsortiumFellowship, Thoracic Surgery - Independent, 2024 - 2026
- Johns Hopkins UniversityResidency, Surgery, 2019
- University of Illinois College of MedicineClass of 2019
- University of Illinois at Urbana-ChampaignPhD, Biochemistry , 2011 - 2016
- Loyola University ChicagoBS, Molecular Biology, Summa Cum Laude, 2007 - 2011
Publications & Presentations
PubMed
- 32 citationsDeep Mutational Scans as a Guide to Engineering High Affinity T Cell Receptor Interactions with Peptide-bound Major Histocompatibility ComplexDaniel T. Harris, Ningyan Wang, Timothy P. Riley, Scott D. Anderson, Nishant K. Singh
The Journal of Biological Chemistry. 2016-11-18 - 21 citationsAn Engineered Switch in T Cell Receptor Specificity Leads to an Unusual but Functional Binding GeometryDaniel T. Harris, Nishant K. Singh, Qi Cai, Sheena N. Smith, Craig W. Vander Kooi
Structure. 2016-07-06 - 178 citationsAdoptive T Cell Therapies: A Comparison of T Cell Receptors and Chimeric Antigen ReceptorsDaniel T. Harris, David M. Kranz
Trends in Pharmacological Sciences. 2016-03-01
Grant Support
- Engineerning High-Affinity T Cell Receptors Against Cancer AntigensNCI2013–2019
Research History
- Graduate Research, University of Illinois, Department of BiochemistryThesis title: Engineering Human T Cell Receptors for Cancer Immunotherapies2011 - 2016
- Undergraduate Research, Loyola University Chicago, Department of BiologyStudied the structure of heterochromatic domains within the short-arm of human chromosome 212008 - 2011
Professional Memberships
- Member
Viewing the full profile is available to verified healthcare professionals only.
Find your profile and take control of your online presence: