
Alex Doan
5.0
(2)
Admissions Committee at Stanford University School of Medicine
Admissions Committee at Stanford University
Successful clients at
Not currently taking new clients
Work Experience

Medical Student
Stanford University
August 2020 - Present
Admissions Committee

Student Council President
Stanford University
August 2020 - Present
I served as the Stanford Medical Student Association (student council) president during the 2022-2023 academic year, as VP of wellness during the 2021-2022 academic year, class representative during the 2024-2025 school year, and first-year wellness representative during the 2020-2021 school year. During my tenure as president, SMSA successfully negotiated for a 50% increase in the student activities budget and I served in multiple advisory and leadership roles with our administration, including as the sole student representative on the Stanford Medicine Integrated Strategic Plan Refresh Committee and on Financial Aid and Student Spaces Redesign Committees. In my work as VP of Wellness, I served on search and screen and interview committees to hire staff for the Stanford Medicine Mental Health Team.

Medical Student Researcher
Stanford University
January 2020 - Present
My work in the Mackall Lab focused on understanding the role of the transcription factor FOXO1 in CAR T cells. Our investigations established FOXO1 as a critical mediator of CAR T cell fitness and efficacy and found that overexpression was associated with better antitumor activity, memory-like phenotypes, and in vivo efficacy. Our work is published here: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-024-07300-8

Cancer Researcher
National Cancer Institute
August 2018 - August 2020
I was a CRTA Research Fellow in the Chattoraj Lab at the NCI, where I investigated chromosomal replication and segregation in Vibrio cholerae. I was mentored by Dhruba Chattoraj, Ph.D., and Revathy Ramachandran, Ph.D.

Undergraduate Researcher
Duke University
August 2014 - May 2018
As a member of the Baugh Lab, I researched insulin-like signaling, development, and metabolism in the roundworm Caenorhabditis elegans. My work focused on metabolic shifts that are crucial to the worm's stress response. We discovered that carbohydrate metabolism is downstream of insulin-like signaling in C. elegans, and that the synthesis of trehalose, a disaccharide, is important for prolonging early-life starvation survival and mediating stress resistance in the worm. My work culminated in a second-author paper in eLife (October 2017), as well as a senior research thesis. I was mentored by L. Ryan Baugh, Ph.D., and Jonathan Hibshman, Ph.D.

Laboratory research assistant
Duke University
August 2014 - January 2015
I created media and solutions required for C. elegans research, washed/autoclaved glassware, and aided in lab maintenance.
Education

Stanford University School of Medicine
Doctor of Medicine - MD, Medicine, Medicine
2020 - 2025
Admissions Committee Experience
MD Candidate (2020-2025); took 1 year off to pursue research in CAR T cell immunotherapy in Crystal Mackall lab resulting in 1st-author publication in Nature. Stanford Medicine student body president 2022-2023. Experience serving on the SoM Admissions Committee.

Duke University
Bachelor's Degree, Cell/Cellular and Molecular Biology
2014 - 2018
Grade: 3.79 GPA B.S., Biology, with a concentration in Cell and Molecular Biology Senior Thesis: daf-16/FoxO promotes trehalose synthesis during L1 arrest to support C. elegans starvation survival
2 Reviews
Overall Rating
5.0
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