Trine B. Rounge joined the Cancer Registry of Norway in 2011. Rounge works as a senior researcher at the Research Department. She is also Professor at the Centre for Bioinformatics and Department of Pharmacy at the University of Oslo. Her research interests are genomics, epigenics, transpriptomics and microbiome, and the development of cancer biomarkers. Trine has broad experience in microbiology and genomics, including wet-lab and bioinformatics and leads several large projects developing new methods for sequencing technology and bioinformatics. Trine holds a master's degree in biotechnology from NTNU. She started her career with microbiological genome research and did her PhD on evolution of gene systems in freshwater bacteria in 2008 at the University of Oslo.
Trine B. Rounge is a senior researcher at the Research Department at the Cancer Registry of Norway and professor at the University of Oslo.
Her research interests are genomics, epigenitics, transpriptomics and microbiome, and the development of cancer biomarkers.
Using new large-scale sequencing technology , she examines biological samples from different biobanks to understand cancer development.
Trine has broad experience in microbiology and genomics, including wet-lab and bioinformatics and leads several large projects developing new methods for sequencing technology and bioinformatics.
Trine leads the research project CRCbiome , which investigates how gut bacteria change during the development of colorectal cancer and how this is affected by diet and lifestyle. She is also one of the leaders of a large, ongoing project that investigates what small non-coding RNAs in the blood look like before a cancer diagnosis.
She is also one of the leaders of a cross-institutional group working on the development of methods and analyses of genomic variation in HPV infections, with the goal of developing new methods for cervical cancer screening.
Trine is also Professor at the Centre for Bioinformatics and Department of Pharmacy at the University of Oslo.
Trine holds a master's degree in biotechnology from NTNU. She started her career with microbiological genome research and did her PhD on evolution of gene systems in freshwater bacteria in 2008 at the University of Oslo.
She also worked as a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Oslo and researched the cod genome, before she started as a researcher at the Cancer Registry of Norway in 2011.
Trine has a background from both molecular biology and bioinformatics.
Link to publications (External researcher profile)