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Thomas Marjot

Dr Thomas Marjot

Clinical Senior Lecturer

Biography

Dr Thomas Marjot is a Principal Investigator at the Roger Williams Institute of Liver Studies, King’s College London and Honorary Consultant Hepatologist at King’s College Hospital. His research programme focuses on experimental and translational hepatology, with a particular emphasis on steatotic liver disease, including MASLD, MetALD, and alcohol-related liver disease.

He leads the Liver Metabolism and Biological Rhythms (LIMBR) Group, which investigates how circadian biology regulates liver metabolism in humans and how disruption of biological timing contributes to metabolic dysfunction. His work centres on mechanistic, early-phase experimental medicine studies, integrating advanced metabolic phenotyping, stable isotope methodologies, multi-omics approaches, and interventional human models. A central aim of his research is to translate mechanistic insights into therapeutic strategies. This includes developing and testing novel interventions targeting metabolic and circadian pathways, with applications in metabolic liver disease and in populations exposed to circadian disruption, such as shift workers.

He completed a Wellcome Trust-funded DPhil at the University of Oxford in 2023, focusing on circadian regulation liver metabolism, and has led a range of translational human studies spanning metabolism and circadian biology.

Research

LIMBR thumbnail
Marjot Lab – Liver Metabolism & Biological Rhythms (LIMBR)

The Liver Metabolism and Biological Rhythms (LIMBR) Group investigates how circadian biology regulates liver metabolism in humans and how disruption of biological timing contributes to metabolic dysfunction.

Research

LIMBR thumbnail
Marjot Lab – Liver Metabolism & Biological Rhythms (LIMBR)

The Liver Metabolism and Biological Rhythms (LIMBR) Group investigates how circadian biology regulates liver metabolism in humans and how disruption of biological timing contributes to metabolic dysfunction.