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  1. Dr Catherine Lindon

    ... role of substrate proteolysis in the precisely coordinated events giving rise to two daughter cells at the end of mitosis. The Aurora ...

  2. Dr Athena Matakidou

    ... modify the mouse renal apithelium and replicate the genetic events observed in human renal cell carcinoma. The development of reproducible ...

  3. Dr Mariann Bienz

    ... cell compartment. Our aim is to understand the molecular events underlying Wnt signal transduction. We focus on positively-acting ...

  4. Dr Dario Bressan

    ... for the spatial and temporal control of biological events in vivo. Specifically, I am using photochemically caged ligands and ...

  5. Dr Frank McCaughan

    My research is focused on understanding the early driver events that are critical to the development of squamous lung cancer (SQC) and ...

  6. Professor Gillian Murphy

    ... by trafficking which allows specific localisation in events such as cell invasion. The identification of the importance of specific ...

  7. Dr James Nathan

    Cellular mechanisms of oxygen and metabolite sensing: ...

  8. Dr James Rudd

    ... arteries as a predictor of plaque rupture and clinical events. Additionally, I use non-invasive imaging methods such as PET, MRI and ...

  9. Ms Paola Marco

    ... The inhibitor can be washed out, allowing us to study events in a more flexible way. I will introduce these mutants in RPE cells to ...

  10. Dr Marisa Segal

    ... morphogenesis in S. cerevisiae we have focused on the events that determine SPB asymmetry or spindle polarity, i.e. the mechanisms ...

  11. Professor Simon Mendez-Ferrer

    The Méndez-Ferrer laboratory research focuses on the regulation of the haematopoietic stem-cell niche in health and disease. Blood stem cells reside in specialised niches which allows them to self-renew, proliferate, differentiate and migrate according...

  12. Mr Alexander Evtushenko

  13. Mr Asif Jah

    Mr Asif Jah ...

  14. Dr Callum Campbell

  15. Dr Cedric Ghevaert

    Cedric Gevaert graduated from the medical school of the University Libre de Bruxelles in 1997 and subsequently became a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians, London (2000). He specialised in Haematology and became a fellow of the Royal College of...

  16. Ms Christine Anne Loreno

  17. Miss Daniella Black

  18. Dr David Fernandez-Antoran

    We use long-term human and mouse 3D primary epithelial cultures,  in vivo  cell lineage tracing, mathematical modelling, next generation sequencing methods and state-of-the-art confocal microscopy techniques to unravel the molecular responses and...

  19. Dr Dominic Gerard O'Donovan

    Corneal Pathology & Transplantation Myalgic Encephalomyelitis / Chronic Fatigue Syndrome

  20. Miss Emma Brown

  21. Miss Emma Wong

  22. Professor Sir David Klenerman

    We are interested in developing and applying a range of new biophysical methods, based on laser fluorescence spectroscopy and scanning probe microscopy, to important problems in biology, which have not been addressed to date due to the lack of suitable...

  23. Mr Giuseppe Aresu

    Mr Aresu is a Consultant Thoracic Surgeon at the Royal Papworth Hospital. He undertook his Cardiothoracic specialist training in Padua, Udine (Italy) and in Bristol (UK). In November 2011 he started working as consultant thoracic surgeon in Udine where...

  24. Mr Giuseppe Rinaldi

  25. Dr Nimesh Joseph

  26. Dr Roy Rabbie

    We use DNA sequencing of patients and their tumours to study genomic evolution in melanoma.

  27. Dr Alejandra Bruna

    We aimed to study the effects of the TGF-beta pathway in breast cancer stem cell (BCSC) ...

  28. Dr Ahsan MEMON

    ... applications, this holographic system was deployed to the study of cancer and stem cell shape regulation and the role of effective ...

  29. Dr Adrian Ionescu

    I currently work as a post-doctoral research associate at the Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics, University of Cambridge, in the Thin Film Magnetism (TFM) group with Prof. Crispin Barnes on an ERC International Training Network project,...

  30. Dr Andrew Murray

    ... including the matching of oxygen demand and supply. We study this in cells, tissues, animal models and healthy humans at high ...

  31. Dr Annalisa Mupo

    ... and around 35% of all adult leukemias. My work aims to study commonly occurring mutations in AML-NK (normal karyotype) using ...

  32. Mr Aman Coonar

    ... cancer with emphasis on surgery. Local PI for PULMICC study- a RCT of metastectomy v best other care for colorectal metastases to ...

  33. Mr Angelos Kolias

    ... neurosurgery. His research utilises a variety of study designs, including observational studies, dry laboratory experiments ...

  34. Professor Tony Green

    Tony Green is Professor of Haemato-oncology in the University of Cambridge and honorary Consultant Haematologist at Addenbrookes Hospital. He was appointed Head of the University Department of Haematology (2000-2020), and in 2016 was appointed Director...

  35. Dr Alex Cagan

    ... evolution. In particular I develop and apply methods to study somatic mutational landscapes across diverse species, leveraging the ...

  36. Dr Harry Bulstrode

    ... a CRUK Pioneer Award to fund my research into oncolytic virus therapies specific to the glioma stem cell population. I hold an ...

  37. Dr James Tysome

    Angiogenesis plays a role in the growth of many skull base and head and neck tumours. I aim to investigate the role of angiogenesis inhibitors in these tumours, develop novel inhibitors including oncolytic viruses and use molecular imaging techniques to...

  38. Professor Ming-Qing Du

    ... associated T cell lymphoma (EATL), Kaposi sarcoma herpes virus (KSHV) associated lymphoproliferative disorders. ...

  39. Dr Michael Weekes

    I am interested in determining how human cytomegalovirus and other intracellular pathogens evade innate immunity. We recently developed ?Quantitative Temporal Viromics?, a proteomic technique that provides a systematic quantitative analysis of temporal...

  40. Professor Nicholas Coleman

    Our group aims to translate basic scientific advances into improvements in the clinical management of neoplastic disease. We work in two main areas: 1. Development and evaluation of novel markers for improved cancer screening Early detection of cancer...

  41. Professor Paul J Lehner

    We study MHC I molecules and other critical cell surface receptors. We showed that the cancer-causing herpesviruses (KSHV) pirated ubiquitin E3 ligases from their vertebrate hosts. These ligases ubiquitinate and downregulate critical cell surface...

  42. Dr Robin Crawford

    Human papilloma virus infection and development of disease Response to therapy in ovarian and ...

  43. Professor Tony Kouzarides

    Tony Kouzarides is Professor of Cancer Biology at the University of Cambridge, Deputy Director of the Gurdon Institute and Director of the Milner Therapeutics Institute. ...

  44. Professor Alan Warren

    ... goal is to elucidate the molecular mechanisms of ribosome assembly in eukaryotic cells and to understand how defects in this process cause bone marrow failure and cancer predisposition. Assembly of the two subunits of the ribosome, containing 80 different ribosomal ...

  45. Professor Clemens Kaminski

    ... The techniques are also used for research into molecular assembly, protein conformational dynamics, and aggregation. Recently we have ...

  46. Professor Heike Laman

    ... non-canonical activity for Fbxo7, which acts as an assembly factor for D-type cyclin/Cdk6 complexes.  We want to understand how ...

  47. Dr Mairi Louise

    ... the mechanism of priming by the replicative primase and the assembly of the replisome. We employ various techniques, including structural ...

  48. Dr Myriam Ouberai

    ... - drug delivery  Cancer therapy  Peptide self-assembly  Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s diseases  Biomolecular ...

  49. Dr Stephen McLaughlin

    ... the transformed state. Hsp90 faciliatates the activation and assembly of oncogenic proteins involved in key regulatory pathways in cancer ...

  50. Dr Sara Morais da Silva

    ... the links between cell cycle, in particular the spindle assembly checkpoint proteins and cellular metabolism. ...

  51. Dr Sally Boss

    ... of metal-containing fragments in libraries for fragment assembly. The capacity to dramatically increase ligand efficiency and to offer ...

  52. Professor Tuomas Knowles

    ... of our work has been focused on protein self-assembly. We explore the potential of proteins to generate new types of ... and renewable building blocks. In addition to functional assembly, we are also interested in understanding aberrant protein self-assembly that underlies the onset and development of disease states. ...

  53. Professor Elizabeth Murchison

    Elizabeth Murchison studies the genetics and evolution of clonally transmissible cancers. Transmissible cancers are unusual cancers that have survived beyond the bodies of their original hosts via the transmission of living cancer cells. Naturally...

  54. Dr Richard Dybowski

    ... and (b) optimisation of clinical decisions: (a) Within-host dynamics of bacterial infections with respect to antibiotic intervention. ...

  55. Miss Annalisa Occhipinti

    ... if Cambridge. I am currently working on gene network interactions and cancer data analysis. I am also developing a mathematical ...

  56. Professor Bertie Gottgens

    ... approach has resulted in the discovery of new combinatorial interactions between key blood stem cell regulators, as well as experimentally ...

  57. Dr Catherine Green

    ... such as surface plasmon resonance to investigate physical interactions between replication proteins, and also in vivo studies of replication protein dynamics and interactions in human tissue culture systems. ...

  58. Dr Darerca Owen

    ... biochemistry and cell biology to generate data on the interactions the small G proteins undergo. These data can then be employed to ...

  59. Professor Ernest Laue

    ... study of the structure of larger macromolecules and their interactions. We are increasingly directing our research towards structural ... interested in fundamental studies of protein-protein interactions, and in providing greater understanding and knowledge of how such ...

  60. Mr Alex Frankell

    Interpretation of Genomic data to inform in vitro molecular analysis and identify important drivers of Oesophageal ...

  61. Professor Anthony Davenport

    ... drugs) together with their transmitters in humans. We use in vitro pharmacology and in vivo imaging using positron emission tomography, to ...

  62. Dr Arnaud Comment

    ... biomolecules, and the conception and test of in vivo and in vitro protocols for biomedical applications. Real-time uptake and metabolism, ...

  63. Dr Simon Cook

    In terms of basic science we are interested in how protein kinase and lipid signalling pathways control cell fate decisions such as proliferation versus differentiation and survival versus death. However, these pathways are frequently de-regulated in...

  64. Professor Steve Charnock-Jones

    ... ablation.  We also carry out work using human tissues in vitro, in vivo and in retrospective genetics studies. I have other work focused ...

  65. Dr Emma Rawlins

    ... to contribute to cancer growth. Our lab also uses in vitro and in vivo techniques to investigate the molecular control of lung ...

  66. Miss Samantha Hallawell

    Cancer Immunotherapy- In vitro profiling of immunostimulatory antibodies as well as elucidation of ...

  67. Dr Hanna Najgebauer

    ... new algorithms and computational tools for scoring cancer in vitro models based on their clinical relevance and covered genomic ...

  68. Professor Adrian Liston

    We are focussed on understanding the biology of regulatory T cells within the tissues. How they migrate there, what controls their numbers ...

  69. Dr Adrien Hallou

    Initially trained as a physicist and a chemist at the Ecole Normale Supérieure (Paris, France), I developed my interest for quantitative approaches of biological systems during my MPhil and PhD in Biophysics at the University of Cambridge. I am now a...

  70. Professor Anna Philpott

    ... including embryos of the frog Xenopus laevis, mammalian cells including ES cells, and mice. I am particularly interested in post-translational cell ...

  71. Professor Ben Simons

    We are interested in the role of stem cells in the maintenance of adult tissue. In particular, by drawing of the ...

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