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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. Professor Andrea Brand

  13. Dr Alison Schuldt

  14. Mrs Amy Bates

  15. Miss Amy Cullen

  16. Ms Anita Chhabra

  17. Dr Ahsen Ustaoglu

  18. Dr Clea Barcena

  19. Ms Catherine Dabrowska

  20. Ms Chiara Cerrato

  21. Dr Chandan Sanghera

  22. Mr Arqum Anwar

    Rotation Project: The project aims to investigate the cellular role(s) of a novel factor expected to be involved in DNA damage response. Specifically, the interactome of the protein will be explored using co-immunoprecipitation followed by mass...

  23. Dr Andreas Bender

    Previously affiliated with the Lead Discovery Informatics (LDI) group of Novartis in Cambridge/MA, I am now developing and applying cheminformatics techniques in the drug discovery field in my group with the University of Cambridge. Our expertise ranges...

  24. Professor Alan Warren

    Our long-term 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,...

  25. Dr Alasdair Russell

    Alasdair heads up a specialised team that provide a centralised ‘Hub’ for the innovation and application of state-of-the-art Genome Editing technologies to complex, patient-relevant model systems in a pre-clinical setting. Further, we use these novel...

  26. Dr Alexey Larionov

    Hormonal treatment and resistance in Breast cancer Heritable cancer predisposition NGS data analysis

  27. Dr Andrew Bannister

    I have spent the last three decades generally messing around with chromatin with a special focus on histones and their modifications. My research has focused on identifying novel histone modifications together with characterization of the enzymes ...

  28. Dr Antony Rix

    Co-founded by Prof Evis Sala and Dr Antony Rix, Lucida Medical is a spin-out from the University of Cambridge Department of Radiology and Cambridge University Hospitals. The company develops AI-based software to help automate the analysis of...

  29. Professor Anthony Davenport

    Our research group focuses on understanding the role of G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs, targets for about ~50% of current drugs) together with their transmitters in humans. We use in vitro pharmacology and in vivo imaging using positron emission...

  30. Dr Alex Cagan

    My research seeks  to understand the somatic evolutionary processes that occur within our bodies as we age and their consequences for health.  Evolution is often considered  to be an almost imperceptibly slow process. However, the cells that...

  31. Dr Andre Neves

    As a chemical engineer, I enjoy translating basic science into novel biomedical technologies. I am interested in the use of molecular imaging techniques for early cancer diagnosis and for better assessing response to cancer therapy. Currently, I'm...

  32. Mr David Yu

    ... Patterning, Growth Control, and Cell Polarity; Precision and Robustness of Positional Information in Cells; Ultrasensitivity, Bistability, ...

  33. Dr Ahsan MEMON

    ... learning algorithm for data processing to elucidate the dynamics of molecules, measure local forces, and re-localise or switch cellular ... that surrounds the cell to regulate and control cell dynamics and by extension cell behaviours through cell signaling. Ever since, ...

  34. Professor Clemens Kaminski

    ... for research into molecular assembly, protein conformational dynamics, and aggregation. Recently we have developed an optical ...

  35. Dr Catherine Green

    ... proteins, and also in vivo studies of replication protein dynamics and interactions in human tissue culture systems. ...

  36. Dr David Fairen-Jimenez

    ... such as grand canonical Monte Carlo (GCMC) and molecular dynamics (MD), and machine learning to design new materials. Nowadays, we run ...

  37. Professor Sir David Klenerman

    ... fluorescence spectroscopy to probe the intramolecular dynamics, conformations and function of range of biologically important ...

  38. Professor Folma Buss

    ... transport processes, cell signaling and membrane dynamics, and how defects in these molecular machines are linked to cancer, ...

  39. Dr Gaia Schiavon

    - Use of ctDNA analysis for early assessment of response / prediction of long term outcome, and to interrogate minimal residual disease ...

  40. Dr Joo-Hyeon Lee

    ... in chromatin, transcription, translation, and cellular dynamics in homeostasis and injury repair. We investigate the regulatory ... during this process. Elucidating the normal process of lung dynamics will provide us a foundation to understand lung diseases and cancer. ...

  41. Dr Jennifer Gallop

    ... that regulate the actin cytoskeleton orchestrate actin dynamics. ...

  42. Professor Anna Korhonen

    I conduct research in computer science - in natural language processing and text mining. I have research projects which ...

  43. Professor David Spring

    Our research interests are centered on using organic synthesis to make small molecules and peptides, which potentially could be used for early stage drug discovery. For more detailed information, please visit the Spring Group web pages: http://www...

  44. 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...

  45. Dr Francesco Colucci

    ... focus on special immune cells found in the womb, the uterine natural killer (NK) cells, which are thought to contribute to the vascular ...

  46. Professor Ian Paterson

    Organic synthesis - generally related to anticancer natural products and analogues. Synthesis of potent cytotoxic payloads for ...

  47. Dr Julian Sale

    My lab is interested in the mechanisms that alleviate arrested DNA replication and the impact their loss has on mutagenesis and on the maintenance of epigenetic memory through the recycling of histones during replication. Replication can be arrested by...

  48. Professor Matthew Allen

    My laboratory is interested in preclinical modelling of musculoskeletal cancer, with a particular emphasis on paediatric cancers (such as osteosarcoma, rhabdomyosarcoma and Ewings sarcoma) and adult cancers that spread to bone (such as breast, prostate,...

  49. Professor Raymond Goldstein

    My group focuses on nonequilibrium phenomena in the natural world, with particular emphasis on biological physics. We strive for a ...

  50. Dr Robert Thomas

    ... he has an an ongoing RCT evaluating the effect of a natural essential oil nail cream on the severity of taxotere oncolysis. ...

  51. Professor Tuomas Knowles

    ... to generate new types of artificial materials formed from natural and renewable building blocks. In addition to functional assembly, we ...

  52. Mr Angelos Kolias

    Angelos Kolias is a Clinical Senior Lecturer and Consultant Neurosurgeon in the Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Addenbrooke’s Hospital and University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK. He also holds an adjunct Professorship at Humanitas University,...

  53. 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...

  54. Mr Asif Jah

    Mr Asif Jah ...

  55. Dr Danish Mazhar

    Dr Mazhar was a Medical Undergraduate at the University of Oxford and completed his Clinical Training in London. He undertook Specialist Training in Medical Oncology at the Hammersmith and Charing Cross Hospitals in London. He was awarded a PhD by...

  56. Dr Daniel Munoz-Espin

    My group works at the interface between cellular senescence, plasticity and the fundamental processes and mechanisms that lie at the origin of cancer. We are also developing novel tools and nanodevices for cancer early diagnosis and therapy. ...

  57. Professor Steve Charnock-Jones

    ... My work on understanding and manipulating angiogenesis is of direct relevance to solid tumour growth. ...

  58. Professor Ernest Laue

    The study of the structure and function of protein complexes, mainly using either NMR spectroscopy or X-ray crystallography, but also employing a wide range of biochemical methods to study cellular complexes both in vitro and in vivo. Studying proteins...

  59. Professor Florian Markowetz

    We develop computational approaches for the systems genetics of cancer. To identify drivers of cancer we link genetic data to molecular and cellular phenotypes. Our work combines two complementary directions by (1) analyzing global portraits of cancer...

  60. Professor Anna Philpott

    I am interested in the balance between proliferation and differentiation during development and cancer, using a range of models including embryos of the frog Xenopus laevis, mammalian cells including ES cells, and mice. I am particularly interested in...

  61. Dr Marco Sciacovelli

    My research focuses on the role of metabolic reprogramming during transformation and tumour evolution. We are interested in ...

  62. Dr Emma Beddowes

    Investigating the development and application of circulating free nucleic acids to breast cancer research.

  63. Miss Emma Hanbury

  64. Miss Emma Kay Richardson

    Investigating the role of VHL and HIF in clear cell renal cell carcinoma.

  65. Miss Emma Brown

  66. Miss Emma Wong

  67. Miss Emma Wong

  68. Dr Emmanuel Huguet

    He qualified at Bristol University, and after completing house officer posts at the Bristol Royal Infirmary, worked at Bristol University as an anatomy demonstrator to undergraduate medical students. He subsequently undertook a PhD in cancer molecular...

  69. Dr Emma Rawlins

    The Rawlins lab works on the roles of stem cells in lung development and homeostasis with the dual aims of understanding how the normal homeostatic control mechanisms are subverted in cancer and whether mechanisms of differentiation can be exploited as...

  70. Mrs Gemma Andrews

  71. Ms Gemma Goodfellow

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