IMB's latest news, explainers and more

 


Supporting life-saving research at CCRG

Read more

Get the latest research to your inbox

Subscribe
 

  • Professor
    School of Chemistry and Molecular Biosciences, Faculty of Science
  • Doolan Group

    Group Leader

    Professor Denise Doolan

    Deputy Director (Research)
    Institute for Molecular Bioscience
    Researcher profile is public: 
    1
    Supervisor: 
    Researcher biography: 

    Professor Denise Doolan is Director of Research at the Institute for Molecular Bioscience. She joined IMB in 2022 and was previously Deputy Director of the Australian Institute of Tropical Health and Medicine, and Director of the JCU Centre for Molecular Therapeutics, at James Cook University.

    She is a molecular immunologist, working on the development of vaccines, diagnostics and host-directed therapeutics for infectious and chronic diseases that impact global public health, with a particular focus on malaria. Her cross-disciplinary research program spans host-pathogen immunity, antigen discovery, vaccine engineering, and biomarker discovery. A particular interest is the application of state-of-the-art genome-based technologies and human models of disease system to identify novel targets for intervention against disease or that predict risk of disease.

    She is a recognized world expert in malaria immunology, vaccinology, and omic-based approaches for therapeutic and diagnostic development. She has been honoured as a Fellow of the International Society for Vaccines (2017) and a Fellow of the Australian Society of Parasitology (2019) in recognition of her leadership and contribution to health and medical science in Australia and internationally.

    Professor Doolan serves on a number of Executive Boards and Advisory Boards. Most recently, she has been elected as President of the International Society for Vaccines (2021-2023), and has been appointed to the Federal Government's Australian Medical Research Advisory Board (AMRAB; 2021-2026) to provide specialist insights into Australia's medical research and innovation priorities.

    Body: 


     

    Researchers

    Dr Anouschka Akerman

    Postdoctoral Research Fellow
    Institute for Molecular Bioscience
    Researcher profile is public: 
    1
    Supervisor: 

    Dr Ashton Kelly

    Postdoctoral Research Fellow
    Institute for Molecular Bioscience
    Researcher profile is public: 
    1
    Supervisor: 

    Ms Maggie King

    Principal Research Assistant
    Institute for Molecular Bioscience
    Researcher profile is public: 
    0
    Supervisor: 

    Students

    Ms Brenna Daily

    PhD Student
    Institute for Molecular Bioscience
    Researcher profile is public: 
    0
    Supervisor: 

    Miss Nadia Boulahia

    PhD Student
    Institute for Molecular Bioscience
    Researcher profile is public: 
    0
    Supervisor: 

    Miss Kiara Knuckey

    Student
    Institute for Molecular Bioscience
    Researcher profile is public: 
    1
    Supervisor: 
  • Executive Dean
    Faculty of Medicine
    Member, Advisory Board
    Institute for Molecular Bioscience
  • Adjunct Fellow
    Institute for Molecular Bioscience
  • Koopman Group

      Group Leader

    Emeritus Professor Peter Koopman

    Emeritus Professor
    Institute for Molecular Bioscience
    Researcher profile is public: 
    0
    Supervisor: 
    Body: 

    Highlights

    Professor Koopman earned his PhD from the University of Melbourne in 1986 for research on stem cell differentiation. He moved to London soon afterwards for a postdoctoral appointment in the Mammalian Development Unit at the Medical Research Council, where he conducted medical analyses of mouse embryo development. During a second postdoc, with the National Institute for Medical Research, he was part of the team who isolated the mouse Y-chromosome gene (now known as SRY) and demonstrated its role in sex determination by reversing the sex of XX-chromosome mice. The discovery is widely regarded as one of the major achievements in molecular genetics of the 20th century.

    In 1992 he took a role at The University of Queensland, and now heads a research team whose work focuses on genes that regulate embryonic development, with special emphasis on the molecular genetics of sex development, fertility, gonadal cancers and intersex conditions. He’s also extensively involved in research training, having co-founded the Australian Developmental Biology Workshop in 2001. The workshop is a training-ground for the next generation of developmental biologists in Australia and the Asia-Pacific region.

    Between 2007 and 2012 he was a Federation Fellow of the ARC, and in 2008 was elected a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science.

    Connect

    ResearcherIDScopusOrcid

     

      Researchers

    Students

    Mr Christian Larney

    Higher degree by research (PhD) student
    Institute for Molecular Bioscience
    Researcher profile is public: 
    1
    Supervisor: 

    Ms Clarissa Rios Rojas

    Higher degree by research (PhD) student
    Institute for Molecular Bioscience
    Researcher profile is public: 
    1
    Supervisor: 

Pages

Strawberry DNA extraction activity

Extract and view DNA from a strawberry using common household ingredients.

Get started

 

 

 

The Edge: Genetics

People have known for thousands of years that parents pass traits to their children, but it is only relatively recently that our technology has caught up to our curiosity, enabling us to delve into the mystery of how this inheritance occurs, and the implications for predicting, preventing and treating disease.

 View online
 Download magazine

Subscribe to our newsletter

Get the latest research straight to your inbox. 
Stay up-to-date as we answer questions about hot topics, and share the latest news at IMB, Australia’s #1 research institute.

Subscribe

General enquiries

  +61 7 3346 2222
  imb@imb.uq.edu.au

Media enquiries

IMB fully supports UQ's Reconciliation Action Plan and is implementing actions within our institute.

Support us

Donate to research
100% of donations go to the cause