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- Floor ManagerInstitute for Molecular Bioscience
Yap Group
Group Leader
Professor Alpha Yap
Professor and ARC Laureate FellowInstitute for Molecular BioscienceResearcher profile is public:1Supervisor:Researcher biography:My group studies the role of cadherin cell adhesion molecules in morphogenesis and tumor development. E-cadherin is a key mediator of cell-cell recognition. It participates in tissue patterning and its dysfunction contributes to tumor progression and invasion.
Associate Professor Yap is the group leader for Cadherin cell adhesion molecules, Epithelial morphogenesis & Cell locomotion research at the IMB.
Body:Highlights
Professor Alpha Yap is a cell biologist. After training in Internal Medicine, Endocrinology and Cell Physiology, he undertook postdoctoral research with Barry Gumbiner at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (New York) before returning to Australia to establish his independent research group.
His research is at the leading edge of a rapidly developing field of science called mechanobiology. Mechanobiology explores how mechanical forces influence biology. Professor Yap is particularly interested in understanding how cells communicate by exerting force upon one another.
Collaborating across disciplines with colleagues from physics, developmental biology and mathematics, his research group has been instrumental in discovering how mechanical forces are generated, and sensed, to coordinate cell behaviour in tissues. Focusing on the epithelial tissues that are the major barriers of the body, Professor Yap believes that their cells monitor force to detect changes in the health of the tissue. This has important implications for understanding diseases such as cancer and inflammation.
Professor Yap currently serves on the editorial boards of several major international journals, amongst them Developmental Cell, Current Biology and Molecular Biology of the Cell.
He was the recipient of the 2013 President’s Medal of the Australia and New Zealand Society for Cell and Developmental Biology and is a Principal Research Fellow of the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia.
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Researchers
Dr Ellen Potoczky
Postdoctoral Research FellowInstitute for Molecular BioscienceResearcher profile is public:1Supervisor:Dr Julia Eckert
Visiting AcademicInstitute for Molecular BioscienceResearcher profile is public:0Supervisor:Dr Sarah Sale
Postdoctoral Research FellowInstitute for Molecular BioscienceResearcher profile is public:0Supervisor:Dr Fabienne Haslam
Postdoctoral Research FellowInstitute for Molecular BioscienceResearcher profile is public:0Supervisor:Ms Suzie Verma
Principal Research TechnicianInstitute for Molecular BioscienceResearcher profile is public:0Supervisor:Miss Fayth Lim
Senior Research TechnicianInstitute for Molecular BioscienceResearcher profile is public:0Supervisor:Students
Miss Denni Currin-Ross
PhD student & Research OfficerInstitute for Molecular BioscienceResearcher profile is public:0Supervisor:Ms Zoya Mann
PhD student & Research OfficerInstitute for Molecular BioscienceResearcher profile is public:0Supervisor:Ms Le Thanh Huyen Nguyen
PhD StudentInstitute for Molecular BioscienceResearcher profile is public:1Supervisor:Ms Angela Khin Oo Lwin
PhD StudentInstitute for Molecular BioscienceResearcher profile is public:1Supervisor:Mr Akshar Rao
PhD StudentInstitute for Molecular BioscienceResearcher profile is public:1Supervisor:- Tasks to complete ahead of the scholarship application opening
Schembri group
Group Leader
Professor Mark Schembri
Professorial Research Fellow & Group Leader & Centre Director of Institute for Molecular BioscienceInstitute for Molecular BioscienceResearcher profile is public:1Supervisor:Researcher biography:Professor Mark Schembri is a prominent microbiologist with experience in combating the global health crisis presented by multi-drug resistant pathogens. Professor Schembri’s expertise on the virulence of bacterial pathogens and his innovative analysis of biofilm formation aims to improve the outcomes of the >400 million individuals that suffer from urinary tract infections each year across the globe.
Through the application of genetic, genomic and functional studies on uropathogenic E. coli, Professor Schembri has identified targets to reduce the virulence of this pathogen, and will pursue the development of life-saving therapeutic and preventative advances with the assistance of NHMRC, MRFF and ARC grants. Professor Schembri has tracked the rapid emergence and global spread of a virulent, drug-resistant E. coli clone and used genome sequencing to understand its evolution and virulence.
Links: Professor Schembri collaborates with national and international research leaders, including in Denmark, where he was a lecturer. Professor Schembri has strong links with other international experts in his field, including at the Pasteur Institute and the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in Cambridge. His research collaborations also span lead groups at UQ and other top Australian institutes, including Griffith and La Trobe Universities.
Membership, Funding and patents: Since 2014, Professor Schembri has been awarded over $15 million in funding from competitive national research funding bodies. He holds provisional patents for the development of novel therapeutic agents and vaccine antigens. He is a Fellow of the American Academy of Microbiology, and is regularly invited to speak at international conferences in his field.
Awards and Communication: Professor Schembri was the recipient of the Frank Fenner Award (2010) and the ASM BacPath Oration Award (2019) for his outstanding original research contribution to the study of Infectious Disease. He was an Australian Research Council Future Fellow (2011-2015) a National Health and Medical Research Council Senior Research Fellow (2016-2020). Professor Schembri is the author of >240 peer-reviewed research manuscripts. He is President of the Australian Society for Microbiology (2022-2026).
Researchers
Dr Briony Joyce
Postdoctoral Research FellowInstitute for Molecular BioscienceResearcher profile is public:1Supervisor:Dr Zack Lian
Postdoctoral Research FellowInstitute for Molecular BioscienceResearcher profile is public:1Supervisor:Dr Nhu Nguyen
Research FellowInstitute for Molecular BioscienceResearcher profile is public:1Supervisor:Dr Duy Phan
Research FellowInstitute for Molecular BioscienceResearcher profile is public:1Supervisor:Researcher biography:I got my BSc degree from the University of Natural Sciences in Vietnam. I spent the next two years working on characterisation of multi-drug resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis with Dr Maxine Caws at the Oxford University Clinical Research Unit in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. I went to the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute and the University of Cambridge, UK to do my PhD in Prof. John Wain lab where I studied molecular mechanisms affecting the stability of IncHI1 multidrug resistant plasmids in Salmonella Typhi. I then moved to Australia to join the group of Prof. Mark Schembri at the School of Chemistry and Molecular Biosciences, University of Queensland. I am now working on identifying novel virulent factors in uropathogenic E. coli, especially in the newly emerged but globally spread ST131 clone, using high-throughput transposon mutagenesis and next-gen sequencing. I also maintain my interest in plasmid biology and have started projects to study multidrug resistant plasmids carrying blaCTX-M-15 or blaNDM-1 resistant genes.
Lab Manager
Dr Kate Peters
Senior Research ManagerInstitute for Molecular BioscienceResearcher profile is public:0Supervisor:Senior Research Assistant
Ms Chelsea Stewart
Senior Research AssistantInstitute for Molecular BioscienceResearcher profile is public:0Supervisor:Students
Miss Irene Martinez Roman
PhD StudentInstitute for Molecular BioscienceResearcher profile is public:0Supervisor:Mr Lachlan Walker
PhD studentInstitute for Molecular BioscienceResearcher profile is public:1Supervisor:Mr Samuel Morris
Honours StudentInstitute for Molecular BioscienceResearcher profile is public:1Supervisor:Ms Cameron Perkoulidis
StudentInstitute for Molecular BioscienceResearcher profile is public:1Supervisor:- One of the barriers to stemming the rise of resistance to antibiotics is their overuse, and often this is because bacterial and viral infections have very similar symptoms.
- StorepersonInstitute for Molecular Bioscience
- Microscopy Officer & Research OfficerInstitute for Molecular Bioscience
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Strawberry DNA extraction activity
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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.
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