Stuart Tangye
Garvan Institute, NSW, Australia
- This delegate is presenting an abstract at this event.
Dr Stuart Tangye is the Head of the Immunology Division at the Garvan Institute of Medical Research, Professor in the Faculty Medicine, University of NSW Australia, and an NHMRC Principal Research Fellow. He completed his PhD on B-cell leukemia at UTS in 1995 and undertook postdoctoral training at the DNAX Research Institute for Molecular and Cellular Biology (Palo Alto California, USA; 19996-1999). He returned to Australia in 2000 as a University of Sydney Research Fellow to work with Dr Phil Hodgkin at the Centenary Institute of Cancer Medicine and Cell Biology (University of Sydney). He established an independent research lab in 2002, and was recruited to the Garvan Institute in 2006.
His research interests focus on human immunobiology in health and disease. This is achieved by studying lymphocyte development, signalling, differentiation and effector function in patients with diseases resulting from monogenic loss- or gain-of-function mutations in key regulators of immune responses, as well as in corresponding animal models of these human conditions. In the past few years, his lab has made significant contributions to elucidating how these mutations result in some of the clinical features associated with human primary immunodeficiencies. He has been funded by fellowships and project and program grants awarded by the NHMRC, Cancer Council NSW, XLP Research Trust and Association for International Cancer Research. Since 1995, he has published >140 peer-reviewed articles and invited reviews and in 2011 he received the Gottschalk Medal from the Australian Academy of Sciences, which recognises “outstanding research in the medical sciences by scientists no more than 40 years of age”. More recently he was awarded the Faculty of Science Alumni Excellence Award from the University of Technology Sydney (2013), and a Senior Scholarship from the US-Australian Fulbright Commission to undertake sabbatical study at Rockefeller University in New York (2015). He is on the senior editorial boards of J Exp Med, J Immunol and J Clin Immunol. When he is not at work, he enjoys surfing, cycling, swimming and most of all being a Dad to his three beautiful children!
Presentations this author is a contributor to:
The functionality of immune cells in DOCK8 deficient patients after haematopoietic stem cell transplant (#351)
4:00 PM
Bethany A Pillay
Poster Session Three
The function of immune cells in patients with a mutation in the DOCK8 gene before and after bone marrow transplant (#104)
1:20 PM
Bethany A Pillay
BD Science Communication Award Session
Gain-of-function mutations in Pik3cd result in dysregulation of B cells at multiple stages (#200)
4:00 PM
Elissa K Deenick
Poster Session One & Burnet Oration Cocktail Function
Clarifying the molecular mechanism of STAT3 signaling in naïve and memory B cells (#349)
4:00 PM
Simon Pelham
Poster Session Three
Alterations in CD8+ T cell phenotype and function in the peripheral blood of PIK3CD gain-of-function patients (#74)
3:10 PM
Emily SJ Edwards
Workshop 7: Infection and Immunity 2
Using Primary Immunodeficiencies to Investigate Human CD4+ T cell Development, Differentiation and Function. (#12)
11:25 AM
Cindy Ma
Symposium II: Lymphocyte Differentiation, Activation and Memory