Axel Kallies
University of Melbourne and Doherty Institute, VIC, Australia
- This delegate is presenting an abstract at this event.
Axel Kallies is Professor for Molecular Immunology at the University of Melbourne, Australia. He completed his PhD in Berlin, Germany, in 2002. After a postdoctoral period during which he studied plasma cell differentiation, he established his laboratory at The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute (WEHI) in Melbourne, Australia. In 2017, he was recruited to the Department for Microbiology and Immunology at the Peter Doherty Institute, University of Melbourne. His team studies the molecular and metabolic control of lymphocyte differentiation in response to antigen. The focus of the lab is on understanding molecular pathways required for CD8 T cell and regulatory T cell (Treg) differentiation.
The Kallies lab has developed and applied genetic and molecular approaches to this field, including novel reporter mouse strains, metabolic techniques, transcriptional profiling, chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) and accessible chromatin (ATAC) sequencing. They published several key studies in leading journals of the field, including Nature, Science, Immunity and Nature Immunology, which detail the roles of transcription factors and cytokines in differentiation, clonal expansion and cellular metabolism of lymphocytes. Over the last few years, the Kallies lab has developed a focus on linking transcriptional control and cellular metabolism of T cells in response to chronic infection and cancer.
Presentations this author is a contributor to:
Deciphering resident memory T cell ontogeny (#6)
10:00 AM
Laura Mackay
Plenary I: Adaptive Immunity
Transplantation of tissue-resident lymphocytes (#352)
4:00 PM
Amy Prosser
Poster Session Three
Organ donors; giving more than expected (#105)
1:30 PM
Amy Prosser
BD Science Communication Award Session
Distinct mechanisms govern tissue-resident memory T cell development in different organs (#18)
2:55 PM
Erica Wynne-Jones
Workshop 1: Lymphocyte biology 1
Immunity at the front line (#106)
1:40 PM
Erica Wynne-Jones
BD Science Communication Award Session
Immunological processes underlying the slow acquisition of immunity to blood-stage malaria (#76)
3:40 PM
Diana S Hansen
Workshop 7: Infection and Immunity 2
Bach2 is required to sustain the CD4 T cell response (#369)
4:00 PM
Tom Sidwell
Poster Session Three
Lipid excess suppresses NK cell function in B cell lymphoma (#279)
4:00 PM
Takumi Kobayashi
Poster Session Two
Molecular control of tissue-resident regulatory T cell differentiation (#42)
3:40 PM
Axel Kallies
Workshop 4: Mucosal Immunity
The role of microbiota in the formation of circulating memory CD8+ T cells (#21)
3:40 PM
Annabell Bachem
Workshop 1: Lymphocyte biology 1