We aim to decipher how the adaptive immune system goes wrong in disease, and how this can be used in diagnostics and therapeutics using cutting-edge experimental and computational approaches
Associate Professor Rachael Bashford-Rogers
From adaptive immunity to clinical translation
We are investigating how defects in the ability to mount effective immune responses lead to infectious disease susceptibility, impaired surveillance of cancer and immunodeficiencies, compared to the mechanisms leading to a breakdown of immunological tolerance causing autoimmune diseases.
This will lead us to:
Understand why certain individuals are at greater risk of developing immunological disease
Highlight key interactions of immune cells within sites of inflammation or disease
Define novel therapeutic targets or optimal therapeutic combinations
Identify blood biomarkers immune status
Stratify patients for improved clinical management
This is being achieved through the development and application of novel experimental and computational approaches, working in partnership with a global network of clinicians, immunologists and sample cohorts. We prioritise translational- and patient-focussed research to work towards bridging fundamental biology to early phase clinical trials. Our research interests focus on B cell biology and their interactions with other cells in tissues and blood:
Development and diversification of different B cell populations in health and disease
Understanding the nature of B cell immuno-surveillance, regulation and activation across cancers and autoimmune diseases, with a particular focus on pancreatic and renal cancers
Minimal residual disease detection in lymphoid malignancies
Influence of genetic and environmental variation on B cell fate
Immune cell population reconstitution and persistence with immunomodulatory therapy
How B and T cells may be therapeutically modulated across diseases
Novel method developments (experimental and computational)