Research
Immunology

The immune system provides the defense for an organism to repel invasion by disease-causing agents. Immunology is the study of all aspects of the immune system in states of both health and disease; malfunctions of the immune system in disorders, such as autoimmune diseases. Researchers in the Department of Pathology study many aspects of immunology including the signalling mechanisms and cell types that generate immune responses, the evolution and function of families of genes integral to the immune system and the process of auto-immunity (in which the immune system attacks the normal tissue of the body).
Research projects within this thematic include;
- Antibody Structure And Function (Dr Michael Clark)
- Regulation of autoimmune disease (Professor Anne Cooke)
- Innate immune signalling (Dr Brian Ferguson)
- Immune and genetic analyses in HPV disease (Dr Peter Goon)
- Regulation of Autoimmune Diseases (Dr Allison Green)
- Lymphocyte Activation (Dr Nick Holmes)
- Structure, function and evolution of the immune response, focusing on the avian MHC (Professor Jim Kaufman)
- MHC class II antigen presentation (Dr Adrian Kelly)
- Immunology of Pregnancy (Professor Ashley Moffett)
- Signal Transduction and Immunity (Professor Chris Rudd)
- Anti-viral Immunity and Viral Immune Evasion (Dr Phil Stevenson)
- Genetic and functional relationships between immune receptors (Professor John Trowsdale)
