Alumni
This person is a member of Sanger Institute Alumni.
I joined the Wright faculty lab in 2007 and have mostly been working on the identification of new receptor-ligand interactions between pathogens and their host. To identify targets that can be easily accessible to therapeutics, we have been focusing on pathogen and host proteins that are displayed at the cell surface. My role is to compile, express and test large libraries of recombinant proteins that represent the cell surface repertoire of various pathogens.
I first focused on cell surface proteins displayed at the surface of merozoites, the blood-stage form of the Plasmodium falciparum parasite that causes malaria. Using a technique to detect low affinity extracellular interactions, I screened this panel of parasite proteins against a library of proteins present at the surface of the human red blood cell. Using this approach, I identified some new host-pathogen interactions, including the one between the P. falciparum RH5 and human basigin, which is essential for the invasion of P. falciparum into the human erythrocyte. RH5 has now become a primary target in the development of an effective vaccine against malaria.
More recently, I have begun a new project looking at extracellular proteins of Schistosoma mansoni, the parasite that causes bilharzia, for which no vaccine is available despite being the second most common parasitic disease. We have compiled a library proteins mostly expressed at the schistomula stage, which occurs shortly after the parasite has penetrated the human host’s skin. Using a systematic screening approach, we hope to identify new vaccine targets.
My timeline
Begins another project focused on the identification of novel vaccine targets for the bilharzia parasite, Schistosoma mansoni
Starts a research project looking for new extracellular protein interactions between the human red blood cell and the malaria parasite, Plasmodium falciparum
Joins the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in the Cell Surface Signalling laboratory “Development of a new method for selecting recombinant mouse monoclonal antibodies”
Post-doctoral fellow in the Vertebrate Development Laboratory, Cancer Research UK London Research Institute “Role of the Notch signalling pathway in intestinal cell differentiation”
PhD in Human Genetics “The role of the JAGGED1 gene in Alagille syndrome”, Universite Paris 7 Denis Diderot and Hopital de Bicetre
Graduate degree in Human Genetics, Universite Paris 7 Denis Diderot