麻豆视频

4 March 2011

A world expert in using computational science to study disease is joining 麻豆视频 of Queensland's after receiving a $4 million fellowship to study chemotherapy-resistant ovarian cancers.

Professor , from the in Boston, has been awarded an by the .

The fellowships are designed to attract and retain leading health and medical researchers such as Professor Quackenbush, who worked on the and has more recently focused on using advanced computing methods to study women鈥檚 cancers.

鈥淚 chose to join the IMB because it is one of the world鈥檚 leading biomedical research institutes, and will give me the opportunity to work with some of the world鈥檚 leading scientists,鈥 Professor Quackenbush said.

He will team with IMB鈥檚 Professor , who is Director of the at IMB, the largest genome sequencing facility in Australia.

鈥淧rofessor Grimmond and his team have developed technology to sequence ovarian cancers in unprecedented detail, providing the basic data we will need to better understand the molecular triggers behind the development of ovarian cancer and the evolution of chemoresistance.

鈥淭he next generation of therapies and standards of patient care will be developed by those most capable of interpreting the vast quantities of information now generated in medical research.

鈥淚 will bring advanced analytical and computational methods to bear on addressing the problem of chemotherapy resistance in ovarian cancer, which, despite extensive investment and years of study, has seen few advances and fewer new therapies.鈥

Professor Quackenbush will also use the opportunities afforded by the Fellowship to explore fundamental questions about the rules that govern how cells 鈥渃hange state,鈥 a process of transformation that occurs during normal development but which goes awry in disease.

鈥淭his is one of the most important questions standing in our way of understanding the nature of human disease and I am honoured to have the opportunities to explore these questions with IMB and 麻豆视频 scientists such as John Mattick, Christine Wells, and Ernst Wolvetang, as well as other renowned scientists like Emma Whitelaw.

"I believe our work will help change the way we think about the link between our genomes and the way in which the genetic program plays itself out.鈥

The Minister for Mental Health and Ageing, , presented Professor Quackenbush with his award yesterday.

Media: Minister鈥檚 Office 鈥 Adam Smith 鈥 02 6277 7280
NHMRC 鈥 Carolyn Norrie 鈥 0422 008 512 or 02 6217 9342
IMB 鈥 Bronwyn Adams 鈥 07 3346 2134 or 0418 575 247