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Personal Statement

Immunopharmacology lecturer and research scientist- Cell signalling and inflammation.

I have been a researcher in the field of immuno-pharmacology in relation to cell signalling and inflammation since 2004, specialising in the area of cell signalling in inflammation and G-protein coupled receptors.

My research area covers:

1) The cellular mechanisms underlying the inflammatory environment linked to breast cancer progression, with an emphasis on CXCL12 and the NFkB pathway. 

2) understanding the molecular mechanisims of PAR2 signalling in the proccesses that underpin inflammation (focus on arthritis), with an emphasis on targert validation and drug discovery.  

3) Understanding the molecular mechanisms that underpin IKK-alpha signalling in inflammation and cancer.

Recent preliminary projects have taken me in the direction of CXCL12 signalling in breast cancer, where I have uncovered a link between the non-canonical NFkB pathway and CXCL12 production in cancer cell lines. With the aid of first in class novel IKKa inhibitors I am in an excellent position to investigate this further. In the lab we  also have several 'hit compounds' from a SULSA screen which target CXCL12 transcriptional activity, this will allow further drug discovery/evaluation work in this area. Targeting the chemokine directly is a novel approach which will by pass many of the unwanted side effects evident with inhibition of its target receptor -  CXCR4. 

I had the privilege of being part of a group which was one of the first to recognise the biological relevance of PAR2, developed one of the first PAR2 knockout models and indeed my research career started within the Ferrell and Lockhart group, who along with my current group, have forged a world lead in the area of chronic inflammation (arthritis). 

I teach across all years in the biomedical sciences programme, with an even split across both Pharmacology and Immunology. I also coordinate and teach the Advanced Masters programme in Pharmacology, along with key PGR lead modules within the department.

I am the year 4 BMS coordinator. 

 

Research Interests

Current Collaborators: 

CXCL12-IKKa project = Professor Valerie Speirs (University of Aberdeen) and Dr Craig Jamieson (UoS)

PAR2-Osteoarthrits project = Dr Anne Crilly (University of the West of Scotland), and Dr Craig Jamieson (UoS).

IKK-alpha signalling project = Prof Robin Plevin (UoS). 

 

Teaching Interests

Recently awarded Senior fellowship status (Aug 2025) of the Higer Education Academy based on my vast teaching experience and leadership skills. 

I was previously awarded my PG Cert in Advanced Academic studies in 2016 where I also become a recognised fellow of the higher education academy.

I am the deputy director of the PGT programme within SIPBS, the Year 4 lead for Biomolecular Sciences and the current NSS champion reporting to and a member of FLEC. I am also co-director of the Biomedical Sciences employment liasion committe and I am the director of the participation, experience, engagement and resilience (PEER) committee within Biomolecular Sciences. The PEER committee has student experience, engagement and well being as it's core focus. As such student participation and voice within the group is intergral to it's success. 

In regards to my teaching I have module co-ordinator roles across Pharmacology and Immunology within BMS. I teach across year 1 -3 in Immunology and from years 2-4 in Pharmacology. I also coordinate and deliver on the MSc Advanced Pharmacology module. I am module lead for the year 2 Immunology labs and semester 2 labs in year 3.

My on-going discipline-specific research generates lab projects for both Honours and Masters level students, and enables competitive summer intership applications.  My discipline-specific research informs my teaching practice and is central to year 4 advanced Pharmacology. I was previously part of the BMS accreditation team and lead the redesign of the critical analysis projects at Masters level. I am currently involved with the redesign of the Introductory content for Immunology, both lectures and labs. 

From 2014 I taught and then co-ordinated the PP904 compulsory PhD class on abstract writing, poster presentation and presentation skills for 8 years. I was also actively involved in the organisation of the initial CPU summer school run here in SIPBS.

Education/Academic qualification

Doctor of Science, PAR2 mediated inhibition of TNF driven JNK signalling, University of Paisley

1 Oct 200430 Sept 2008

Award Date: 30 Sept 2008

External positions

visiting lecturer, UNIVERSITY OF THE WEST OF SCOTLAND

21 Sept 2023 → …

Keywords

  • Cellular signalling
  • Research methodology
  • receptors
  • inflammation

Expertise related to UN Sustainable Development Goals

In 2015, UN member states agreed to 17 global Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to end poverty, protect the planet and ensure prosperity for all. This person’s work contributes towards the following SDG(s):

  1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being
  2. SDG 4 - Quality Education
    SDG 4 Quality Education

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