This week's Hudson seminar
will be held in Seminar Rooms 1 &
2, Level 2, TRF Building on Thursday 10th May, 12pm-1pm.
Our speaker will be Professor Michael W. Parker DPhil
(Oxon) FAA FAHMS
Director, Bio21 Institute, University of Melbourne; Head, Structural Biology, St. Vincents Institute of Medical Research.
Director, Bio21 Institute, University of Melbourne; Head, Structural Biology, St. Vincents Institute of Medical Research.
He will be presenting 'Molecular
mechanisms of cell signalling by the betacommon family of cytokine receptors
Professor Michael Parker is Director of the Bio21 Institute,
University of Melbourne and Head of Structural Biology, St. Vincent’s Institute
of Medical Research in Melbourne. He is also an NHMRC Senior Principal Research
Fellow in the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at Bio21. After
obtaining his D. Phil. in protein crystallography from Oxford University,
Michael returned to Australia to re-establish a protein crystallography
laboratory at St. Vincent’s in 1991. The work of the laboratory is
internationally recognised with the determination of more than 140 crystal
structures of proteins involved in cancer, Alzheimer’s disease and infection.
He has published over 300 papers and his work has been recognised with numerous
awards including the 1999 Gottschalk Medal of the Australian Academy of
Science, a 2006 Federation Fellowship from the Australian Research Council, the
2011 Lemberg Medal of the Australian Society for Biochemistry and Molecular
Biology, the 2011 Ramaciotti Medal for Excellence in Biomedical Research, the
2012 Federation of Asian and Oceanian Biochemists and Molecular Biologists
Award for Research Excellence and the 2016 Bob Robertson Award of the
Australian Society for Biophysics for outstanding contributions to biophysics
in Australia and New Zealand. He was elected a Fellow of the Australian Academy
of Science in 2010 and a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Health and Medical
Sciences in 2015. He is currently Chair of the National Committee of
Crystallography under the auspices of the Australian Academy of Science.
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