About
My laboratory’s profound motivation and purpose is to stop the development of oesophageal cancer. By working in a multidisciplinary team we are combining our expertise to affect novel therapeutic strategies for immunoprevention and decipher the underlying biology that governs protection from damage and dysfunction in the oesophageal epithelium as we age.
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Research
Research interests
- Cancer prevention
- Innate immunity
- Tumour microenvironment
- Cancer evolution and genetics
Current research
Harnessing the activities of gastro-intestinal innate immune cells for the prevention of oesophageal adenocarcinoma (CRUK Biology to Prevention Award).
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Research groups
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Research interests
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Current research
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Research projects
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Publications
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Supervision
Current PhD Students
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Teaching
Module Lead for Quantitative Cell Biology (Integrated PhD Biomedical Science, MEDI6227).
Module co-lead for (Genomic Technologies and Basic Informatics (MSc Genomics, MEDI6237).
Module co-lead for Numeracy and Statistics (BM6, MEDI0014).
Personal Academic Tutor for BM and PGT students.
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Courses and modules
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External roles and responsibilities
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Biography
Matthew Rose-Zerilli graduated from the University of Portsmouth in 2002 with a degree in Biochemistry. Matthew worked in the Pharmacogenomics industry before he undertook a PhD in Genetics at the University of Southampton. Following his PhD, he was awarded a career track fellowship within the School of Medicine and subsequently obtained a John Goldman fellowship for future science (Leukaemia UK). Recently, Matthew established his own research group focussed on cancer prevention within the School of Cancer Sciences.
Prizes
- John Goldman fellowship for future science (2016)
- Faculty of Medicine Career Track Fellowship (2014)
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Prizes
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