Welcome all to Pentridge Prison, Melbourne, for the Melbourne Immunotherapy Network Spring Symposium. Get your mugshot taken, and hear about the local translational immuno-landscape! www.melbourneimmunotherapy.org
@assocprofashhaque
A/Prof, Dept of Microbiol & Immunol, Uni. Melbourne; Peter Doherty Institute for Infection & Immunity. President: Melbourne Immunotherapy Network. Deputy Secretary: Australian & NZ Soc of Immunology. Interests: T cells, B cells, cellular genomics & guitars
Welcome all to Pentridge Prison, Melbourne, for the Melbourne Immunotherapy Network Spring Symposium. Get your mugshot taken, and hear about the local translational immuno-landscape! www.melbourneimmunotherapy.org
Here's an updated poster for the Melbourne Immunotherapy Network, Spring Symposium & Dinner. For details and registration, please visit this link: www.melbourneimmunotherapy.org
Please re-post
Allegedly, a dozen eggs may soon cost $250 in Melbourne. Dear students of immunology & immunotherapy, spend your $ instead on the Melbourne Immunotherapy Network Symposium & Dinner (2-3 Sept, Pentridge Prison). You can translate without breaking eggs!
www.melbourneimmunotherapy.org
π¨π¦ π¬ Last month to register to the EMBO workshop on Adaptive Immunity in Barrier Tissues.
π Where: Basel, Switzerland
π
When: 26thβ29th August 2025
π Registration deadline: 30th May 2025
Childcare support & travel grants from @embo.org and @efis-immunology.bsky.social
#EMBOBarrierTissues
Go to this!! It's Free: www.eventbrite.com.au/e/weighing-t...
Pls re-post: Melbourne Immunotherapy Network Spring Symposium, 2-3 Sept 2025, at Pentridge Prison (No current inmates BTW). www.melbourneimmunotherapy.org
$250 for students (inc. networking drinks, conference dinner in prison hall, and after-dinner speaker - to be announced soon). C U behind bars!
Interesting article: www.theguardian.com/wellness/202...
NHMRC Grant application completed on May 4th. A reason to celebrate, I think.
Ever wondered what the immune system looks like up close? With a technique called Spatial Transcriptomics, we detected ~20,000 genes in the spleen, and converted the data into a zoom-able interactive app with DEPT IT agency, to inform school kids etc about immune cells & health. Do you like it?
Scalable spatial transcriptomics through computational array reconstruction - @broadinstitute.org go.nature.com/3QYfSDd
Yes. The situation at NIH is worse than the public realizes.
The #NIH is on track to be effectively ended as a funder of evidence-based research within a year.
That is not an exaggeration. The firings and consolidation announced today will create a new, MUCH worse NIH.
1/
Cool germinal center acrobatics from Juhee Pae et al, check it out!
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
HCA scientists have assembled the Asian Immune Diversity Atlas (AIDA), the worldβs first multi-national survey of human blood at single-cell resolution, providing insights into human variation, biological mechanisms, disease risk, and diagnostic criteria.
Saba Asad had to deal with COVID lockdowns, home schooling her kids, a tough mouse breeding program and more; yet 3 years later her PhD Oration on B cell scRNAseq in malaria was fab! Well done, Saba. Good luck with thesis submission. Read her pre-print work here: www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
We found this VHS tape of Thom performing at the Horseshoe Tavern, Toronto in 1995 for the release of The Bends
Watch the full show waste.lnk.to/horseshoetav...
Register TODAY: Melbourne Immunotherapy Network, 2-day Spring Symposium, Pentridge Prison, Coburg! 2-3 Sept '25.
Student Early Bird: $250, inc. conference dinner (No metal prison trays, I promise!)
Click below to register and submit your Abstract.
www.melbourneimmunotherapy.org/registration
Get ready for #WorldImmunologyDay2025! π
Join us at The Francis Crick Institute on 24 April to explore "The immune system and your brain" π§
Hosted by @claudiahammond.bsky.social and run by @britsocimm.bsky.social, @natureportfolio.nature.com and @crick.ac.uk
Register for FREE now: bit.ly/41m8kP9
Here's a new co-authored pre-print with Michelle Boyle @burnetinstitute.bsky.social, studying cTfh cells in volunteers infected with P. falciparum, via scRNA-seq and paired TCR-seq. Tfh1 are split based on CCR7, with CCR7+ Tfh1 correlating with antibody responses.
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
The ASMR is delighted to announce the appointment of Dr Shane Huntington OAM (@drshanerrr.bsky.social) as the societyβs inaugural CEO. Shane brings extensive experience in leadership, research, communication and engagement. He is the ideal appointment to guide the expansion and impact of ASMR.
Just a quick reminder from Roald Dahl in 1962. Vaccination protects against measlesβ¦..
First measles death in Texas. Unfortunately, not surprising. Number of cases likely to increase and we may see more deaths. A tragic, preventable death of a school aged child. But the outbreak is called "not so unusual" by RFK. Simply not true. This is both unusual AND preventable. #vaccineswork
@keystonesymposia.bsky.social
Our Melbourne team is v sad not to be at the Keystone B cell meeting, Monaco, but will watch the On Demand versions at lab meetings! I hope to present our study on temporal dynamics of CSR, expansion, fate & SHM in 2026. read it here www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
This is a REALLY important thread about the threat to vaccine, vaccine access and vaccine design the new administration is. Do read
An exciting day at @thedohertyinst.bsky.social today, since we welcome our 2025 cohort of Honours students at the Department of Microbiology & Immunology. Itβs going to be a rewarding year for all concerned!
Excerpt from a public letter Roald Dahl wrote encouraging people to vaccinate their children. Olivia, my eldest daughter, caught measles when she was seven years old. As the illness took its usual course I can remember reading to her often in bed and not feeling particularly alarmed about it. Then one morning, when she was well on the road to recovery, I was sitting on her bed showing her how to fashion little animals out of coloured pipe-cleaners, and when it came to her turn to make one herself, I noticed that her fingers and her mind were not working together and she couldnβt do anything. βAre you feeling all right?β I asked her. βI feel all sleepy,β she said. In an hour, she was unconscious. In twelve hours she was dead. The measles had turned into a terrible thing called measles encephalitis and there was nothing the doctors could do to save her. That was twenty-four years ago in 1962, but even now, if a child with measles happens to develop the same deadly reaction from measles as Olivia did, there would still be nothing the doctors could do to help her. On the other hand, there is today something that parents can do to make sure that this sort of tragedy does not happen to a child of theirs. They can insist that their child is immunized against measles. I was unable to do that for Olivia in 1962 because in those days a reliable measles vaccine had not been discovered. Today a good and safe vaccine is available to every family and all you have to do is to ask your doctor to administer it.
The measles outbreak in Texas is reminding me of the public letter Roald Dahl wrote about losing his daughter to measles in 1962, just before the vaccine was publicly available.
If you're interested in vaccines, cancer immunotherapy, blocking autoimmune disease, early detection of disease etc, check out the Melbourne Immunotherapy Network: www.melbourneimmunotherapy.org/background
Here are our supporting institutions below. Come along to our September meeting in Melbourne.
This may be the 1st Immunotherapy Meeting to be held in a PRISON! We will discuss how scientific discoveries can be best developed to detect, treat, and prevent human diseases for which the immune system is either the cause or a potential cure. Registration opens soon: www.melbourneimmunotherapy.org