Michael Jennings
Institute for Glycomics, Griffith University, QLD, Australia
- This delegate is presenting an abstract at this event.
 
      
        Prof Michael Jennings works in the fields of bacterial genetics, bacterial pathogenesis, vaccine development and glycobiology. His undergraduate and postgraduate degrees (PhD 1990) are from Griffith University, Australia. His post-doctoral training was in the laboratory of Prof Richard Moxon at the University of Oxford (1992-1996), supported by a Beit Memorial Fellowship for Medical Research. In 1997 he took up a faculty position at the University of Queensland. In 2009 he returned to Griffith University to take up the position of Deputy Director and Principal Research Leader at the Institute for Glycomics. He has made major contributions to understanding virulence factor function and regulation in a range of bacterial pathogens, including the discovery of epigenetic regulation systems call phasevarions. His current work focuses on the role of glyco-interactions in infectious disease.      
      Presentations this author is a contributor to:
                  
          
          Multiple bacterial veterinary pathogens contain phase-variable regulons; phasevarions (#79)
  
  10:10 AM
      
    John Atack    
  
          
            
            Animal pathogens and potential zoonosis          
        
                        
          
          Selection for non-optimal codons in secretory signal sequences is not for weaker mRNA secondary structures in Escherichia coli (#137)
  
  9:50 AM
      
    Yaramah Zalucki    
  
          
            
            Microbial Evolution and Genomics          
        
                        
          
          Glycan-glycan interactions between host glycans and pathogen glycans: Role in colonisation/adherence. (#153)
  
  11:30 AM
      
    Christopher Day    
  
          
            
            Glycobiology          
        
                        
          
          Engineering a bacterial toxin for improved function as a N-glycolylneuraminic acid specific lectin (#368)
  
  7:35 PM
      
    Lucy K Shewell    
  
          
            
            Poster Session II          
        
                        
          
          The Role of Glycan Interactions in the Cell and Host Tropism of Bacterial Pathogens (#28)
  
  11:45 AM
      
    Michael Jennings    
  
          
            
            Plenary 3          
        
            
                ASMicro 2018