
Professor

@curtisclocklab
0000-0002-9601-9624
NA
Annie
Curtis
School of Pharmacy and Biomolecular Science
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Research Summary
Model Systems
Research Methods
We are interested in understanding how the circadian clock controls our immune system and immune function, in particular in relation to intracellular metabolism . Immune parameters such as severity of immune disease to response to vaccination show a time of day effect. Many immunological conditions ranging from rheumatoid arthritis to cardiovascular disease display time of day variation in symptoms. We use mouse models, and human samples in our work.
Humans; Mice or other rodents; Eukaryotic cells (including primary and transformed cell lines)
Quantitative research; Basic/fundamental/discovery research; Translational/applied research; Laboratory research; Ex vivo or postmortem studies; In vitro experiments; Biomedical or health research
Professor of Immunology
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Curtis Clock Lab
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Lumicycle, transgenic mice
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NA
I am happy to be contacted by
Prospective postdocs; Policymakers or think tanks; Patient or carer groups; Learned societies; Funders or charitable organisations; The media; Prospective industry partners; Prospective academic collaborators; Prospective lab technicians or lab managers; Prospective undergraduate students; Prospective MSc students; Prospective PhD students
