Anja Knaupp
Monash University, VIC, Australia
- This delegate is presenting an abstract at this event.
I am an Early Career Researcher in the Reprogramming and Epigenetics Laboratory of A/Prof Jose Polo at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia. My past and current research interests focus on understanding how proteins mediate physiological and pathological processes. I completed my undergraduate degree in Technical and Applied Biology at the University of Applied Sciences in Bremen, Germany. I then moved to Melbourne, Australia to conduct a PhD in protein folding and misfolding in the Conformational Disease Laboratory of Prof Steve Bottomley at Monash University. I graduated from my PhD in December 2012. For my postdoctoral position I wanted to apply my protein biochemical knowledge to the stem cell field and joined the laboratory of A/Prof Polo in January 2013. My current research aims at understanding the protein interaction network which mediates pluripotency. I am particularly interested in the transcription factor Oct4 which is not only an essential regulator of pluripotency but also central to cellular reprogramming; the conversion of somatic cells into induced pluripotent stem cells.
Presentations this author is a contributor to:
SRSF3 facilitates reprogramming and coordinates gene expression in pluripotent cells through multiple RNA processing machineries (#51)
2:45 PM
Minna-Liisa Anko
Session 8B: RNA Regulation, Disease & Development
Characterising Epigenome Dynamics During the Reprogramming of Somatic Cells to iPS Cells (#24)
3:00 PM
Sam Buckberry
Session 4B: Epigenetics and Epigenomics
SRSF3 facilitates cell proliferation and controls cell cycle in pluripotent cells through the direct regulation of stem cell specific microRNAs (#289)
8:30 PM
Madara Ratnadiwakara
Poster Session 2