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Scientists have isolated the gene behind one of the deadliest forms of breast cancer
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Scientists have isolated the gene behind one of the deadliest forms of breast cancer
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Researchers Find The Gene Responsible For One of The Deadliest Breast Cancer Types
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Dr. Archa Fox is an Associate Professor and ARC Future Fellow in the School of Human Sciences and the School of Molecular Sciences at the University of Western Australia, and an affiliate with the Harry Perkins Institute of Medical Research. Archa completed her PhD with Professor Merlin Crossley (USYD, year 2000) on transcription factor interactions. She then carried out Postdoctoral work with Angus Lamond (Dundee, UK), where she discovered the paraspeckle, a new type of sub-nuclear body, built on a noncoding RNA. In 2006 she started her own research group at the (now) Harry Perkins Institute of Medical Research in WA. In 2015 she took up an academic position at the University of WA. Archa was given the emerging leader award of the Australian/NZ Society of Cell and Developmental Biology in 2017. She is treasurer of the Board of Lorne Genome Inc, President of the RNA Network of Australia and was recently elected as a Director of the Board for the RNA Society (2020-21).
Date Time
$15 million in funding to support health and medical research
Eleven University of Western Australia research projects have received a combined $15 million in funding, including a project aimed at enhancing the wellbeing of Aboriginal young people through activities with horses.
The National Health and Medical Research Council Ideas Grants were announced today by Minister for Health, the Hon. Greg Hunt MP.
UWA Professor Juli Coffin (who is also a researcher with Telethon Kids Institute) will lead a $2.5 million project working with horses and using Equine Assisted Learning (EAL) to promote the social, emotional and spiritual wellbeing of Aboriginal young people.