Congratulations to my colleague Dr Christine Edmead on being awarded this year's Zaimis Prize for Sustained Achievement & Leadership in Pharmacology Teaching by the British Pharmacology Society. Richly deserved and an amazing achievement. Well done !
Come and join us @LifeScienceBath. We are looking to appoint a lecturer in pharmacology - this job ad went live today, closing date 15 January 2023 https://t.co/WdcAj11iqM
Congratulations to our former Head of Department @SteveWardHoD who received a pandemic-delayed Doctor of Science this week for research conducted over a long career in pharmacology.
Congratulations to ALL my colleagues (past and present); Christine Edmead, Chris Garland and Barry Potter. Well done all!!
New Fellows and Honorary Fellows for 2022 | British Pharmacological Society https://t.co/xoYW0Z7vwz
New work from @CTI_Bath in @Cancers_MDPI brings personalised #Immunology prescribing closer, by showing a way to predict which patients are likely to respond better to treatment:
https://t.co/E4MZKi65Go
Congratulations to Professor Luke O'Neill on receiving an Honorary Degree from the University of Bath in recognition of his outstanding research achievements and championing science more broadly to the general public.
Congratulations to our latest Honorary Graduate and former colleague Barry V L Potter MA DPhil DSc(Oxon) CSci FIoD CBiol FRSB CChem FRSC MAE FMedSci. An honour and privilege to deliver the oration https://t.co/FjABJxCMmS
Congratulations to DOCTOR James Miles on successfully defending his PhD thesis (and he gave a fantastic pre-viva public seminar as well!) A great example of collaborative PhD work carried out across 4 institutions (Basque Country. Bordeaux, Bath and Oxford). Well done James!
Study demonstrates notable differences of T cell compositions in distinct tumour microenvironments of various cancer types that may help inform future precision immunotherapies with maximal clinical benefit https://t.co/Znsm4AOyc4
Evidence that nasal immunisation is superior to injected immunization at producing mucosal lung IgA antibodies, protecting mice from respiratory pathogens. https://t.co/VpDbntN7bY
Evidence Omicron unlikely to escape T cell immunity- Green are Spike regions T cells recognise. Blue are changes- only 1 overlap. ‘T-cells from previous infection, and most likely from vaccination will still recognize Omicron and provide protection’.
https://t.co/mgcjo9Jq28
Excellent initiative led by Steve Ley Immunopathology Network at the Crick………some inspiring stuff and grateful that an interloper from Bath can participate