Tag Archives: vaccines

Vaccines and vino

Recently, I was fortunate enough to attend and present at GSK’s PhD and Postdoc workshop in Siena, Italy. The workshop spanned two days and I had a brilliant time there – Siena itself is beautiful, I ate fantastic food, and I learnt a huge amount about all stages of vaccine production.

Unfortunately, due to confidentiality, I can’t go into great detail about others’ current research, however I have provided a short overview of the five main areas the workshop focused on below.

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Antibody Engineering and Therapeutics Conference

I was invited to speak at the Antibody Engineering and Therapeutics Conference (presenting mine and Matt’s recently published epitope profiling paper), in San Diego (December 12th – 16th). Unfortunately, the pandemic had other ideas so I decided not to travel but luckily the conference was hybrid. 

The conference included 1 day of pre-conference workshops and 4 days of presentations from academic and industry, with livestreaming of the initial keynotes (including one from Charlotte). Remaining talks were recorded and made available after the conference. I’ve highlighted a few of my favourite talks and conference themes, with links to papers where available.

Naturally, a lot of the presented research related to covid-19. I was speaking in the ‘Antibody Repertoires and Covid-19’ session, where there were interesting presentations from Professor Eline Luning Prak from the University of Pennsylvania and Elaine Chen from Vanderbilt University analysing antibody responses in covid-recovered individuals, and comparing vaccine responses in covid-recovered vs covid-naiive individuals. Other talks around SARS-CoV-2 vaccines included Dr Laura Walker from Adimab/Adagio Therapeutics comparing BCR repertoire responses to different types of vaccinations, and the effect of using different booster types.

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Do antibodies care about sex?

In a recent OPIG antibody meeting, the topic of immune system differences between men and women came up. I thought this was cool and something I hadn’t read about, so what a brilliant topic for a blog most. This post is a high-level overview – I’ve listed the papers I’ve used at the bottom of this post so please consult them for more details!

Differences between males and females can lead to pretty big disparities in disease prevalence and outcomes. For example, non-reproductive cancers occur predominantly in males, whilst the majority of autoimmune disease occurs in females. Many factors may be impacting this, including environmental, genetic and hormonal influences, and much more research is required to fully understand these processes. Here I focus on sex-based biology, rather than gender, though both can influence the immune response.

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