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Dr Martin Davey

Supervisor Details

Contact Details

Dr Martin Davey

Warwick Medical School, University of Warwick

Research Interests

The vertebrate immune system has evolved to ensure host survival from pathogenic microbes. The immune system is a highly specialised network of cells, organs, receptors and soluble factors that protects the host from infection and cancer, while also promoting healthy tissues. The adaptive immune system – responsible for generating memory to past infections - has retained a tripartite cellular network of B cells, αβ T-cells and γδ T-cells for ~450 million years of vertebrate evolution.

We know a lot about “conventional” β T-cells, but while “unconventional” γδ Tcells are frequently implicated in anti-bacterial, anti-viral and anti-parasitic immunity, the mechanisms that this group of immune cells employs to communicate and control these infections is almost completely unclear.

My lab investigates the role of these human γδ T-cells across tissues, life and infections (malaria, tuberculosis and viruses).


MIBTP Project Details

Primary supervisor for:

Co-supervisor on a project with Professor Meera Unnikrishnan.

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