Associate Professor Rohan Teasdale
Researcher biography
Protein trafficking in disease
The highly co-ordinated movement of the thousands of distinct membrane proteins between the cell surface and intracellular compartments is a critical factor in health and disease. This movement controls the organisation of cells in tissues and communication between cells and their environment. The success of this process depends on the regulated sorting and trafficking of proteins within the highly dynamic endosomal compartments of the cell in processes that are emerging as important drivers of neurodegenerative disease, cancer and metabolic pathologies. An understanding of how endosomal traffic is regulated, and how lysosomal traffic and degradation are modulated, is critical for providing insights into disease and devising new therapeutic approaches.
Major Undergraduate Teaching Activity
SBMS Honours Convenor (BBiomed, BAdvcSci (Cell Biology and Biomedical Science majors) & BSci (Cell Biology and Biomedical Science majors)
SBMS Honours Coordinator (BIOM6191 & BIOM6192)
BIOL2200 – Molecular Cell Biology I Lecturer and practical cooridinator
BIOL3006 – Molecular Cell Biology II Lecturer
Student Supervisor for Research Projects in Biomedical Sciences (SCIE3220/1 or Honours)