November 21, 2019
Philanthropic gift boosts research into disease detection
Generous $300,000 donation funds new Horizons Fellow of Molecular Pathology
A generous donation of $300,000 will significantly accelerate the 51’s (UOW) research into molecular pathology to enable earlier detection of disease.
The remarkable gift from two donors will be dedicated to creating a new Fellowship – the Horizons Fellow of Molecular Pathology – based at the new Molecular Horizons facility at UOW’s 51 campus, due for completion by the end of the year.
Molecular pathology is an emerging discipline devoted to the study and diagnosis of disease through the examination of molecular abnormalities within cells and tissue.
A globally prestigious research opportunity, the Fellowship will attract international scholars to the position, bringing new ideas and knowledge to UOW.
The two donors wish to remain anonymous.
Distinguished Professor , Director of Molecular Horizons, welcomed the gift and said donations such as these can have a profound impact, enabling potentially life-changing research.
“It is a great example of how philanthropy can be aligned with strategic research directions,” Professor van Oijen said.
“This gift will prove to be catalytic for our efforts to develop cutting-edge technology to visualise disease processes in human tissue. By applying fundamental science to clinical problems, our research will have real-world impact.
“Molecular Horizons is all about developing molecular visualisation technology to drive the life sciences and develop new medical approaches. Together with the donors, we looked carefully at how the gift can have the biggest impact on the goals that are shared by both the donors and the University.”
Molecular Horizons Director Distinguished Professor Antoine van Oijen (second from right) with Molecular Horizons colleagues Distinguished Professor Nicholas Dixon, Dr Andrew Robinson and Dr Harshad Ghodke.
This gift will be used to support the development of tissue imaging techniques by chemical fingerprinting.
Heading up this research area will be Dr Shane Ellis, who will join Molecular Horizons in January 2020. The recipient of the Fellowship will have the opportunity to work under the mentorship of Dr Ellis, commencing next year.
Dr Ellis graduated from UOW with a PhD in Chemistry in 2013, before moving to the Netherlands for postdoctoral research at the Maastricht Multimodal Molecular Imaging Institute where he became an Assistant Professor in 2014. The Commonwealth Government announced Dr Ellis last month as the recipient of a highly prestigious Australian Research Council Future Fellowship.
“We have been lucky to recruit Dr Ellis to the Illawarra and are happy to be able to help the establishment of his research team with this Horizons Fellowship of Molecular Pathology,” Professor van Oijen said.
“A pioneering researcher in the area of mass spectrometry, a technique that measures chemical fingerprints of material, he uses this method to measure the chemical composition of living material, spot by spot. This allows him to construct chemical photographs of cells and tissues, not using light but using the chemical information as a way to image.
“We look forward to continuing this exciting journey with the donors and help move the science forward. We are also excited about supporting the career growth of a talented junior researcher with this Fellowship.”
“I would like to thank our donors for the generous contribution they have made, enabling us to make this Fellowship possible.”