Gordon MacPherson

Dr George Gordon MacPherson is Reader in Experimental Pathology, Turnbull Fellow, Tutor in Medicine, and Senior Tutor at Oriel College, Oxford. He holds a Bachelor's degree (B.M.), Master's degree (M.A.) and a doctorate (D.Phil.). His research interests lie in Cell Biology, Pathology, and Immunology. Medically qualified, he researches immunology at the Sir William Dunn School of Pathology, University of Oxford.

He is recognized for his "pioneering work"[1] on the modulation of the adaptive immune response by sub-populations of antigen-presenting dendritic cells, including a sub-population of dendritic cells which presents self-antigens derived from apoptotic gastrointestinal epithelial cells and helps maintain self-tolerance.[2] This contrasts with the role of other dendritic cells in presenting pathogen-derived antigens in order to activate specific anti-pathogen T-cell and B-cell responses. He has also been a member of a British study group determining novel breast cancer susceptibility loci.[3]

Publications

His ten most cited publications are:

References

  1. Iwasaki,A., "Mucosal dendritic cells" Annual Review of Immunology (2007). 25:381–418 url= "Pioneering work on LP DCs by G. MacPherson and colleagues analyzed DCs [dendritic cells] in the lymph that were bound for the MLNs (mesenteric lymph nodes)." Archived 23 December 2010 at WebCite
  2. Huang, F.-P., Platt, N., Wykes, M., Major, J.R., Powell, T.J., Jenkins, C.D., MacPherson, G.G. "A discrete subpopulation of dendritic cells transports apoptotic intestinal epithelial cells to T cell areas of mesenteric lymph nodes" (2000) Journal of Experimental Medicine, 191 (3), pp. 435-443.
  3. "Genome-wide association study identifies novel breast cancer susceptibility loci." Nature. 2007 May 27 PMID 17529967
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