mcmorran

The McMorran Group - Red Blood Cells, Platelets and Malaria Group

The main focus of our research group is to study red blood cells and platelets, exploring their roles in diseases, with projects available for students interested in immunology, parasitology, and human genetics.

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Research themes

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Associate Professor Brendan McMorran

About

The McMorran group works in the Division of Immunology and Infectious Disease at ANU’s prestigious the John Curtin School of Medical Research. We investigate the two major cells of the blood, red blood cells (RBC) and platelets, and the important roles of these cells play in various human diseases affecting the circulation. We have a strong track record in discovery science, having identified platelets as innate immune protective cells in malarial infection and that platelets are regulators of erythrocyte turnover. Our current work explores the biology and biochemistry that underpins these remarkable platelet functions. We are interested in both the broader physiological significance of platelet-RBC interactions in the bloodstream, how these cells impact on host susceptibility and resistance to malaria, and how they contribute to the pathogenesis of chronic conditions affecting platelet and erythrocytes, as well as translating this knowledge for clinical applications.

In other collaborative work, we also host projects investigating the genetic causes of chronic kidney disease in an Indigenous Australian community. The projects listed below are available for undergraduate and post-graduate students interested in immunology and parasitology, malaria drug development, haematology and platelet function, or human genetics.

Student projects: Students interested in studying host-pathogen interactions, anti-plasmodial drug development, haematology and platelet and erythrocyte biology, or human genomics and kidney disease can contact Associate Professor Brendan McMorran for more information about current available projects.

Current projects:

Publications

Projects

We've identified genetic factors contributing to kidney disease in the Australian Indigenous population and are creating mouse models and cell lines to study these genes and test potential treatments.

Theme

Chronic disease, Indigenous health, Phenogenomics

We've discovered that platelets help remove aged red blood cells by forming complexes that target them for destruction in the spleen, a process crucial for preventing thrombosis and maintaining red blood cell homeostasis.

Theme

Infectious diseases, Inflammation

We're developing PDIP, a peptide derived from PF4, to combat malaria by targeting and killing parasites inside infected cells; current efforts focus on optimizing its structure and combining it with existing drugs for enhanced efficacy.

Theme

Infectious diseases

The McMorran group discovered that platelets play a protective role in malaria by releasing Platelet factor 4 (PF4), which kills the parasite, and are currently studying the molecular mechanisms behind this function.

Theme

Infectious diseases

Members

Leader

Brendan McMorran

Associate Director, HDR, JCSMR
Group Leader
Senior Fellow

Technician

Laurensia (Citha) Kannitha

Research Technician

Student

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PhD Student

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PhD Student

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PhD Student

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Honours Student

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PhD Student

News

JCSMR led researchers discovered platelets have another function that removes old and damaged red blood cells (RBC) from circulation.

Read the article