Elma joined Pirbright in January 2014 as group leader of Swine Influenza Immunology and is now head of Mucosal Immunology. She obtained her PhD at the Imperial Cancer Research Fund before working as a postdoctoral fellow in Birmingham, Senior Research Scientist at the Edward Jenner Institute and Principal Investigator at Oxford University. Elma identified the leucocyte common antigen (CD45) as a cause of severe combined immunodeficiency in man and the role of CD45 variants in disease. In Oxford she demonstrated the importance of local immunity in vaccine induced protection against tuberculosis.
Elma’s lab has developed many tools to study immunity in pigs, including cell transfer, peptide-SLA tetramers (in collaboration with Andy Sewell, Cardiff University) and means of enumerating tissue resident memory cells. They have established a reproducible one-to-one transmission model for swine influenza and shown that aerosol delivery is the most efficient way to induce heterosubtypic immunity against swine influenza. They have begun to investigate antibody function and specificity in the pig influenza model and have successfully demonstrated its value in testing the protective efficacy of human antibodies.
Sign up to view 0 direct reports
Get started