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Associate Professor Peter Moyle
Associate Professor

Peter Moyle

Email: 
Phone: 
+61 7 334 61869

Overview

Background

Dr Moyle’s laboratory (www.moylelab.com) uses cutting edge technologies for the synthesis of peptides, protein expression, and protein semi-synthesis to gain insights into the functional roles played by various biochemical pathways, to engineer better protein and peptide therapeutics, and to improve the delivery characteristics of various therapeutic molecules. Specific current areas of interest are detailed below:

  1. Subunit Vaccine Development: methods to develop improved vaccines through the combination of recombinant and synthetic approaches to improve immunopotency and tailor immune responses (links to reseach articles on semisynthetic vaccines and peptide vaccines; reviews on vaccine development).
  2. Delivery Systems for Nucleic Acid-Based Molecules: multi-component synthetic and recombinant approaches to improve the cellular uptake, and targeted delivery of various oligonucleotide molecules (e.g. siRNA, mRNA, pDNA and CRISPR-Cas9) as an exciting approach to treat or prevent various diseases (links to research articles and reviews).
  3. Deciphering the Roles of Post-Translational Modifications: The combination of peptide synthesis and protein semisynthesis to enable the production of large amounts of site-specifically modified species, that can be used to deconvolute the roles played by various post-translational modifications (links to research articles).
  4. Peptide/Protein Drugs and Delivery: The study of methods to improve the delivery characteristics of peptide/protein drugs (e.g. poor oral absorption, instability to chemical/enzymatic degradation, and the inability to reach their site/s of action) through chemical engineering approaches.
  5. New Approaches for Superbugs: the development of antivirulence approaches, and formulations (e.g. various types of nanoparticles - silver, protein, mesoporous silica), which reduce the ability for microbes to cause disease, and make them more readily treated with antimicrobials, by providing access to synergistic combinations, and reducing the risk of antimicrobial resistance.

Information for Potential Students:

The Moyle lab considers applications from potential students and postdoctoral fellows with an interest in: i) infection control (including subunit vaccine and antimicrobial development); ii) delivery systems for peptide therapeutics; iii) targeted delivery systems; iv) studying the function of posttranslational modifications; and v) delivery systems for nucleic acid-based therapeutics (e.g. siRNA, shRNA, miRNA, mRNA, pDNA and CRISPR-Cas9). If you are interested in working in any of these areas please feel free to contact Dr Moyle (p.moyle@uq.edu.au). Please ensure that you supply an up to date CV; describe why you would like to work in the Moyle lab; provide a listing of publications (preferably with impact factors and citation counts); and indicate what skills you would bring to the lab. Detailed information on our laboratory is available at www.moylelab.com. Preference will be given to students and postdoctoral fellows who have their own funding.

Dr Moyle Biosketch:

Dr Moyle (H-index 30, >2600 citations; >95 publications; 13/8/2024; Google Scholar, ORCID, ResearcherID, and Publons profiles) received a PhD (Dec 2006) and a Bachelor of Pharmacy (Hons I) (Dec 2001) from The University of Queensland (UQ); graduated from the Pharmaceutical Society of Australia pre-registration pharmacist-training course (Nov 2002); and is registered with the Pharmacy Board of Australia. He currently works as an Associate Professor in the UQ School of Pharmacy, where he has been based since 2014.

Dr Moyle works in the fields of medicinal chemistry, chemical biology, and drug formulation, investigating subunit vaccine development, outcomes associated with histone post-translational modifications, and methods to improve the delivery characteristics of oligonucleotide (e.g. siRNA and pDNA), peptide, and protein therapeutics. During his PhD, Dr Moyle developed methods that enabled the synthesis of pure, lipid adjuvanted peptide vaccines, using advanced chemical ligation techniques. In addition, the conjugation of mannose to combined prophylactic/therapeutic human papillomavirus type-16 vaccines, to target dendritic cells, was demonstrated to significantly improve vaccine anti-tumour activity. This work, conducted with leading researchers at the QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute (Prof Michael Good & Dr Colleen Olive), established Dr Moyle’s national and international profile in the field of vaccine development, resulting in 11 peer reviewed papers, including top journals in the field (J Med Chem; J Org Chem), as well as 6 review articles and 2 invited book chapters.

Dr Moyle undertook his postdoctoral training in the laboratory of one of the world’s premier chemical biologists, Professor Tom Muir (the Rockefeller University, NY, USA; now at Princeton University, NJ, USA). During this time he developed an extensive knowledge of techniques for protein expression, bioconjugation, bioassays, and proteomics, which represent an essential skill set required for this proposal. As part of this work, Dr Moyle developed novel synthetic routes to generate site-specific ADP-ribose conjugated peptides and proteins. This research was hailed as a major breakthrough in the field, leading to several collaborations, and an exemplary publication in the prestigious chemistry journal JACS. This vast body of work identified the enzyme (PARP10) responsible for mono-ADP-ribosylation of histone H2B, and demonstrated interactions between this modification and several proteins, including BAL, which is associated with B cell lymphomas. In addition, a number of robust chemical methods were developed to enable the synthesis of a complete library of methyl-arginine containing histones, which were incorporated into synthetic chemically-defined chromatin to investigate the site-specific effects of arginine methylation on histone acetylation. This work led to a collaboration with colleagues at Rockefeller to investigate the effects of histone arginine methylation on transcription.

Teaching:

Dr Moyle teaches into the following subjects in the UQ School of Pharmacy.

  • PHRM3011 (Quality Use of Medicines) - course coordinator
  • PHRM4021 (Integrated Pharmaceutical Development)
  • PHRM3021 (Dosage Form Design)
  • PHRM2040 (Drug Discovery)

Awards:

2016 - Health and Behavioural Sciences (HABS) faculty commendation for Early Career Citations for Outstanding Contributions to Student Learning (ECCOSL)

2015 - ChemMedChem top 10 cited article of 2013 (link)

2014 - Highest ranked NHMRC development grant (2013; APP1074899)

2013 - Institute for Molecular Biology (IMB) Division of Chemistry and Structural Biology Prize

Availability

Associate Professor Peter Moyle is:
Available for supervision
Media expert

Qualifications

  • Bachelor, The University of Queensland
  • Doctor of Philosophy, The University of Queensland

Research interests

  • Peptide delivery systems

    The use of peptides as drugs may suffer from issues including poor oral absorption, instability to chemical/enzymatic degradation, and an inability to reach their site of action. Using chemical techniques we can improve the stability, targeting, circulation time, potency, etc of peptide-based therapeutics. We are currently interested in improving the delivery and stability characteristics of peptide-based therapeutics for diabetes (e.g. GLP-1 and GIP).

  • siRNA, shRNA, microRNA, pDNA, CRISPR-Cas9 delivery systems

    Using protein/peptide-based approaches to develop targeted, non-toxic systems to enhance the delivery of oligonucleotide therapeutics to their tissue, cellular and intracellular sites of action.

  • Vaccine development

    We focus on the development on methods to develop improved subunit vaccine formulations against neglected diseases, and diseases for which current vaccine formulations are not ideal. Our recent focus has been on Group A Streptococcus, which is responsible for diseases ranging from a sore throat through to heart and kidney damage, and the flesh eating disease necrotising fasciitis. We also focus on technologies that enable the site specific incorporation of potent vaccine adjuvants into protein, peptide, and carbohydrate-based antigens.

  • Protein semisynthesis/engineering

    We are interested in modern techniques for the engineering of proteins are therapeutic or diagnostic molecules, including their roles as tools to probe the functions of biochemical pathways. We use modern techniques for gene assembly (e.g. SLIC, Gibson assembly), combined with codon optimisation, optimised expression systems, and purification technologies.

  • Deciphering the functional roles of post-translational modifications

    Using protein semisynthesis to produce highly pure, site-specifically post-translationally modified (e.g. ADP-ribose, methyl, phosphoryl, acetyl) proteins, which can be applied to biochemical assays to accurately determine their function, and the identity of any interacting species.

Works

Search Professor Peter Moyle’s works on UQ eSpace

95 works between 2001 and 2024

81 - 95 of 95 works

2006

Conference Publication

Liposaccharides in peptide, gene and vaccine delivery

Toth, I, Moyle, P. M., Koda, Y., Olive, C. and Good, M F (2006). Liposaccharides in peptide, gene and vaccine delivery. 10th Naples Workshop on Bioactive Peptides, Naples, 11-14 June, 2006.

Liposaccharides in peptide, gene and vaccine delivery

2006

Journal Article

Method for the synthesis of highly pure vaccines using the lipid core peptide system

Moyle, P. M., Olive, C., Good, M. F. and Toth, I. (2006). Method for the synthesis of highly pure vaccines using the lipid core peptide system. Journal of Peptide Science, 12 (12), 800-807. doi: 10.1002/psc.815

Method for the synthesis of highly pure vaccines using the lipid core peptide system

2006

Conference Publication

Synthesis and immunological evaluation of M protein targeted tetra-valent and tri-valent group A streptococcal vaccine candidates based on the lipid-core peptide system

Moyle, Peter Michael, Olive, Colleen, Karpati, Levente, Barozzi, Nadia, Ho, Mei-Fong, Dyer, Joanne, Sun, Hsien Kuo, Good, Michael and Toth, Istvan (2006). Synthesis and immunological evaluation of M protein targeted tetra-valent and tri-valent group A streptococcal vaccine candidates based on the lipid-core peptide system. 6th Australian Peptide Conference, Whitsunday Islands, Australia, 9-14 October, 2005. Netherlands: Springer. doi: 10.1007/s10989-006-9021-8

Synthesis and immunological evaluation of M protein targeted tetra-valent and tri-valent group A streptococcal vaccine candidates based on the lipid-core peptide system

2006

Conference Publication

Multi-epitopic lipid core peptide vaccine with broad protective immune responses against Group A streptococcus

Fujita, Y, Moyle, P. M., Olive, C., Good, M F and Toth, I (2006). Multi-epitopic lipid core peptide vaccine with broad protective immune responses against Group A streptococcus. 29th European Peptide Symposium, Gdansk, 3-8 Sept, 2006.

Multi-epitopic lipid core peptide vaccine with broad protective immune responses against Group A streptococcus

2006

Conference Publication

Highly pure, multi-epitopic lipopeptide vaccine delivery system: Synthesis and investigation

Moyle, P. M., Olive, C., Ho, M.-F. and Toth, I (2006). Highly pure, multi-epitopic lipopeptide vaccine delivery system: Synthesis and investigation. GPEN 2006, Lawrence, USA, 25 - 27 Oct, 2006.

Highly pure, multi-epitopic lipopeptide vaccine delivery system: Synthesis and investigation

2006

Conference Publication

Development of vaccines for the prevention and/or treatment of human papillomavirus type-16 associated cervical cancer

Simerska, P, Moyle, P. M., Olive, C., Sun, H., Ho, M.-F., Pandy, M.G., Dyer, J. R., Burgess, M L and Toth, I (2006). Development of vaccines for the prevention and/or treatment of human papillomavirus type-16 associated cervical cancer. Brisbane Biological & Organic Chemistry Symposium, Brisbane, 24 November 2006.

Development of vaccines for the prevention and/or treatment of human papillomavirus type-16 associated cervical cancer

2006

Conference Publication

The lipid core peptide system in vaccine delivery

Toth, I., Moyle, P. M., Karpati, L., Horvath, A., Olive, C. and Good, M. F. (2006). The lipid core peptide system in vaccine delivery. XVIth Lancefield International Symposium on Streptococci and Streptococcal Diseases, Palm Cove, Australia, 25 and 29 September 2005. Amsterdam, The Netherlands: Excerpta Medica Foundation. doi: 10.1016/j.ics.2005.11.057

The lipid core peptide system in vaccine delivery

2006

Journal Article

Synthesis of a highly pure lipid core peptide based self-adjuvanting triepitopic group A Streptococcal vaccine, and subsequent immunological evaluation

Moyle, P. M., Olive, C., Ho, M. F., Good, M. F. and Toth, I. (2006). Synthesis of a highly pure lipid core peptide based self-adjuvanting triepitopic group A Streptococcal vaccine, and subsequent immunological evaluation. Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, 49 (21), 6364-6370. doi: 10.1021/jm060475m

Synthesis of a highly pure lipid core peptide based self-adjuvanting triepitopic group A Streptococcal vaccine, and subsequent immunological evaluation

2006

Conference Publication

Development of peptide vaccines against HPV-16 associated cervical cancer and group a streptococci

Moyle, Peter M., Horvath, Aniko, Karpati, Levente, Olive, Colleen, Barozzi, Nadia, Wimmer, Norbert, Good, Michael and Toth, Istvan (2006). Development of peptide vaccines against HPV-16 associated cervical cancer and group a streptococci. 19th American Peptide Symposium, San Diego, United States, 18-23 June 2005. New York, United States: Springer. doi: 10.1007/978-0-387-26575-9_169

Development of peptide vaccines against HPV-16 associated cervical cancer and group a streptococci

2006

Conference Publication

Multi-epitopic lipid core peptide vaccine with broad protective immune responses against Group A Streptococcus

Fujita, Y., Moyle, P., Olive, C., Good, M. and Toth, I. (2006). Multi-epitopic lipid core peptide vaccine with broad protective immune responses against Group A Streptococcus. CHICHESTER: JOHN WILEY & SONS LTD.

Multi-epitopic lipid core peptide vaccine with broad protective immune responses against Group A Streptococcus

2005

Conference Publication

The synthesis and immunological activity of a lipid-core peptide (LCP) based Human Papillomavirus (HPV) type-16 vaccine

Moyle, Peter M., Olive, Colleen, Sun, Hsien, Good, Michael and Toth, Istvan (2005). The synthesis and immunological activity of a lipid-core peptide (LCP) based Human Papillomavirus (HPV) type-16 vaccine. 3rd International Peptide Symposium and 28th European Peptide Symposium, Prague, Czech Republic, 5-10 September 2004. GENEVA 1: Kenes International.

The synthesis and immunological activity of a lipid-core peptide (LCP) based Human Papillomavirus (HPV) type-16 vaccine

2004

Conference Publication

Liposaccharides for drug and vaccine delivery

Toth, I., Horvath, A., Karpati, L., Moyle, P., Olive, C. and Good, M. (2004). Liposaccharides for drug and vaccine delivery. 3rd International and 28th European Peptide Symposium, Prague, Czech Republic, 5–10 September 2004. Chichester, West Sussex, United Kingdom: John Wiley & Sons. doi: 10.1002/psc.618

Liposaccharides for drug and vaccine delivery

2004

Journal Article

Mucosal immunization: Adjuvants and delivery systems

Moyle, P.M., McGeary, R. P., Blanchfield, J. T. and Toth, I. (2004). Mucosal immunization: Adjuvants and delivery systems. Current Drug Delivery, 1 (4), 385-396. doi: 10.2174/1567201043334588

Mucosal immunization: Adjuvants and delivery systems

2003

Journal Article

Development of lipid-core-peptide (LCP) based vaccines for the prevention of the group A streptococcal (GAS) infection

Moyle, P. M., Horvath, A., Olive, C., Good, M. F. and Toth, I. (2003). Development of lipid-core-peptide (LCP) based vaccines for the prevention of the group A streptococcal (GAS) infection. Letters In Peptide Science, 10 (5-6), 605-613. doi: 10.1007/BF02442594

Development of lipid-core-peptide (LCP) based vaccines for the prevention of the group A streptococcal (GAS) infection

2001

Conference Publication

Solid-phase synthesis of oligosaccharides utilising a novel Dde-based linker

Moyle, P.M., Mcgeary, R. P. and Toth, I. (2001). Solid-phase synthesis of oligosaccharides utilising a novel Dde-based linker. APSA Annual Conference 2001, Melbourne, 9-12 Dec 2001. Melbourne: Australasian Pharmaceutical Science Association.

Solid-phase synthesis of oligosaccharides utilising a novel Dde-based linker

Funding

Current funding

  • 2020 - 2024
    Developing a multicomponent platform for targeted gene delivery
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant

Past funding

  • 2016 - 2017
    Evaluation of immunological efficacy and safety parameters of experimental GAS vaccines in non-human primates
    Queensland Emory Development Alliance
    Open grant
  • 2016
    Establishing a High-Throughput, Microwave-Assisted Automated Peptide Synthesis Facility at PACE
    UQ Major Equipment and Infrastructure
    Open grant
  • 2015 - 2016
    Platform for the rapid production of optimised vaccine libraries: application to an important bacterial cause of disease (Streptoccus pyogenes)
    UQ Early Career Researcher
    Open grant
  • 2014 - 2016
    Non-human primate studies of group A streptococcal vaccine candidates
    NHMRC Development Grant
    Open grant
  • 2013 - 2016
    Development of a multicomponent delivery system for oligonucleotides
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2009 - 2013
    NHMRC Training (Postdoctoral) Fellowship: Studying factors that affect gene regulation and disease, and the development of improved vaccine technologies
    NHMRC Training (Postdoctoral) Fellowship
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Associate Professor Peter Moyle is:
Available for supervision

Before you email them, read our advice on how to contact a supervisor.

Available projects

  • Honours, Masters and PhD Projects

    Dr Moyle is interested in taking on students with an interest in i) subunit vaccine development, ii) delivery systems for peptide/protein therapeutics, iii) studying the function of post-translational modifications, iv) protein engineering, v) delivery systems for siRNA/shRNA/microRNA, pDNA and CRISPR-Cas9.

    If you are interested in working on any of these areas please contact Dr Moyle.

Supervision history

Current supervision

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

Contact Associate Professor Peter Moyle directly for media enquiries about:

  • pharmacy
  • teaching
  • vaccines

Need help?

For help with finding experts, story ideas and media enquiries, contact our Media team:

communications@uq.edu.au