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Professor Ala Tabor
Professor

Ala Tabor

Email: 
Phone: 
+61 7 334 62176

Overview

Background

Prof Ala Tabor joined QAAFI's Centre for Animal Science in October 2010, after 18 years of conducting research with the Queensland Government. She is a research focussed academic with a strong background in industry engagement associated with animal health and agricultural biotechnologies. Her research interests are associated with the application of genomic sequence data to improve animal disease management through: 1) the development of molecular diagnostic and genotyping methods to better identify pathogens; and 2) the study of gene function in relation to virulence and host pathogenicity of infectious diseases, to develop new effective vaccines. Areas studied to date include bovine reproductive diseases (in particular bovine genital campylobacteriosis), Australian paralysis tick (Ixodes holocyclus), cattle tick (Rhipicephalus microplus species complex), and tick-borne diseases (babesiosis and anaplasmosis). Some key outputs of her work include the application of reverse vaccinology for the development of a novel cattle tick vaccine and paralysis tick vaccine (patents pending), and commercialized diagnostic tools for bovine reproductive diseases. Prof Tabor has attained and completed ~$12 million in competitive grants in the last 10 years including the ARC, pharma and industry. Current research includes paralysis tick vaccines/treatments, bovine biomarkers for disease resistance, cattle tick commercial vaccine trials, bioinformatics/genomics of ticks and bovine venereal Campylobacter spp., tick fever genotyping/detection, and diagnostic assay development for bovine genital campylobacteriosis. Her international recognition in her field is exemplified by the invitation to join the BMGF International Cattle Tick Vaccine Consortium (CATVAC, est. 2015), specialist tick editor for the International Journal for Parasitology, Chair for the 9th International Tick and Tick-borne Pathogen (TTP9) conference (with the 1st Asia-Pacific Rickettsia Conference) held for the first time in Australia in 2017, and also international invitations to deliver expert presentations. Her research vision is to translate her research outcomes into viable products and methods for the benefit of cattle producers and pet owners. There are many options for students to pursue Honours, research components of Masters in Biotechnology or Masters in Molecular Biology (through affiliation with SCMB), as well as MPhil and/or PhD programs with Ala's group. Ala together with SCMB's Biotechnology Program Director and SAFS have developed UQ's 'Agricultural Biotechnology-Field of Study' (https://my.uq.edu.au/programs-courses/plan.html?acad_plan=AGBIOX5599&year=2020) within the Master of Biotechnology to start in 2020. She has had a strong focus on diversity, inclusion and gender equity initiatives at the University of Queensland.

Availability

Professor Ala Tabor is:
Available for supervision
Media expert

Qualifications

  • Doctor of Philosophy, The University of Queensland

Research impacts

Ala's research is translationally driven by developing vaccines, diagnostic tests and genotyping assays to better manage the health of livestock and companion pets. Globally there are approximately 1.46b cattle, of which 80% in tropical and sub-tropical regions of the world are at risk from ticks (Rhipicephalus microplus species complex) and the diseases they carry (anaplasmosis and babesiosis) with estimated annual losses of $US22b-$US30b (Lew-Tabor & Rodriguez Valle 2016). Australia is one the largest exporters of cattle in the world (~$1.3m p.a.) with 60% of these exports originating from northern Australia. In Australia, cattle tick and tick borne diseases cost ~$175m per year in losses. Reproductive wastage also has a high economic impact on cattle production in northern Australia with the cost of losses due to infectious diseases difficult to determine due to the lack of specific diagnostic tests. The Australian paralysis tick (Ixodes holocyclus) affects ~100,000 livestock and 10,000 companion animals per year in Australia, as well as humans.

Ala is currently collaborating with industry towards the commercialisation of 2 very different anti-tick vaccines - the cattle tick and the Australian paralysis tick - 3 patents under review. Cattle tick research (genomics - reverse vaccinology approach) commenced in 2005 and proof of concept trials have shown excellent results. This ~$5m investment since 2005 has been a large collaboration with Qld Department of Agriculture & Fisheries, Murdoch University's Centre for Comparative Genomics and the US Department of Agriculture. Ala has developed molecular assays for the diagnosis of bovine venereal disease (McMillen and Lew, 2006) commercialised into a kit by Applied Biosystems™ (Life Technologies; VetMAX™T.foetus Reagents #4415221) in 2011. Her research team developed a novel bovine venereal disease sampling tool Tricamper™ which is sold by the Qld Department of Agriculture & Fisheries since 2006 (~3,500 sold p.a.). Several assays she and her research teams have developed are in use by veterinary diagnostic laboratories including: bovine tick fever pathogens (anaplasmosis and babesiosis) – monitoring of live vaccine stocks and the investigation of outbreaks including exported cattle in New Caledonia (Lew et al 1998; Lew et al 2002; Bing et al 2016); Bovine venereal/reproductive diseases tests; Screw worm fly quarantine preparedness (this fly species would bring in excess of $100m in losses to Australian livestock if introduced) (Jarrett et al. 2010).

The recognition of her research into cattle tick vaccines led to the invitation to join the International Tick Vaccine Consortium (CATVAC) to deliver tick vaccines into Africa (Morocco, July 2015; concept paper (Schetters et al. 2016)​ and a member of an International Consortium awarded the International ‘Tick and tick-borne Pathogen Award for Significant Contribution for the Field: Genome sequencing of the cattle tick, Rhipicephalus microplus’ at the 8th International Tick and Tick-Borne Pathogen Conference in 2014. She has been invited to present at several international meetings associated with ticks and vaccines including Kenya, Brazil and the UK. Ala was the Chair of the 9th International Tick and Tick-borne Pathogen Conference (TTP9) which was held with the Inaugural Asia-Pacific Rickettsia Conference in 2017 - for the first time in Australia. The outputs of the conference has led to 2 Special Issues with 2 different journals with Prof Tabor as a Guest Editor - MDPI Veterinary Sciences (http://www.mdpi.com/journal/vetsci/special_issues/TTP9) and Ticks and Tick-borne Diseases (https://www.journals.elsevier.com/ticks-and-tick-borne-diseases).

Works

Search Professor Ala Tabor’s works on UQ eSpace

181 works between 1987 and 2024

41 - 60 of 181 works

2020

Conference Publication

Development and optimization of the molecular assays for the detection of Stephanofilaria sp. in buffalo flies and buffalo fly lesions

Naseem, Muhammad Noman, Raza, Ali, Constantinoiu, Constantin, Morgan, Jessica, Tabor, Ala and James, Peter (2020). Development and optimization of the molecular assays for the detection of Stephanofilaria sp. in buffalo flies and buffalo fly lesions. Annual Australian Society of Parasitology Conference “Parasitravaganza” 2020, Virtual, 30-31 July 2020.

Development and optimization of the molecular assays for the detection of Stephanofilaria sp. in buffalo flies and buffalo fly lesions

2020

Conference Publication

Proteomics as a Potential Tool for Identifying Biomarkers for Host Resistance to Cattle Tick

Raza, Ali, James, Peter and Tabor, Ala (2020). Proteomics as a Potential Tool for Identifying Biomarkers for Host Resistance to Cattle Tick. The Third International Tropical Agriculture Conference (TROPAG 2019), Brisbane, QLD Australia, 11–13 November 2019. Basel, Switzerland: MDPI. doi: 10.3390/proceedings2019036131

Proteomics as a Potential Tool for Identifying Biomarkers for Host Resistance to Cattle Tick

2020

Conference Publication

Detection of Stephanofilaria (Nematoda: Filariidae) in Buffalo Fly Lesions

Naseem, Muhammad Noman, Tabor, Ala, Raza, Ali, Constantinoiu, Constantin, Morgan, Jess and James, Peter (2020). Detection of Stephanofilaria (Nematoda: Filariidae) in Buffalo Fly Lesions. Third International Tropical Agriculture Conference (TROPAG 2019), Brisbane, QLD, Australia, 11–13 November 2019. Basel, Switzerland: MDPI AG. doi: 10.3390/proceedings2019036108

Detection of Stephanofilaria (Nematoda: Filariidae) in Buffalo Fly Lesions

2020

Conference Publication

Detection of stephanofilaria (nematoda: filariidae) in buffalo fly lesions

Naseem, Muhammad Noman, Tabor, Ala, Raza, Ali, Constantinoiu, Constantin, Morgan, Jess and James, Peter (2020). Detection of stephanofilaria (nematoda: filariidae) in buffalo fly lesions. The third International Tropical Agriculture Conference (TROPAG 2019), Brisbane, QLD, Australia, 11-13 November 2019. Basel, Switzerland: MDPI . doi: 10.3390/proceedings2019036108

Detection of stephanofilaria (nematoda: filariidae) in buffalo fly lesions

2019

Book Chapter

The enigma of identifying new cattle tick vaccine antigens

E. Tabor, Ala (2019). The enigma of identifying new cattle tick vaccine antigens. Ticks and tick-borne pathogens. (pp. *-*) London, United Kingdom: IntechOpen. doi: 10.5772/intechopen.81145

The enigma of identifying new cattle tick vaccine antigens

2018

Journal Article

Report from the 'One Health' 9th Tick and Tick-Borne Pathogen Conference and the 1st Asia-Pacific Rickettsia Conference, Cairns, Australia, 27 August-1 September 2017

Tabor, Ala and Valle, Manuel Rodriguez (2018). Report from the 'One Health' 9th Tick and Tick-Borne Pathogen Conference and the 1st Asia-Pacific Rickettsia Conference, Cairns, Australia, 27 August-1 September 2017. Veterinary Sciences, 5 (4) 85, 85. doi: 10.3390/vetsci5040085

Report from the 'One Health' 9th Tick and Tick-Borne Pathogen Conference and the 1st Asia-Pacific Rickettsia Conference, Cairns, Australia, 27 August-1 September 2017

2018

Journal Article

Could Australian ticks harbour emerging viral pathogens?

O'Brien, Caitlin A., Hall, Roy A. and Lew-Tabor, Ala (2018). Could Australian ticks harbour emerging viral pathogens?. Microbiology Australia, 39 (4), 185-190. doi: 10.1071/MA18060

Could Australian ticks harbour emerging viral pathogens?

2018

Journal Article

Meeting the challenge of tick-borne disease control: a proposal for 1000 Ixodes genomes

Murgia, Maria V., Bell-Sakyi, Lesley, de la Fuente, José, Kurtti, Timothy J., Makepeace, Benjamin L., Mans, Ben, McCoy, Karen D., Munderloh, Uli, Plantard, Olivier, Rispe, Claude, Valle, Manuel Rodriguez, Tabor, Ala, Thangamani, Saravanan, Thimmapuram, Jyothi and Hill, Catherine A. (2018). Meeting the challenge of tick-borne disease control: a proposal for 1000 Ixodes genomes. Ticks and Tick-borne Diseases, 10 (1), 213-218. doi: 10.1016/j.ttbdis.2018.08.009

Meeting the challenge of tick-borne disease control: a proposal for 1000 Ixodes genomes

2018

Journal Article

Discovery of a novel iflavirus sequence in the eastern paralysis tick Ixodes holocyclus

O'Brien, Caitlin A., Hall-Mendelin, Sonja, Hobson-Peters, Jody, Deliyannis, Georgia, Allen, Andy, Lew-Tabor, Ala, Rodriguez-Valle, Manuel, Barker, Dayana, Barker, Stephen C. and Hall, Roy A. (2018). Discovery of a novel iflavirus sequence in the eastern paralysis tick Ixodes holocyclus. Archives of Virology, 163 (9), 1-7. doi: 10.1007/s00705-018-3868-9

Discovery of a novel iflavirus sequence in the eastern paralysis tick Ixodes holocyclus

2018

Journal Article

Local immune response to larvae of Rhipicephalus microplus in Santa Gertrudis cattle immune response against Rhipicephalus microplus

Constantinoiu, Constantin, Lew-Tabor, Ala, Jackson, Louise, Jorgensen, Wayne, Piper, Emily, Mayer, David, Johnson, Linda, Venus, Bronwyn and Jonsson, Nicholas (2018). Local immune response to larvae of Rhipicephalus microplus in Santa Gertrudis cattle immune response against Rhipicephalus microplus. Parasite Immunology, 40 (4) e12515, e12515. doi: 10.1111/pim.12515

Local immune response to larvae of Rhipicephalus microplus in Santa Gertrudis cattle immune response against Rhipicephalus microplus

2018

Journal Article

Comparison of protein gut samples from rhipicephalus spp. using a crude and an innovative preparation method for proteome analysis

Karbanowicz, Thomas P., Nouwens, Amanda, Tabor, Ala E. and Rodriguez-Valle, Manuel (2018). Comparison of protein gut samples from rhipicephalus spp. using a crude and an innovative preparation method for proteome analysis. Veterinary Sciences, 5 (1) 30, 30. doi: 10.3390/vetsci5010030

Comparison of protein gut samples from rhipicephalus spp. using a crude and an innovative preparation method for proteome analysis

2018

Journal Article

Transcriptome and toxin family analysis of the paralysis tick, Ixodes holocyclus

Rodriguez-Valle, Manuel, Moolhuijzen, Paula, Barrero, Roberto A., Ong, Chian Teng, Busch, Greta, Karbanowicz, Thomas, Booth, Mitchell, Clark, Richard, Koehbach, Johannes, Ijaz, Hina, Broady, Kevin, Agnew, Kim, Knowles, Aleta G., Bellgard, Matthew I. and Tabor, Ala E. (2018). Transcriptome and toxin family analysis of the paralysis tick, Ixodes holocyclus. International Journal for Parasitology, 48 (1), 71-82. doi: 10.1016/j.ijpara.2017.07.007

Transcriptome and toxin family analysis of the paralysis tick, Ixodes holocyclus

2018

Journal Article

‘One Health’ solutions for ticks and tick-borne diseases, and rickettsial pathogens of humans, domestic animals and wildlife

Tabor, A. E., Graves, S. R., Rodriguez Valle, M. and Stenos, J. (2018). ‘One Health’ solutions for ticks and tick-borne diseases, and rickettsial pathogens of humans, domestic animals and wildlife. Ticks and Tick-borne Diseases, 9 (6), 1604-1605. doi: 10.1016/j.ttbdis.2018.08.006

‘One Health’ solutions for ticks and tick-borne diseases, and rickettsial pathogens of humans, domestic animals and wildlife

2017

Journal Article

Extracellular expression of the HT1 neurotoxin from the Australian paralysis tick in two Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains

Karbanowicz, Thomas, Dover, Eric, Mu, Xinyi, Tabor, Ala and Rodriguez-Valle, Manuel (2017). Extracellular expression of the HT1 neurotoxin from the Australian paralysis tick in two Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains. Toxicon, 140, 1-10. doi: 10.1016/j.toxicon.2017.10.013

Extracellular expression of the HT1 neurotoxin from the Australian paralysis tick in two Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains

2017

Journal Article

Cattle Tick Rhipicephalus microplus-host interface: A review of resistant and susceptible host responses

Tabor, Ala E., Ali, Abid, Rehman, Gauhar, Garcia, Gustavo Rocha, Zangirolamo, Amanda Fonseca, Malardo, Thiago and Jonsson, Nicholas N. (2017). Cattle Tick Rhipicephalus microplus-host interface: A review of resistant and susceptible host responses. Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology, 7 (DEC) 506, 506. doi: 10.3389/fcimb.2017.00506

Cattle Tick Rhipicephalus microplus-host interface: A review of resistant and susceptible host responses

2017

Journal Article

Purification of biotinylated cell surface proteins from Rhipicephalus microplus epithelial gut cells

Karbanowicz, Thomas P., Lew-Tabor, Ala and Rodriguez Valle, Manuel (2017). Purification of biotinylated cell surface proteins from Rhipicephalus microplus epithelial gut cells. Journal of Visualized Experiments (125), e55747. doi: 10.3791/55747

Purification of biotinylated cell surface proteins from Rhipicephalus microplus epithelial gut cells

2017

Journal Article

Peripheral cellular and humoral responses to infestation with Rhipicephalus microplus in Santa-Gertrudis cattle

Piper, Emily K., Jonsson, Nicholas, Gondro, Cedric, Vance, Megan E., Lew-Tabor, Alicja and Jackson, Louise A. (2017). Peripheral cellular and humoral responses to infestation with Rhipicephalus microplus in Santa-Gertrudis cattle. Parasite Immunology, 39 (1) e12402, e12402. doi: 10.1111/pim.12402

Peripheral cellular and humoral responses to infestation with Rhipicephalus microplus in Santa-Gertrudis cattle

2016

Journal Article

Strategies for new and improved vaccines against ticks and tick-borne diseases

de la Fuente, J., Kopacek, P., Lew-Tabor, A. and Maritz-Olivier, C. (2016). Strategies for new and improved vaccines against ticks and tick-borne diseases. Parasite Immunology, 38 (12), 754-769. doi: 10.1111/pim.12339

Strategies for new and improved vaccines against ticks and tick-borne diseases

2016

Journal Article

An evaluation of quantitative PCR assays (TaqMan® and SYBR Green) for the detection of Babesia bigemina and Babesia bovis, and a novel fluorescent-ITS1-PCR capillary electrophoresis method for genotyping B. bovis isolates

Zhang, Bing, Sambono, Jacqueline L., Morgan, Jess A. T., Venus, Bronwyn, Rolls, Peter and Lew-Tabor, Ala E. (2016). An evaluation of quantitative PCR assays (TaqMan® and SYBR Green) for the detection of Babesia bigemina and Babesia bovis, and a novel fluorescent-ITS1-PCR capillary electrophoresis method for genotyping B. bovis isolates. Veterinary Sciences, 3 (3) 23, 23. doi: 10.3390/vetsci3030023

An evaluation of quantitative PCR assays (TaqMan® and SYBR Green) for the detection of Babesia bigemina and Babesia bovis, and a novel fluorescent-ITS1-PCR capillary electrophoresis method for genotyping B. bovis isolates

2016

Journal Article

Erratum to “A review of reverse vaccinology approaches for the development of vaccines against ticks and tick borne diseases” [Ticks Tick-borne Dis. 7 (4) (2016) 573–585](Ticks and Tick-borne Diseases (2016) 7(6) (1236–1237) (S1877959X15300534) (10.1016/j.ttbdis.2015.12.012))

Lew-Tabor, A. E. and Rodriguez Valle, M. (2016). Erratum to “A review of reverse vaccinology approaches for the development of vaccines against ticks and tick borne diseases” [Ticks Tick-borne Dis. 7 (4) (2016) 573–585](Ticks and Tick-borne Diseases (2016) 7(6) (1236–1237) (S1877959X15300534) (10.1016/j.ttbdis.2015.12.012)). Ticks and Tick-borne Diseases, 7 (6), 1236-1237. doi: 10.1016/j.ttbdis.2016.07.008

Erratum to “A review of reverse vaccinology approaches for the development of vaccines against ticks and tick borne diseases” [Ticks Tick-borne Dis. 7 (4) (2016) 573–585](Ticks and Tick-borne Diseases (2016) 7(6) (1236–1237) (S1877959X15300534) (10.1016/j.ttbdis.2015.12.012))

Funding

Current funding

  • 2024 - 2025
    Proof of concept cattle tick vaccine trial for commercial adoption
    Australia's Economic Accelerator Seed Grants
    Open grant
  • 2023 - 2025
    A next-generation whole parasite bovine Babesia vaccine (ARC Discovery Project administered by Griffith University)
    Griffith University
    Open grant
  • 2021 - 2026
    NB2: Assessing practical interventions to reduce calf wastage and herd mortality in northern systems
    Meat & Livestock Australia
    Open grant

Past funding

  • 2022 - 2023
    Product development of an Australian trichomoniasis vaccine: Pilot trial
    Meat & Livestock Australia
    Open grant
  • 2019
    A versatile accurate mass, high resolution QTOF mass spectrometer for chemistry and proteomic applications
    UQ Major Equipment and Infrastructure
    Open grant
  • 2018 - 2021
    Product development of a new cattle tick vaccine
    Meat & Livestock Australia
    Open grant
  • 2018 - 2020
    Improving Tick-Resistance in Beef Cattle (AQIP project administered by QUT)
    Queensland University of Technology
    Open grant
  • 2017 - 2024
    Improving fertility in northern cattle through host and pathogen molecular diagnosis
    Meat & Livestock Australia
    Open grant
  • 2017 - 2023
    Improving bovine respiratory disease control through the characterisation of pathogen genomics and host interactions
    Meat & Livestock Australia
    Open grant
  • 2017 - 2018
    Improving Tick-Resistance in Beef Cattle
    Queensland Government Advance Queensland Innovation Partnerships
    Open grant
  • 2017 - 2024
    Cattle tick and Buffalo fly host genetics, susceptibility to buffalo fly lesions and biomarkers for resistance
    Meat & Livestock Australia
    Open grant
  • 2014 - 2017
    Cattle vaccination studies using novel anti-cattle tick antigens developed during Beef CRC research
    Meat & Livestock Australia
    Open grant
  • 2013
    Tick Fever Genotyping
    Queensland Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry
    Open grant
  • 2013 - 2016
    Harnessing the genome of the Australian paralysis tick to develop effective control products
    ARC Linkage Projects
    Open grant
  • 2011 - 2012
    Genomic approach to develop a vaccine and or treatments for Ixodes holocyclus
    UniQuest Pty Ltd
    Open grant
  • 2011 - 2012
    Improving bovine tick fever vaccine production: sensitive monitoring methods and novel delivery systems
    UQ New Staff Research Start-Up Fund
    Open grant
  • 2011 - 2012
    Cysticercus bovis - Enhanced classification of suspect lesions identified at meat inspection
    Meat & Livestock Australia
    Open grant
  • 2010 - 2012
    3.1.2 Novel solutions to improve tick resistance of cattle
    CRC Beef
    Open grant
  • 2009 - 2012
    An integrated genomics approach to improve our understanding of the biology of genital campylobacteriosis in beef cattle
    ARC Linkage Projects
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Professor Ala Tabor is:
Available for supervision

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Supervision history

Current supervision

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

Contact Professor Ala Tabor directly for media enquiries about:

  • bovine reproductive diseases
  • Cattle disease
  • Cattle tick
  • Cattle vaccine development
  • Molecular biology
  • paralysis tick
  • tick borne disease

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