
Overview
Background
The research interests of the Hume Laboratory centre on the biology of macrophages and osteoclasts. These are cells of haematopoietic origin that are closely related to each other but have distinctly different activities.
David Hume was a group leader at the Institute for Molecular Bioscience (1988-2007) and subsequently Director of the Roslin Institute at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland from 2007-2017. He is currently a Professorial Research Fellow at the Mater Research Institute-UQ, located at the Translational Research Institute
Availability
- Professor David Hume is:
- Available for supervision
Fields of research
Qualifications
- Bachelor (Honours) of Science (Advanced), Australian National University
- Doctor of Philosophy, Australian National University
Research interests
-
Macrophages Biology
Professor David Hume is a Professorial Research Fellow at the Mater Research Institute-UQ located at the Translational Research Institute. He was previously Director of The Roslin Institute at the University of Edinburgh (2007-2017). From 1988-2007, he was at the Institute for Molecular Bioscience at the University of Queensland, serving as Deputy Director of the CRC for Chronic Inflammatory Diseases, and Director of the ARC Special Centre for Functional and Applied Genomics. At Mater, David co-leads the Macrophage Biology Research Group with Dr Kate Irvine. He has authored over 450 scientific publications and has supervised more than 55 PhD graduates. He is an international authority in genome sciences, with a particular focus on the function of macrophages—specialised cells of the immune system involved in innate immunity against infections, inflammatory disease and cancer. David’s research focusses on macrophages in normal growth, development and physiology, infectious disease resistance and progression and complications of inflammation. His lab investigates mechanisms that regulate the biological functions of macrophages and explores avenues to boost their normal function and/or limit the damage they cause in inflammatory and infectious diseases. He is also interested in the genetic variations in macrophage function between individuals that contribute to susceptibility to inflammatory and infectious diseases. David has been elected to Fellowships in the Royal Society of Edinburgh, the UK Academy of Medical Sciences and the Royal Society of Biology. Since 2000, he has been a leading member of the FANTOM Consortium, which has made extensive contributions to mammalian genome and transcriptome annotation. David has a 35 year track record of attracting major strategic funding (CRC for Chronic Inflammatory Disease, ARC Special Research Centre in Australia; BBSRC Institute Strategic Programmes, Wellcome Trust Centres, UK Agritech Centre and Bill and Melinda Gates Centre Foundation in the UK) as well as continuous research project funding from NHMRC, ARC, BBSRC, MRC and the Wellcome Trust. "I trained as a metabolic biochemist at the Australian National University, and was very fortunate to have a great mentor in Dr Maurie Weidemann. Throughout my career, I have tried to mentor others with the same level of enthusiasm and support given to me. Being a biological scientist in the early 21st century is very much like being a physical scientist in the early 20th century. Each day brings new technologies and completely unexpected discoveries. I believe that the most novel breakthroughs and advances in human medicine and biotechnology come from basic discovery science, and fundamental understanding of macrophage biology has been my research focus for the whole of my career. That said, the applications of that understanding to human disease are clear, especially in the areas of tissue repair and regenerative medicine, and I am committed to pursuing those applications to benefit patients."
Works
Search Professor David Hume’s works on UQ eSpace
2016
Journal Article
Macrophage colony-stimulating factor (CSF1) controls monocyte production and maturation and the steady-state size of the liver in pigs
Sauter, Kristin A., Waddell, Lindsey A., Lisowski, Zofia M., Young, Rachel, Lefevre, Lucas, Davis, Gemma M., Clohisey, Sara M., McCulloch, Mary, Magowan, Elizabeth, Mabbott, Neil A., Summers, Kim M. and Hume, David A. (2016). Macrophage colony-stimulating factor (CSF1) controls monocyte production and maturation and the steady-state size of the liver in pigs. American Journal of Physiology - Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology, 311 (3), G533-G547. doi: 10.1152/ajpgi.00116.2016
2016
Journal Article
Resting and injury-induced inflamed periosteum contain multiple macrophage subsets that are located at sites of bone growth and regeneration
Alexander, Kylie Anne, Raggatt, Liza-Jane, Millard, Susan, Batoon, Lena, Wu, Andy Chiu-Ku, Chang, Ming-Kang, Hume, David Arthur and Pettit, Allison Robyn (2016). Resting and injury-induced inflamed periosteum contain multiple macrophage subsets that are located at sites of bone growth and regeneration. Immunology and Cell Biology, 95 (1), 7-16. doi: 10.1038/icb.2016.74
2016
Journal Article
Role of bone marrow macrophages in controlling homeostasis and repair in bone and bone marrow niches
Kaur, Simranpreet, Raggatt, Liza Jane, Batoon, Lena, Hume, David Arthur, Levesque, Jean-Pierre and Pettit, Allison Robyn (2016). Role of bone marrow macrophages in controlling homeostasis and repair in bone and bone marrow niches. Seminars in Cell and Developmental Biology, 61, 12-21. doi: 10.1016/j.semcdb.2016.08.009
2016
Journal Article
Comparative transcriptome analysis of equine alveolar macrophages
Karagianni, A. E., Kapetanovic, R., Summers, K. M., Mcgorum, B. C., Hume, D. A. and Pirie, R. S. (2016). Comparative transcriptome analysis of equine alveolar macrophages. Equine Veterinary Journal, 49 (3), 375-382. doi: 10.1111/evj.12584
2016
Journal Article
Functional annotation of the T-cell immunoglobulin mucin family in birds
Hu, Tuanjun, Wu, Zhiguang, Vervelde, Lonneke, Rothwell, Lisa, Hume, David A. and Kaiser, Pete (2016). Functional annotation of the T-cell immunoglobulin mucin family in birds. Immunology, 148 (3), 287-303. doi: 10.1111/imm.12607
2016
Journal Article
Transcriptional regulation and macrophage differentiation
Hume, David A., Summers, Kim M. and Rehli, Michael (2016). Transcriptional regulation and macrophage differentiation. Microbiology Spectrum, 4 (3) MCHD-0024-2015, 1-19. doi: 10.1128/microbiolspec.MCHD-0024-2015
2016
Journal Article
Induction of interferon and cell death in response to cytosolic DNA in chicken macrophages
Vitak, Nazarii, Hume, David A., Chappell, Keith J., Sester, David P. and Stacey, Katryn J. (2016). Induction of interferon and cell death in response to cytosolic DNA in chicken macrophages. Developmental and Comparative Immunology, 59, 145-152. doi: 10.1016/j.dci.2016.01.023
2016
Journal Article
Analysis of the function of IL-10 in chickens using specific neutralising antibodies and a sensitive capture ELISA
Wu, Zhiguang, Hu, Tuanjun, Rothwell, Lisa, Vervelde, Lonneke, Kaiser, Pete, Boulton, Kay, Nolan, Matthew J., Tomley, Fiona M., Blake, Damer P. and Hume, David A. (2016). Analysis of the function of IL-10 in chickens using specific neutralising antibodies and a sensitive capture ELISA. Developmental and Comparative Immunology, 63, 206-212. doi: 10.1016/j.dci.2016.04.016
2016
Journal Article
Enhancer turnover is associated with a divergent transcriptional response to glucocorticoid in mouse and human macrophages
Jubb, Alasdair W., Young, Robert S., Hume, David A. and Bickmore, Wendy A. (2016). Enhancer turnover is associated with a divergent transcriptional response to glucocorticoid in mouse and human macrophages. Journal of Immunology, 196 (2), 813-822. doi: 10.4049/jimmunol.1502009
2016
Conference Publication
Radio-resistant recipient bone marrow (BM) macrophages (Macs) are necessary for hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) engraftment post transplantation
Levesque, Jean-Pierre, Kaur, Simranpreet, Jacobsen, Rebecca, Millard, Susan, Batoon, Lena, Winkler, Ingrid, Macdonald, Kelli, Perkins, Andrew, Hume, David, Raggatt, Liza and Pettit, Allison (2016). Radio-resistant recipient bone marrow (BM) macrophages (Macs) are necessary for hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) engraftment post transplantation. 45th Annual Scientific Meeting of the ISEH – International Society for Experimental Hematology, San Diego, CA, United States, 25-28 August, 2016. Philadelphia, PA, United States: Elsevier. doi: 10.1016/j.exphem.2016.06.049
2016
Conference Publication
Recipient bone marrow (BM) macrophages (Macs) are vital for haematopoietic stem cell (HSC) engraftment post autologous transplantation
Kaur, S., Raggatt, L. J., Jacobsen, R. N., Millard, S., Batoon, L., Winkler, I. G., Macdonald, K. P. A., Perkins, A. C., Hume, D. A., Levesque, J. P. and Pettit, A. R. (2016). Recipient bone marrow (BM) macrophages (Macs) are vital for haematopoietic stem cell (HSC) engraftment post autologous transplantation. International Congress of Immunology (ICI), Melbourne, VIC, Australia, 21-26 August 2016. Weinheim, Germany: Wiley - VCH. doi: 10.1002/eji.201670200
2016
Conference Publication
Evolution of cell death responses to cytosolic DNA
Vitak, N., Johnson, K. N., Hume, D. A., Sester, D. P. and Stacey, K. J. (2016). Evolution of cell death responses to cytosolic DNA. ICI 2016 International Congress of Immunology, Melbourne, Australia, 21-26 August 2016. Weinheim, Germany: Wiley. doi: 10.1002/eji.201670200
2016
Journal Article
The genomic architecture of resistance to Campylobacter jejuni intestinal colonisation in chickens
Psifidi, A., Fife, M., Howell, J., Matika, O., van Diemen, P. M., Kuo, R., Smith, J., Hocking, P. M., Salmon, N., Jones, M. A., Hume, D. A., Banos, G., Stevens, M. P. and Kaiser, P. (2016). The genomic architecture of resistance to Campylobacter jejuni intestinal colonisation in chickens. BMC Genomics, 17 (293) 293. doi: 10.1186/s12864-016-2612-7
2015
Journal Article
The constrained maximal expression level owing to haploidy shapes gene content on the mammalian X chromosome
Hurst, Laurence D., Ghanbarian, Avazeh T., Forrest, Alistair R. R., Huminiecki, Lukasz, Rehli, Michael, Baillie, J. Kenneth, de Hoon, Michiel J. L., Haberle, Vanja, Lassmann, Timo, Kulakovskiy, Ivan V., Lizio, Marina, Itoh, Masayoshi, Andersson, Robin, Mungall, Christopher J., Meehan, Terrence F., Schmeier, Sebastian, Bertin, Nicolas, Jorgensen, Mette, Dimont, Emmanuel, Arner, Erik, Schmidl, Christian, Schaefer, Ulf, Medvedeva, Yulia A., Plessy, Charles, Vitezic, Morana, Severin, Jessica, Semple, Colin A., Ishizu, Yuri, Young, Robert S. ... Hayashizaki, Yoshihide (2015). The constrained maximal expression level owing to haploidy shapes gene content on the mammalian X chromosome. PLoS Biology, 13 (12) e1002315, e1002315. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.1002315
2015
Journal Article
CSF1 restores innate immunity after liver injury in mice and serum levels indicate outcomes of patients with acute liver failure
Stutchfield, Benjamin M., Antoine, Daniel J., Mackinnon, Alison C., Gow, Deborah J., Bain, Calum C., Hawley, Catherine A., Hughes, Michael J., Francis, Benjamin, Wojtacha, Davina, Man, Tak Y., Dear, James W., Devey, Luke R., Mowat, Alan M., Pollard, Jeffrey W., Park, B. Kevin, Jenkins, Stephen J., Simpson, Kenneth J., Hume, David A., Wigmore, Stephen J. and Forbes, Stuart J. (2015). CSF1 restores innate immunity after liver injury in mice and serum levels indicate outcomes of patients with acute liver failure. Gastroenterology, 149 (7), 1896-1909. doi: 10.1053/j.gastro.2015.08.053
2015
Journal Article
Identification and annotation of conserved promoters and macrophage-expressed genes in the pig genome
Robert, Christelle, Kapetanovic, Ronan, Beraldi, Dario, Watson, Mick, Archibald, Alan L. and Hume, David A. (2015). Identification and annotation of conserved promoters and macrophage-expressed genes in the pig genome. BMC Genomics, 16 (1) 970, 970.1-970.17. doi: 10.1186/s12864-015-2111-2
2015
Journal Article
Dengue virus NS1 protein activates cells via Toll-like receptor 4 and disrupts endothelial cell monolayer integrity
Modhiran, Naphak, Watterson, Daniel, Muller, David A., Panetta, Adele K., Sester, David P., Liu, Lidong, Hume, David A., Stacey, Katryn J. and Young, Paul R. (2015). Dengue virus NS1 protein activates cells via Toll-like receptor 4 and disrupts endothelial cell monolayer integrity. Science Translational Medicine, 7 (304) 304ra142, 1-10. doi: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aaa3863
2015
Journal Article
The many alternative faces of macrophage activation
Hume, David A. (2015). The many alternative faces of macrophage activation. Frontiers in Immunology, 6 (JUL) 370. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2015.00370
2015
Journal Article
Immune surveillance of the lung by migrating tissue monocytes
Rodero, Mathieu P., Poupel, Lucie, Loyher, Pierre-Louis, Hamon, Pauline, Licata, Fabrice, Pessel, Charlotte, Hume, David A., Combadière, Christophe and Boissonnas, Alexandre (2015). Immune surveillance of the lung by migrating tissue monocytes. eLife, 4 (JULY 2015) e07847, 1-23. doi: 10.7554/eLife.07847
2015
Journal Article
Direct embeddings of relatively hyperbolic groups with optimal ℓp compression exponent
Hume, David (2015). Direct embeddings of relatively hyperbolic groups with optimal ℓp compression exponent. Journal fur die Reine und Angewandte Mathematik, 2015 (703), 147-172. doi: 10.1515/crelle-2013-0040
Funding
Current funding
Past funding
Supervision
Availability
- Professor David Hume is:
- Available for supervision
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Available projects
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The role of macrophages in postnatal development
This project is associated with a successful ARC Discovery Grant and builds upon the discovery that mutation in the CSF1R gene, which controls the deveelopment of macrophages, has severe impacts on postnatal growth and organ development (See paper below). The phenotype can be reversed by transfer of wild-type bone marrow. The PhD project will focus on analysing the precose mechanisms that enable transplanted macrophages to restore normal development. It will develop a wide range of skills in the braod areas of cell and developmental biology, genomics and bioinformatics.
Enquiries to david.hume@uq.edu.au or Katharine.Irvine@uq.edu.au
Keshvari S, Caruso M, Teakle N, Batoon L, Sehgal A, Patkar OL, Ferrari-Cestari M, Snell CE, Chen C, Stevenson A, Davis FM, Bush SJ, Pridans C, Summers KM, Pettit AR, Irvine KM, Hume DA.
CSF1R-dependent macrophages control postnatal somatic growth and organ maturation. PLoS Genet. 2021 Jun 3;17(6):e1009605. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1009605. Online ahead of print.PMID: 34081701
Supervision history
Current supervision
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Doctor Philosophy
Phenotypic impacts of hypomorphic mutations in the mouse Csf1r locus
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Katharine Irvine
-
Doctor Philosophy
Erythroid iron metabolism and its effect on systemic iron homeostasis
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Katharine Irvine
-
Doctor Philosophy
Transcriptional regulation of the mouse Csf1r locus
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Katharine Irvine
-
Doctor Philosophy
Regulation and function of CSF1R-dependent tissue macrophage populations.
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Katharine Irvine
-
Doctor Philosophy
Regulation of Resident Tissue Macrophage Development and Function
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Sahar Keshvari, Dr Katharine Irvine
-
Doctor Philosophy
The role of IL34 in HPV-mediated epithelial cancers
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Graham Leggatt, Dr Janin Chandra, Professor Ian Frazer
-
Doctor Philosophy
Functions of CSF1R signalling in inflammation.
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Antje Blumenthal, Dr Katharine Irvine
-
Doctor Philosophy
The role of IL34 in HPV-mediated epithelial cancers
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Graham Leggatt, Dr Janin Chandra, Professor Ian Frazer
-
Doctor Philosophy
Preclinical modelling of central nervous system complications and toxicities of cellular and immunotherapies for cancer treatment
Associate Advisor
-
Doctor Philosophy
The role of IL34 in HPV-mediated epithelial cancers
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Graham Leggatt, Dr Janin Chandra, Professor Ian Frazer
Completed supervision
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2024
Doctor Philosophy
Macrophage colony-stimulating factor in the treatment of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Katharine Irvine, Dr Sahar Keshvari
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2023
Doctor Philosophy
Characterisation of a novel mouse model with a disease-causing Colony Stimulating Factor 1 Receptor mutation
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Katharine Irvine
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2023
Doctor Philosophy
The role of macrophages in the regulation of systemic metabolism
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Katharine Irvine, Dr Sahar Keshvari
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2009
Doctor Philosophy
Regulation and Function of Schlafen in Macrophage Biology
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Matt Sweet
-
2007
Doctor Philosophy
THE STRUCTURAL BASIS FOR INTERACTION BETWEEN COLONY- STIMULATING FACTOR-1 AND ITS RECEPTOR, CSF-1R
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Mark Smythe, Professor Bostjan Kobe, Dr Ian Ross
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2007
Doctor Philosophy
TRANSCRIPTIONAL REGULATION OF THE c-fms PROMOTER BY THE ETS FAMILY OF TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Kate Stacey
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2006
Doctor Philosophy
FUNCTIONAL CHARACTERISATION OF MACROPHAGE-SPECIFIC TRANSCRIPTS
Principal Advisor
-
2005
Doctor Philosophy
MECHANISMS OF INTERFERON-GAMMA PRIMING OF MACROPHAGE ACTIVATION BY CpG DNA
Principal Advisor
-
2004
Master Science
Study of gene expression profile of osteoclasts
Principal Advisor
-
2004
Doctor Philosophy
THE EXPRESSIONS AND FUNCTIONS OF G3BPs IN MACROPHAGES
Principal Advisor
-
2004
Doctor Philosophy
TRANSCRIPTIONAL ANALYSIS OF MACROPHAGE SIGNALLING IN RESPONSE TO LIPOPOLYSACCHARIDE
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Brandon Wainwright
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2003
Doctor Philosophy
THE FUNCTION AND REGULATION OF TARTRATE-RESISTANT ACID PHOSPHATASE (TRAP)
Principal Advisor
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2003
Doctor Philosophy
Transcriptional regulation of c-fms gene expression
Principal Advisor
-
2003
Doctor Philosophy
MECHANISMS OF ACTION OF BACTERIAL DNA ON MACROPHAGE ACTIVATION
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Kate Stacey
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2025
Doctor Philosophy
The role of IL34 in HPV-mediated epithelial cancers
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Graham Leggatt, Dr Janin Chandra, Professor Ian Frazer
-
2024
Doctor Philosophy
Preclinical modelling of central nervous system complications and toxicities of cellular and immunotherapies for cancer treatment
Associate Advisor
-
2021
Master Philosophy
Developing a Novel Immune Cell Therapy for Glioblastoma: A Novel Monocyte-based Cell-therapy for the Treatment of Glioblastoma
Associate Advisor
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2012
Doctor Philosophy
Characterisation of Myeloid Cells in the Peritoneal Foreign Body Response: Evidence for Phenotypic Plasticity
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Barbara Rolfe
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2010
Doctor Philosophy
Osteal macrophages (osteomacs) are pivotal for intramembranous bone formation in vivo: Osteomacs facilitate osteoblast maintenance in vivo and enhance osteoblast-mediated bone deposition in a murine model of bone healing
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Allison Pettit, Dr Liza Raggatt
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2009
Doctor Philosophy
Short Sequence Tags Reveal Global Transcription Of Repetitive Elements In Mammalian Genomes
Associate Advisor
-
2009
Doctor Philosophy
Cellular activation and death in response to cytoplasmic DNA
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Kate Stacey
-
2009
Doctor Philosophy
Role of macrophages, residing on the bone surface, in bone remodelling and repair
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Allison Pettit, Dr Liza Raggatt
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2007
Doctor Philosophy
FUNCTIONAL CHARACTERISATION OF THE ROLE OF PROTEIN TYROSINE PHOSPHATASE CD148 IN MACROPHAGES
Associate Advisor
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2006
Doctor Philosophy
THE ROLE OF MICROPHTHALMIA TRANSCRIPTION FACTOR (MITF) IN OSTEOCLAST GENE REGULATION
Associate Advisor
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2006
Doctor Philosophy
MOLECULAR AND FUNCTIONAL CHARACTERISATION OF POTENTIAL MURINE RENAL STEM CELLS
Associate Advisor
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-
2006
Doctor Philosophy
THE IMPORTANCE OF EPIGENETICS IN MAMMALS
Associate Advisor
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2005
Doctor Philosophy
SHADES OF DOMAINS: BIOINFORMATIC IDENTIFICATION OF PROTEIN DOMAIN SUBTYPES AND CORRELATION WITH FUNCTIONAL SPECIFICITY
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Rohan Teasdale
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2005
Doctor Philosophy
CELLULAR RESPONSES TO IMMUNOSTIMULATORY DNA
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Matt Sweet, Professor Kate Stacey
Media
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