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Professor Denise Doolan
Professor

Denise Doolan

Email: 
Phone: 
+61 7 334 62159

Overview

Background

Professor Denise Doolan is Director of Research at the Institute for Molecular Bioscience. She joined IMB in 2022 and was previously Deputy Director of the Australian Institute of Tropical Health and Medicine, and Director of the JCU Centre for Molecular Therapeutics, at James Cook University.

She is a molecular immunologist, working on the development of vaccines, diagnostics and host-directed therapeutics for infectious and chronic diseases that impact global public health, with a particular focus on malaria. Her cross-disciplinary research program spans host-pathogen immunity, antigen discovery, vaccine engineering, and biomarker discovery. A particular interest is the application of state-of-the-art genome-based technologies and human models of disease system to identify novel targets for intervention against disease or that predict risk of disease.

She is a recognized world expert in malaria immunology, vaccinology, and omic-based approaches for therapeutic and diagnostic development. She has been honoured as a Fellow of the International Society for Vaccines (2017) and a Fellow of the Australian Society of Parasitology (2019) in recognition of her leadership and contribution to health and medical science in Australia and internationally.

Professor Doolan serves on a number of Executive Boards and Advisory Boards. Most recently, she has been elected as President of the International Society for Vaccines (2021-2023), and has been appointed to the Federal Government’s Australian Medical Research Advisory Board (AMRAB; 2021-2026) to provide specialist insights into Australia’s medical research and innovation priorities.

Availability

Professor Denise Doolan is:
Available for supervision

Fields of research

Qualifications

  • Bachelor of Science, The University of Queensland
  • B Sc Hons (Biochemistry), The University of Queensland
  • M Phil (Life Sciences), Griffith University
  • PhD (Molecular Immunology), The University of Queensland

Works

Search Professor Denise Doolan’s works on UQ eSpace

224 works between 1987 and 2025

221 - 224 of 224 works

1987

Journal Article

Amino-Acid Supply and Protein-Metabolism in Ehrlich Ascites Tumor-Cells .1. Identification of Limiting Amino-Acids

Doolan, DL and Ward, LC (1987). Amino-Acid Supply and Protein-Metabolism in Ehrlich Ascites Tumor-Cells .1. Identification of Limiting Amino-Acids. Cytobios, 51 (204), 7-23.

Amino-Acid Supply and Protein-Metabolism in Ehrlich Ascites Tumor-Cells .1. Identification of Limiting Amino-Acids

1987

Journal Article

Amino acid supply and protein metabolism in Ehrlich ascites tumour cells. 2 Incorporation of 14C-tyrosine

Doolan, D. L. and Ward, L. C. (1987). Amino acid supply and protein metabolism in Ehrlich ascites tumour cells. 2 Incorporation of 14C-tyrosine. Cytobios, 50 (204), 49-61.

Amino acid supply and protein metabolism in Ehrlich ascites tumour cells. 2 Incorporation of 14C-tyrosine

1987

Journal Article

Amino-Acid Supply and Protein-Metabolism in Ehrlich Ascites Tumor-Cells .2. Incorporation of C-14 Tyrosine

Doolan, DL and Ward, LC (1987). Amino-Acid Supply and Protein-Metabolism in Ehrlich Ascites Tumor-Cells .2. Incorporation of C-14 Tyrosine. Cytobios, 51 (204), 49-61.

Amino-Acid Supply and Protein-Metabolism in Ehrlich Ascites Tumor-Cells .2. Incorporation of C-14 Tyrosine

1987

Journal Article

Amino acid supply and protein metabolism in Ehrlich ascites tumour cells. 2. Incorporation of 14C-tyrosine

Doolan, D. L. and Ward, L. C. (1987). Amino acid supply and protein metabolism in Ehrlich ascites tumour cells. 2. Incorporation of 14C-tyrosine. Cytobios, 51 (204), 49-61.

Amino acid supply and protein metabolism in Ehrlich ascites tumour cells. 2. Incorporation of 14C-tyrosine

Funding

Current funding

  • 2026 - 2030
    Next-generation therapeutics for malaria designed using systems-based approaches
    NHMRC Investigator Grants
    Open grant
  • 2025 - 2026
    An mRNA T-cell Vaccine Against Malaria
    UQ - Sanofi Translational Science Hub Partnership Scheme
    Open grant
  • 2025 - 2026
    A Facility for Accelerated Microbial Phenotyping in Southeast Queensland
    ARC Linkage Infrastructure, Equipment and Facilities
    Open grant
  • 2024 - 2026
    Development of a multi-antigen T-cell malaria vaccine (NFMRI grant administered by James Cook University)
    James Cook University
    Open grant
  • 2024 - 2026
    Effective Multiple Sclerosis diagnosis based on EBV proteome screening
    MS Research Australia Project Grant
    Open grant
  • 2023 - 2026
    Human-informed data-driven development of next-generation T cell vaccine against malaria
    United States National Institutes of Health
    Open grant

Past funding

  • 2013 - 2017
    Tropical disease - immunity, pathogenesis and vaccine development: global translation (NHMRC Program Grant administered by Griffith University)
    Griffith University
    Open grant
  • 2012 - 2014
    ResTeach Funding 2012 0.1 FTE School of Medicine/School of Chemisty and Molecular Biosciences
    UQ ResTeach
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Professor Denise Doolan is:
Available for supervision

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Supervision history

Current supervision

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Systems immunology and multi-omics approaches to understand protective immunity to human malaria

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Quan Nguyen

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Understanding the link between EBV and Multiple Sclerosis

    Principal Advisor

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Utilising high throughout spatial Transcriptomics to personlise treatment approaches for endometriosis patients

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Quan Nguyen, Associate Professor Akwasi Amoako, Dr Brett McKinnon

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

For media enquiries about Professor Denise Doolan's areas of expertise, story ideas and help finding experts, contact our Media team:

communications@uq.edu.au