Wai-Hong Tham

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About
Wai-Hong Tham received her PhD from Princeton University and her B.A. from University of California, Berkeley. She also holds a joint appointment at WEHI as a Lab Head in the Infectious Diseases and Immune Defense Division and is co-Chair of the WEHI Biologics Initiative.
Her lab has made fundamental discoveries in novel host-pathogen interactions and examined their molecular and structural mechanisms to drive rational design of new therapies against malaria. Her lab studies parasite adhesins required for entry into human red cells, parasite surface proteins that bind to human complement proteins for immune evasion and novel parasite proteins involved in fertilisation.
The overarching aim is to rationally design and generate new inhibitors or antibodies that block these interactions and stop recurrent malaria infection in humans and block transmission from mosquitoes. Our work intersects with the fields of structural biology, nanobody technology, immuno-epidemiology and molecular parasitology.
Awards
- Victorian Honour Roll of Women, Change Agent, 2023
- Bancroft-Mackerras Medal for Excellence, Australian Society of Parasitology, 2023
- Elizabeth Blackburn Biomedical Fellowship, NHMRC, 2022
- International Award, Biochemical Society, UK, 2020
- Eureka Prize for Infectious Diseases Research (Team Prize), 2019
- Burnet Prize, 2018
- David Syme Research Prize, 2018
- Elizabeth Blackburn Biomedical Fellowship, NHMRC, 2018
- HHMI - Wellcome International Research Scholar, 2017
- Eureka Prize for Infectious Diseases Research (Team Prize), 2011
Affiliations
- Tham Group - Understanding chytrid infection biology , Group Leader
Research interests
To understand mechanisms of malaria parasite entry and fertilisation for the development of novel interventions to stop infection and transmission of the malaria parasites.
Projects
Location
Rm N3.014, Level 3, Linnaeus Building (134)