Brett Hambly
Professor
Pathology
University of Sydney
Australia
Biography
1980-81 Intern and Resident Medical Officer, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney 1982-84 Relief Staff - Medical, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney 1982-84 Life Insurance Medical Research Fund of Australia & New Zealand Research Scholar (Candidate for Ph.D.), Department of Anatomy, University of Sydney 1984-86 Temporary Lecturer, Department of Anatomy, University of Sydney 1987-88 NHMRC CJ Martin Post-doctoral Research Fellow, Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, University of California, San Francisco 1989-90 NHMRC CJ Martin Post-doctoral Research Fellow, Dept of Anatomy, Univ Sydney 1991 NHMRC Senior Research Officer, Department of Anatomy, University of Sydney 1992-93 Lecturer, Department of Pathology, University of Sydney 1994-02 Senior Lecturer, Department of Pathology, University of Sydney 2003- Associate Professor, School Medical Science - Pathology Discipline, Univ Sydney 2003- Adjunct Assoc Professor, Biology (Molec Biophysics), Florida State Univ, Tallahassee
Research Interest
Cardiovascular disease, in particular familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, atherosclerosis and Genetic thoracic aortic aneurysm
Publications
-
Zhang, X., Zhao, L., Hambly, B., Bao, B., Wang, K. (2017). Diabetic retinopathy: Reversibility of epigenetic modifications and new therapeutic targets. Cell & Bioscience, 7(1), 1-8.
-
Buljan, V., Graeber, M., Holsinger, D., Brown, D., Hambly, B., Delikatny, E., Vuletic, V., Krebs, X., Tomas, I., Bohorquez-Florez, J., Liu, G., Banati, R. (2017). Calcium-axonemal microtubuli interactions underlie mechanism(s) of primary cilia morphological changes. Journal of Biological Physics, Article in press.
-
Liu, R., Lo, L., Lay, A., Zhao, Y., Ting, K., Robertson, E., Sherrah, A., Jarrah, S., Li, H., Zhou, Z., Hambly, B., Jeremy, R., Bannon, P., Vadas, M., Gamble, J., et al (2017). ARHGAP18 Protects Against Thoracic Aortic Aneurysm Formation by Mitigating the Synthetic and Pro-Inflammatory Smooth Muscle Cell Phenotype. Circulation Research, 121(5), 512-524.