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How is the blood cell population size controlled? Macrophage-like cells are an ancient animal blood cell lineage critically important for development, immunity, and homeostasis. This fellowship seeks

La Trobe University — ARC Future Fellowships
Amount
Up to $872,220
Closes
Thursday 31 December 2026
Status
unknown
Type
open opportunity
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Description

How is the blood cell population size controlled? Macrophage-like cells are an ancient animal blood cell lineage critically important for development, immunity, and homeostasis. This fellowship seeks to reveal the genes and control mechanisms used by animals to achieve an optimally-sized army of these cells - to contain threats for survival upon infection, heal following acute stress exposures, or for development, ongoing maintenance, and repair of wear and tear. By marrying the genetic tractability of the model organism Drosophila and its simple, yet conserved blood cell system, this project will yield new insights into the mechanisms that govern the animal blood cell population. This will benefit our fundamental understanding of how animals maximise their health throughout life.. Scheme: ARC Future Fellowships. Field: 3105 - Genetics. Lead: A/Prof Travis Johnson

Categories
health
Target Recipients
researchersuniversities

Foundations Supporting This Area

Discovery method: arc-grants
Last verified: Monday 2 March 2026
Added: Saturday 28 February 2026