Dr Amy Chung

Postdoctoral Fellow
Department of Microbiology and Immunology
University of Melbourne

awchung@unimelb.edu.au

Research Activities

Antibodies are a vital component of the immune response required for protection and control of infectious diseases. However beyond the traditional mechanism of neutralisation of pathogens (inhibition of the pathogen from infecting a cell), antibodies can act as key beacons - instructing the innate immune system on how to attack and eliminate the pathogens. These functional antibodies have been utilised in cancer therapy and growing evidence has demonstrated the importance of these antibodies in the control of several infectious pathogens. My research is focused in understanding the mechanisms behind these functional antibodies, in order to provide insights towards more effective antibody therapies and vaccines against HIV, Mycobacterium Tuberculosis, Influenza and other infectious diseases.

Techniques/Expertise

Immunological Assays
Cell Culture
Flow Cytometry
Surface Plasmon Resonance (Biacore)
Multiplex (Luminex)
Confocal Microscopy
Protein Assays, SDS, Western Blots
PCR, Cloning, DNA purification etc
MATLAB

Disease Models

HIV, Mycobacterium Tuberculosis

Other members with similar research interests

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Dr Bernadette Jones-Freeman

Department of Immunology Monash University SEE FULL PROFILE >

Dr Alison West

Centre for Innate Immunity and Infectious Diseases Hudson Institute of Medical Research SEE FULL PROFILE >

Prof Alex Andrianopoulos

School of BioSciences University of Melbourne SEE FULL PROFILE >

Upcoming Events

  • Jul 30

    VIIN Careers Evening 2025

    Walter and Eliza Hall Institute MORE INFO
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    VIIN Careers Evening 2025

    Walter and Eliza Hall Institute MORE INFO
  • Nov 14

    VIIN Young Investigator Symposium 2025

    Monash Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Parkville MORE INFO