Skip to main content
Global main menu
Study
Study
Close menu
Skip to next tab
Areas of study
Foundation courses
Biological and biomedical sciences
Business and management
Chemical sciences
Comparative literature
Computer and data science
Dentistry
Drama
Economics and finance
Engineering
English
Environmental Science
Film studies
Geography
Global Development
Global and Public Health
History
Law
Liberal arts
Linguistics
Materials science
Mathematics
Medicine
Modern languages and cultures
Physics and astronomy
Politics and international relations
Psychology
Study at Queen Mary
Undergraduate study
Postgraduate study
Online study
International students
Short courses
Summer school
A-Z undergraduate courses
A-Z postgraduate taught courses
A-Z PhD subjects
Degree Apprenticeships
Experience Queen Mary
Why Queen Mary?
Accommodation
City campuses
Open days
Student life
The London advantage
Explore our campuses
About
About
Close menu
Skip to next tab
About home
Giving
Welcome
How to find us
Calendar
Our history
Alumni
Local community
Global
Facts and figures
Freedom of information
Who's who
Sustainability
Arts and Culture
The Medical College of Saint Bartholomew’s Hospital Trust
Equality, Diversity and Inclusion
Volunteering
Education and the student experience
Active Curriculum for Excellence
Research
Research
Close menu
Skip to next tab
Research and Innovation
Research home
Strategy, support and guidance
Research highways
Featured research
Facilities and resources
Publications
Postgraduate research degrees
News
Research impact
Research culture
Research by faculties and centres
Humanities and Social Sciences
Medicine and Dentistry
Science and Engineering
Collaborations and partnerships
Collaborate with us
Contact us
Find an expert
Search
Search Queen Mary University London website
Close
Home
Back to home
Study
Areas of study
Foundation courses
Biological and biomedical sciences
Business and management
Chemical sciences
Comparative literature
Computer and data science
Dentistry
Drama
Economics and finance
Engineering
English
Environmental Science
Film studies
Geography
Global Development
Global and Public Health
History
Law
Liberal arts
Linguistics
Materials science
Mathematics
Medicine
Modern languages and cultures
Physics and astronomy
Politics and international relations
Psychology
Study at Queen Mary
Undergraduate study
Postgraduate study
Online study
International students
Short courses
Summer school
A-Z undergraduate courses
A-Z postgraduate taught courses
A-Z PhD subjects
Degree Apprenticeships
Experience Queen Mary
Why Queen Mary?
Accommodation
City campuses
Open Days
Student life
The London advantage
Explore our campuses
About
About home
Giving
Welcome
How to find us
Calendar
Our history
Alumni
Local community
Global
Facts and figures
Freedom of information
Who's who
Sustainability
Arts and Culture
The Medical College of Saint Bartholomew’s Hospital Trust
Equality, Diversity and Inclusion
Volunteering
Education and the student experience
Active Curriculum for Excellence
Research
Research and Innovation
Research home
Strategy, support and guidance
Research highways
Featured research
Facilities and resources
Publications
Postgraduate research degrees
News
Research impact
Research culture
Research by faculties and centres
Humanities and Social Sciences
Medicine and Dentistry
Science and Engineering
Collaborations and partnerships
Collaborate with us
Contact us
Events
Events
Section home
Section navigation
Upcoming Events
Digital Library
Past events
Resources we offer
Visitor information
Queen Mary presents
Queen Mary University of London
Events
Past events
2018
Items
Wednesday Night Fever
16 May 2018
Time: 7:00 - 10:00pm
Venue: The Crown Tavern 43 Clerkenwell Green, London EC1R 0EG
Our immune system is the body’s army of defence against viruses and bacteria. However under some conditions, these guardians switch battle sides and attack our own body. Tonight, Antal discusses how a particular gene can both protect against and contribute to immune diseases. Whilst Tim and Sophie deliberate on the severe complications caused by the immune system after surgery.
How ancestry can shape our immunity
Professor Antal Rot
(Wellcome Trust Investigator and Arthritis Research UK Chair in Inflammation Sciences)
Genetically all humans are 99.9% identical. However, a recent study described more than 80 million individual human gene signatures. Some of these genetic traits characterise people of defined ethnicities, inhabiting one country only, or one continent. Some variants have been selected by evolution as they provided protection from locally prevalent endemic diseases. I will speak about a gene variant that originates and is hugely widespread in Africa. This unique "African" gene variant protects its bearers from malaria but predisposes them later in life for major chronic diseases.
Surgery: a double-edged scalpel?
Dr Tim Jones and Dr Sophie Walker
(Clinical Research Fellow and Clinical Research Assistant, Queen Mary University of London )
Surgery has the potential to relieve suffering and provide cure from serious diseases such as cancer. Surgery has evolved from the barber-surgeons of medieval times. Patients are changing too and sicker people have operations than before. Despite medical advances, patients are still suffering from life-threatening complications after surgery, such as infections and organ failure. The act of surgery itself can contribute to the development of complications even with optimal surgical technique. We will discuss how these complications arise and what might be done in future to prevent them.
Back to top