Mark Febbraio
Garvan Institute of Medical Research, NSW, Australia
- This delegate is presenting an abstract at this event.
- Scientist
Professor Mark Febbraio is a Senior Principal Research Fellow of the NHMRC, is the Head of the Cellular and Molecular Metabolism Laboratory and Head of the Division of Diabetes & Metabolism at The Garvan Institute of Medical Research in Sydney, Australia. He is also the CSO of N-Gene Research Laboratories Inc., a USA based Biotechnology Company and the Founder and CSO of the recently incorporated company Kinomedica. His research is focussed on understanding cellular and molecular mechanisms associated with exercise, obesity, type 2 diabetes and cancer and his aim is to develop novel drugs to treat lifestyle related diseases. He has authored over 230 peer reviewed papers in leading journals and has over 25,000 career citations. He has won prizes at international, national and institutional levels including the A K McIntyre Prize for significant contributions to Australian Physiological Science (1999), the Colin I Johnson Lectureship by the High Blood Pressure Research Council of Australia (2006) the ESA/ADS Joint Plenary Lecture (2009), the Sandford Skinner Oration from the University of Melbourne (2011), Eureka Scientific Prize Finalist (2013) and the Kellion Award for the Australian Diabetes Society (2017).
Presentations this author is a contributor to:
Identification of secreted factors linking hepatic steatosis to insulin resistance. (#192)
10:00 AM
Ruth Meex
ADS Basic Orals: Lipids, Cytokines and Glucose Tolerance
Substrains of C57BL/6J mice display altered metabolic traits suggestive of metabolic drift. (#18)
9:30 AM
Darren C Henstridge
ADS Basic Orals: Metabolic Regulation and Exercise
Muscle-specific overexpression of AdipoR1 or AdipoR2 gives rise to differential local and systemic effects. (#240)
2:00 PM
Sahar Keshvari
ADS Basic Poster Discussions - Obesity and its implications
Therapeutic strategies to prevent liver inflammation and fibrosis (#100)
10:00 AM
Mark Febbraio
ADS Basic Symposium: Obesity, Metabolic Stress and Liver Disease