The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic obviated the importance of having rapid vaccine development strategies in place to limit the suffering and societal burden of infectious diseases, and has subsequently led to a rapid increase in the development of new mRNA vaccines for a variety of indications.
However, whilst our understanding of the molecular processes underpinning the efficacy of these therapeutics continues to evolve, for instance via the discovery and characterisation of new immune cell specific receptors and functions, the landscape of experimental techniques routinely employed to study the spatiotemporal dynamics of the immune system and the cellular responses to mRNA therapeutics have remained largely unchanged since the late 20th century.
This talk will present recent work conducted by the team in Brisbane, which utilizes a variety of PET tracers to investigate the spatiotemporal dynamics of mRNA immunization. These include protein translation, innate immune cell infiltration, dissemination into the lymphatic system, and the subsequent activity of immune effector cells. The team has demonstrated that PET-CT enables longitudinal imaging of molecular processes essential for developing effective immune responses, such as antigen trafficking and immune cell activation, thereby enhancing the understanding of how mRNA vaccines exert their biological effects and providing a platform for rapid formulation evaluation.
Thursday, 23 October 2025
16:00 Australian Eastern Standard Time (UTC+10)
8:00 Central European Summer Time (UTC+2)
This session is ideal for researchers, clinicians, and professionals in immunology, molecular imaging, and vaccine development who are interested in cutting-edge tools for studying immune responses.
Dr. James Humphries
Postdoctoral researcher based at the University of Queensland
Dr. James Humphries is a postdoctoral researcher based at the University of Queensland and affiliate research fellow within the ARC Research Hub for Advanced Manufacture of Targeted Radiopharmaceuticals. His research focus is on developing PET and SPECT molecular imaging agents to understand complex biological systems and employing these as tools that can be used to longitudinally monitor immunologically derived responses to a range of therapeutics, including mRNA vaccines and radiopharmaceuticals.
Dr. Anne Chen
Application Scientist at Bruker APAC
Dr. Anne Chen is an Application Scientist at Bruker APAC, specializing in nuclear molecular imaging with over 20 years of experience in oncology and preclinical imaging. She has extensive expertise in PET-CT, SPECT-CT, and quantitative analysis with PMOD, and at Bruker she supports researchers across APAC in advancing translational studies through optimized preclinical imaging solutions.