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Gabriella Stuart is a Research Technician in the Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, School of Biomedical Sciences, Division of Health Sciences at the University of Otago. She holds an MSc and her research interests include angiogenesis, inflammation, wound healing, and therapeutics. The Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology studies the effects of drugs on biological systems from the molecular level to patient studies and examines the harmful effects of chemicals, with research aimed at developing drugs to treat cancer, diabetes, neurological conditions, and heart disease.
Stuart is a co-author on 23 publications, with her work cited 863 times according to ResearchGate. Key publications include "Isolation and characterisation of two epithelial-like cell lines from the gills of Chrysophrys auratus (Australasian snapper) and Oncorhynchus tshawytscha (Chinook salmon) and their use in aquatic toxicology" (2024), "Methods to Assess Chemokine Binding and Anti-chemotactic Activity of Virus Proteins" (2023), "Parapoxvirus Interleukin-10 Homologues Vary in Their Receptor Binding, Anti-Inflammatory, and Stimulatory Activities" (2022), "Skin antigen-presenting cells and wound healing: New knowledge gained and challenges encountered using mouse depletion models" (2021), "Depletion of langerin+ cells enhances cutaneous wound healing" (2020), "Orf Virus IL-10 and VEGF-E Act Synergistically to Enhance Healing of Cutaneous Wounds in Mice" (2020), "Anti-fibrotic Actions of Equine Interleukin-10 on Transforming Growth Factor-Beta1-Stimulated Dermal Fibroblasts Isolated From Limbs of Horses" (2020), "The Cutaneous Inflammatory Response to Thermal Burn Injury in a Murine Model" (2019), and "Treatment of limb wounds of horses with orf virus IL-10 and VEGF-E accelerates resolution of exuberant granulation tissue, but does not prevent its development" (2018). These publications cover topics such as virus-derived protein therapeutics, inflammatory responses, cell lines for toxicology, and models of wound healing.

Photo by Osarugue Igbinoba on Unsplash
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