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Honorary Fellow
Dr Mark Fife
Expertise
Avian Immunology, Bioinformatics, Cell Biology, Epidemiology, Gene Regulation, Genetics, Genomics, Innate Immunity, q-PCR, Vaccines

Dr Mark Fife

Dr. Mark Fife is an Honorary Fellow at The Pirbright Institute and Head of Biotechnology at Aviagen. He is a complex-disease geneticist with extensive experience in complex trait analysis (QTL and association studies), candidate gene mapping and molecular biology techniques. He has produced over 45 peer-reviewed publications and book chapters in this area before becoming a group leader at the Institute. 

His work has been the focus of extensive genome-wide and haplotype analysis using web-based SNP selector software that he implemented at Pirbright. This work has culminated in the identification and characterisation of several causal genes for important immune traits in chickens. His current research found a group of related genes called the interferon-inducible transmembrane (IFITM) genes, that are able to prevent viruses from attacking and killing host cells. The aim of his work is to determine the biology and genetic variation of these and similar immune genes in chickens; specifically, the ability of these genes to protect the host against avian viruses. The output of this work will be in identifying specific gene variants that correlate with resistance to a number of avian viruses, thus allowing poultry breeding programmes to select robust chickens, able to fight viral infections.

The research has also revealed that a reduction in chIFITM expression results in an increase in the virus titre in CEFs infected with avian influenza A virus (AIV) H9N2, suggesting that chIFITMs have a functional role in the control of viral infections. The observation may have useful implications in terms of vaccine production. Many vaccines have been produced in embryonated hen eggs or continuous avian cell lines for more than 30 years. However, it is well established that the rate determining step in the manufacture of numerous vaccines is the induction of antiviral immune responses that prevents the replication of vaccine viruses. The aim is to generate chIFITM K/Os using cutting edge genetic approaches such the CRISPR/Cas9 system which will directly target and knock-out chIFITM expression. It is believed that this approach will overcome the rate limiting step in vaccine production, directly resulting in increased vaccine yields and improve the speed at which vaccines can be manufactured.

Dr. Fife has extensive expertise in coordinating multidisciplinary and multi-site projects.  He is an active STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) ambassador which creates opportunities to inspire young people and develop their creativity, problem-solving and employability skills for the UK's future competitiveness.

He now works as Head of Biotechnology for Aviagen Ltd.

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