We study membrane proteins and how they control signalling and cellular responses to stress. These processes are implicated in multiple human diseases including cancer, neurodegeneration, inflammation and infection so, although we mostly do discovery science, our work has wide potential medical relevance, and we are also interested in the translational opportunities.
Our particular focus is the rhomboid-like superfamily. We were the first to discover rhomboids, and we proved that they were novel intramembrane proteases, conserved across evolution, and that they controlled growth factor signalling. Since then, the rhomboids have been implicated in many biological processes including, for example, growth factor activation, neurodegeneration, mitochondrial function, host cell invasion by parasites and bacterial physiology.
More recently we have become interested in the much wider superfamily of rhomboid-like proteins, the majority of which are not proteases. Of these non-protease rhomboid-like proteins, we especially focus on the iRhoms, which we discovered to be primary regulators of inflammation.
Our experimental approaches include genetics, cell biology, biochemistry and structural biology, mainly in mammalian cells but also with a variety of model systems. Although our main effort is aimed at understanding fundamental biology of the rhomboid-like superfamily, we are also actively pursuing the potential medical and translational significance of our basic discoveries.
Freeman lab
Investigating the interface between membrane proteins, the cell biology of signalling, and mechanisms of human disease
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