Professor Andrew Sinclair is Deputy Director of the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute and a Professor in Translational Genomics in the Dept. of Paediatrics at the University of Melbourne.
He led a National Health & Medical Research Council Program focusing on the molecular genetics of gonad development and its impact on patients with differences of sex development (DSD). In this capacity he has forged formal linkages with both national and international clinicians, discovered new genes, developed a rapid genomic sequencing panel assay (now in clinical use) that has dramatically improved rates of diagnosis. Recently, he has differentiated human iPS (stem cells) into testis cell lineages for functional analysis of DSD patient variants.
As a Board Director of the Victorian Clinical Genetics Service he has had oversight for implementing a range of genomics applications into clinical service provision, in particular, clinically accredited exomes and whole genomes. He is one of the leaders of the Melbourne Genomics Health Alliance and a lead architect of the Australian Genomics Health Alliance both of which aim to implement genomics into the healthcare system to improve patient outcomes. He has received numerous national and international awards and in 2015 was elected a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Health and Medical Sciences.
Professor Andrew Sinclair is Deputy Director of the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute and a Professor in Translational Genomics in the Dept. of Paediatrics at the University of Melbourne.
He led a National Health & Medical Research Council...
Professor Andrew Sinclair is Deputy Director of the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute and a Professor in Translational Genomics in the Dept. of Paediatrics at the University of Melbourne.
He led a National Health & Medical Research Council Program focusing on the molecular genetics of gonad development and its impact on patients with differences of sex development (DSD). In this capacity he has forged formal linkages with both national and international clinicians, discovered new genes, developed a rapid genomic sequencing panel assay (now in clinical use) that has dramatically improved rates of diagnosis. Recently, he has differentiated human iPS (stem cells) into testis cell lineages for functional analysis of DSD patient variants.
As a Board Director of the Victorian Clinical Genetics Service he has had oversight for implementing a range of genomics applications into clinical service provision, in particular, clinically accredited exomes and whole genomes. He is one of the leaders of the Melbourne Genomics Health Alliance and a lead architect of the Australian Genomics Health Alliance both of which aim to implement genomics into the healthcare system to improve patient outcomes. He has received numerous national and international awards and in 2015 was elected a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Health and Medical Sciences.
Top Publications
Beverdam, A, Svingen, T, Bagheri-Fam, S, Bernard, P, McClive, P, Robson, M, Khojasteh, MB, Salehi, M, Sinclair, AH, Harley, VR, et al.
Sox9-dependent expression of Gstm6 in Sertoli cells during testis development in mice..
Reproduction
137(3)
:
481 -486
2009
view publication
Combes, AN, Wilhelm, D, Davidson, T, Dejana, E, Harley, V, Sinclair, A, Koopman, P.
Endothelial cell migration directs testis cord formation..
Dev Biol
326(1)
:
112 -120
2009
view publication
Sinclair, A.
Design and Optimization of Manufacturing.
263 -291
2009
view publication
Western, P, Van Den Bergen, J, Miles, D, Ralli, R, Sinclair, A.
002. REGULATION OF PLURIPOTENCY AND CELL CYCLE IN FETAL GERM CELLS.
Reproduction Fertility and Development
21(9)
:
2
2009
view publication
Smith, CA, Roeszler, KN, Sinclair, AH.
Genetic evidence against a role for W-linked histidine triad nucleotide binding protein (HINTW) in avian sex determination..
Int J Dev Biol
53(1)
:
59 -67
2009
view publication