Lindsay Wu
UNSW Sydney, NSW, Australia
A/Prof. Lindsay Wu is a metabolic biochemist whose lab studies the molecular and metabolic mechanisms that underlie biological ageing, with a focus on applications for female fertility. A key interest for the lab is the role of altered metabolism as a cause of reproductive ageing, including unexpected mechanisms for the biosynthesis of the redox cofactor nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+). His group previously showed that declining levels of this cofactor are a reversible cause of reproductive ageing in mice, resulting in an undergoing a prospective clinical trial in IVF patients, and other ongoing research includes its applications in chemotherapy induced infertility and late-life female health. He is an is an American Federation for Aging Research (AFAR) / Hevolution Investigator, and leads an active research team at UNSW Sydney.
Presentations this author is a contributor to:
SIRT2 over-expression reverses ageing-induced decline in oocyte quality (#33)
10:45 AM
Dave R Listijono
SRB - Oozoa Award Finalists
NAD+ availability is critical for meiotic maturation in mouse oocytes (#96)
11:30 AM
Laurin Lau
SRB Orals - Oocyte Biology
The pan-sirtuin inhibitor, nicotinamide, disrupts the meiosis I-to-meiosis II transition in mouse oocytes (#305)
5:00 PM
Angelique Riepsamen
SRB Poster Session: Oocyte/Follicle development/Corpus luteum
ESA-SRB 2015*