Dr Candice Quin

Dr Candice Quin
Dr Candice Quin
Dr Candice Quin

Lecturer

Accepting PhDs

About
Office Address
6.14 Institute of Medical Sciences
Foresterhill Campus
Ashgrove Road West
AB25 2ZD

View on Map

School/Department
School of Medicine, Medical Sciences and Nutrition
Research

Research Overview

Dr. Quin aims to prevent the pathogenesis of frailty in older adults, providing them with more years of healthy, independent living. Frailty is a state of increased vulnerability to stressors including infections (e.g. pneumonia) and inflammatory diseases (e.g. cardiovascular disease, myelodysplastic syndrome [MDS], diabetes), which develops as a consequence of age-related decline in multiple systems, including the immune system. Using techniques such as flow cytometry, multi-omic approaches and gnotobiotics, Dr. Quin studies mechanisms by which gut microbiota shape the immune and epigenetic landscape to affect the development of frailty and ageing health conditions.

Find out more: https://www.quinlab.co.uk/lab/

Research Areas

Accepting PhDs

I am currently accepting PhDs in Biomedical Sciences.


Please get in touch if you would like to discuss your research ideas further.

Biomedical Sciences

Accepting PhDs

Research Specialisms

  • Gerontology
  • Immunology
  • Medical Microbiology
  • Metabolic Biochemistry
  • Bioinformatics

Our research specialisms are based on the Higher Education Classification of Subjects (HECoS) which is HESA open data, published under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence.

Current Research

Major projects in the Quin lab include:

  • Understanding the origins of healthy and unhealthy ageing (e.g. frailty) 
  • Uncovering how the ageing gut microbiome contributes to age-related immune remodeling 
  • Elucidating how changes in the gut microbiome impact host epigenomics
  • Developing novel strategies to prevent age-related conditions (pneumonia, blood cancers, cardiovascular disease)

Past Research

Throughout my academic career, I have been fascinated with factors contributing to health across the life-course. I completed my Ph.D. in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at the University of British Columbia under the supervision of Dr. Deanna Gibson. My doctoral training focused on how neonatal environmental exposures, such as diet, set up the ageing trajectory and alter systemic inflammation into adulthood through gut-microbe interactions. Here, I gained valuable insights into how different fat types (saturated, monounsaturated etc.) contribute to inflammation directly and through the microbiome. I then joined Dr. Dawn Bowdish’s research group at McMaster University as a postdoctoral researcher. In this position, I addressed important topics in immunology including the impact of the ageing microenvironment on haematopoiesis and epigenetic reprogramming of monocytes, the cellular and molecular mechanisms of impaired anti-pneumococcal immunity with age, and the role of inflammation in immunosenescence.

Publications

Page 1 of 2 Results 1 to 10 of 19

  • Neutrophil-mediated innate immune resistance to bacterial pneumonia is dependent on Tet2 function

    Quin, C., DeJong, E. N., Cook, E. K., Luo, Y. Z., Vlasschaert, C., Sadh, S., McNaughton, A. J., buttigieg, M. M., Breznik, J. A., Kennedy, A. E., Zhao, K., Mewburn, J., Dunham-Snary, K. J., Hindmarch, C. C., Bick, A. G., Archer, S. L., Rauh, M. J., Bowdish, D. M.
    The Journal of Clinical Investigation, vol. 134, no. 11, e171002
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Maternal adaptations in mouse lactation are vulnerable to diet-induced excess adiposity

    Breznik, J. A., Ribeiro, T. A., Yeo, E., Kennelly, B. K. E., Wang, X., Quin, C., Cowbrough, B., Verdú, E. F., Bowdish, D. M. E., Sloboda, D. M.
    Working Papers: Preprint Papers
  • Fasting increases microbiome-based colonization resistance and reduces host inflammatory responses during an enteric bacterial infection.

    Graef, F. A., Celiberto, L., Allaire, J., Kuan, M. T., Bosman, E., Crowley, S., Yang, H., Chan, J., Stahl, M., Yu, H., Quin, C., Gibson, D., Verdu, E., Jacobson, K., Vallance, B.
    PLoS Pathogens, vol. 17, no. 8, e1009719
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Maternal Intake of Dietary Fat Pre‐Programs Offspring's Gut Ecosystem Altering Colonization Resistance and Immunity to Infectious Colitis in Mice

    Quin, C., Ghosh, S., Dai, C., Barnett, J. A., Garner, A. M., Yoo, R. K. H., Zandberg, W. F., Botta, A., Gorzelak, M. A., Gibson, D. L.
    Molecular Nutrition & Food Research, vol. 65, no. 6, 2000635
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Early life environmental exposures have a minor impact on the gut ecosystem following a natural birth.

    Tasnim, N., Quin, C., Gill, S. K., Dai, C., Hart, M., Gibson, D. L.
    Gut Microbes, vol. 13, no. 1, 1875797
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Physical Activity Shapes the Intestinal Microbiome and Immunity of Healthy Mice but Has No Protective Effects against Colitis in MUC2-/- Mice.

    Estaki, M., Morck, D., Ghosh, S., Quin, C., Pither, J., Barnett, J., Gill, S. K., Gibson, D. L.
    mSystems, vol. 5, no. 5
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Human behavior, not race or geography, is the strongest predictor of microbial succession in the gut bacteriome of infants.

    Quin, C., Gibson, D. L.
    Gut Microbes, vol. 11, no. 5, pp. 1143-1171
    Contributions to Journals: Review articles
  • Fish oil supplementation reduces maternal defensive inflammation and predicts a gut bacteriome with reduced immune priming capacity in infants.

    Quin, C., Vollman, D., Ghosh, S., Haskey, N., Estaki, M., Pither, J., Barnett, J., Jay, M., Birnie, B., Gibson, D. L.
    The ISME Journal, vol. 14, no. 8, pp. 2090-2104
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Physical activity shapes the intestinal microbiome and immunity of healthy mice but has no protective effects against colitis in MUC2-/- mice

    Estaki, M., Morck, D. W., Quin, C., Pither, J., Barnett, J. A., Gill, S. K., Gibson, D. L.
    Working Papers: Preprint Papers
  • Influence of sulfonated and diet-derived human milk oligosaccharides on the infant microbiome and immune markers.

    Quin, C., Vicaretti, S., Mohtarudin, N., Garner, A., Vollman, D., Gibson, D. L., Zandberg, W.
    The Journal of Biological Chemistry, vol. 295, no. 12
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
Show 10 | 25 | 50 | 100 results per page

Refine

Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings

Contributions to Journals

Working Papers