Professor Mark Vickers

Professor Mark Vickers
Professor Mark Vickers
Professor Mark Vickers

MBChB MRCP DM FRCPath

Chair in Applied Medicine (Clin)

About
Email Address
m.a.vickers@abdn.ac.uk
Telephone Number
+44 (0)1224 272401
Office Address

1. Room 3:25, Institute of Medical Sciences

2. Blood Transfusion Centre, Foresterhill Road, Aberdeen AB25 2ZW

School/Department
School of Medicine, Medical Sciences and Nutrition

Biography

I graduated from Oxford Medical School in 1983, having completed a Biochemistry Part II at Cambridge. After general medical jobs in London, I worked with Doug Higgs on genes surrounding the alpha-globin gene cluster. I then trained in clinical Haematology at the Hammersmith, Reading and John Radcliffe Hospitals (1990–1996). I moved to Aberdeen in 1996 and was promoted to Professor in the section of Applied Medicine in 2008. I took over directorship of the Academic Transfusion Medicine Unit in 2010.

External Memberships

Member of Royal College of Physicians

Fellow of Royal College of Pathologists

British Society for Haematology

 

Research

Research Overview

My main current interest is in how cells are recognised as being damaged by phagocytes, using red blood cells as the main model system. Our work has implicated unusual glycosylation motifs as being key to the process and are of particular relevance to the mechanism of haemolysis in sickle cell disease and malaria. The mechanism gives insight into splenic function, notably susceptibility to pneumococcal infection. I have interests in cellular immunotherapy, including the use of blood donor derived cytotoxic lymphocytes to treat post-transplant lympoproliferative disease and COVID-19. I am supervising PhD students developing innate immunotherapeutic reagents to treat cancers. I am also involved in collection and use of convalescent plasma for COVID-19.My main current interest is in how cells are recognised as being damaged by phagocytes, using red blood cells as the main model system. Our work has implicated unusual glycosylation motifs as being key to the process and are of particular relevance to the mechanism of haemolysis in sickle cell disease and malaria.  The mechanism gives insight into splenic function, notably susceptibility to pneumococcal infection.  I have interests in cellular immunotherapy, including the use of blood donor derived cytotoxic lymphocytes to treat post-transplant lympoproliferative disease and COVID-19.  I am supervising PhD students developing innate immunotherapeutic reagents to treat cancers.  I am also involved in collection and use of convalescent plasma for COVID-19.

 

Knowledge Exchange

I have given talks about the use of convalescent plasma and T cells to treat COVID-19.

Collaborations

Prof. Alex Rowe, Edinburgh University.

Prof. Stuart Haslam, Imperial College London.

Prof. David Rees, King's College London.

Supervision

Shiva Nickaria, Raquel Ferro, Ellen Main - all working on immunotherapies.

Teaching

Teaching Responsibilities

I organise, and deliver much of, the haematology training in the medical school.  I remain an enthusiastic bedside teacher.  I co-ordinated the third year medical degree 1997-2010.

Publications

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  • Season of infectious mononucleosis as a risk factor for multiple sclerosis: a UK primary care case-control study

    Downham, C., Visser, E., Vickers, M., Counsell, C.
    Multiple Sclerosis and Related Disorders, vol. 17, pp. 103-106
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Effective antigen presentation to helper T cells by human eosinophils

    Farhan, R. K., Vickers, M. A., Ghaemmagham, A. M., Hall, A. M., Barker, R. N., Walsh, G. M.
    Immunology, vol. 149, no. 4, pp. 413-422
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Leukocyte Ig-Like receptor B1 restrains dendritic cell function through increased expression of the NF-κB regulator ABIN1/TNIP1

    Khanolkar, R. C., Kalogeropoulos, M., Lawrie, A., Roghanian, A., Vickers, M. A., Young, N. T.
    Journal of Leukocyte Biology, vol. 100, no. 4, pp. 737-746
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Adoptive immunotherapy for primary immunodeficiency disorders with virus-specific T lymphocytes

    Naik, S., Nicholas, S. K., Martinez, C. A., Leen, A. M., Hanley, P. J., Gottschalk, S. M., Rooney, C. M., Hanson, I. C., Krance, R. A., Shpall, E. J., Cruz, C. R., Amrolia, P., Lucchini, G., Bunin, N., Heimall, J., Klein, O. R., Gennery, A. R., Slatter, M. A., Vickers, M. A., Orange, J. S., Heslop, H. E., Bollard, C. M., Keller, M. D.
    Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, vol. 137, no. 5, pp. 1498-1505
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Intraoperative salvage does not affect expression of markers for erythrophagocytosis

    Chakravarty, P. D., Porter, C., Cao, H., Cairns, L., Moss, M., Duthie, R., Ashcroft, P., Jeffrey, R., Gibson, G., Buchan, K., Erwig, L., Barker, R. N., Vickers, M. A.
    Transfusion Medicine, vol. 26, no. 2, pp. 147-149
    Contributions to Journals: Letters
  • Systematic review and meta-analysis of the sero-epidemiological association between Epstein-Barr virus and rheumatoid arthritis

    Ball, R. J., Avenell, A., Aucott, L., Hanlon, P., Vickers, M. A.
    Arthritis Research & Therapy, vol. 17, pp. 274
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Intraoperative cell salvage may damage erythrocytes as indicated by macrophage uptake

    Chakravarty, P. D., Porter, C., Cao, H., Cairns, L., Barker, R. N., Moss, M., Duthie, R., Jeffrey, R. P., Ashcroft, G. P., Gibson, G., Buchan, K., Erwig, L., Vickers, M. A.
    Annual Meeting of the Society-of-Academic-and-Research-Surgery (SARS(, pp. 31-31
    Contributions to Journals: Abstracts
  • How do immune responses differ against senescent and damaged erythrocytes: profiling sugar and protein changes on the cell surface

    Cao, H., Tampakis, D., Moss, M., Pickford, W. J., Hall, L. S., Crocker, P. R., Erwig, L. P., Vickers, M. A., Barker, R. N.
    Immunology, vol. 143, no. s2, pp. 118-119
    Contributions to Journals: Abstracts
  • Establishment and operation of a Good Manufacturing Practice-compliant allogeneic Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-specific cytotoxic cell bank for the treatment of EBV-associated lymphoproliferative disease

    Vickers, M. A., Wilkie, G. M., Robinson, N., Rivera, N., Haque, T., Crawford, D. H., Barry, J., Fraser, N., Turner, D. M., Robertson, V., Dyer, P., Flanagan, P., Newlands, H. R., Campbell, J., Turner, M.
    British Journal of Haematology, vol. 167, no. 3, pp. 402-410
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Human interleukin-27: wide individual variation in plasma levels and complex inter-relationships with interleukin-17A

    Forrester, M. A., Robertson, L., Bayoumi, N., Keavney, B. D., Barker, R. N., Vickers, M. A.
    Clinical and Experimental Immunology, vol. 178, no. 2, pp. 373-383
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
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