Dr Maud Dumoux
Maud has a PhD in immunology from Paris 7 Diderot. Prior to working at the Franklin, she worked at the Institute of Structural and Molecular Biology and Diamond light source. She is interested in the development of imaging modalities and host pathogen interactions.
Large Volume Tomography
High resolution large volume tomography with electron microscopy has the potential to transform our understanding of life, by linking the atomic and molecular structure of protein complexes in their biological context – the cell.
Biochemical Microscopy for imaging across Molecular Scales
Developing a transformative cryogenic 3D biochemical microscope, harnessing the power of high-resolution electron microscopy and mass spectrometry imaging
Understanding how Chlamydia adapts to life inside and outside host cells
We are studying how Chlamydia changes form to infect and survive in the body. Using advanced imaging and protein analysis, we track how its internal machinery adapts.
Visualising HIV entry one virus at a time
This project explores how HIV enters human cells by studying proteins on the virus surface and how they work together. Using advanced imaging, we observe how these proteins move and cluster.