MARGARITI LAB - Key Persons


Amanda Boyle

Job Titles:
  • Student
I am a biochemistry Msci student working with Dr. Margariti and her team. My project focuses on the generation of blood vessel organoids. Specifically, the generation of blood vessel organoids from human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) from diabetic and non-diabetic patients. These organoids will be compared to identify the underlying mechanisms of cardiovascular disease and diabetes that cause vascular dysfunction. Staining and confocal microscopy will be used to determine the structural differences between healthy and diabetic. Different molecular techniques e.g., RT-PCR and NOS assay will be used to determine any differences in gene expression and notable signalling pathways. This new information will allow for the development of new therapies for the treatment of diabetes and cardiovascular disease.

Andrew Yacoub

Job Titles:
  • Student
I am a PhD student with advanced expertise accumulated along my studies of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs), regenerative medicine and pharmacy. The aim of my research is to use the state-of-the-art technology "Organoids" derived from patient-specific stem cells to have better understanding of the underlying mechanisms of how cardiovascular diseases arise in diabetic patients. I focus on differentiating iPSCs to endothelial cells which are the lining cells of the blood vessels, and to screen the patient-specific organoids with potential drugs within the personalised medicine approach. My ultimate goal is to contribute to find one of the novel therapies for diabetic and cardiovascular patients.

Anna Korelidou

Job Titles:
  • Student
I am a molecular biologist with experience in clinical laboratory analysis and microbiology. Here, I am an Early Career Researcher within the CITI-GENS Marie Skłodowska-Curie PhD programme, working with Professor Margariti as my second supervisor. My interest is in 3D printing technology for biomedical applications using biocompatible and biodegradable polymers. My focus is on implantable devices loaded with cells, drugs and growth factors to improve the therapeutic outcome of cardiovascular diseases. My project is an interdisciplinary and intersectoral approach via tissue engineering combined with material sciences, additive manufacturing and the incorporation of a pharmaceutical company.

Catherine Fleming

Job Titles:
  • Student
I am a final year biomedical science BSc student conducting my research project with the Margariti team. My aims are to identify plausible mechanisms by which the RNA-binding protein QKI-7 mediates endothelial dysfunction, and to explore if, and how, three candidate drugs may downregulate QKI-7 expression. I am currently working with literature and clinical trial data to support in vitro assessments of these drugs.

Celine Chan

Job Titles:
  • Student
I am a Biomedical Science undergraduate student currently undertaking my final year research project with the Margariti team. My project focuses on the RNA binding protein QKI-7 and the mechanisms behind its role in diabetic vasculopathy. I work with bioinformatic tools to identify binding sites of QKI-7 bound RNAs, determined by RNA immunoprecipitation sequencing (RIP-Seq) analysis, to reveal the signalling pathways affected by QKI-7 in diabetes-associated endothelial dysfunction.

Clare-Ann Nelson

Job Titles:
  • Student
I am a Masters Student with a Microbiology background currently studying under Dr. Andriana Margariti's supervision. My project focuses on the investigation of vascular organoids as a disease model for cardiovascular disease and diabetes. I am studying the effects of mitochondrial and exosome dysfunction in vascular disease states and their contribution to disease progression. The aim of this project is to identify possible therapeutic targets to alleviate the burden of vascular disease on our society.

Dr. Andriana Margariti

Job Titles:
  • Group Leader
  • Professor
Andriana Margariti Professor of Vascular and Regenerative Medicine group leader a.Margariti@qub.ac.uk To know more about me Professor Margariti has developed significant expertise in stem cell biology, with particular emphasis on cell reprogramming, chromatin remodelling, cell signalling and endothelial cell biology. She had received her postdoctoral training in the Cardiovascular Division of the BHF Centre of Excellence at King's College London (KCL). In 2013 Prof Margariti was appointed as a Lecturer in the Centre for Experimental Medicine (CEM), in Queen's University Belfast (QUB). She has received a BBSRC New Investigator award to study the mechanisms of endothelial cell direct reprogramming and a range of BHF grants to study the endothelial cell dysfunction. Prof Margariti and her team have worked extensively to elucidate the underlying mechanism of endothelial cell reprogramming and they have generated functional endothelial cells based on a fully defined environment. In 2017 Margariti's Laboratory demonstrated how the RNA binding protein QKI-5 is a key player on EC reprogramming inducing neovascularisation and angiogenesis while more recently they have shown the mechanism whereby FSTL3 and ESM1 enhances the function of iPS-ECs. In 2019, the team showed that QKI-6 is implicated in vascular smooth muscle differentiation, and, by combining QKI-5 and QKI-6, functional blood vessels were generated. Importantly, a breakthrough study in her lab (Yang et al., Nature Communications, 2020) is showing that targeting QKI-7 expression in vivo restores EC function in diabetes. By investing on their unique expertise on cell reprogramming and iPS cell technologies, Prof Margariti's team has developed patient-specific cells lines of diabetes (diabetic patient-specific iPS cell lines in a petri dish) based on fast and highly efficient approaches (Vilà González et al, Diabetes, 2020). These cell lines are now valuable tools to study the underlying causes and mechanisms of the pathogenesis of EC dysfunction, to develop human blood vessel organoids and generate new knowledge, biomarkers of diabetes and effective therapies. Prof Margariti was promoted to Senior Lecturer in 2017, and to Professor in Vascular and Regenerative Medicine in 2020. Prof Margariti is also leading the iPS cell facilities in the Wellcome-Wolfson Institute for Experimental Medicine (WWIEM) in QUB, where iPS cells are generated and differentiated towards vascular cells (including ECs, Smooth Muscle Cells and Pericytes), Cardiomyocytes, Neurons, Macrophages, Retina pigment epithelial cells and many other cell types, including blood vessels organoids and Kidney organoids.

Gabriel Pena Machado

Job Titles:
  • Science

Garrett Carney

Job Titles:
  • Student
I am a PhD Researcher whose expertise lie within Stem Cells and their applications in investigating the pathogenesis behind Maculopathies. From completing my master's project with Professor Margariti, I gained expertise in induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs); from their derivation from a small volume of blood, to their culture and maintenance, to their subsequent differentiation. I was heavily involved in the troubleshooting and development of our state-of-the-art Blood Vessel Organoid system alongside my colleague and highly faceted research fellow, Dr. Hojjat Naderi-Meshkin. In Maculopathies, the Retinal Pigment Epithelium (RPE) are the main homeostatic regulatory cells which become degenerative and initiate a cascade of events which can compromise vision by the dysregulation of other cell types within the macula and choroid. Therefore, with my experience and expertise, my PhD research has lent me to focus on developing a bone fide model of Maculopathies in vitro. Currently I am developing patient specific iPSC-RPE which will be stringently characterised and functionally assessed to ensure they are exemplar. Once content with this in vitro model; iPSCs will be derived from patients suffering of maculopathies and subsequently differentiated to iPSC-RPE. These iPSC-RPE will then be subjected to characterisation, functionality testing, RNA-Seq and Metabolomics to help identify the key mediators in the early development of Maculopathies.

Hojjat Naderi-Meshkin

Job Titles:
  • Research Fellow

Jenna Fulton

Job Titles:
  • Student
I am a MSc Experimental Medicine student with a particular interest in induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) and regenerative medicine in the field of cardiovascular and diabetes research. The main focus of my project is to generate vascular organoids derived from patient-specific iPSCs. These remarkable 3D models of the vasculature will be compared to that of a non-diabetic individual to elucidate the key underlaying mechanisms that drive vascular dysfunction in diabetic patients. Using a range of molecular techniques such as RT-PCR and confocal microscopy, this will highlight any differences in gene and marker expression, key signalling pathways and specific cell-cell interactions, paying particular attention to endothelial cell-pericyte crosstalk. This newfound molecular knowledge will be useful in drug screening to discover new, targeted therapies for diabetic and cardiovascular disease patients.

Magdalini Eleftheriadou

Job Titles:
  • Research Fellow

Michael Breen

Job Titles:
  • Nuffield Research Placement ) 2017

Rebekah Craig

Job Titles:
  • Nuffield Research Placement ) 2014

Sebastian de Nys Cortina

Job Titles:
  • Student

Sophia Kelaini

Job Titles:
  • Research Fellow

Victoria Cornelius

Job Titles:
  • Student
I am a current PhD student with a particular interest in induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) and regenerative medicine in the field of cardiovascular and diabetes research. The main focus of my research is to decipher the pathogenic role of the RNA-binding protein Quaking (QKI) in diabetic endothelial dysfunction using iPSC technologies to derive physiological disease models from diabetic donors. Furthermore, I am interested in isolating a drug capable of targeting QKI to alleviate the associated vascular complications. In addition, I am currently performing collaborative work using 3D printing to develop medicated vascular prosthesis.