Rebecca Robker
University of Adelaide, SA, Australia
- This delegate is presenting an abstract at this event.
Prof Rebecca Robker is a biomedical scientist whose vision is to improve health of women and children by discovering how the ovary generates oocytes and then releases them for fertilisation and the creation of a new individual. She is Head of Reproduction and Development at the University of Adelaide, and Theme Leader of Early Origins of Health within the Robinson Research Institute. Her team has uncovered cellular mechanisms by which obesity impairs female fertility by identifying how lipid metabolism and lipid excess affect ovulation and early embryo development. She has characterized immune cells in adipose tissue and the ovary and shed light on their roles in ovarian fibrosis that occurs with obesity and aging. Currently her team is identifying therapeutic modalities to protect embryogenesis from the effects of obesity and bring these into use in reproductive medicine.
Presentations this author is a contributor to:
Nuclear progesterone receptor-regulated gene networks in the oviduct: Potential mediators of progesterone action on oviductal transport. (#209)
5:00 PM
Lisa K Akison
SRB Poster Session - Gene regulation
Haemoglobin: A gas transport molecule lost during oocyte in vitro maturation (IVM). (#152)
9:30 AM
Hannah M Brown
SRB Orals - Assisted Reproductive Technologies and Stem Cells
Addition of an ER-stress inhibitor overcomes the compromised development of cow COCs matured in vitro with elevated fatty acids (#226)
5:00 PM
Melanie L Sutton-McDowall
SRB Poster Session - Oocyte/blastocyst/embryo
Exposure to high glucose and lipid impairs oocyte developmental competence in association with ER stress and O-GlcNAcylation (#236)
5:00 PM
Siew L Wong
SRB Poster Session - Oocyte/blastocyst/embryo
Reversing endoplasmic reticulum stress restores oocyte mitochondrial activity and embryo development in obese mice. (#77)
4:30 PM
Linda L Wu
SRB Symposium 2 - Mitochondria: powering gametes and embryos