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Alan Munro (immunologist)

Alan Munro
Born 1937
Madras, India
Alma mater University of Cambridge
Doctoral advisor Asher Korner
Doctoral students Philippa Marrack
Known for autoimmune system

Alan James Munro (born 19 February 1937) is a British immunologist and entrepreneur.

Munro was educated at the Edinburgh Academy. He attended the University of Cambridge, specialising in biochemistry. His PhD in the area of protein synthesis was supervised by Asher Korner at the Department of Biochemistry (1964), and his early posts were in this department (1963–68). His collaborators during this period include Tim Hunt.

He joined the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge in 1968 to set up a cellular immunology programme. In 1971, he joined the Immunology Division of the Department of Pathology at the University of Cambridge. He spent sabbatical years at the Salk Institute, La Jolla, USA (1965–66) and University of Leiden, the Netherlands (1976–77). He became acting head of the Pathology Department in 1987.

His research interests during this period included the regulation of the immune response and the generation of therapeutic antibodies. He was instrumental in the early investigation of the Campath series of antibodies, which eventually resulted in the cancer treatment, alemtuzumab.

In 1988, Munro spent a sabbatical year working in the biotechnology company Celltech. He left the university in 1989 to co-found the highly successful Cambridge-based biotechnology company Immunology Ltd, later renamed Cantab Pharmaceuticals plc (now part of Celtic Pharma), specialising in therapeutic vaccines and immunotherapy, and he acted as its scientific director until 1995. He was also Chairman of Lorantis Ltd, another Cambridge-based immunology company.


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