Background
Katherine Belov was born in Sydney, Australia in 1973 to Nick and Larissa Belov. Belov grew up in West Ryde, New South Wales and pursued her undergraduate degree at Macquarie University in human genetics.
Katherine Belov was born in Sydney, Australia in 1973 to Nick and Larissa Belov. Belov grew up in West Ryde, New South Wales and pursued her undergraduate degree at Macquarie University in human genetics.
She was persuaded to change from human genetics to animal genetics by Professor Des Cooper who would become her Doctor of Philosophy supervisor, and initially worked on grey kangaroos, but quickly changed to the study of marsupials.
She is a specialist in the research on the cancer which is devastating the Tasmanian devil population. Throughout her career, she has disproved a theory concerning genetic diversity of marsupial immune systems, characterized the South American gray short-tailed opossum"s immune genes, participated in the Platypus Genome Project, led research identifying the properties of platypus venom, and identified the cause of the spread of the Tasmanian devil"s contagious cancer. She challenged a theory by another researcher who believed that marsupials did not have a highly developed immune system and proved that they had sophisticated immune systems comparable to our own.
The research inspired her to enroll in a Phd program on marsupial immunology at Macquarie University.
She earned her Doctor of Philosophy in 2002, and began her postdoctoral work at the Australian Museum with an Australian Research Council Fellowship. In 2004, as part of the team, Belov became one of the primary researchers to sequence the genome of the platypus.
The results, involving the work of over 100 international scientists, were published in Nature in May 2008. Among the findings were that the platypus has unique anti-microbial peptides with broad-spectrum potential for fighting a variety of bacteria and viruses, and possibly staph infections in humans.
Belov"s research continued and she now leads her own team of researchers from the University of Sydney, they began to characterise the platypus venom, which has no antivenom and causes severe pain to humans.
They were able to complete the analysis in 18 months, verifying seven snake-like zinc metalloproteinases, seven toxins similar to the alpha-latrotoxins of black widow spiders, six cysteine-rich secretory proteins (CRISPs) like those found in some lizards and gila monsters, as well as some minor components similar to those of sea anemone venom. In 2007, Belov accepted a lectureship position at the Faculty of Veterinary Science at the University of Sydney and began to focus on the contagious cancer, which started spreading through the Tasmanian devil population in 1996. She proposed that the problem was that devils lack major histocompatibility complex gene diversity.
Belov proved her hypothesis, that devils do not mount an immune response to the cancer because the tumor"s genetic makeup is so similar to their own.
In 2014, she was awarded the Fenner Medal for research in biology from the Australian Academy of Science. In 2016, she was appointed to the new role of Pro-Vice-Chancellor (Global Engagement) at the University of Sydney.
Professor Belov"s new role includes responsibility for managing the development and execution of the University’s global engagement strategy.