Announcement from the Royal Society of New Zealand
For immediate release:
Tuesday 14 April, 2009
Rutherford Foundation Awards Freemasons Roskill Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship
The Rutherford Foundation of the Royal Society of New Zealand has awarded Dr Nicola Jackson the inaugural Freemasons
Roskill Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship to undertake postdoctoral research at the University of Cambridge.
Nicola will join a team of scientists within the Department of Pathology led by Professor John Trowsdale and Dr Adrian
Kelly, whose research is focused on understanding how pathogens interact with their host’s immune system.
Neville Jordan, President of the Royal Society of New Zealand and Chair of the Board of the Trustees of the Rutherford
Foundation, said “We would like to thank the Freemasons Roskill Foundation for their generous support of this Fellowship
We are delighted to have the opportunity to expand the suite of scholarships and fellowships offered by the Royal
Society of New Zealand Rutherford Foundation.”
Nicola recently completed her PhD in Molecular Medicine and Pathology at the University of Auckland. Under the
supervision of Professor John Fraser, she investigated the antibiotic-resistant superbug, Staphylococcus aureus. She
also collaborated with Professor Ted Baker in the Maurice Wilkins Centre for Molecular Biodiscovery.
The opportunity to work with the Trowsdale/Kelly group in Cambridge will allow Nicola to broaden her interest in
host-pathogen interaction and to apply the knowledge gained from her PhD to another important human pathogen, Salmonella
enterica.
Salmonella is the most common cause of food-borne illness and is a major public health problem. There is currently no
vaccine available and a number of multi-drug resistant strains have been found. Salmonella is a cunning pathogen because
it invades host immune cells, inhibiting their ability to deal with the current infection and prevent future ones.
Nicola intends to investigate how this process works. This will provide important information about Salmonella, and may
ultimately lead to ways of achieving long-term immunity to re-infection.
The sponsor of the new Fellowship is charitable trust, Freemasons Roskill Foundation. Chairman, David Mace, was
enthusiastic in his congratulations for Nicola as an outstanding inaugural winner and said further Fellowships will
follow at Universities such as Edinburgh and Dublin’s Trinity as well as Cambridge.
“Education at all levels is intrinsic to Freemasonry but this fellowship is the pinnacle of our support for young New
Zealanders to make their mark in the world. We hope the Freemasons Fellowship becomes the benchmark for educational
honours in this country. We are very grateful to the Royal Society of New Zealand for their wholehearted endorsement of
our aims and are delighted that the Fellowship is a major part of the new Royal Society Rutherford Foundation’s
portfolio of awards.”
The award will be presented at a function at The University of Auckland on Thursday evening.
ends