Clare Lloyd Explained

Clare Lloyd
Birth Name:Clare Margaret Lloyd
Thesis Url:https://copac.jisc.ac.uk/id/23218132?style=html
Thesis Title:Mechanisms of nephritis during murine malarial infections
Thesis Year:1991
Fields:Inflammation
Workplaces:Imperial College London
Harvard University
Millennium Pharmaceuticals
Alma Mater:King's College London (PhD)

Clare Margaret Lloyd is a Professor of Medicine and Vice Dean for Institutional Affairs at Imperial College London. She investigates allergic immunity in early life.

Early life and education

Lloyd earned her BSc and PhD in immunology at King's College London.[1] She earned her Bachelor's degree in 1987 and her PhD in 1991. She was awarded a National Kidney Research Fund Fellowship and joined the United Medical and Dental Schools of Guy's and St Thomas' Hospitals. Her work considered mouse models of glomerulonephritis. She joined Harvard University to work on chronic inflammatory glomerulonephritis. She became interested in the mechanisms of cell recruitment. She was involved with early studies that looking at the cloning, expression and function of chemokine.[2] Her group demonstrated that T helper cells were the initial responders to CCR3 and CCR4 pathways, but the increase in CCR4 positive cells results in the long-term representation of T helper cells in vivo.[3] LLoyd studied the role of these chemokines in allergic lung inflammation.[4] She looked to better characterise the spatial patterns of chemokine expression to inform therapeutic strategies that limit the side-effects of allergen exposure.

Career and research

After her postdoctoral fellowship at Harvard University, Lloyd joined at Millennium Pharmaceuticals in 1996 to work on models to characterise novel genes. She returned to the UK in 1999, joining Imperial College London as a Wellcome Trust Senior Fellow. She continued her interest in allergens, looking at the roles for cells and molecules involved in pulmonary inflammation. She is part of the Asthma UK Centre in Allergic Mechanisms of Asthma.[5] She is a member of the British Society for Immunology and Wellcome Trust Infection, Immunity and Immunophenotyping.[6] Lloyd studies the lung cells of children who suffer from asthma and severe wheeze.[7] She has studied why pollen and dust can trigger reactions in some people but not others.[8] She became interested in why exposure to allergens and infections in early life had such an influence on programming pathways to maintain pulmonary homeostasis.[9] [10] She demonstrated that Interleukin 9 can mediate inflammation of asthma.[11]

She was appointed Professor in Respiratory Immunology in 2006. She is co-lead of the respiratory division.[12] Her research group, the Lloyd Lab, look at the interactions between lung cells and infiltrating inflammatory cells.[13] Lloyd was awarded the Imperial College London Rectors Medal for her Research Supervision in 2014.[14] In 2018, she demonstrated that the ICOS/ICOS‐L pathway could be a therapeutic target in asthma.[15]

Academic service

She was the lead National Heart and Lung Institute Athena Swan lead between 2009 and 2014, achieving the first Silver award for a medical department in the UK.[16] She pushed for the improvement of the Imperial College London mentoring scheme, in an effort to support early career researchers. In 2016 she was appointed Dean of Institutional Affairs at Imperial College London. She serves on the scientific advisory board of Science Magazine and is an editor of Nature Mucosal Immunology and the European Journal of Immunology.[17] [18] [19] She serves on the Royal Society Newton International Fellowships board.[20]

Awards and honours

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Professor Clare Lloyd. Imperial College London. 2018-12-16. imperial.ac.uk.
  2. Gutierrez-Ramos. Jose-Carlos. Gearing. David. Coyle. Anthony J.. Proudfoot. Amanda E. I.. Powers. Christine A.. Dussault. Barry. Yu. Gary. Jia. Gui-Quan. Lloyd. Clare M.. 1999. Mouse Monocyte-Derived Chemokine Is Involved in Airway Hyperreactivity and Lung Inflammation. The Journal of Immunology. en. 163. 1. 403–411. 10.4049/jimmunol.163.1.403 . 1550-6606. 10384142. free.
  3. Lloyd. Clare M.. Delaney. Tracy. Nguyen. Trang. Tian. Jane. Martinez-A. Carlos. Coyle. Anthony J.. Gutierrez-Ramos. Jose-Carlos. 2000. Cc Chemokine Receptor (Ccr)3/Eotaxin Is Followed by Ccr4/Monocyte-Derived Chemokine in Mediating Pulmonary T Helper Lymphocyte Type 2 Recruitment after Serial Antigen Challenge in Vivo. The Journal of Experimental Medicine. 191. 2. 265–274. 0022-1007. 2195756. 10637271. 10.1084/jem.191.2.265.
  4. Lloyd. Clare. 2002. Chemokines in allergic lung inflammation. Immunology. 105. 2. 144–154. 10.1046/j.1365-2567.2002.01344.x. 0019-2805. 1782646. 11872089.
  5. Web site: Prof. Clare Lloyd Asthma UK Centre. asthma-allergy.ac.uk. 2018-12-16.
  6. Web site: Home 3i Consortium - Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute. immunophenotype.org. 2018-12-16.
  7. Web site: Wheezing and Asthma: Earlier Diagnosis and Treatment Action Medical Research Children's Charity. 2013-04-10. action.org.uk. en. 2018-12-16. https://web.archive.org/web/20181217014908/https://www.action.org.uk/our-research/wheezing-and-asthma-hopes-earlier-diagnosis-and-better-treatment. 2018-12-17. dead.
  8. Web site: Lungs. Wellcome Collection. en. 2018-12-16.
  9. Lloyd. Clare M.. Saglani. Sejal. Sejal Saglani. 2010. Asthma and allergy: The emerging epithelium. Nature Medicine. en. 16. 3. 273–274. 10.1038/nm0310-273. 3380503. 20208514.
  10. Lloyd. Clare M.. Hawrylowicz. Catherine M.. 2009. Regulatory T Cells in Asthma. Immunity. 31. 3. 438–449. 10.1016/j.immuni.2009.08.007. 1074-7613. 3385348. 19766086.
  11. Lloyd. Clare M.. Phimister. Elizabeth G.. Harker. James A.. Epigenetic Control of Interleukin-9 in Asthma. New England Journal of Medicine. 379. 1. 2018. 87–89. 0028-4793. 10.1056/NEJMcibr1803610. 29972761. 10044/1/61609. 49651778. free.
  12. Web site: Structure and key people. Imperial College London. en-GB. 2018-12-16.
  13. Web site: People – LLOYD LAB. en-US. 2018-12-16.
  14. Web site: Honours and Memberships - Professor Clare Lloyd. imperial.ac.uk. 2018-12-16.
  15. Uwadiae. Faith I.. Pyle. Chloe J.. Walker. Simone A.. Lloyd. Clare M.. Harker. James A.. Targeting the ICOS/ICOS-L pathway in a mouse model of established allergic asthma disrupts T follicular helper cell responses and ameliorates disease. Allergy. en. 4. 650–662. 10.1111/all.13602. 30220084. 6492018. 1398-9995. 2018. 74.
  16. Web site: Professor Clare Lloyd on being Vice Dean (Institutional Affairs). 2017-11-27. FoM Staff Blog. en-GB. 2018-12-16.
  17. Web site: Advisory Board. 2018-01-31. Science AAAS. en. 2018-12-18.
  18. Web site: About the Editors Mucosal Immunology. www.nature.com. en. 2018-12-18.
  19. Web site: European Journal of Immunology. onlinelibrary.wiley.com. 10.1002/(ISSN)1521-4141. 2027.42/37955. 250212720 . 2018-12-18.
  20. Web site: Clare Lloyd Royal Society. royalsociety.org. en-gb. 2018-12-18.
  21. Web site: Professor Clare Lloyd The Academy of Medical Sciences . acmedsci.ac.uk . 7 March 2020.