Graham Stephen Le Gros (born 1955/56) is a New Zealand immunologist. He is currently Director (chief executive) of the Malaghan Institute of Medical Research in Wellington, New Zealand and leads its Allergic and Parasitic Diseases Programme. He is also Research Director of the Vaccine Alliance Aotearoa New Zealand – Ohu Kaupare Huaketo[1] and a Research Professor at Victoria University of Wellington.
Le Gros was born in Blenheim. During his childhood he moved to Singapore with his father who was in the Air Force. He studied at Massey University.[2]
After completing a PhD in 1987 under Jim Watson at the University of Auckland, titled Role of interleukin 2 and interleukin 3 in haemopoiesis,[3] Le Gros undertook a three-year Fogarty Fellowship at the National Institutes of Health in Washington DC before working for Ciba-Geigy in Switzerland.
In 1990 he published fundamental research – later recognised as a 'Pillar of Immunology' by the Journal of Immunology[4] – with Dr William Paul at the National Institutes of Health and colleagues on the role of IL-4 in Th2 immune responses relevant to allergy, asthma and parasitic diseases.
In 1994 he returned to New Zealand as Director of the Malaghan Institute.
He leads an active biomedical research programme in allergic and parasitic diseases including running a clinical programme exploring the therapeutic potential of human hookworms.[5]
In 2020, during New Zealand's COVID-19 lockdown, he was a leading voice among New Zealand scientists calling for a national COVID-19 vaccine programme.[6]
Le Gros is programme director for Vaccine Alliance Aotearoa New Zealand-Ohu Kaupare Huaketo (VAANZ), a collaborative programme with scientists from the Malaghan Institute, University of Otago and Victoria University, which evaluates vaccines and develops local vaccines.[7]
In 2021 he was appointed to the Board of Research for Life.[8]
In 2005, Le Gros was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand in recognition of his research contributions to the fields of immunology and asthma.[9]
He was awarded the Wellington Medical Research Foundation Gold Medal in 2010 and in 2011 he won the Science and Technology category of the Wellingtonian of the Year Awards[10] for his contribution to medical research in Wellington and New Zealand.
Le Gros was awarded an Honorary Fellowship from the Royal College of Pathologists of Australasia in 2014 and the same year was made a Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit[11] in the Queen's Birthday Honours.
In 2016 he received the Sir Geoffrey Peren Award,[12] the Distinguished Alumni Award 2016 by Massey University.
In 2017 Le Gros was named a Paul Harris Fellow by the Rotary Foundation of Rotary International in appreciation of tangible and significant assistance given for the furtherance of better understanding and friendly relations among peoples of the world.[13]
He was named a 2021 Kea[14] World Class New Zealander acknowledging his "stellar career as a world-leading immunologist, seeking to harness the power of the human immune system to improve human health."[15]
Le Gros is married to Professor Franca Ronchese, who leads the Immune Cell Biology Programme at the Malaghan Institute.[16]