Sarah Flannery
Research Assistant in Proteomics
Background and current interests
I was first introduced to proteomics during my PhD at Sheffield university, where I studied the light reactions of photosynthesis in plants by proteomic analysis of the thylakoid membrane. An internship at the MRC London Institute of Medical Sciences in their Biological Mass Spectrometry facility lead me to the Target Discovery Institute in Oxford. Here, I now manage the TimsTOF Pro and work on a broad range of academic and industrial collaborations ranging from small interactome projects to large-scale clinical studies.
Recent publications
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STN7 is not essential for developmental acclimation of Arabidopsis to light intensity
Journal article
Flannery SE. et al, (2023), The Plant Journal, 114, 1458 - 1474
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Comparative proteomics of thylakoids from Arabidopsis grown in laboratory and field conditions
Journal article
Flannery SE. et al, (2021), Plant Direct, 5
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Developmental acclimation of the thylakoid proteome to light intensity in Arabidopsis
Journal article
Flannery SE. et al, (2021), The Plant Journal, 105, 223 - 244
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Dynamic Thylakoid Stacking Is Regulated by LHCII Phosphorylation but Not Its interaction with PSI
Journal article
Wood WHJ. et al, (2019), Plant Physiology, 180, 2152 - 2166
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A miRNA-145/TGF-β1 negative feedback loop regulates the cancer-associated fibroblast phenotype
Journal article
Melling GE. et al, (2018), Carcinogenesis, 39, 798 - 807