Andrew S. Flies

Andrew S. Flies

University of Tasmania

H-index: 19

Oceania-Australia

About Andrew S. Flies

Andrew S. Flies, With an exceptional h-index of 19 and a recent h-index of 18 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at University of Tasmania, specializes in the field of immunology, ecology, hyena, wild immunity, tasmanian devil.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Ethyl-Iophenoxic acid as a serum marker for oral baiting of Tasmanian devils

Conversion of mouse-derived hybridomas to Tasmanian devil recombinant IgG antibodies

Wildlife nidoviruses: biology, epidemiology, and disease associations of selected nidoviruses of mammals and reptiles

Automated Analysis of PD1 and PDL1 Expression in Lymph Nodes and the Microenvironment of Transmissible Tumors in Tasmanian Devils

Understanding the evolution of immune genes in jawed vertebrates

Evaluation of oral baits and distribution methods for Tasmanian devils (Sarcophilus harrisii)

A human adenovirus encoding IFN-γ can transduce Tasmanian devil facial tumour cells and upregulate MHC-I

Class II transactivator induces expression of MHC-I and MHC-II in transmissible Tasmanian devil facial tumours

Andrew S. Flies Information

University

Position

Senior Research Fellow - Menzies Institute for Medical Research

Citations(all)

2346

Citations(since 2020)

1050

Cited By

1731

hIndex(all)

19

hIndex(since 2020)

18

i10Index(all)

28

i10Index(since 2020)

25

Email

University Profile Page

University of Tasmania

Google Scholar

View Google Scholar Profile

Andrew S. Flies Skills & Research Interests

immunology

ecology

hyena

wild immunity

tasmanian devil

Top articles of Andrew S. Flies

Title

Journal

Author(s)

Publication Date

Ethyl-Iophenoxic acid as a serum marker for oral baiting of Tasmanian devils

bioRxiv

Ruth Pye

David Nichols

Amy T Gilbert

Andrew S Flies

2021/12/16

Conversion of mouse-derived hybridomas to Tasmanian devil recombinant IgG antibodies

Andrew S. Flies Bailey Slyp

Jocelyn M. Darby

2023/10/23

Wildlife nidoviruses: biology, epidemiology, and disease associations of selected nidoviruses of mammals and reptiles

Andrew S Flies

Emily J Flies

Nicholas M Fountain-Jones

Ruth E Musgrove

Rodrigo K Hamede

...

2023/8/31

Automated Analysis of PD1 and PDL1 Expression in Lymph Nodes and the Microenvironment of Transmissible Tumors in Tasmanian Devils

Immunological Investigations

Grace G Russell

Chiara Palmieri

Jocelyn Darby

Gary P Morris

Nicholas M Fountain-Jones

...

2023/8/18

Understanding the evolution of immune genes in jawed vertebrates

Michal Vinkler

Steven R Fiddaman

Martin Těšický

Emily A O'Connor

Anna E Savage

...

2023/5/31

Evaluation of oral baits and distribution methods for Tasmanian devils (Sarcophilus harrisii)

Wildlife Research

Sean Dempsey

Ruth J Pye

Amy T Gilbert

Nicholas M Fountain-Jones

Jennifer M Moffat

...

2022/11/22

A human adenovirus encoding IFN-γ can transduce Tasmanian devil facial tumour cells and upregulate MHC-I

Journal of General Virology

Ahab N Kayigwe

Jocelyn M. Darby

A Bruce Lyons

Amanda L. Patchett

Leszek Lisowski

...

2022/11/16

Class II transactivator induces expression of MHC-I and MHC-II in transmissible Tasmanian devil facial tumours

Open biology

Chrissie EB Ong

Yuanyuan Cheng

Hannah V Siddle

A Bruce Lyons

Gregory M Woods

...

2022/10/19

Saving the devils is in the details: Tasmanian devil facial tumor disease can be eliminated with interventions

Letters in biomathematics

Brian Drawert

Andrew S Flies

Sean Matthew

Megan Powell

Bryan Rumsey

2022/2/2

Cytokines: signalling improved immunotherapy?

Alana J De Luca

A Bruce Lyons

Andrew S Flies

2021/9

Patterns of SARS-CoV-2 exposure and mortality suggest endemic infections, in addition to space and population factors, shape dynamics across countries

medRxiv

Nicholas M Fountain-Jones

Luke Yates

Emily Flies

Andrew Flies

Scott Carver

...

2021/7/16

NLRC5 regulates expression of MHC-I and provides a target for anti-tumor immunity in transmissible cancers

Journal of cancer research and clinical oncology

Chrissie EB Ong

Amanda L Patchett

Jocelyn M Darby

Jinying Chen

Guei-Sheung Liu

...

2021/4/2

Tasmanian devil CD28 and CTLA4 capture CD80 and CD86 from adjacent cells

Developmental & Comparative Immunology

Candida Wong

Jocelyn M Darby

Peter R Murphy

Terry L Pinfold

Patrick R Lennard

...

2021/2/1

Applied ecoimmunology: using immunological tools to improve conservation efforts in a changing world

Conservation Physiology

Michel EB Ohmer

David Costantini

Gábor Á Czirják

Cynthia J Downs

Laura V Ferguson

...

2021

Post-release immune responses of Tasmanian devils vaccinated with an experimental devil facial tumour disease vaccine

Wildlife Research

Ruth Pye

Jocelyn Darby

Andrew S Flies

Samantha Fox

Scott Carver

...

2021/12/9

Generation and testing of fluorescent adaptable simple theranostic (FAST) proteins

Bio-protocol

Andrew S Flies

Jocelyn M Darby

Peter R Murphy

Terry L Pinfold

Amanda L Patchett

...

2020/7/5

An oral bait vaccination approach for the Tasmanian devil facial tumor diseases

Andrew S Flies

Emily J Flies

Samantha Fox

Amy Gilbert

Shylo R Johnson

...

2020/1/2

RTA in a COVID-19 Environment

Graeme Zosky

Kimberley Norris

Gregory Woods

Andrew Flies

2020/1/1

Rewilding immunology

Science

Andrew S Flies

Wild Comparative Immunology Consortium

2020/7/3

Curse of the devil: molecular insights into the emergence of transmissible cancers in the Tasmanian devil (Sarcophilus harrisii)

Amanda L Patchett

Andrew S Flies

A Bruce Lyons

Gregory M Woods

2020/7

See List of Professors in Andrew S. Flies University(University of Tasmania)

Co-Authors

H-index: 168
Andrew Pardoll

Andrew Pardoll

Johns Hopkins University

H-index: 142
Lieping Chen

Lieping Chen

Yale University

H-index: 115
Liqun Luo

Liqun Luo

Stanford University

H-index: 36
A. Bruce Lyons

A. Bruce Lyons

University of Tasmania

H-index: 32
Gregory Woods

Gregory Woods

University of Tasmania

H-index: 18
Emily J Flies

Emily J Flies

University of Tasmania

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