photo of A/Prof Mirana Ramialison

A/Prof Mirana Ramialison

A/Prof Mirana Ramialison

Details

Role Group Leader / Principal Research Fellow
Research area Stem Cell Medicine

Contact

Available for student supervision
Associate Professor Mirana Ramialison is Group Leader of the Bioinformatics and Transcriptomics Laboratory at the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute in Melbourne, and heads the reNEW Bioinformatics Hub of the Novo Nordisk Foundation for Stem Cell Medicine. A/Prof Ramialison received her Engineering degree from the University of Luminy, after which she worked as a programmer at the ERATO differentiation project in Kyoto. She obtained her PhD from the European Molecular Biology Laboratory in Heidelberg in 2007, and joined the Victor Chang Cardiac Research Institute in Sydney as an EMBO and HFSP Post-Doctoral Fellow in 2010. As an NHMRC/Heart Foundation Career Development Fellow, she established her first laboratory at the Australian Regenerative Medicine Institute (Monash University) in 2014. She is currently a Heart Foundation Future Leader Fellow, winner of the 2023 Shirley E Freeman Innovation Award.
Associate Professor Mirana Ramialison is Group Leader of the Bioinformatics and Transcriptomics Laboratory at the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute in Melbourne, and heads the reNEW Bioinformatics Hub of the Novo Nordisk Foundation for Stem Cell...
Associate Professor Mirana Ramialison is Group Leader of the Bioinformatics and Transcriptomics Laboratory at the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute in Melbourne, and heads the reNEW Bioinformatics Hub of the Novo Nordisk Foundation for Stem Cell Medicine. A/Prof Ramialison received her Engineering degree from the University of Luminy, after which she worked as a programmer at the ERATO differentiation project in Kyoto. She obtained her PhD from the European Molecular Biology Laboratory in Heidelberg in 2007, and joined the Victor Chang Cardiac Research Institute in Sydney as an EMBO and HFSP Post-Doctoral Fellow in 2010. As an NHMRC/Heart Foundation Career Development Fellow, she established her first laboratory at the Australian Regenerative Medicine Institute (Monash University) in 2014. She is currently a Heart Foundation Future Leader Fellow, winner of the 2023 Shirley E Freeman Innovation Award.

Top Publications

  • Charitakis, N, Salim, A, Piers, AT, Watt, KI, Porrello, ER, Elliott, DA, Ramialison, M. Disparities in spatially variable gene calling highlight the need for benchmarking spatial transcriptomics methods.. Genome Biol 24(1) : 209 2023
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  • Bienroth, D, Charitakis, N, Jaeger-Honz, S, Garkov, D, Elliott, DA, Porrello, ER, Klein, K, Nim, HT, Schreiber, F, Ramialison, M. Spatially Resolved Transcriptomics Mining in 3D and Virtual Reality Environments with VR-Omics. 2023
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  • Ramialison, M. Human specificity encoded in the dark matter of the genome. Nature Cardiovascular Research 1(9) : 794 -795 2022
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  • Mohenska, M, Tan, NM, Tokolyi, A, Furtado, MB, Costa, MW, Perry, AJ, Hatwell-Humble, J, van Duijvenboden, K, Nim, HT, Ji, YMM, et al. 3D-cardiomics: A spatial transcriptional atlas of the mammalian heart.. J Mol Cell Cardiol 163: 20 -32 2022
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  • Nim, HT, Dang, L, Thiyagarajah, H, Bakopoulos, D, See, M, Charitakis, N, Sibbritt, T, Eichenlaub, MP, Archer, SK, Fossat, N, et al. A cis-regulatory-directed pipeline for the identification of genes involved in cardiac development and disease.. Genome Biol 22(1) : 335 2021
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