New Zealand medical researcher
Emma Louise Scotter MNZM is a New Zealand academic neuropharmacologist, and is a senior lecturer at the University of Auckland, and head of the university's Centre for Brain Research. In 2024 she was appointed a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to Motor Neuron Disease research.
Academic career
Scotter completed a PhD in pharmacology at the University of Auckland, working on Huntington's disease.[1] She undertook postdoctoral work at the University of Waikato, and then received an international fellowship to work on motor neuron disease genetics with Professor Chris Shaw at King's College London.[2] Scotter then returned to Auckland as a postdoctoral research fellow, and in 2015 was awarded a Rutherford Discovery Fellowship, for research on the blood-brain-barrier in motor neuron disease (MND).[3] She joined the faculty of the university, rising to senior lecturer.[1] As of 2024 she is head of the university's Centre for Brain Research.[4]
Scotter's team has shown that New Zealand has one of the highest incidences of motor neuron disease in the world.[2] There are around 35 different genes involved in MND, but only around 10 per cent of cases are known to be genetic, and environmental causes are also believed to play a part. Scotter leads a large study into the genetics of the disease in New Zealand, and in one family was able to identify the specific genetic defect involved, allowing family members to be tested.[5] Her research group is trialling treatments, some of which appear to slow or stop the disease progression for some patients.[2][6][7]
Honours and awards
In the 2024 King's Birthday Honours, Scotter was appointed a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to Motor Neuron Disease research.[4]
Selected works
References
External links