BRMEC15 AGENDA

20 Years of Investing in ME Research to Discover ME:
In Pursuit of the Mechanisms and Treatment Strategies for Myalgic Encephalomyelitis

BRMEC15 logo

The BRMEC15 Colloquium Agenda 2026

BRMEC15 DAY 1 - 27 May 2026
Presentation Speaker / Institute
08:55 BRMEC15 Opening and Welcome Simon Carding
Quadram Institute, UK
09:10 Session 1: Systems Biology, Models and Modelling
09:10 Session Moderator Tamas Korcsmaros
Imperial College London, UK
Title to be confirmed Dezső Modos
Imperial College London, UK
Title to be confirmed Marek Ostaszewski
Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine, University of Luxembourg
General Discussion
Coffee Break
11:310 Session 2: Post-Genomics
Session Moderator Elisa Oltra
Catholic University of Valencia San Vicente Mártir, Spain / EMERG
Understanding T cell dysregulation in ME Andrew Grimson
Dept. of Molecular Biology and Genetics, Cornell University, USA
tbc tbc
-
tba tba
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General Discussion
Lunch
13:30 Session 3: Chronic Infection Aetiology
11:30 Session 2: Post-Genomics
Session Moderator David Price
Cardiff University, UK / European ME Research Group
Title to be confirmed Fernando Real
CNRS – Centre for Infection and Immunity of Lille (CIIL), Institut Pasteur de Lille, France
Title to be confirmed Greg Towers
Blizard Institute, Queen Mary University of London, UK
Searching for chronic infection in ME Maureen Hanson
Cornell University, USA
General Discussion
Coffee Break
16:30 Session 4 Nervous System and Neuroinflammation
16:30 Session 4 Nervous System and Neuroinflammation
Session Moderator Jon Brooks
Liverpool University, UK
Neuro-PET data of post-COVID patients (tbc) Denise Visser
Amsterdam UMC, Netherlands
Microglial profiling in ME/CFS Felipe Correa-da-Silva
Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience, Netherlands
General Discussion
BRMEC15 Colloquium Evening Dinner Dinner and Networking for delegates of BRMEC15
BRMEC15 DAY 2 - 28 May 2026
Presentation Speaker / Institute
08:55 BRMEC15 Day 2 Welcome Simon Carding
Quadram Institute, UK
09:10 Session 5: Immune System Primary and Secondary
Session Moderator Eva Untersmayr-Elsenhuber
Medical University of Vienna, Austria / EMERG
Title to be confirmed Leo A.B. Joosten
Radboud University Medical Centre, The Netherlands
Crossing the Cell Membrane Threshold: Ion Channels, Calcium, and the Inner Cell Function Sonya Marshall-Gradisnik
NCNED, Griffith Univ., Australia
Tissue-specific immune dysregulation in long COVID Marcus Buggert
Karolinska Institutet, Sweden
General Discussion
Coffee Break
11:30 Session 6: Metabolism
Session Moderator Rikke Olsen
Aarhus University, Denmark / European ME Research Group
Title to be confirmed Edmund Kunji
MRC Mitochondrial Biology Unit, University of Cambridge, UK
Itaconate Shunt Hypothesis for ME Pathogenesis: Model predictions and experimental tests Robert Phair
Integrative Bioinformatics Inc, USA
Failures in the Peripheral Oxygen Transport Cascade:
Microvascular and Mitochondrial Dysregulation in Long COVID and ME
Anouk Slaghekke
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands
General Discussion
Lunch
14:00 Session 7: BRMEC15 Keynote
Keynote Speech: Sarah Teichmann
University of Cambridge, UK
Coffee Break
09:10 Session 1 Part II: Systems Biology, Models and Modelling
Title to be confirmed Anna Niarakis
Université de Toulouse III-Paul Sabatier - CNRS, France
15:30 Session 8: Biomarker Discovery
Session Moderator Jonas Bergquist
Uppsala University, Sweden
Beyond Linear DNA: 3D Chromatin Architecture and the Path to a Diagnostic Biomarker in ME (provisional) Alexandre Akoulitchev & Dmitry Pshezhetskiy
Oxford BioDynamics, UK & University of East Anglia, UK
BEVs The Carding Group
Quadram Institute, UK
General Discussion
18:45 IIMEC18 Pre-Conference Evening Dinner Dinner and Networking
 
BRMEC15 DAY3 - 29 May 2026

This day's programme is subject to change

Presentation Speaker / Institute
08:55 IIMEC18 Conference / BRMEC15 Day 3 Welcome Simon Carding
Quadram Institute, UK
Opening Address from WHO Europe: Dr Hans Kluge
WHO Regional Director for Europe
09:20 BRMEC15 Session 9: Therapeutics
Session Moderator Andrew Wilson
University of East Anglia, UK
A platform for Clinical Trials in ME Andrew Wilson
University of East Anglia, UK
Brain fog treatment: Preliminary findings from cognitive rehabilitation trials in adults with post‑viral syndromes Gitendra Uswatte
University of Alabama, USA
Hypoxia‑Induced Mitochondrial Stress‑Signaling: A Randomised Controlled Trial for ME Rikke Katrine Jentoft Olsen
Aarhus University, Denmark/EMERG
Title to be confirmed tba
-
Audience discussion Panel session
-
Coffee Break
11:15 Title to be confirmed Vicky Whittemore
National Institutes of Health (NIH), USA
Title to be confirmed (Emerging Research for the Discovery of ME Mechanisms) Eva Untersmayr-Elsenhuber
Medical University of Vienna, Austria / EMERG
Title to be confirmed (A Global Platform Trial of Repurposed Drugs for Long COVID) Douglas D. Fraser
Western University in London, Canada
Title to be confirmed (Genomics and Drug Repurposing) Rowan Gardner
PrecisionLife, UK
Coffee Break
Title to be confirmed (European Clinical Protocol) Jesper Mehlsen
Copenhagen University Hospital, Denmark/EMERG
Covid-UPP trial follow-up Leo Tamariz
University of Miami, USA
Covid-UPP trial follow-up Ana Palacio
University of Miami, USA
Specialised care for seriously and very seriously ill People with ME Mari Gamme Sollie / Trine Alm Holterbakken
Røysumtunet, Norway
Title to be confirmed (Clinical Approach to Treatment) Friðbjörn Sigurðsson
Akureyri Hospital, Iceland/EMERG
Title to be confirmed Ron Davis
Stanford Genome Technology Center, USA
Panel / Audience Discussion Panel session
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Dinner

Our Conference Week Sponsors

Proud to partner with organisations supporting our research objectives

Some of the institutes, organisations and agencies that will have speakers, representatives and participants involved and invited to the conference week 2026 events -

Quadram Institute, UK
National Institutes of Health (NIH), USA
University of East Anglia, UK
University of Uppsala, Sweden
University of Amsterdam, Netherlands
Georgetown University, USA
Aarhus Universitet, Denmark
European ME Research Group, Europe
Medical University of Vienna, Austria
The National University Hospital of Iceland
University of Western Ontario, Canada
Akureyri Hospital, Iceland
Young EMERG, Europe
Université de Toulouse, France
Cardiff University School of Medicine, UK
.
University of Vermont, USA
Copenhagen University Hospital, Denmark
Imperial College London, UK
NCNED, Australia
Precision Life, UK
Radboud University, The Netherlands
Columbia University, USA
University of Bergen, Norway
University of Oslo, Norway
Universidad Católica de Valencia, Spain
Nova Southeastern University, Miami, USA
Georgetown University, USA
Stanford Genome Technology Center, USA
University of Alabama, USA
Cornell University, USA
The National University Hospital of Iceland
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Netherlands
Institute for Cardiovascular Diseases Dedinje, Serbia
Charité University Hospital, Berlin, Germany
University of Florida, USA
Karolinska Institutet, Sweden
University of Helsinki, Finland
CNRS / Institut Pasteur de Lille, France
Queen Mary University of London, UK
University of Cambridge, UK
Université de Montréal, Canada
Massachusetts General Hospital, USA
European ME Alliance, Europe
University of Oxford, UK
University of Melbourne, Australia
Terra Biological LLC, USA
Northwestern University, USA
MRC Mitochondrial Biology Unit, UK
University of Luxembourg
Centre for Genomics Research, AstraZeneca
Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience, The Netherlands.

Research Leader, Quadram Institute Bioscience, Norwich Research Park, UK

Professor Simon Carding

UK

Upon completing postgraduate work at the Medical Research Council’s Clinical Research Centre in Harrow, Professor Carding “emigrated” to the USA to take up a postdoctoral position at New York University School of Medicine, and then at Yale University as a Howard Hughes Fellow in the Immunobiology Group at Yale University. While at Yale an interest in gamma-delta (γδ) T cells was acquired working closely with Adrian Hayday on molecular genetics and then with Prof. Peter Doherty to establish their role in (viral) infectious disease.
He left Yale after five years to take up a faculty position at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia where he developed a research interest in mucosal and GI-tract immunology, performing studies in germfree mice with Prof John Cebra that helped establish the role of gut microbes in the aetiology of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD).
After 15 years in the USA, he returned to the UK to take up the Chair in Molecular Immunology at the University of Leeds where he established a new research programme on commensal gut bacteria and Bacteroides genetics leading to the development of a Bacteroides drug delivery platform that is being used for developing new interventions for IBD and for mucosal vaccination.
In 2008 he was recruited by UEA and IFR to develop a gut research programme, taking up the Chair of Mucosal Immunology at UEA-MED and the position of head of the Gut Biology Research Programme at IFR, which later became part of the Gut Health and Food Safety (GHFS) Programme.
GHFS research covers a broad area of gut biology including epithelial cell physiology, mucus and glycobiology, mucosal immunology, commensal microbiology, foodborne bacterial pathogens, and mathematical modelling and bioinformatics. The success of this programme has led to the establishment of the Gut Microbes and Health research programme that is integral to the research agenda of The Quadram Institute.

Research Director, Coordinating Research Centre, Bispebjerg and Frederiksberg Hospital, Denmark
Co-chair European ME Research Group

Dr Jesper Mehlsen

Denmark

Dr Jesper Mehlsen graduated as a medical doctor in 1979 and finished his specialist training in 1990. He has published more than 140 scientific papers in peer reviewed journals, mainly on the autonomic nervous system and more recently on complex diseases possibly resulting form HPV-vaccination.
For more than 35 years, he has worked clinically and in research with dysfunction of the autonomic nervous system. Such dysfunction may lead to symptoms from a number of different organs often dominated by diminished control of blood pressure and heart rate.
Over the past 5 years, he has worked clinically and in research with patients who suspect side effects due to HPV vaccination to be the cause of a number of symptoms, common to those seen in chronic ME.
Dr Mehlsen is co-chair of the European ME Research Group (EMERG).

Tamas Korcsmaros

UK

Dr Tamas Korcsmaros is a systems biologist working with both computational and experimental approaches to study signalling networks in the gut.
For 15 years, he has been been working in the field of intra- and inter-cellular signalling networks and the regulation of autophagy, a key cellular process for maintaining health and fight diseases. He is particularly interested in how cell-cell and cell-microbe interactions affect intestinal homeostasis, and how one could use precision medicine to tackle current challenges to treat patients with inflammatory bowel disease.
In his group they have developed gap-filling computational resources and applied experimental novel systems, such as organoids, to achieve these goals.
Besides leading his research group that focuses on improving our understanding on the pathomechanisms of IBD, he is also co-leading the NIHR Imperial BRC Organoid Facility to establish patient-specific multi-omics studies for various complex diseases.

REFERENCES

References

David Price

UK

Professor David A Price MRCP DPhil DTM&H FAoP FLSW FRSB graduated with double first class honours in medical sciences and pathology at the University of Cambridge and completed his clinical training at King's College Hospital London.
He practised internal medicine, specialising in infectious and tropical diseases, before pursuing a doctorate in molecular immunology at the University of Oxford.
After further academic clinical appointments, his research was conducted with fellowship support at the NIH Vaccine Research Center.
He was appointed as Chair of Infection and Immunity at Cardiff University School of Medicine in October 2007.
His research program focuses on the development and implementation of advanced biotechnologies to characterise immune responses against globally relevant pathogens, such as HIV-1 and SARS-CoV-2.

REFERENCES

Associate Professor Jos Bosch

Netherlands

In 2012 he was appointed associate professor in the Department of Psychology, section Clinical Psychology.
His research investigates the psychobiology of medical disorders, with the aim to understand and mitigate the impact of disease.
His dual expertise in psychology and biology allows him to approach this topic in a genuinely interdisciplinary manner, by integrating methods and concepts from both fields, and apply these to experimental laboratory studies, clinical investigations, and epidemiological analyses. More recently hsi work has expanded to include Data Science and Artificial Intelligence (AI) as a source of novel approaches to the analysis and modification of human biology and behaviour. The latter program of research is funded by two H2020 consortium grants, of which he isa lead and a coordinator, and involves intensive collaborations with groups accross continental Europe, the UK, and the US.

Since 2019 he became Associate Editor of Health Psychology Review, having previously acted as associate/senior editor for Brain, Behavior & Immunity (2011-2014), Psychological Bulletin (2010-2013), and Health Psychology (2010-2015).

In 2018 he was appointed Program Leader of the AMC/VUmc research institute ‘Amsterdam Public Health' (APH), Divsion of Mental Health (https://www.amsterdamumc.org/research/institutes/amsterdam-public-health.htm). In 2020 I was reappointed for 2 more years.

In 2023 Jos was awarded a grant of more than seven million euros to commence new biomedical research into ME/CFS.

Further reading:

Amsterdam UMC leads international consortium in the search for treatment for ME/CFS

Research Unit for Molecular Medicine, Department of Clinical Medicine, Aarhus University, Denmark

Associate Professor Rikke Katrine Jentoft Olsen

Denmark

Rikke's research group has a longstanding interest in inborn errors of mitochondrial metabolism with special focus on fatty acid oxidation disorders. We integrate genetic diagnostics of affected families with research into cell pathological mechanisms and novel treatment modalities in the form of mitochondrial vitamins/co-factors and anaplerotic compounds for the tricarboxylic acid cycle. In recent years, we have initiated research programs to understand the role that mitochondria may play in ME.

Besides science, Rikke KJ Olsen is an active member of the Neonatal Screening Program for inborn errors of metabolism in Denmark and board member of international scientific organisations within fatty acid oxidation disorders and ME/CFS.

Full Chair Professor in Analytical Chemistry and Neurochemistry at the Department of Chemistry, Uppsala University, Sweden

Professor Jonas Bergquist

Sweden

Professor Begquist has a background as MD, Associate Professor of Clinical Neuroscience , Sahlgrenska University Hospital and the University of Gothenburg. Since 1999 , he has been a researcher in Uppsala, Sweden, and in 2005 was appointed professor of analytical chemistry and neurochemistry at the Department of Chemistry - BMC , Uppsala University. From 2011 he worked also as an adjunct professor of pathology at the University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.

Medical specialist in Immunology,
Head of Gastrointestinal Immunology research group
Department of Pathophysiology and Allergy,
Medical University of Vienna, Austria

Associate Professor Eva Untersmayr-Elsenhuber, MD, PhD

Austria

Dr. Eva Untersmayr-Elsenhuber Associate Professor of Pathophysiology and Allergy Research at The University of Vienna. Her research interests are Immunology and Microbiology, Comparative Immunology and Oncology, Pathophysiology.
In 2011, Dr.in Eva Untersmayr-Elsenhuber completed her specialist training. Since then, Dr.in Untersmayr-Elsenhuber has worked as a specialist and associate professor at the ” Institute of Pathophysiology and Allergy Research at the Medical University of Vienna. In 2012, Dr.in Eva Untersmayr-Elsenhuber completed her part-time doctoral studies in natural sciences at the University of Salzburg and received her doctorate (Dr. rer. nat.). She is the author of more than 40 internationally acclaimed articles published in renowned journals, which have so far been cited more than 1000 times by other authors in publications. For her work in the field of food allergy, Dr.in Untersmayr-Elsenhuber has received numerous prizes such as the Pirquet Prize, the most important prize in the field of allergy research of the Austrian Society for Allergology and Immunology, the Theodor Billroth Prize of the Medical Association of Vienna and the Vienna Chamber of Commerce Prize 2014.
In addition, Dr Eva Untersmayr-Elsenhuber has led and managed numerous competitively funded research projects on food allergy, gastrointestinal immunology and oncology since 2005. She is a member of national and international committees such as the Austrian and European Societies for Allergolgy and Immunology and the Collegium Internationale Allergologicum. Dr. Untersmayr-Elsenhuber has participated in numerous science communication activities for years, such as the production of information brochures, the Children’s University, the Long Night of Research and Science at the VHS Vienna.
(with grateful thanks to https://www.praxis-neustift.com/en/prof-ddr-eva-untersmayr-elsenhuber/)

Links:

Researchgate

Presenter to be confirmed

Details will be announced shortly.

Presenter to be announced

Details will be announced shortly.

Presenter to be announced

Details will be announced shortly.

Universidad Católica de Valencia “San Vicente Mártir”, Spain

Elisa Oltra

Spain

Dr. Elisa Oltra is a professor of Cell and Molecular Biology at the Universidad Católica de Valencia “San Vicente Mártir” where she also works as a researcher in the area of stem-cell and cancer.
She obtained an M.S. degree in Biochemistry at the Universitat de Valencia (Spain) and later earned her PhD in Biochemistry, Cell and Molecular Biology at the University of Miami, FL (USA) where she stayed for her post-doctoral training and later, as Senior Scientist till 2006 when she moved back to Spain. During her studies at the University of Miami she identified alternative 5´UTR sequences involved in regulating cell-cell communication through mechanisms of differential connexin43 expression in the heart.
She also isolated a novel essential protein (Ini) and demonstrated its participation in mechanisms of transcription and splicing.
In 2009 she started a project to investigate the molecular basis of Fibromyalgia having identified at present irregularities in RNAseL expression and miRNAs profile changes in the participating patients which could lead to a deeper understanding of the disease.
In 2012 she joined the IVP Valencian Institute of Pathology, also at the Universidad Católica de Valencia where she is currently studying a specific type of vesicles: the exosomes, as mediators of stem-cell based therapies.
She is also academic director of the first officially accredited Master degree in Biobanking in Europe in collaboration with the Spanish Network of Biobanking at the Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Madrid (Spain).

Liberty Hyde Bailey Professor, Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics, Cornell University, New York, USA

Professor Maureen Hanson

USA

Maureen Hanson is Liberty Hyde Bailey Professor in the Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics at Cornell University in Ithaca, NY. Previously she was on the faculty of the Department of Biology at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville and an NIH NRSA postdoctoral fellow at Harvard, where she also completed her Ph.D. degree. While most of her prior research has concerned cell and molecular biology in plant cells, she began a research program on ME/CFS after noting at a 2007 IACFS meeting the paucity of molecular biologists studying the illness. Her lab was part of the 2012 multicenter study organised by Ian Lipkin's group at Columbia University to assess the actual role of XMRV in ME/CFS. Dr. Hanson has a current project to examine the microbiome of ME/CFS patients and controls, in collaboration with Dr. Ruth Ley (Cornell Microbiology) and Susan Levine, M.D. (Manhattan, NY). Dr Levine is also collaborating with Dr. Hanson on an immune cell gene expression project that involves Dr. Fabien Campagne and Dr. Rita Shaknovich at Weill Cornell Medical School in New York City. Dr. Hanson's third project concerns analysis of blood samples from individuals performing a two-day cardiopulmonary exercise test at Ithaca College under the supervision of Dr. Betsy Keller.

Dr Vicky Whittemore

USA

Dr. Whittemore is a Program Director in the Synapses, Channels and Neural Circuits Cluster. Her interest is in understanding the underlying mechanisms of the epilepsies including the study of genetic and animal models of the epilepsies.

The major goal is to identify effective treatments for the epilepsies and to develop preventions. Dr. Whittemore received a Ph.D. in anatomy from the University of Minnesota, followed by post-doctoral work at the University of California, Irvine, and a Fogarty Fellowship at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden.

She was on the faculty of the University of Miami School of Medicine in The Miami Project to Cure Paralysis prior to working with several non-profit organisations including the Tuberous Sclerosis Alliance, Genetic Alliance, Citizens United for Research in Epilepsy (CURE), and the National Coalition for Health Professional Education in Genetics (NCHPEG).

She also completed a four-year term on the National Advisory Neurological Disorders and Stroke Council.

Other Links

Paediatric Critical Care/Trauma Medicine at Western University in London, Ontario, Canada

Douglas D. Fraser

Canada

Professor Fraser, a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada, holds a position as Professor and Clinician Scientist in Paediatric Critical Care/Trauma Medicine at Western University in London, Ontario.
He completed his MD/PhD in the Department of Physiology and Biophysics at the University of Calgary, Alberta, receiving a Canadian Institutes of Health Research Strategic Training Fellowship and several esteemed International Research Awards from the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Society for Pediatric Research.
As Director of the Translational Research Centre, a human tissue biobank operating for over 15 years, Professor Fraser has garnered multiple Research Innovation Awards and successfully filed numerous patents. He is also a Co-Founder and Chief Medical Officer of NeuroLytixs, Inc., a diagnostics-based biotech company.
Professor Fraser's research focuses on identifying signalling pathways and diagnostics/prognostic biomarkers for acquired brain injury, severe sepsis and COVID-19. His work includes profiling Long-COVID patients for proteome changes, with particular emphasis on understanding the immune response.
Currently, he leads two International Multicentred Long-COVID Research Programmes: "LC-Optimize" (Identification of Long-COVID Sub-Phenotypes to Optimise Patient Outcomes) and "LC-Statistic" (Sudden Death Associated with Post-COVID Condition).

Professeure de Biologie Computationnelle des Systèmes, Pôle de Biologie des Systèmes, MCD-CBI, Université de Toulouse III-Paul Sabatier - CNRS

Anna Niarakis

France

Dr Anna Niarakis is a Full Professor of Computational Systems Biology at the University of Toulouse III-Paul Sabatier, affiliated with the Center of Integrative Biology and the Laboratory of Molecular and Cellular Dynamics. She holds a 4-year delegation for research at INRIA- Saclay, in the group Lifeware.
Dr Niarakis has a broad scientific background in Biochemistry, Biology, Pharmaceutical Technology and post-doctoral studies in Computational Systems Biology and Bioinformatics (ENS, Paris, Institut Gustave Roussy) with expertise in complex human diseases, especially autoimmune diseases.
She is a co-leader of the Disease Maps consortium coordinating the COVID-19 Disease Map initiative, and she also leads the Working Group “ Building Immune Digital Twins”, supported by the Research Data Alliance.
Dr Niarakis has significant expertise in academic teaching and mentoring, course design and management and is also very active in organizing and participating in international summer and winter schools of Computational Systems Biology.
She is the main co-organizer and the leading instructor of the Wellcome Trust Advanced Course "Computational Systems Biology for Complex Human Disease: From Static to Dynamic Representations of Disease Mechanisms" :
Courtesy https://cbi-toulouse.fr/eng/equipe-niarakis

Further Information:

Dr Olli Polo

Integrativ Clinic, Stockholm, Sweden p> Dr Olli Polo, MD, PhD, is a Finnish pulmonologist, sleep specialist and physician with expertise in physiology, currently practising at the Integrativ Clinic in Stockholm. Formerly a professor of pulmonology at Tampere University, his clinical and research interests focus on myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS), with particular attention to sympathetic nervous system dysfunction, circadian rhythm disturbances and tissue hypoxia.

Dr Polo’s work emphasises the role of connective tissue abnormalities, such as Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, as potential contributors to ME/CFS. His clinical approach includes experimental therapies such as low-dose naltrexone, supplemental oxygen, saline, vitamin B12, and dopamine agonists, while advising caution regarding psychiatric medications and certain sleep aids.

He has published extensively on sleep disorders and related conditions and has presented at international conferences. Dr Polo is known for advocating patient-centred care in ME/CFS.

More information
https://www.integrativakliniken.se/about-1
ResearchGate Olli Polo

Professor Ron Davis

Professor Ronald Davis

Stanford School of Medicine in Stanford Professor of Biochemistry and Genetics at the Stanford School of Medicine in Stanford, California, USA

Ronald W. Davis, Ph.D., is a Professor of Biochemistry and Genetics at the Stanford School of Medicine in Stanford, California.

He is a world leader in the development of biotechnology, especially the development of recombinant DNA and genomic methodologies and their application to biological systems.

At Stanford University, where he is Director of the Stanford Genome Technology Center, Dr. Davis focuses on the interface of nano-fabricated solid state devices and biological systems.

He and his research team also develop novel technologies for the genetic, genomic, and molecular analysis of a wide range of model organisms as well as humans.

The team's focus on practical application of these technologies is setting the standard for clinical genomics.

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Postdoctoral Researcher, Radiology & Nuclear Medicine, University Medical Center Utrecht, Netherlands

Denise Visser

Netherlands

Denise Visser, a researcher at University Medical Center Utrecht, has revealed extensive brain inflammation in her research. Her work with Neuro-PET imaging has shown significant inflammation throughout the brain in patients with long-term symptoms after COVID-19, also known as Long COVID. These findings, which demonstrate in vivo neuroinflammation, are crucial as they provide the first direct evidence of widespread brain damage in living patients who have recovered from COVID-19 Visser, a researcher at University Medical Center Utrecht, has revealed extensive brain inflammation in her research. Her work with Neuro-PET imaging has shown significant inflammation throughout the brain in patients with long-term symptoms after COVID-19, also known as Long COVID. These findings, which demonstrate in vivo neuroinflammation, are crucial as they provide the first direct evidence of widespread brain damage in living patients who have recovered from COVID-19.

Further Information:

Precision Life, UK

Rowan Gardner

Co-founder, PrecisionLife, UK

Rowan has over 30 years of experience working in innovative businesses applying computational methods to life science and patient data to understand disease and find new medicines and treatments for unmet medical needs.
She is on the board of Digital Health and Care Wales a strategic health authority tasked with the digital transformation of NHS in Wales, and is responsible for oversight of the digital governance and safety committee.
Rowan holds a Masters in biochemistry from the University of Oxford and played a part in one of the university's first spinouts, Oxford Molecular Group, when it listed on the London Stock Exchange in 1994. She also collaborated with the pioneering team at CERN to disseminate the applications to cloud computing frameworks in healthcare and pharmaceutical research.

Dr Dezső Modos, Imperial College London, UK

Dr Dezső Modos

UK

Dr Dezső Modos is an Imperial College Research Fellow in the Systems Medicine division of the Department of Metabolism, Digestion and Reproduction. He completed his medical degree at Semmelweis University and a minor in bionics at the Pázmány Péter Catholic University. Later he obtained his PhD at the Semmelweis University on network biology. His primary focus was the intracellular signalling network in cancer and understanding the role of paralogues in signalling. After his PhD he moved to Cambridge and learned cheminformatics. He used network biology to understand and predict compound synergy in cancer. Here he also learned about various cheminformatic techniques, which he is adapting for his fellowship. The current inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) therapies maintain remission only in around 30% of cases forming therapeutic celling. His fellowship aims to find the right drug to the right patient in IBD. Similarly, using the targets of IBD drugs as a source node can build a drug specific network footprint. The comparison of patient-specific disease and drug networks, much like connectivity mapping, can aid in identifying the correct drug for each patient. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in inflammatory bowel disease are often in the non-coding region of the genome. He and his colleagues developed a tool called iSNP (https://github.com/korcsmarosgroup/iSNP) which can map these single nucleotide polymorphisms to regulatory regions and through that SNP affected genes. From the SNP affected genes, patient specific signalling networks, individual pathogenetic pathways and patient specific network footprints can be constructed. Already, he used this method to understand ulcerative colitis pathogenesis. See https://www.imperial.ac.uk/people/d.modos

Dr Robert Phair

Chief Scientific Officer, Integrative Bioinformatics, Inc., USA

Dr. Robert Phair, a systems biologist whose Ph.D. is in Physiology, is an internationally known expert in the area of kinetic modeling, with over 35 years of experience in the modeling of complex biological systems. He started his academic life with a degree in Electrical Engineering at MIT with the intention to apply engineering analysis to complex biological systems. He was a professor at The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine for 16 years before co-founding Integrative Bioinformatics, Inc (IBI), a scientific consultancy in Silicon Valley, with a focus on cellular and molecular systems,where a systematic approach has been developed to model biological systems that allows effective testing of complex hypotheses against available experimental data.

Alexandre Akoulitchev

Chief Scientific Officer, Oxford BioDynamics, UK

Alexandre Akoulitchev is Chief Scientific Officer at Oxford BioDynamics, an international biotechnology company advancing personalised healthcare through precision clinical diagnostic tests. He leads the development of the EpiSwitch® platform, a proprietary technology that maps long-range three-dimensional genomic interactions as biomarkers of disease state. The platform has already been translated into clinical use for prostate cancer detection and immunotherapy response prediction across multiple tumour types.

Dr Akoulitchev's work in ME/CFS, conducted in collaboration with the University of East Anglia, the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and Royal Cornwall Hospitals NHS Trust, has demonstrated that 3D chromatin architecture carries distinctive and reproducible signatures in ME/CFS patients that are absent in healthy controls. This approach, working beyond linear DNA sequence, identified hundreds of disease-associated genomic changes and achieved diagnostic accuracy of 96%, offering the prospect of the first reliable blood-based diagnostic test for ME.

Professor Dmitry Pshezhetskiy

Norwich Medical School, University of East Anglia, UK

Professor Dmitry Pshezhetskiy is a researcher at Norwich Medical School, University of East Anglia, with expertise in molecular oncology, epigenetics and translational biomarker research. His laboratory focuses on the application of advanced genomic and epigenomic technologies to the discovery and validation of clinically actionable biomarkers in complex diseases.

Professor Pshezhetskiy led the collaborative research programme with Oxford BioDynamics that applied EpiSwitch® 3D genomic profiling to ME/CFS for the first time, resulting in the development of a blood-based diagnostic with 96% accuracy published in the Journal of Translational Medicine in 2025. The study identified a unique and reproducible pattern of 3D chromatin architecture in ME/CFS patients that is absent in healthy controls, opening a new avenue for both diagnosis and the biological understanding of the disease. He has described this work as potentially transforming how ME/CFS is diagnosed and managed, and as opening the door to identifying patient subgroups most likely to benefit from specific therapies.

Alexandre Akoulitchev

Chief Scientific Officer, Oxford BioDynamics, UK

Alexandre Akoulitchev is Chief Scientific Officer at Oxford BioDynamics, an international biotechnology company advancing personalised healthcare through precision clinical diagnostic tests. He leads the development of the EpiSwitch® platform, a proprietary technology that maps long-range three-dimensional genomic interactions as biomarkers of disease state. The platform has already been translated into clinical use for prostate cancer detection and immunotherapy response prediction across multiple tumour types.

Dr Akoulitchev's work in ME has demonstrated that 3D chromatin architecture carries distinctive and reproducible signatures in ME/CFS patients that are absent in healthy controls. This approach, working beyond linear DNA sequence, identified hundreds of disease-associated genomic changes and achieved diagnostic accuracy of 96% in an initial cohort, offering the prospect of the first reliable blood-based diagnostic test for ME.


Professor Dmitry Pshezhetskiy

Norwich Medical School, University of East Anglia, UK

Professor Dmitry Pshezhetskiy is a researcher at Norwich Medical School, University of East Anglia, with expertise in molecular oncology, epigenetics and translational biomarker research. His laboratory focuses on the application of advanced genomic and epigenomic technologies to the discovery and validation of clinically actionable biomarkers in complex diseases.

Professor Pshezhetskiy led the clinical side of the collaborative research programme with Oxford BioDynamics that applied EpiSwitch® 3D genomic profiling to ME for the first time, published in the Journal of Translational Medicine in 2025. He has described this work as potentially transforming how ME is diagnosed and managed, and as opening the door to identifying patient subgroups most likely to benefit from specific therapies.

Marek Ostaszewski

Luxembourg

Dr Marek Ostaszewski is a research scientist at the Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine, University of Luxembourg, where he works in bioinformatics, computational biology, and translational medicine. He has experience in metaheuristics, network analysis, and systems biology, and his work has included the development and exploration of disease maps and methods for modelling complex biological systems.
He has also worked on translational medicine projects and scientific project management in Luxembourg, including research linked to Parkinson’s disease and broader systems biomedicine efforts.

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Andrew Grimson

USA

Andrew Grimson is an Associate Professor in the Department of Molecular Biology & Genetics at Cornell University. His lab focuses on post-transcriptional gene regulaon, especially the identity and function of animal microRNAs and other small RNAs.
His research also examines gene regulatory networks, 3'UTR-mediated regulation, and the use of genomic tools to study immune dysregulation in ME/CFS.
He is a co-PI of the Cornell NIH ME/CFS Research Center and has contributed to work on immune changes, including single-cell transcriptomic studies and T cell exhaustion in ME/CFS.

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Felipe Correa da Silva

Amsterdam, the Netherlands

Felipe Correa da Silva is a postdoctoral researcher working in the Brain Plasticity / NeuroImmunology group (Lucassen / Huitinga) at the Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience in Amsterdam.
His research interests focus on neuroglia, neuropathology, and the cellular and molecular changes associated with ME/CFS and other brain disorders.
He works on postmortem brain research and related neuroimmunology approaches to better understand disease mechanisms in the human brain.

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Fernando Real

France

Fernando Real is a research scientist and team leader at the Center for Infection and Immunity of Lille (CIIL), Institut Pasteur de Lille, where he leads work on the chronicity of viral infections.
His research focuses on how macrophages and other myeloid cells can act as long-term hosts for persistent intracellular pathogens, with particular emphasis on viral persistence and HIV-related chronic infection.
He combines immunology and infection biology to better understand the mechanisms that allow pathogens to evade clearance and persist in the body.

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Greg Towers

UK

Professor Greg Towers is a molecular virologist whose work focuses on host-virus interactions, with particular emphasis on HIV-1, innate immunity, and viral immune evasion.
He has made major contributions to understanding how HIV capsids are stabilised by host cofactors and how the viral genome avoids cytoplasmic nucleic acid sensors.
His broader research also includes SARS-CoV-2 and other viruses, using comparative virology to better understand mechanisms of infection and immune control.

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Jon Brooks

UK

Dr Jonathan Brooks is a Senior Lecturer at the University of Liverpool, where his research uses neuroscience and MRI-based techniques to study changes in the human central nervous system produced by pain.
His work includes magnetic resonance imaging, functional MRI, and magnetic resonance spectroscopy, with a strong interest in chronic pain, brainstem and spinal cord function, and related neuroimaging methods.
He has also contributed to research on myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome and other conditions involving altered brain and nervous system function.

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Sonya Marshall-Gradisnik

Australia

Professor Sonya Marshall-Gradisnik is Director of the National Centre for Neuroimmunology and Emerging Diseases (NCNED) at Griffith University in Australia.
Her research focuses on myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS), natural killer cell function, ion channel dysfunction, cytokine production, and immune signalling pathways.
She is a leading researcher in ME/CFS and has also contributed to work on the relationship between ME/CFS and Long COVID.

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Marcus Buggert

Sweden

Marcus Buggert is an assistant professor and group leader at Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm, where his research focuses on human adaptive immunity to viral infections and cancer.
His work centres on antigen-specific T cells and the study of immune responses across blood and tissue, with the aim of understanding how location, age, genetics, and disease shape protective and dysfunctional immunity.
These insights are used to inform better vaccines, immunotherapies, and strategies for future pandemics.

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Edmund Kunji

UK

Professor Edmund Kunji is a research group leader at the MRC Mitochondrial Biology Unit, University of Cambridge, where he studies mitochondrial carrier proteins and their role in the transport of metabolites, cofactors, and ions across the inner mitochondrial membrane.
His work focuses on the structural and functional characterisation of transport proteins in mitochondria, with the goal of understanding their physiological roles and their links to human disease.
He has made major contributions to mitochondrial bioenergetics, membrane transport, and the molecular basis of transporter dysfunction.

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The Carding Group

UK

The Carding Group at the Quadram Institute studies gut microbes in health and disease, with a particular focus on mucosal immunology, commensal microbiology, foodborne pathogens, and host-microbe interactions.
The group’s broader research includes work on the intestinal microbiome, virome, and gut-brain axis, as well as projects related to ME/CFS and microbiota-based interventions.
Its studies combine immunology, microbiology, and bioinformatics to understand how microbes shape gut health and disease in humans.

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Anouk Slaghekke

The Netherlands

Anouk Slaghekke is a PhD candidate at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam in the Department of Human Movement Sciences and Amsterdam Movement Sciences.
Her research focuses on skeletal muscle adaptations in ME/CFS, with an emphasis on peripheral muscle oxygenation, skeletal muscle structure and function, post-exertional malaise, and underlying pathophysiology.
She is also involved in work related to the National ME/CFS Biobank and has presented research on microvascular dysfunction and basal membrane thickening in skeletal muscle in ME/CFS and post-COVID syndrome.

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Leo A.B. Joosten

The Netherlands

Professor Leo A.B. Joosten is a pathobiologist and professor of mechanisms of inflammatory diseases at Radboud University Medical Centre in Nijmegen.
His research focuses on host defence mechanisms triggered by pathogenic microorganisms and the chronic inflammation they can cause, with current projects exploring Toll-like receptors, Nod-like receptors, and C-type lectin receptors in pathogen recognition.
He also studies the role of the inflammasome and autophagy machinery in the pathogenesis of Lyme disease, as well as metabolic-related diseases such as diabetes type 2, atherosclerosis, and gouty arthritis.

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Andrew Wilson

UK

Professor Andrew Wilson is a Clinical Senior Lecturer in Respiratory Health at the University of East Anglia and an Honorary Consultant Physician at Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital.
His work focuses on the design and conduct of clinical trials and other clinical investigations, including studies to evaluate new treatments, biomarkers, and risk stratification variables.
He has led large non-commercial multi-centre trials and brings extensive experience in remote assessment methods, trial design, and biomarker-driven research.

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Gitendra Uswatte

USA

Professor Gitendra Uswatte is a professor of psychology and physical therapy at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.
His research focuses on rehabilitation psychology, neurorehabilitation, neuroplasticity, and health psychology, with particular interest in how behavioral factors influence recovery after neurological injury.
He also has a strong record in clinical trial design and the study of cognitive rehabilitation and related interventions.

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Leo Tamariz

USA

Professor Leonardo J. Tamariz is a clinician and researcher at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine.
His work focuses on public health sciences, cardiology, biomarkers, large datasets, and the study and treatment of long COVID.
He also serves as a staff physician at the Miami VA long COVID clinic.

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Ana Palacio

USA

Dr. Ana M. Palacio is a Professor of Clinical Medicine at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine and a clinician investigator in public health sciences.
Her work focuses on long COVID, health disparities, social determinants of health, and complex chronic illness.
She has extensive experience in clinical care, research, and teaching, particularly in community-based and disparities-focused medicine.

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Mari Gamme Sollie and Trine Alm Holterbakken

Røysumtunet, Norway

Mari Gamme Sollie is a specialist nurse and professional lead at Røysumtunet’s ME department in Norway.
Avdeling for ME is a round-the-clock care service for people with ME/CFS, offering individualized support, symptom relief, and structured care in a calm environment.
She is involved in the clinical and organisational work supporting this specialist service.

Trine Alm Holterbakken is the department head at Røysumtunet.
She leads the team connected with the ME department and the wider care services at Røysumtunet.
The service is built around holistic care, dignity, and a multidisciplinary approach for patients needing long-term support.

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