- Source: Trevor Lawley
Trevor Lawley FMedSci is a Faculty member and Group Leader in the Host-Microbiota Interactions Lab at the Wellcome Sanger Institute (WSI). He is also co-founder and Chief Scientific Officer of the biotech company Microbiotica.
During his career, Lawley has pioneered the application of high throughput genomic and culturing approaches to characterise enteric pathogens and investigate the microbiomes contained on and within host organisms, during periods of health and disease.
Education and career
Lawley received his bachelor's degree in Biology in 1997 from Acadia University. He then studied for a PhD at the University of Alberta, in the laboratories of Diane Taylor and Laura Frost, where he studied the mechanisms that pathogenic bacteria use to disseminate antibiotic resistance genes. After his PhD, Trevor was awarded a Canadian Institutes of Health Research post-doctoral fellowship to work in the Laboratories of Stanley Falkow and Denise Monack at Stanford University, where he studied the impact of antibiotic treatment on Salmonella disease and transmission.
In 2007 Lawley received a Royal Society of London Award to start a research programme on Clostridioides difficile disease and transmission at the Wellcome Sanger Institute. In 2010, he was appointed as a Career Development Fellow in the Sanger Institute Faculty and was promoted to Faculty Group Leader in 2014 and a Senior Group Leader in 2021.
In December 2016, Lawley, together with Gordon Dougan and Mike Romanos, co-founded the biotech company Microbiotica through £12M seed funding from Cambridge Innovation Capital, IP Group and Seventure. In March 2022, Microbiotica secured Series B funding to perform two clinical studies for patients with cancer and ulcerative colitis. Microbiotica develops Live Bacterial Therapeutics, biomarkers and microbiome-based technologies focused on autoimmune diseases and cancers.
Research
Lawley leads the Host-Microbiota Interactions Lab at the Sanger Institute, which explores the relationship between humans and the bacteria and viruses that collectively form their microbiome.
Lawley and his team use a range of methods and tools, including large scale metagenomic analysis, genetics, mouse and cellular models, state-of-the art microbial culturing, transcriptomics, proteomics and machine learning, to investigate the microbial communities associated with human health and a range of developmental disorders, diseases and poorly understood syndromes. They are particularly interested in how the microbiome influences long-term growth, development and disease resistance of children from Westernized and Low- and Middle-Income countries.
They have worked on concepts, analytical tools, and methodology to enable basic discoveries and translation of medicines and diagnostics from the human microbiome using data-driven and hypothesis-driven approaches.
They focus on several key areas including:
Characterising the evolution of taxonomic and functional diversity in the human microbiome;
Investigating the early-life microbiome, and how birth-mode and clinical interventions, impact microbiome acquisition and assembly
Understanding host-microbiome interactions and drivers of inflammatory disease and cancer
Studying the fundamental biology, transmission and pathogenesis of C. difficile.
Lawley’s group has authored over 100 papers. Their work is regularly covered in the scientific and popular press
Awards and honours
Lawley was elected as a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences in 2023. In 2015 Lawley received the Peggy Lillis Foundation “Innovator Award” for Pioneering Work on Live Biotherapeutics.
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