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Molecular Biology
Australia
2026

D-Index & Metrics

Molecular Biology

D-Index
105
Citations
38505
World Ranking
448
National Ranking
10

Research.com Recognitions

  • 2026 - Research.com Molecular Biology in Australia Leader Award
  • 2025 - Research.com Molecular Biology in Australia Leader Award
  • 2023 - Research.com Molecular Biology in Australia Leader Award

Overview

Roger R. Reddel is affiliated with the Children's Medical Research Institute in Australia. Their research primarily spans the fields of Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology, and Medicine, with particular focus on Molecular Biology, Cancer Research, Spectroscopy, Oncology, and Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine.

Their work encompasses several specialized topics, including:

  • Advanced Proteomics Techniques and Applications
  • Cancer Genomics and Diagnostics
  • Telomeres, Telomerase, and Senescence
  • Bioinformatics and Genomic Networks
  • Radiomics and Machine Learning in Medical Imaging
  • Mass Spectrometry Techniques and Applications
  • Gene expression and cancer classification

Recent scientific contributions include publications such as:

  • Pan-cancer proteomic map of 949 human cell lines, 2022, Cancer Cell
  • Strategies to enable large-scale proteomics for reproducible research, 2020, Nature Communications
  • Role of POT1 in Human Cancer, 2020, Cancers
  • Clinical applications of mass spectrometry-based proteomics in cancer: Where are we?, 2022, PROTEOMICS
  • Alternative lengthening of telomeres is not synonymous with mutations in ATRX/DAXX, 2021, Nature Communications

Their frequent co-authors include Phillip J. Robinson, Qing Zhong, Peter G. Hains, Rebecca C. Poulos, and Adel T. Aref. These collaborations have contributed to a consistent presence in scientific literature.

Reddel has published repeatedly in venues such as:

  • bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
  • Nature Communications
  • Cancer Research
  • Cancers
  • Cancer Research Communications

Best Publications

  • EVIDENCE FOR AN ALTERNATIVE MECHANISM FOR MAINTAINING TELOMERE LENGTH IN HUMAN TUMORS AND TUMOR-DERIVED CELL LINES

    Tracy M. Bryan;Anna Englezou;Luciano Dalla-Pozza;Melissa A. Dunham

  • Telomere elongation in immortal human cells without detectable telomerase activity.

    Tracy M. Bryan;Anna Englezou;Jyothi Gupta;Silvia Bacchetti

  • Telomere maintenance by recombination in human cells

    Melissa A. Dunham;Axel A. Neumann;Clare L. Fasching;Roger R. Reddel

  • Transformation of Human Bronchial Epithelial Cells by Infection with SV40 or Adenovirus-12 SV40 Hybrid Virus, or Transfection via Strontium Phosphate Coprecipitation with a Plasmid Containing SV40 Early Region Genes

    Roger R. Reddel;Yang Ke;Brenda I. Gerwin;Mary G. McMenamin

  • Alternative lengthening of telomeres: models, mechanisms and implications

    Anthony J. Cesare;Roger R. Reddel

  • Alternative lengthening of telomeres in mammalian cells

    Jeremy D Henson;Axel A Neumann;Thomas R Yeager;Roger R Reddel

  • Telomerase-negative Immortalized Human Cells Contain a Novel Type of Promyelocytic Leukemia (PML) Body

    Thomas R. Yeager;Axel A. Neumann;Anna Englezou;Lily I. Huschtscha

  • Protein composition of catalytically active human telomerase from immortal cells.

    Scott B. Cohen;Mark E. Graham;George O. Lovrecz;Nicolai Bache

  • Whole-genome landscape of pancreatic neuroendocrine tumours

    Aldo Scarpa;David K. Chang;Katia Nones;Katia Nones;Vincenzo Corbo

  • Isolation of a Candidate Human Telomerase Catalytic Subunit Gene, Which Reveals Complex Splicing Patterns in Different Cell Types

    Andrzej Kilian;David D.L. Bowtell;Helen E. Abud;Gary R. Hime

  • Multiple independent variants at the TERT locus are associated with telomere length and risks of breast and ovarian cancer

    Stig E. Bojesen;Stig E. Bojesen;Karen A. Pooley;Sharon E. Johnatty;Jonathan Beesley

  • Loss of ATRX, genome instability, and an altered DNA damage response are hallmarks of the alternative lengthening of telomeres pathway.

    Courtney A. Lovejoy;Wendi Li;Steven Reisenweber;Supawat Thongthip

  • Check your cultures! A list of cross-contaminated or misidentified cell lines.

    Amanda Capes-Davis;George Theodosopoulos;Isobel Atkin;Hans G. Drexler

  • DNA C-circles are specific and quantifiable markers of alternative-lengthening-of-telomeres activity

    Jeremy D Henson;Ying Cao;Lily I Huschtscha;Andy C Chang

  • Alternative Lengthening of Telomeres Is Characterized by High Rates of Telomeric Exchange

    J. Arturo Londoño-Vallejo;Héra Der-Sarkissian;Lucien Cazes;Silvia Bacchetti

  • Alternative lengthening of telomeres and survival in patients with glioblastoma multiforme

    V Hakin-Smith;DA Jellinek;D Levy;T Carroll

  • Alterations in p53 and p16INK4 expression and telomere length during spontaneous immortalization of Li-Fraumeni syndrome fibroblasts

    E. M. Rogan;T. M. Bryan;Bharati Hukku;K. Maclean

  • A robust assay for alternative lengthening of telomeres in tumors shows the significance of alternative lengthening of telomeres in sarcomas and astrocytomas.

    Jeremy D. Henson;Jonathan A. Hannay;Stanley W. McCarthy;Janice A. Royds;Janice A. Royds

  • Oncogenes and tumor-suppressor genes.

    T A Lehman;R Reddel;A M Peiifer;E Spillare

  • Telomerase and cancer.

    Reddel Rr

Frequent Co-Authors

Curtis C. Harris
Curtis C. Harris National Institutes of Health
Renu Wadhwa
Renu Wadhwa National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
Sunil C. Kaul
Sunil C. Kaul National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
Antony W. Braithwaite
Antony W. Braithwaite University of Otago
Emma L. Duncan
Emma L. Duncan King's College London
Youji Mitsui
Youji Mitsui Tokushima Bunri University
Susan J. Clark
Susan J. Clark Garvan Institute of Medical Research
Georgia Chenevix-Trench
Georgia Chenevix-Trench QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute
Robert L. Sutherland
Robert L. Sutherland Garvan Institute of Medical Research
James G. Kench
James G. Kench Royal Prince Alfred Hospital

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