Matthias Ernst

Professor
Cell Division
Ludwig Cancer Research Institute
Belgium

Business Expert Infectious Diseases
Biography

Ludwig Cancer Research is a global community of leading scientists pursuing innovative ways to prevent and control cancer. From basic research to clinical trials, in individual laboratories or as part of international teams, our researchers are tackling the hardest questions, spotting the connections and the possibilities. At Ludwig, we test our work against the one measure that matters — improving human health. Ludwig Cancer Research is a global community of leading scientists pursuing innovative ways to prevent and control cancer. From basic research to clinical trials, in individual laboratories or as part of international teams, our researchers are tackling the hardest questions, spotting the connections and the possibilities. At Ludwig, we test our work against the one measure that matters — improving human health.

Research Intrest

In 1990, I joined the laboratory of Prof Ashley Dunn at the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research in Melbourne to extend my studies into molecular mechanisms that underpin the growth of cancer cells. In 1996 I was recruited as Deputy Head for the Bone Biology Research Department at Novartis in Switzerland. Following my return to Melbourne in 1998 as Group Leader, Ludwig Melbourne-Parkville Branch, I was appointed Acting Director in 2009. In 2012 I moved to the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute, where I continued to embrace genetic tools and state-of-the-art molecular biology to understand the molecular mechanism that allow the cells of the lining in the stomach and bowel to continuously renew without forming tumours.  Recently, my work has identified several critical proteins, which derail this process and allow cells to unabatedly grow when acquiring mutations and to cause cancer of the stomach and the colon. I was appointed inaugural Scientific Director of the newly established Olivia Newton-John Cancer Research Institute in 2014. At the ONJCRI my laboratory team is exploring novel strategies to target these cancer-promoting proteins, to develop new therapeutics for gastrointestinal cancers