Dr Leonie Unterholzner

Senior Lecturer in Molecular Immunology

Research Overview

My research group is interested in how cells can detect foreign DNA, for example when skin cells have been infected by a virus. This is part of the innate immune response, which acts within the first few hours of infection, with the aim to alert more specialised immune cells, and to eliminate the virus before it can spread to other parts of the body. We are investigating how a cell can distinguish viral DNA from its own DNA genome, and how it signals to alert neighbouring cells. We also study how cells can detect their own DNA as danger signal, when the DNA has been damaged by UV light or chemotherapy.

Our work investigates molecular mechanisms that underlie the immune response during infection, autoimmunity and cancer.


01/10/2023 → 30/09/2024
Research


01/10/2023 → 31/03/2024
Research


01/10/2023 → 30/09/2026
Research


01/12/2022 → 30/11/2025
Research


21/11/2022 → 31/03/2023
Research


04/01/2021 → 30/04/2024
Research


01/10/2019 → 30/09/2024
Research


01/02/2019 → 30/04/2019
Research


01/10/2018 → 31/03/2019
Research


01/01/2018 → 31/05/2021
Research


01/01/2015 → 31/12/2018
Research


01/08/2014 → 28/02/2016
Research


01/02/2014 → 31/08/2015
Research


01/02/2013 → 31/07/2018
Research


Editorial activity


Invited talk


Invited talk


Invited talk


Publication peer-review


Publication peer-review


Publication peer-review


Invited talk


Invited talk


Oral presentation


Oral presentation


Membership of board


Publication peer-review


Publication peer-review


Invited talk


Invited talk


Invited talk


Member of an organisation


Fellowship awarded competitively


Fellowship awarded competitively


Fellowship awarded competitively


Fellowship awarded competitively

  • Cancer Biology and Genome Stability
  • Microbes, Pathogens and Immunity