Angela van Daal
Associate Professor
Associate Dean (Research)
BSc Hons (Adelaide)
PhD (Macquarie)
Angela completed a BSc at the University of Adelaide and a PhD in Molecular Genetics at Macquarie University. She did post-doctoral research in the area of molecular genetics at Washington University in the US.
On returning to Australia she continued this research at the University of Adelaide. In 1991 she took a position at the South Australian Forensic Science Centre where she developed and implemented DNA typing for forensic casework. She introduced DNA typing to the courts of SA, Queensland, ACT and also provided DNA evidence in NSW and Victoria. She was heavily involved in the setting up of Quality Guidelines for DNA testing for both forensic and parentage purposes.
As a qualified ATA/ASCLD-LAB inspector she was involved in audits and accreditations of a number of forensic laboratories around the world including the FBI. She moved to Queensland in 1999 and worked in the CRC for Diagnostics at QUT and for six years. She moved to Bond University in July 2005.
Download a more extensive listing of Angela van Daal's publications
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- Agouti: From mouse to man, from skin to fat
- Agouti signal protein regulation in human melanoma cells
- A polymorphism in the agouti signalling protein (ASIP) is associated with decreased levels of mRNA
- A polymorphism study of the human agouti gene and its association with MC1R
- Association of functionally different RUNX2 P2 promoter alleles with BMD
- Body mass index-related human adipocyte agouti expression is sex-specific but not depot-specific
- Gene polymorphisms and their effects in the melanocortin system
- Interrogation of multimeric DNA amplification products by competitive primer extension using Bst DNA polymerase (large fragment)
- Linkage disequilibrium analysis identifies an FGFR1 haplotype-tag SNP associated with normal variation in craniofacial shape
- Melanocortins and their receptors and antagonists
- Mouse models of obesity
- Novel PCR-EIA method for the detection of Chlamydia pneumoniae in respiratory specimens
- Single nucleotide polymorphisms in the MATP gene are associated with normal human pigmentation variation
- Solid-phase amplification and detection: A single-tube diagnostic assay for infectious agents
- The C/C genotype of the C957T polymorphism of the dopamine D2 receptor (DRD2) is associated with schizophrenia

