Marnie Blewitt is head of a division at WEHI, which focuses on X-inactivation, and is engaged in research on the role of polycomb-group proteins in hematopoietic stem cell function.
She completed undergraduate studies in 1999 at The University of Sydney,[1] with honours and a double major of Molecular Biology and Genetics.
[2] As part of her doctoral research at the same institution under the supervision of Associate Professor Emma Whitelaw, she designed a sensitised mutagenesis screen to find new epigenetic modifiers in mice, for which she was awarded the Genetics Society of Australia DG Catcheside prize for the best PhD in genetics.
She moved to Melbourne at the end of 2005 to accept a Peter Doherty post-doctoral fellowship in Doug Hilton's[3] lab from 2005 to 2009, before becoming laboratory head in January 2010.
[5] Other research activities include the study of the roles of polycomb-group proteins in hematopoietic stem cell function.