Marilyn Renfree

Professor
Marilyn Renfree
Born 1947
Residence Australia
Nationality Australian
Institutions University of Melbourne
Alma mater Australian National University
Known for Research on Marsupial foetal development

Marilyn Renfree (born 1947) is an Australian zoologist. She completed her PhD at the Australian National University, was a post-doctoral fellow in Tennessee and then Edinburgh before going back to Australia. Since 1991, Renfree has been professor of zoology at the University of Melbourne.[1] Her main research interest focuses in reproductive and developmental biology of marsupials.

Early life

Marilyn Renfree was born in Brisbane, Queensland but moved to Canberra, ACT where her father was appointed as Commonwealth Crown Solicitor. Renfree went the Canberra Girls' Grammar School where she studied French, German, English, geography, maths and biology.[2]

Renfree studied biology at the Australian National University. Subjects she loved the most were biochemistry as well as reproduction and development. She chose to do her Honours degree to be about both biochemistry and fieldwork which, in those days, was seen as unusual. Renfree's Honours degree was about studying composition of foetal fluids of tammar wallabies. To do so, she had to invent a new way to catch female tammars on Kangaroo Island, to get enough individuals to work on.[2]

Research career

She then started her PhD project, studying all aspects of maternal-foetal interactions in marsupials. As part as her research, she showed that it was possible to reactivate embryos that were in embryonic diapause (a state of suspended animation) and carry them to full term by giving progesterone injections. She also showed that marsupials have functional placenta, which produces hormones. Moreover, Renfree showed that, like in any mammal, marsupial placenta regulates precisely what goes mother to foetus. Renfree also proved that, during pregnancy, the two uteri of kangaroos and wallabies behave differently, the gravid one becoming larger than the non-pregnant one due to the presence or absence of the embryo. This was Renfree's first paper and it was a Nature publication.[3][4]

In March 1972, Renfree finished her PhD, worked for six months in Zoology at ANU and then moved to University of Tennessee to work with Joe Daniel. The project was funded by NIH to study uterine proteins and the influence of melatonin on uterine secretions.[5] While working there, Renfree also started a project working on endocrinology of opossums. To get possums for this work, she advertised in the local newspaper and soon became known as the "possum lady from Australia".[2]

Renfree then moved to the University of Edinburgh, to learn about genetics in Anne McLaren's lab. She worked on foetal fluids in mouse, repeating what she had previously done in tammar.

Renfree moved back to Australia to take up a lecturer position in vertebrate biology at Murdoch University, Perth, WA in 1973. Renfree established a colony of tammars at Murdoch University and also started working on agile wallabies, studying them to understand how lactation is controlled in marsupials. She also started working on honey possums, in collaboration with Ron Wooller.

In January 1982, Renfree married Roger Short and they both moved to Monash University, Melbourne, VIC where she started her third tammar colony. She applied for a NHMRC fellowship and was a Principal Research Fellow for ten years at Monash, working full-time on research.

Her two daughters, Tamsin and Kirsten were born in 1983 and 1986. In collaboration with her husband, Renfree studied the contraceptive effects of breastfeeding, showing that breastfeeding on demand had very effective contraceptive effect. Renfree, in collaboration with David Parer and Liz Parer-Cook, participated in The Nature of Australia, a series by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation celebrating Australia's bicentenary in 1988. Methods used to film tammars were then used to study birth process in marsupials. Renfree showed that, as for other mammals, prostaglandin is involved in birth and that, as well as for other mammals, marsupial baby is capable of modifying maternal physiology at birth.[2]

In 1991, Renfree got appointed Chair of Zoology and Head of Department at Melbourne University, a position she held until 2003. She became a Laureate Professor of the University in 2002, and in 2003 was awarded a Federation Fellowship. In 2011, Renfree was one of the lead researchers on the very first kangaroo genome sequencing project [6] Renfree currently serves on the Prime Minister's Science Prizes Committee for Australia.

Awards

Renfree was awarded the Gottschalk Medal in 1980, the Mueller Medal in 1997. She was elected a fellow of the Australian Academy of Science in 1997. She was awarded the Gold Conservation Medal of the Zoological Society of San Diego for 2000, the Centenary Medal, Commonwealth of Australia in 2003 and was made Officer of the Order of Australia in 2013 for distinguished service to biology, particularly through leadership in the research into marsupial reproduction, and to the scientific community.[7]

Mentors

Renfree has had several mentors during her study years and career. Mrs Nicholson, who was also fondly called Mrs Nick by her students, was Renfree's biology teacher in fourth and fifth grade. Mrs Nicholson was a very important link to science for Renfree, being one of very few Australian female Doctors in Science at that time.

Another link to science was Renfree's sister, who was Frank Fenner's technician, Bev also worked at the John Curtin School of Medical Research when Renfree worked for a short time between school and university.

Prof. Amoroso [8] was very supportive of Renfree's work during her PhD and after. Renfree co-authored a paper "Hormones and the evolution of viviparity" with Amoroso in 1979.

Woman in science

Renfree's father didn't expect her or her sister to go to university, he was expecting their brother to go. When Renfree told her father that she wanted to start studying at university, he told her that she had one year to prove what she could do. At the end of her first year, Renfree got a scholarship and supported herself through the rest of her studies. Her father was very pleased and got both very enthusiastic and supportive. While Renfree was doing her PhD, she never told any boy she would meet at a party that she was actually doing a PhD. Saying that she worked in the Zoology Department was simpler. Renfree believes Murdoch University was the first place she met discrimination as a woman in science, being "the wrong sex, the wrong age".[2]

References

  1. "Professor Marilyn Renfree | Faculty of Science". Science.unimelb.edu.au. Retrieved 2014-08-15.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 "Australian Academy of Science - Professor Marilyn Renfree". Sciencearchive.org.au. 2009-04-07. Retrieved 2014-08-15.
  3. Marilyn B. Renfree (1972-12-22). "Influence of the Embryo on the Marsupial Uterus". Nature.com. Retrieved 2014-08-15.
  4. http://trove.nla.gov.au/article/result?q=marilyn+renfree&sortby=dateAsc
  5. "Renfree, Marilyn Bernice - Biographical entry - Encyclopedia of Australian Science". Eoas.info. Retrieved 2014-08-15.
  6. "First kangaroo genome sequence reveals possible gene responsible for characteristic hop". ScienceDaily. Retrieved 2014-08-15.
  7. "WiLS Database - Expert Women in Life Sciences". Wils-database.embo.org. 2014-03-21. Retrieved 2014-08-15.
  8. "Caribbean Icons in STI". Niherst. Retrieved 2014-08-15.
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