Contact information
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2354-3281
CAMS-Oxford Institute, Nuffield Department of Medicine
Research groups
Peter Wing
PhD
Group Leader
Research Summary
Oxygen is an essential metabolite for life given its fundamental role in aerobic respiration. As such cells acutely detect variations in oxygen levels through an evolutionarily conserved signalling cascade orchestrated by hypoxic inducible factors (HIFs), which rapidly alters the cellular transcriptome to promote survival. Many viral infections encounter variable oxygen levels that impact their replication through changing key cellular processes they rely on to replicate.
At present my lab is dedicated to understanding the molecular mechanisms governing the interplay between the cellular hypoxic response and viruses with pandemic potential such as coronaviruses and henipaviruses both in primary and zoonotic hosts, funded by the BBSRC. Through bridging these two areas of biology, viral replication in bats and cellular oxygen sensing, the goal of my research is to uncover innovative strategies for preventing and managing highly pathogenic zoonotic viral infections.
Recent publications
A key role for the exoribonuclease XRN1 in regulating the hepatitis B viral transcriptome.
Journal article
Tsukuda S. et al, (2026), iScience, 29
Substrate‐Selective Inhibition of the SARS‐CoV‐2 Papain‐Like Protease: Inhibition of Hydrolysis of Human Over Viral Substrates
Journal article
Sharma S. et al, (2026), Chemistry – A European Journal
Hypoxia inducible factors regulate pneumovirus replication by enhancing innate immune sensing.
Journal article
Ha J. et al, (2026), Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 123
Long-persisting SARS-CoV-2 spike-specific CD4+ T cells associated with mild disease and increased cytotoxicity post COVID-19
Journal article
Liu G. et al, (2025), Nature Communications, 16
A Novel Toolkit of SARS-CoV-2 Sub-Genomic Replicons for Efficient Antiviral Screening.
Journal article
Erdmann M. et al, (2025), Viruses, 17