Always clear, concise, and insightful.
Creates a collaborative learning environment.
Inspires growth and curiosity in every student.
Creates dynamic and engaging lessons.
Muhammad Jasim Uddin serves as Senior Lecturer in Veterinary Virology within the School of Veterinary Medicine at Murdoch University in Perth, Australia. He earned his Doctor of Veterinary Medicine (DVM) and Master of Science (MS) from Bangladesh Agricultural University (BAU), a PhD from the University of Bonn in Germany, and conducted postdoctoral research training in both Germany and Australia. Throughout his career, Uddin has held positions including Assistant Professor and subsequently Associate Professor in the Department of Medicine at BAU, as well as Researcher at the School of Veterinary Science, The University of Queensland. These experiences have shaped his expertise across international institutions in Bangladesh, Australia, and Germany.
Uddin's research interests encompass veterinary virology, immunology of infectious diseases, innate immunity, cell culture techniques, viral immunology, epigenetics, gene expression analysis, PCR methodologies, animal science, and production. He has produced 136 peer-reviewed publications, garnering over 2,070 citations and 23,000 reads. Among his highly cited works is "Exosomal and non-exosomal transport of extra-cellular microRNAs in follicular fluid: implications for bovine oocyte developmental competence" published in 2013. Other significant contributions include "Global burden of lumpy skin disease, outbreaks, and future challenges" (2023), "Viral Threats to Australian Fish and Prawns: Economic Impacts and Biosecurity Solutions—A Systematic Review" (2025), "Virome of Australia’s most endangered parrot in captivity evidenced of harboring hitherto unknown viruses" (2023), "Hepatic transcriptome analysis reveals genes, polymorphisms, and pathways in lipid metabolism" (2023), and "Association study and expression analysis of olfactomedin like 3 (OLFML3) gene for growth traits in sheep" (2022). His investigations address critical issues such as emerging viral threats in livestock and wildlife, transcriptomic responses to pathogens, meat quality traits influenced by genetics and epigenetics, and biosecurity challenges in aquaculture and poultry. Uddin contributes to the academic community as a member of the Research Committee in the School of Veterinary Medicine at Murdoch University and Pork Innovation Western Australia. He also serves as an Associate Editor for Frontiers in Veterinary Science and guest editor for special issues in the journal Viruses on topics like host-pathogen interactions for animal health.
