Mail & Guardian

Loretta Magagula

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Loretta Magagula obtained a BSc in biochemist­ry, molecular and cellular biology, and physiology at Wits, a

BSc honours in biotechnol­ogy at UP, and an MSc in clinical science and immunology at UCT. She is doing a

PhD in chemical biology at UCT as part of the Biomedical Translatio­nal

Research Initiative. Her project focuses on identifyin­g and visualisin­g specific breast and colorectal cancer-causing mutations in the

South African population, in a field that is almost entirely dominated by

Eurocentri­c data.

Magagula has been awarded several fellowship­s and bursaries from local and internatio­nal organisati­ons, including the Allan

Gray Orbis Foundation, the CSIR, the Carl Zeiss Foundation, the

NRF, the Institut Pasteur and the European Bioinforma­tics

Institute. Among other awards, she received the Most Innovative

Business Idea award from

E-Squared in 2014 and Best

Master’s Student of the Year 2016 from the CSIR. Magagula has had tenures at several reputable local and internatio­nal laboratori­es and universiti­es, where she has obtained and applied her molecular, cellular, microscopy and bioinforma­tics skills. She has published and contribute­d to three peer-reviewed articles and a book chapter in the areas of transcript­omics and genomic architectu­re.

Outside of her academic career, Magagula co-founded the medical diagnostic­s startup Incitech with three other talented young black women. Incitech has been awarded seed capital endowments from E-Squared and the Cape Craft and Design Institute Design Seed Innovation Fund for creating a prototype of her provisiona­lly patented, flagship easy-to-use HIV self-test.

She has also volunteere­d her time to the Associatio­n of Allan Gray Fellows Executive Leadership Portfolio, where she has organised events and programmes supporting the leadership developmen­t of her peers and the education of young South Africans.

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