Metadata
Title
Pathogens, parasites and commensals
Category
general
UUID
b1015c66a6f540d1bf8314174c277270
Source URL
https://sites.manchester.ac.uk/lydia-becker-institute/research/pathogens-parasit...
Parent URL
https://sites.manchester.ac.uk/lydia-becker-institute/
Crawl Time
2026-03-11T06:11:07+00:00
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Pathogens, parasites and commensals

Source: https://sites.manchester.ac.uk/lydia-becker-institute/research/pathogens-parasites-and-commensals/ Parent: https://sites.manchester.ac.uk/lydia-becker-institute/

Lydia Becker Institute of Immunology and Inflammation / Research / Pathogens, parasites and commensals

Pathogens, parasites and commensals

Infections are the invasion of foreign organisms into the body. Understanding the immune system is our best protection against them.

Parasite immunology

Parasitic infection is ubiquitous in both humans and animals and affects billions of individuals globally.

Parasites present the immune system with a complex and dynamic antigenic challenge. Immunologists are equally challenged in trying to determine the mechanisms which underpin resistance and susceptibility to this fascinating group of pathogens.

We work with both protozoan parasites such as Plasmodium and Toxoplasma and metazoan parasites – the helminths or worms. We have one of the strongest groupings of experimental immunologists defining immunity to helminths across the world.

We work on all the major helminth groups including schistosomes, gastrointestinal nematodes, tissue dwelling nematodes and cestodes. We use well-defined model systems to provide mechanistic insight into immunoregulatory processes operating during parasitic infection in order to identify novel ways to ultimately control these pathogens.

Moreover, such model systems are key to the discovery of new pathways and processes involved in fundamental immunology.

We have extensive national and international collaborations. Working with colleagues in locations endemic for human parasitic disease enables us to explore translational aspects of our research. We pursue our discovery science through collaborations with other world-leading immunology groups.

Parasite immunology case study

Bacterial immunology

Trillions of bacteria live within our bodies and play an essential role in educating our immune system. However some bacteria cause severe infections, which is a major driver of mortality and morbidity globally.

The treatment of bacterial infections is becoming more difficult with the emergence of bacteria that are resistant to one or more antibiotics. This problem is largely driven by the widespread use and misuse of antibiotics.

We have a multidisciplinary approach to addressing these problems, combining expertise across clinical and scientific disciplines.

Through our collaborative work in bacterial immunology, we are gaining novel mechanistic insights into bacterial pathogenesis which can translate into clinical applications in vaccination, diagnostics, novel antimicrobials and immunomodulators.

Bacterial immunology case study

Fungal immunology

Fungal diseases kill more than 2 million people every year.

The University is recognised as a centre of international excellence for fundamental and applied research into fungal diseases.

Through the synergistic efforts of more than 80 clinicians, specialist microbiologists and scientists we are working to:

Fungal immunology case study

People

Leads

Professor Richard Grencis

Dr Elizabeth Mann (Deputy lead)

Principal investigators

Professor Judi Allen

Dr Peter Arkwright

Dr Tom Blanchard

Dr Bianca Price

Professor Ray Borrow

Dr Jen Cavet

Dr Kevin Couper

Professor Sheena Cruickshank

Professor Jeremy Derrick

Professor Kathryn Else

Dr Timothy Felton

Dr Julie Gibbs

Dr John Grainger

Professor Richard Grencis

Dr Matthew Hepworth

Dr Sarah Herrick

Dr Stephen Hughes

Dr Joanne Konkel

Dr Dennis Linton

Professor Andrew Mcbain

Professor Andrew MacDonald

Dr Elizabeth Mann

Dr Pawel Paszek

Dr Joanne Pennock

Dr Juan Quintana

Professor Ian Roberts

Dr Dominik Ruckerl

Dr Matthew Sinton

Professor Craig Smith

Dr Tara Sutherland

Professor Lydia Tabernero

Professor David Thornton

Professor Mark Travis

Dr Guoqing Xia

Contact Us

+44 (0)161 306 3771

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