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DTSTART:19960101T000000 END:STANDARD BEGIN:STANDARD TZNAME:GMT TZOFFSETFROM:+0100 TZOFFSETTO:+0000 DTSTART:19961027T020000 RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;BYMONTH=10;BYDAY=-1SU END:STANDARD END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTAMP:20260511T022235Z DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20210113T130000 DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20210113T140000 SUMMARY:BMS Divisional Webinar: Phage Ecology Informing Applied Developme nt\, Professor Martha Clokie\, Department of Genetics and Genome Biology \, University of Leicester TZID:Europe/London UID:20210113-8a17841b74f8c628017508d647371e81@warwick.ac.uk CREATED:20210111T143440Z DESCRIPTION:Abstract: My talk will cover how looking into the ecology of dynamics between bacteriophages and bacteria can help us develop phages for therapeutic application. In general there are two discreet communiti es of phage biologists\, those who isolate phages and try and use them t o treat plant\, animal and human diseases and those who try and understa nd the fundamental aspects of phage biology. My work is largely centred in the middle of these extremes and I will share thoughts\, and insights from recent studies on how I think an ecological understanding of phage s may prevent us from ‘reinventing the wheel’\, each time we wish to tre at a different pathogen and allow us to identify commonalities between u nrelated phage groups. I will share recent data from my lab to support t hese ideas. Biography: I am a Professor of Microbiology at the Universit y of Leicester with 73 published papers on bacteriophages. I lead a grou p of 5 post-doctoral assistants and 5 PhD students working on different aspects of the therapeutic development of phages that target human and a nimal pathogens. I have a good grounding in all aspects of phage therapy development – from unravelling fundamental biology to product developme nt\, and commercialisation. Three three patents have been filed from my work. In brief these are: to protect a set of therapeutic Clostridium di fficile phages - granted in the US and Europe (Therapeutic Phages\; PCT/ GB20 13759275.4\; and 14/423284)\; a Lyme disease phage-based diagnostic test (PCT/GB2017/053323)\, currently being commercially developed with the R.E.D. laboratories\, a leading European diagnostic company\; and an animal Salmonella phage mix (Therapeutic Phages\; PCT/GB20 1815483.1). I have edited four books on phages\, these have sold thousands of copies are the recognised authority on phage methods (and have also been trans lated to Chinese). I have consulted to many biotech companies. I am the Editor in Chief for a newly to be launched journal PHAGE: therapy\, appl ications and research. I have been exposed to the practical use of phage in humans in Georgia and Russia and consulted with medical professional s to help design phage clinical trials to treat respiratory infections a nd diabetic foot ulcers respectively. Much of my work has focussed on de veloping phage products that target the anaerobic gut pathogen\, Clostri dium difficile. This led to a string of papers on the fundamental and ap plied aspects of the disease. I have a track record of translating funda mental science to applied settings evidenced by my work on Salmonella\, that led to two recent three-year BBSRC (Biotechnology and Biological Sc iences Research Council) awards to design\, formulate and evaluate phage products for use in British and Thai livestock. I have had projects to optimise phages production\, stability and spray drying. I worked with t he Department of Health and Wellcome Trust to inform debate and prioriti sation of alternative therapies to antibiotic/antimicrobial drugs (2016) \; served on FSA (Food Standards Agency) Committee to advise on phage re gulation in food (2016)\; Served on MRC funding committee for Antimicrob ial Resistance Cross-Council Initiative Theme 2 (2015/2016). My work has been the focus of recent phage documentaries on BBC world service and B loomsburg Press. I was also recently on BBC R4 Life Scientific (October 2019)\, a programme that showcases scientists and on iconic ‘Infinite Mo nkey Cage’\, a science comedy hosted by Brian Cox\, January 2018. I deve loped and regularly run a course to teach phage biology to African acade mics\, as part of a Gates funded ‘Phages for Global Health’ Yale-Leicest er collaboration. All of my applied work is routed in fundamental biolog y and my early phage research was focussed on understanding how ocean ba cteriophages controlled their marine bacterial hosts. My work paved the way for a new research field which is still very much active\, that of d etermining complex ways that phages interact with their bacterial hosts. LOCATION: CATEGORIES:BiomedicalSciences,DivisionalSeminars LAST-MODIFIED:20210111T143440Z ORGANIZER;CN=Jas Bains: END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR