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Project title: Rapid Development and Testing of Multifunctional Antimicrobial Coatings to Combat Urological Device Infections Supervisory Team: Dr Andrew R. Hamilton; Dr Ali Mosayyebi; Dr Dario
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Primary supervisor - Dr Stefan Bidula Superficial fungal infections such as those of the skin, hair, and nails affect more than 1 billion people annually. Although usually considered a nuisance
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-infecting pathogens including rice and wheat blast fungi (Magnaporthales, Ascomycota), but take-all of wheat is an understudied disease. Little is known about how far the fungus spreads and the intraspecific
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difficile (C. diff) is a serious, worldwide, public health threat. The leading infective cause of hospital-acquired and antibiotic-associated diarrhoea, every year around half a million new cases of C
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but can become invasive, resulting in bloodstream infections that lead to longer illnesses and antibiotic treatment. A significant data gap exists regarding the key genetic attributes that relate
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training budget of £3,250 for specialist training courses and expenses Project Background Schistosomiasis is a major water-borne disease that severely impacts human health, infecting 200 million people
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with worldwide occurrence. Of particular interest is HEV genotype 3 (HEV-3) which is zoonotic, infecting a diverse range of hosts, including pigs. In contrast to the human infection, the infection
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the use of neutralising antibodies. The approaches to study the host-pathogen interaction of PRRSV-1 in vitro and in vivo shall include the: Use of in vitro systems to demonstrate effect of infection on APC
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Applicants are invited to apply for a fully funded PhD position (UK home fees only) at the Institute of Microbiology and Infection (IMI), University of Birmingham to work on a project aiming to
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phenotypic heterogeneity exists within the clonal bacterial population for adhesion to different surfaces. Bacteria even lacking adhesive lectins can bind to cells and cause infections. The objective