Moredon Scientific Ltd

Bacteriology

Current Projects | Reports | Posters

Bacterial diseases continue to have a major impact on the health and welfare of farm livestock. These diseases can be long standing problems that have never been properly controlled such as Johne's disease (Mycobacterium avium paratuberculosis) and enzootic abortion of ewes (Chlamydophila abortus), or emerging diseases such as pasteurellosis due to Pasteurella multocida, and Caseous lymphadenitis (Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis). In both situations their future control will depend on intensive research into the molecular mechanisms of how these pathogens induce disease and how the host responds to infection.

The Bacteriology Division has two programmes of work; molecular pathogenesis and host bacterial interactions. In both of these programmes generic approaches to bacterial diseases are being developed with projects sharing techniques, reagents, equipment and staff. The advent of genomics and the wider availability of bacterial genome sequences has inevitably demanded different approaches to bacteriological research and the Division's scientists have already accessed the Functional Genomics Unit facility for such things as 2-D gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometric analyses of bacterial proteins.

Current Projects

Reports

Posters