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Research
Areas
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Genetics
of Infectious Disease
The techniques of biochemistry, microbiology, molecular biology, and genomics, are used by a group of researchers in the Genetics Program at MSU to study viral, bacterial, and parasitic infectious agents and the diseases they cause. These agents include food- and water-borne agents, sexually-transmitted organisms, and respiratory pathogens of humans and animals. Technological resources available in the MSU community allow these researchers to be on the cutting edge of advancing our knowledge of the infection process. |
| Hans Cheng | genomics of disease resistance and viral disease in chickens |
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FACULTY NAME |
RESEARCH DESCRIPTION |
| Cindy Arvidson | regulation of gene expression and protein localization in pathogenic bacteria |
| Michael Bagdasarian | protein secretion in bacterial pathogens |
| Robert Britton | genomics of Bacillus subtilus, genomics of probiotic/pathogen interactions. |
| Todd Ciche | genetic analysis of nematode gut symbionts, and the nematode as an insect parasite |
| Hans Cheng | genomics of disease resistance and viral disease in chickens |
| Jerry Dodgson | chicken genome mapping and transgenic poultry |
| Michael Kron | amino-acyl tRNA synthetases in parasites |
| Leslie Kuhn | developing computational approaches for protein folding, ligand interactions, and design |
| Linda Mansfield | the infectious process whereby pathogens gain access to and cause disease in their hosts. |
| Martha Mulks | bacterial pathogenesis, animal disease, development of genetic tools to construct vaccines. |
| Suzanne Thiem | molecular biology of insect baculoviruses |
| Thomas Whittam | evolutionary genetics of bacterial pathogens |
| Vincent Young | campylobacter and helicobacter, animal models of infectious diseases, gastrointestinal microbiology/ecology |