Tag: Prog

  • AFC Winter 2016 meeting

    AFC Winter 2016

    Held at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine

    Friday January 8th 2016

    Scientific Programme

    Session 1 (Welcome, Host presentations and Offered papers)

    The TB Centre at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine – who we are and what we do
    Helen Fletcher & Katherine Fielding, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine

    Polyfunctional CD4 T-cells and in vitro mycobacterial growth inhibition detected in Mycobacterium bovis BCG-vaccinated UK infants
    Steven Smith, Andrea Zelmer, Rose Blitz, Helen Fletcher & Hazel Dockrell, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine

    Ex vivo mycobacterial growth inhibition assays (MGIA) as a new tool for assessment of TB vaccines
    Andrea Zelmer, Satria Prabowo, Rachel Tanner, Elena Stylianou, Helen McShane & Helen Fletcher, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine

    The C-terminal domain of protein kinase G is required for regulation of glutamate catabolism in Mycobacterium smegmatis
    Nabanita Bhattacahatyya, M. Zimmerman & H. M. O’Hare, University of Leicester

    Parenteral adenoviral boost enhances BCG-induced protection, but not long-term survival  in a murine model of bovine TB
    Phil Hogarth, Daryan A. Kaveh, M. Carmen Garcia-Pelayo, Paul R. Webb, Esen E. Wooff, Véronique S. Bachy; Animal and Plant Health Agency

    A spatial model of M. tuberculosis in the lung
    Ruth Bowness, Stephen Gillespie & Mark Chaplain, University of St. Andrews

    Session 2 (Offered papers)

    The Suburban Cure–thoughts on dose and genetic susceptibility to TB
    Andrea Cooper & John E. Pearl, University of Leicester

    Does using aerosol and systemic routes of immunisation avoid anti-vector immunity and boost TB vaccine responses?
    Zita-Rose Manjaly Thomas, Iman Satti, Stephanie Harris, Joel Meyer, Morven Wilkie, Michael Riste, Ali Hamidi, Sharon Sheehan, Alice Minhinnick, Henry Bettinson & Helen McShane, University of Oxford

    Investigating host regulatory pathways that limit immunopathology in tuberculosis
    Patience T. Brace, LB Tezera, JS Friedland, TM Millar, CG Proud & PT Elkington, University of Southampton

    Towards definition of an immunological basis of protection obtained by prime-boost immunisation against bovine tuberculosis
    Hannah Metcalfe, Bernardo Villarreal-Ramos, Gareth J. Jones, Sabine Steinbach, W. Ivan Morrison , Tom Connelley & Martin Vordermeier, Animal and Plant Health Agency

    Targeting the mycobacterial membrane using novel antimicrobial peptides for tuberculosis therapy
    Jasmeet Singh Khara, SM Newton, N Krishnan, I Uhra, M Priestman, PR Langford, PLR Ee & BD Robertson, Imperial College

    Circulating serum microRNAs as novel biomarkers for bovine tuberculosis
    Carolina N.Correia, Nicolas C. Nalpas, Kirsten E. McLoughlin, David A. Magee, Ronan G. Shaughnessy, John A. Browne, Adam O. Whelan, H. Martin Vordermeier, Eamonn Gormley, Bernardo Villarreal-Ramos, Stephen V. Gordon & David E. MacHugh, University College Dublin

    Objectively-measured coughing patterns in pulmonary tuberculosis
    Richard Turner, Graham Bothamley & Surinder Birring, Homerton University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust

    Programme details (Word file)

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  • AFC Summer 1996 meeting

    AFC Summer 1996

    Held at Glaxo-Wellcome, Stevenage

    July 5th 1996

    Scientific Programme

    Session 1: Mini-symposium – Mycobacterial molecular biology applications: epidemiology and enzyme targets
    Guest speakers:

    TB in a high-risk community: what can we learn?
    Prof. Paul van Helden, University of Stellenbosch, South Africa

    DNA repair in the mycobacteria
    Prof. Valerie Mizrahi SAIMR, Johannesburg, South Africa

    Work being done at Stevenage:

    High density gridded mycobacterial genomic libraries
    S. Martin and K. Hussem

    Natural substitution of a key residue in mycobacterial PEP:UDP-N acetylglucosamine transferase
    K. Duncan, K Kempsell, D. Kim, W. Lees and C.T. Walsh. Glaxo Wellcome Research & Development and Harvard Medical School

    Session 2

    Sequential antibody responses to Mycobacterium bovis antigens in badgers
    Diane Newell, Chris Cheeseman& Richard Clifton Hadley. CVL and CSL, Weybridge

    The implication of PstS genes in mycobacterial pathogenesis
    Harry Thangaraj. RPMS, Hammersmith, London

    Double double coil and trouble: plasmid replication in mycobacteria
    Pelle Stolt. LSHTM, London

    Influence of non-MHC genes on immune responses to mycobacterial stress proteins
    J. Ivanyi, F. Wahid, S. Carmen & T. Aitman. RPMS, Hammersmith, London

    Session 3

    Mycobacterial viability and cytology studied with membrane and lipid fluorescence probes
    M.R. Barer, R. Cooney, P. Ibrahim, N.J. Garton, H. Christensen & D.E. Minnikin. University of Newcastle

    Towards determining the cellular functions of mycobacterial acyl-CoA carboxylase
    Anabela Medo Miranda, Elizabeth Norman & Jeremy Dale (University of Surrey)

    Nucleic acid vaccination for protection against M. tuberculosis
    X. Zhu, N. Venkataprasad, H. Thangaraj & H.M. Vordermeier. RPMS, Hammersmith, LOndon
    Differential gene expression of mycobacteria inside macrophages: analysis of mRNA
    P.D. Butcher, J.A. Mangan, I.M. Monahan, M.S. Li & D.K Banerjee. St George’s Hospital Medical School, London