Project Details
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The function of CLEC-1 in the skin

Applicant Dr. Betty Hebecker
Subject Area Immunology
Parasitology and Biology of Tropical Infectious Disease Pathogens
Term from 2015 to 2018
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 285692768
 
Final Report Year 2018

Final Report Abstract

In this research project I was able to fulfill all my short term goals set in the proposal: (1) I increased my scientific visibility documented by the invitation to review a scientific publication, (2) I gained knowledge in state-of-the-art technologies and increased my skill set (3) I increased my scientific network (e.g. collaboration with Dr Martin Stacey, University of Leeds on Il-36) and (4) gained intense expertise in fungal immunology. I set the basis for my own independent research in the field of dermatophytes, a research topic hardly addressed in the scientific community. In the first 6 month I had to adapt and change the focus of the whole project because of the inability to detect MelLec (Clec-1) in the quiescent skin. I drafted a new project with the title: Assessment of the cutaneous immune response during Trichophyton rubrum infection using an experimental mouse model. A significant progress was made in this project: I established an in vivo skin infection model with the anthropophilic dermatophyte T. rubrum, I established a single cell isolation protocol for flow cytometry of mouse skin, investigated the binding pattern of different C-type lectin receptors to T. rubrum conidia and generated an antibody against human MelLec. Thus, the basis for an independent research project was made.

Publications

 
 

Additional Information

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