Project Details
EXC 2155: RESIST - Resolving Infection Susceptibility
Subject Area
Microbiology, Virology and Immunology
Basic Research in Biology and Medicine
Medicine
Basic Research in Biology and Medicine
Medicine
Term
since 2019
Website
Homepage
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 390874280
The Cluster of Excellence RESIST will drive forward our understanding of the fundamental determinants of susceptibility to infectious diseases to the point where this newly gained knowledge can be used to develop more accurate, personalised therapies, diagnostic methods and novel preven-tive strategies. These aims are motivated by important clinical needs. Severe manifestations of infec-tious disease often occur in the very young (infants and premature babies) and the very old. Susceptibility to infection may also be inherited or acquired, for example as a side effect of immunosuppressive therapy or another infection. In these individuals, severe infections often curtail the success of modern medicine. Because of an ageing population and an increasing number of patients living with organ or stem cell transplants, severe infectious disease in susceptible individuals represents an important medical and societal challenge, in particular in middle and high-income countries. Currently it is difficult to take into account differences in infection susceptibility and to tailor treatments to the individual requirements of an infected patient, because the host and pathogen determinants that govern infectious disease susceptibility are only poorly understood. To remedy this situation, RESIST will address host genetic factors determining the severity of bacterial and viral infections, explore how the immune response is primed in very young and reshaped in older individuals, and investigate the dynam-ics of microbial communities and determinants of bacterial and viral persistence and replication. RESIST has designed its research programme around numerous existing and planned patient cohorts and will focus on a selected group of bacterial and viral pathogens that are of high public health concern and of particular relevance in the very young, the elderly, patients with inherited immune defects and transplant recipients. RESIST will build on the recently developed excellent infrastructure for basic and clinical in-fection research in the Hannover-Braunschweig area and further strengthen it by incorporating world-leading expertise in molecular imaging (Centre for Structural Systems Biology, Hamburg) and in the genetic causes of immunodeficiency (Centre for Chronic Immunodeficiencies, Freiburg). In this way RE-SIST will generate new ideas and concepts that can be developed further for eventual clinical use with the help of our translational research programmes in the German Centres for Infection Research (DZIF) and Lung Research (DZL), as well as our recently established Centres for Individualised Infection Medicine (CIIM) and Emerging Infections and Zoonoses (RIZ) in Hannover. In this way RESIST will lay the scientific basis and act as a catalyst for the development of innovative approaches to prevent, diagnose and treat severe infections in susceptible patients.
DFG Programme
Clusters of Excellence (ExStra)
Applicant Institution
Medizinische Hochschule Hannover
Participating Institution
Universitätsklinikum Freiburg
Centrum für Chronische Immundefizienz; Helmholtz-Zentrum für Infektionsforschung (HZI); Stiftung Tierärztliche Hochschule Hannover; TWINCORE
Zentrum für Experimentelle und Klinische Infektionsforschung GmbH; Zentrum für strukturelle Systembiologie (CSSB)
c/o Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron DESY
Centrum für Chronische Immundefizienz; Helmholtz-Zentrum für Infektionsforschung (HZI); Stiftung Tierärztliche Hochschule Hannover; TWINCORE
Zentrum für Experimentelle und Klinische Infektionsforschung GmbH; Zentrum für strukturelle Systembiologie (CSSB)
c/o Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron DESY
Spokespersons
Professor Dr. Reinhold Förster; Professorin Dr. Gesine Hansen; Professor Dr. Thomas Schulz
Participating Researchers
Professor Dr. Luka Cicin-Sain; Professor Dr. Markus Cornberg; Professorin Dr. Petra Dersch; Dr. Susanne Eschenburg; Professorin Dr. Rita Gerardy-Schahn; Professor Dr. Bodo Grimbacher; Professor Dr. Kay Grünewald; Professorin Dr. Susanne Häußler; Professor Dr. Jochen Hühn; Professor Dr. Thomas Illig; Professor Dr. Ulrich Kalinke; Professor Dr. Thomas Krey; Professor Dr. Michael Peter Manns; Professorin Dr. Alice C. McHardy; Professor Dr. Rolf Müller; Professor Dr. Albert Osterhaus; Professor Dr. Thomas Pietschmann; Professor Dr. Immo Prinz; Professor Dr. Till Strowig; Professorin Dr. Dorothee Viemann; Professor Dr. Thomas Werfel; Professor Dr. Torsten Witte