📣 Help Shape the Future of UKRI's Gateway to Research (GtR)

We're improving UKRI's Gateway to Research and are seeking your input! If you would be interested in being interviewed about the improvements we're making and to have your say about how we can make GtR more user-friendly, impactful, and effective for the Research and Innovation community, please email gateway@ukri.org.

The molecular pathology of respiratory viral infections

Lead Research Organisation: University of Glasgow
Department Name: College of Medical, Veterinary, Life Sci

Abstract

Studentship strategic priority area:Basic and Clinical Research
Keywords:Respiratory infections- Pathology- Coinfection- Virus pathogenesi

Respiratory viral infections can result in diseases that range from a mild cold to life-threatening pneumonia. As respiratory viruses share an ecological niche (the respiratory tract), studying them as a community is a logical approach to capture their interactions and their pathogenic effects [1]. This project aims to i) characterise host responses to viral infections and co-infections; ii) identify virus-induced molecular pathways that lead to respiratory pathology; and iii) determine interactions between co-infecting viruses.
We will establish a pathogenomics platform (based on work by our group [2]) to study virus-host interactions at an unprecedented level of detail. Briefly, we will infect and co-infect respiratory explants with influenza and paramyxoviruses. We will characterise host responses using transcriptomics, assess virus dynamics using real-time PCR, and determine pathological changes using light, confocal and electron microscopy.
We will quantify transcriptomic profiles and link them to histopathological changes to define general intracellular responses (i.e. mounted against all viruses) as well as specific responses (i.e. mounted against specific viruses) within the respiratory tract.
Obtained results will provide insight for the development of novel therapeutic strategies as well as important new information for the development of mathematical models of co-infections that are being developed by our group.

People

ORCID iD

Publications

10 25 50

Studentship Projects

Project Reference Relationship Related To Start End Student Name
MR/N013166/1 30/09/2016 30/11/2025
1952287 Studentship MR/N013166/1 10/09/2017 31/12/2021
NE/W503058/1 31/03/2021 30/03/2022
1952287 Studentship NE/W503058/1 10/09/2017 31/12/2021