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  • team
  • department
  • center
  • program_project
  • nrc
  • whocc
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  • software
  • tool
  • patent
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  • Assistant Professor
  • Associate Professor
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  • Clinical Research Nurse
  • Clinician Researcher
  • Department Manager
  • Dual-education Student
  • Full Professor
  • Honorary Professor
  • Lab assistant
  • Master Student
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  • Nursing Staff
  • Permanent Researcher
  • Pharmacist
  • PhD Student
  • Physician
  • Post-doc
  • Prize
  • Project Manager
  • Research Associate
  • Research Engineer
  • Retired scientist
  • Technician
  • Undergraduate Student
  • Veterinary
  • Visiting Scientist
  • Deputy Director of Center
  • Deputy Director of Department
  • Deputy Director of National Reference Center
  • Deputy Head of Facility
  • Director of Center
  • Director of Department
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© Clifton E. Barry III, Ph.D., NIAID, NIH.
Colorized scanning electron micrograph of Mycobacterium tuberculosis

About

Roland Brosch obtained his PhD at the University of Salzburg in Austria and after some years of postdoctoral training at the University of Wisconsin in Madison and the Institut Pasteur in Paris, he integrated into the scientific staff of the Institut Pasteur in 2000. He is now Professor and Head of the Integrated Mycobacterial Pathogenomics Unit at the Institut Pasteur. He gained broad experience in mycobacterial research in the tuberculosis (TB) research field, where he had important impact on groundbreaking genome projects of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the etiological agent of TB, the BCG vaccine, and the ancestral gene pool of TB-causing mycobacteria (Mycobacterium canettii). He was also involved in pioneering work on the evolution of the M. tuberculosis complex and the discovery and functional characterization of the ESX / type VII secretion system of M. tuberculosis. He continues to be very interested in these topics, which remain key issues for the identification of new virulence mechanisms of M. tuberculosis, for elucidating the extraordinary evolutionary success of M. tuberculosis, and for gaining new insights and perspectives into host-pathogen interaction, new vaccine concepts and therapeutic interventions.

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