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The benefits of antibiotics to both human and animal health are undisputed. However, as microbes have become increasingly resistant to antimicrobials and other drugs, scientists have become interested in new solutions to the growing superbug crisis, including the use of defensive microbes and faecal transplants. In new research, Oxford University scientists have developed a lab-based approach, creating positive co-dependent relationships between hosts and bacteria, termed ‘mutualisms’, quickly. These lab-developed bacterial relationships demonstrate how microbes can work with their hosts to prevent infection.
Patrick Waters
BSc PhD CSci FIBMS FRCPath Patrick Waters - Associate Professor, Co-Director Autoimmune Neurology Diagnostic Laboratory
Fiona Powrie FRS
FRS, FMedSci, DBE Fiona Powrie FRS - Professor of Musculoskeletal Sciences and Director of the Kennedy Institute
Gabriele DeLuca
M.D., D.Phil., FRCPath, FAAN Gabriele DeLuca - Professor of Clinical Neurology and Experimental Neuropathology
Georg Holländer
MA (Oxon), MD, FMedSci, FRCPCH, FMH Paediatrics (CH) Georg Holländer - Hoffmann and Action Medical Research Professor of Developmental Medicine