Lab Overview
Microbes that are able to persist in their hosts are subject to different selective pressures than are those that transiently infect, and either kill their host or are themselves eliminated. In mammals, the gastrointestinal and genital tracts represent biological niches that usually are populated by colonizing bacteria. We have been interested in bacteria of the Campylobacter and Helicobacter species, highly diverse organisms that live in the mucus layer overlying the mucosal epithelium of mammals, including humans.
H. pylori colonization increases ... [more]
Streaming media from Dr. Blaser's lab:
- Listen to a podcast interview with Dr. Blaser H. pylori — Friend or Foe (broadcast Saturday, September 20th, 2008 on CBC Radio, Quirks & Quarks hosted by Bob McDonald.) On PCs, right click to download mp3 of interview
- Listen to or download a podcast interview with Dr. Blaser Stomach Bug May Help Battle Asthma (broadcast Friday, July 18th, 2008 on National Public Radio)
- View news video: Dr. Yu Chen and Dr. Martin Blaser discuss how a bacterium may help ward off asthma in kids (broadcast Friday, July 25th, 2008 on WBZ-TV, Boston)
- View an entertaining video clip shot in the Blaser Lab: Life On Our Skin,
produced for NPR's Science Friday by Flora Lichtman (broadcast Oct. 18, 2007—at top of list of "Most Viewed Videos" on Science Friday website.)
Recent articles on H.pylori and the risk of asthma:
Current Research
An important focus of our work is Campylobacter fetus, a pathogen of animals and humans. C. fetus cells are covered with S-layer proteins that allow the organisms to escape complement-mediated lysis, and that undergo antigenic variation. Exploring the molecular basis of variation, we have found that the S-layer proteins are encoded by a family of sapA homologs tightly clustered on the chromosome, and that a high frequency DNA inversion plays a critical role in variation. The inversion shows elements of both site-specific and homologous recombination. This is a highly tractable system to examine DNA recombination mechanisms, as well as for structure-function analysis of protein-carbohydrate (LPS) interactions, and the structural basis of antigenicity.
Finally, we are using PCR with conserved 165 ribosomal RNA specificities to define at a molecular level, the bacteria (and fungi) that are normally present in human host mileaus ... [more]