Home About Press Employ Contact Spyglass Advanced Search
HHMI Logo
HHMI News
HHMI News
Scientists & Research
Scientists & Research
Janelia Farm
Janelia Farm
Grants & Fellowships
Grants & Fellowships
Resources
Resources
  Scientists & Research
  Overview  
dashed line
  FindSci  
dashed line
Investigators
dashed line
  Professors  
dashed line
  International Research Scholars  

HHMI-NIH Research Scholars
Learn about the HHMI-NIH Research Scholars Program, also known as the Cloister Program. Moresmall arrow

dashed line

Janelia Farm Research Campus
Learn about the new HHMI research campus located in Virginia. Moresmall arrow

HHMI International Research Scholars
Pascale F. Cossart, Ph.D.
photo

BIOGRAPHY:

Dr. Cossart received her Ph.D. in biochemistry from the University of Paris in 1977. Her postdoctoral research was conducted at the Pasteur Institute. In 1998 she received the Richard Lounsberry Prize and a Helena Rubenstein/UNESCO Award for Women in Science Leadership and in 2000 the Swedish Society of Medicine awarded her the 2000 Louis Pasteur Gold Medal. Dr. Cossart is an “Officier de l'Ordre du Merite” of the French Legion of Honor, president of the Conseil Scientifique of the Pasteur Insitute, a corresponding member of the French Academy of Sciences, and a member of the French Conseil National de la Science. She currently holds the titles of Professor and Head of the Unité des Interactions Bactéries Cellules at the Pasteur Institute of Paris. Her HHMI project is on the molecular and cellular basis of the infection of the human bacterial pathogen Listeria monocytogenes.

RESEARCH ABSTRACT SUMMARY:

Molecular and Cellular Basis of Listeria monocytogenes Infection: New Aspects

Listeria monocytogenes is a food-borne pathogen responsible for gastroenteritis, meningitis, septicemia, and abortions, with a mortality rate of 30 percent. It has the capacity to cross three barriers during infection (the intestinal barrier, the bloodbrain barrier, and the feto-placental barrier). In all infected tissues, Listeria is intracellular due to its capacity to survive in phagocytic cells and also to invade and survive in nonphagocytic cells. Once inside cells, bacteria escape from the internalization vacuole and spread from cell to cell by using the now well-understood phenomenon of actin-based motility. Through a combination of cell biology, genomic, and in vivo approaches, as well as epidemiological data, our knowledge of the infectious process is improving, highlighting the many bacterial, mammalian, and environmental factors that control the success of an infection. New findings concern new virulence genes such as bsh, a gene encoding a bile salt hydrolase, an enzyme that so far has been identified only in bacterial commensals and allows Listeria to persist in the intestine; new regulatory mechanisms controlling expression of virulence genes, for example, an RNA thermosensor; new aspects of the cell biology of entry process, for example, the involvement of myosinVIIA, an unconventional myosin, in the internalin–E-cadherin interaction and of Wave and VASP in the InlB-mediated cytoskeleton rearrangements; and new epidemiological and histological data highlighting how Listeria crosses the physiological barriers. A complete picture of the human disease is emerging.


Photo: Kent Kallberg, Kallberg Studios

Related Links

AT HHMI

bullet icon

HHMI's International Program

dashed line
 Back to Topto the top
HHMI Logo

Home | About HHMI | Press Room | Employment | Contact

© 2008 Howard Hughes Medical Institute. A philanthropy serving society through biomedical research and science education.
4000 Jones Bridge Road, Chevy Chase, MD 20815-6789 | (301) 215-8500 | e-mail: webmaster@hhmi.org