Participants
‹ Back
Professor Marc Lecuit
Director of the Biology of Infection Unit, Institut Pasteur
CV
Current positions
Head of the Biology of Infection Unit, Institut Pasteur
Director of the Inserm Unit 1117
Professor of Medicine, Infectious Diseases and Tropical Medicine, Paris Descartes University
Deputy Head, Division of Infectious Diseases, Necker-Enfants Malades University Hospital
Head of the French National Reference Center and WHO Collaborating Center Listeria
Medical education
2004 Abilitation, Paris Descartes University
2002 MD, Internal Medicine, Infectious Diseases and Tropical Medicine, Paris Descartes University
2001 PhD, Microbiology, Institut Pasteur and Paris Diderot University
1996 MSc, Institut Pasteur and Paris Diderot University
Awards and grants
2017 Prix Duquesne
2017 EMBO Member
2017 ESCMID Fellow
2015 Grand Prix Robert Debré
2015 ERC Consolidator Grant
2010 ERC Starting Grant
2010 Médaille Louis Pasteur, Académie des Sciences
2009 Grand Prix Jean Hamburger de la Ville de Paris
2005 Franco-British Prize of the Académie des Sciences and the Royal Society
2004 ESCMID Young Investigator Award
2003 Research Award of the College of Professors of Infectious and Tropical Diseases
2002 Philippe Foundation Award
2002 EMBO Long-Term Fellowship Award
2001 Prix Jean Valade Fondation de France
2000 Médaille d’Or du Concours de Médecine de l’Internat
Abstract
Abstract:Historically, therapies have been set up empirically with some undeniable success. Yet, this is only with the detailed understanding of diseases’ mechanisms that tailored and precision therapies have been developed. For example, the deciphering of the basic mechanisms of virus replication and oncogenic signaling, have led to the development of highly effective and extremely specific antivirals and anti-tumor therapies, respectively. In the field of antibacterial therapy (antibiotics), chemical substances targeting bacterial specific components like peptidoglycan have been discovered, such as beta lactams and glycopeptides. Yet, while their selectivity for bacteria is high, the intended pathogen is not the only target, also is the microbiota. This has two detrimental consequences: the selection and amplification of antimicrobial resistant pathogenic and commensal bacteria, and the blocking of the beneficial effects on the host of the microbiota. Antimicrobial resistance continuous expansion, and the recognition of the detrimental effects of broad spectrum antimicrobial therapy on beneficial bacteria therefore call for an urgent strategical and tactical change in antimicrobial therapy: there is a need for drugs that either specifically target pathogenic microbes or/and block their pathogenic mechanisms. The development of these new therapeutic strategies requires a detailed and complete understanding of basic microbiology and infectious diseases mechanisms. Funding basic research in microbiology and pathogenesis is the way forward to combat resistance to antibiotics.