Research on the biology of the pneumococcus and pneumococcal diseases: the number one cause of death in children worldwide.

Authors

  • Jorge Eugenio Vidal Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.19136/hs.a16n1.1518

Abstract

Streptococcus pneumoniae has been for decades the number one bacterial killer of children in the world. Although vaccination with pneumococcal conjugate vaccines [PCV7, PCV10, and PCV13 (children) or PPSV23(adults)] has helped decrease the burden of pneumococcal disease (PD), mortality remains high. The introduction of pneumococcal vaccines has also created a niche for vaccine-escape clones. Moreover, the rise of multidrug resistant clones around the world has also posed a serious threat in recent years. Rapid and accurate identification of the pneumococcus in patients suspected of having PD is a high priority as rapid identification of the etiology will lead to better outcomes and thus may help in reducing mortality associated with PD. Efforts have been made for the last ten years in my laboratory to get insights into the biology of the pneumococcus and pneumococcal genetics in order to develop knowledge and tools to assist in decreasing the burden of disease. In my laboratory, a translation science laboratory, we have undertaken or participated in basic science studies, epidemiological studies around the world, clinical trials of new potential antibiotics, and we have spent several years developing and validating molecular technology to identify the pneumococcus and its 90+ serotypes.

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Author Biography

Jorge Eugenio Vidal, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University

Adjunct Professional Appointments 2009-2015. Visiting Researcher, Respiratory Pathogens Branch, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Atlanta, GA 2012-Present. Associate faculty member, program in Population Biology Ecology and Evolution (PBEE), Graduate Division of Biological and Biomedical Sciences (GDBBS), Emory University. http://www.biomed.emory.edu/PROGRAM_SITES/PBEE/Adjunctfaculty.html 2013-Present. Associate Faculty Member, Graduate Program in Medical Sciences, University of Sinaloa School of Medicine. Sinaloa Mexico. http://medicina.uas.edu.mx/?p=99&o=9 2014-Present. Faculty member, Center for Childhood Infections and Vaccines (CCIV), Emory+Children's Pediatric Research Center, Children's Healthcare of Atlanta. http://www.pedsresearch.org/research-faculty/profile/jorge-e.-vidal-phd 2015-Present. Associate Faculty Member. The Emory Antibiotic Resistance Center. Emory University. http://antimicrobialtraining.emory.edu/training-faculty/index.html Education and Training 2009-Present. Assistant Professor. Hubert Department of Global Health, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University. Mentor: Dr. Keith P. Klugman. 2006-2009. Post-Doctoral Fellow. Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine. Pittsburgh PA, USA. Mentor: Dr. Bruce A. McClane. 2006 PhD. Cellular Microbiology. Department of Cell Biology, Center for Research and Advanced Studies (Cinvestav-IPN). Mexico City, Mexico. Mentor: Dr. Fernando Navarro-Garcia. 2001 MSc. Microbiology (Honors). Department of Microbiology National School of Biological Sciences (ENCB-IPN), Mexico City, Mexico. Mentor: Dr. Silvia Giono-Cerezo. 1999 BSc. Chemistry, Pharmacology and Biology (Honors). Autonomous University of Puebla (BUAP), Puebla, Mexico. Awards and Honors 1. Honorific mention for research in bacterial pathogenesis. 34th Mexican Meeting of Microbiology, Cancún, Mexico, Aug 27-29, 2004. 2. Award for excellence in bacterial pathogenesis research. Meeting of the Biological Science, CINVESTAV. Mexico City, Mexico. Jan, 21, 2005. 3. Awarded with a Corporate Activities Student Travel Grant to assist to the ASM 105th General Meeting. Jun 5-9, 2005, Atlanta Georgia, USA. 4. Member of the Tabasco State System of Researcher (SEI), Council of Science and Technology (CCYTET), Tabasco, Mexico. 2005-Present. 5. Awarded with a Corporate Activities Student Travel Grant to attend the ASM 45th ICAAC. Dec 16-19, 2005, Washington DC, USA. 6. National Investigator (Level-1), National System of Researchers (SNI), National Council of Science (CONACyT), Mexico. 2007-Present. 7. Awarded with an ASM General Meeting Post Doctoral Minority Travel Grant to attend the ASM 107th General Meeting, May 21-25, 2007 Toronto, Canada. 8. Awarded with an ASM General Meeting Post Doctoral Minority Travel Grant to attend the ASM 108th General Meeting, Jun 1-5, 2008 Boston, MA, USA. 9. Recognized for outstanding mentoring service by the ASM Minority Mentoring Program during 2008, 2009 and 2010. 10. Awarded with an ASM General Meeting Post Doctoral Minority Travel Grant to attend the ASM 109th General Meeting, May 17-21, 2009 Philadelphia, PA, USA. 11. Scientific artwork (electron micrograph of biofilms grown on lung cells) was chosen for the March 2013 issue of Trends in Microbiology. 12. Scientific artwork (electron micrograph of pneumococcal biofilms grown on a bioreactor) was chosen for the cover of the April issue of Infection and Immunity, American Society for Microbiology. 13. Associate Editor, Journal of Microbiology and Experimentation. Appointed by April 2014. 14. Member of the editorial board of Infection and Immunity, inducted by Professor Ferric C. Fang (Editor in Chief) for three-year terms, January 2015-2018. 15. Member of the editorial board of EC Microbiology. Appointed by December 2015.

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Published

2017-01-16

How to Cite

Vidal, J. E. (2017). Research on the biology of the pneumococcus and pneumococcal diseases: the number one cause of death in children worldwide. Horizonte Sanitario, 16(1), 5-7. https://doi.org/10.19136/hs.a16n1.1518

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Section

Editorial