Professor Mansour Mohamadzadeh
Mansour
Mohamadzadeh, Ph.D. is Associate Professor of Medicine at
Northwestern University. His interests include
immunology, inflammation, medicine, and microbial pathogenesis.
One of the focuses of his laboratory is to elucidate inflammatory
signals
induced in mucosal innate and T cells by bacterial products (e.g.,
peptidoglycan, lipoteichoic acid, surface layer proteins) leading to
intestinal colitis. Using gene targeting in probiotic bacteria he
clearly shows the mitigation of colitis progression. Additionally, to
mobilize mucosal and systemic immunity against microbial challenge he
further optimizes various aspects of his mucosal multivalent-vaccine
platform against a broad range of pathogens such as HIV, H1-N1, and
Biodefense. This goal is achieved by directly targeting immunogens to
small peptides derived from a phage display peptide library leading to
efficiently capture by dendritic cells when expressed by probiotic
bacteria at the mucosal side.
Mansour coauthored
Lipopolysaccharides from Distinct Pathogens Induce Different Classes
of
Immune Responses In Vivo,
Proinflammatory Stimuli Regulate Endothelial Hyaluronan Expression
and
CD44/HA—dependent Primary Adhesion,
Induction of Hapten-specific Tolerance by Interleukin
10 In Vivo,
Interleukin 15 Skews Monocyte Differentiation into Dendritic Cells
with
Features of Langerhans Cells, and
Lactobacilli activate human dendritic cells that skew T cells toward
T
helper 1 polarization.
Mansour earned his Ph.D. in Medicine at the Johannes Guttenberg
University of Mainz,
Germany in 1991.
Founded in 1477, Mainz University is one of the oldest German
universities.
Mansour went on to complete a fellowship in medicine at the Southwestern
Medical Center in Dallas.
Watch
GOODBYE NEEDLE, HELLO SMOOTHIE! New generation oral vaccine uses
dairy
probiotics to protect against disease.
Read
Genetically Engineered Probiotics:
A twist on a traditional therapy shows promise for treating bowel
disease and
Probiotics may offer more effective and less painful
vaccinations.