The Univeristy of Melbourne The Royal Melbourne Hopspital

A joint venture between The University of Melbourne and The Royal Melbourne Hospital

EDUCATION

Research Projects

Project: Exploring the genomic landscape of Staphylococcus aureus antibiotic adaptation

Howden Group

In severe S. aureus infections, bacterial adaptation within the human host can lead to antibiotic treatment failure through the emergence of mutations promoting antibiotic resistance and tolerance. Identifying these mutations might enable more effective treatments targeted to the bacterial strains that carry them. This project will use adaptive laboratory evolution to gather a deeper understanding of why key anti-staphylococcal antibiotics fail in clinical infections. It involves performing adaptive evolution experiments, testing antibiotic resistance phenotypes, bacterial whole-genome sequencing, bioinformatics

Contact project supervisor for further
information and application enquiries

Project Supervisor

Dr Stefano Giulieri

Project Co-supervisor

Professor Ben Howden

Project availability
Master of Biomedical Science
Honours

Howden Group

danielle.ingle@unimelb.edu.au

2 vacancies

Themes
Antimicrobial Resistance
Bacterial and Parasitic Infections
Cross Cutting Disciplines
Global Health
Indigenous Health

The Howden lab has a strong interest in understanding the various facets of antimcirobial resistance (AMR), spanning discovery research in AMR mechanisms and evolution through to translational projects to imporve AMR detection and surveillance, and treatment of resistant infections.