The Section of Molecular Microbiology is located in the Flowers Building on the South Kensington campus of Imperial College London. The section has three major research themes centred around bacterial pathogenicity. Particular interests include the mechanisms underlying bacterial virulence, innate immunity and bacterial recalcitrance towards antibiotics.
Molecular Microbiology is part of the Centre for Bacterial Resistance Biology (CBRB), a joint initiative with the Faculty of Natural Sciences. The overall goals of the CBRB are to understand the biology of bacterial infections and to translate this information into novel strategies for preventing and treating microbial disease. The Section of Molecular Microbiology also plays a leading role in the Centre for Integrative Systems Biology and Bioinformatics (CISBIO) and Centre for Infection Prevention and Management.
The section employs over 40 members of staff and includes over 20 research students. The Principal Investigators are currently supported by grants totalling over £20 million and contribute to teaching on 15 courses, organising modules on five of these courses. The section runs the Bacterial Pathogenesis and Infection Stream of the MRes in Biomedical Research.
Research groups and section leadership
Research interests and areas
A selection of the Section's key research areas:
- Cell wall assembly in gram-positive bacterial pathogens
- Gene regulation and acquisition of bacteria by bacteriophages
- Mechanisms underpinning bacterial adaptive responses to stress
- Innate immune responses to commensal and pathogenic bacteria and role of the microbiota
- Meningococcal genomics/type IV pilus biology
- Salmonella pathogenesis and persistence
- Staphylococcal persistence in host tissues
- Systems microbiology and the biology of tuberculosis
Section leadership
Professor Sivaramesh Wigneshweraraj
Section Head, Molecular Microbiology
Professor Sivaramesh Wigneshweraraj's research focusses on the investigation of the mechanisms that regulate the activity of bacterial transcription machinery, the RNA polymerase, the acquisition of bacteria by bacteriophages and adaptive responses to sustained nutrient stress at molecular, structural and genome-wide levels.
Research group leads
Dr Darius Armstrong-James
Dr Darius Armstrong-James
Professor of Infectious Diseases and Medical Mycology
Emeritus Professor Herbert Arst
Emeritus Professor Herbert Arst
Emeritus Professor of Microbial Genetics
Dr Thomas Clarke
Dr Thomas Clarke
Senior Lecturer
Dr Andrew Edwards
Dr Andrew Edwards
Reader
Professor Angelika Gründling
Professor Angelika Gründling
Professor of Molecular Microbiology
Professor David Holden
Professor David Holden
Emeritus Professor of Microbiology
Dr Alex McCarthy
Dr Alex McCarthy
Reader in Bacterial Infection Biology
Professor José Penadés
Professor José Penadés
Chair in Microbiology
Dr Brian Robertson
Dr Brian Robertson
Reader in Systems Microbiology
Dr Avinash Shenoy
Dr Avinash Shenoy
Reader in Innate Immunity and Infection
Dr Aran Singanayagam
Dr Aran Singanayagam
Clinical Reader
Dr Teresa Thurston
Dr Teresa Thurston
Honorary Senior Lecturer
Dr Julien Vaubourgeix
Dr Julien Vaubourgeix
Honorary Lecturer
Professor Sivaramesh Wigneshweraraj
Professor Sivaramesh Wigneshweraraj
Professor of Molecular Microbiology
General enquiries
Section Manager
Sophie Dunhill
+44 (0)20 7594 3199
Team Administrator
Anna Lee
+44 (0)20 7594 2954
Laboratory Manager
Shajna Begum
+44 (0)20 7594 3070