Eine Kamera ist auf eine reflektierende Glasscheibe gerichtet.
© DZIF

News

All current DZIF news can be found here.

Red-coloured rod-shaped bacteria in an electron micrograph.
© CDC

Treating tuberculosis when antibiotics no longer work

Tuberculosis is currently the infectious disease that causes the most deaths worldwide. Of particular concern is the increasing emergence of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis bacteria, particularly in

Blue bacterial colonies growing on an agar plate with yellow agar, held by a hand in a blue glove. A plastic inoculation loop held by another gloved hand is hovering over the colonies aiming to pick a colony..
© JLU-Giessen

When bacteria exchange resistance genes with each other

Bacteria that are resistant to broad-spectrum antibiotics from the carbapenem group are increasingly posing major problems for healthcare systems worldwide. They can cause serious infections and

Pseudomonas aeruginosa
© Medical Illustrator: Jennifer Oosthuizen

Study on promising new antibiotic Darobactin reinforces its potential

Darobactin is a promising candidate for the development of new, resistance-breaking antibiotics, as it has an exceptional mechanism of action and a broad spectrum of activity. In a recent study, DZIF

Logos of DZIF and BIOASTER side by side on a blue background
© INCATE

INCATE and BIOASTER join forces to support innovators in the fight against antibiotic resistance

INCATE, the INCubator for Antibacterial Therapies in Europe, and BIOASTER, the French Technology Research Institute, have announced this week the beginning of a new partnership that aims to improve

World AMR Awareness Week from 18 to 24 November: Preventing antimicrobial resistance together

From 18 to 24 November, the “World AMR Awareness Week” (WAAW), a global campaign proclaimed by WHO, aims to draw attention to the near-pandemic rise in infections caused by resistant microbial

 A digitally colourised scanning electron microscopic (SEM) image depicting a single, red-coloured T cell infected by numerous, spheroid shaped, mustard-coloured HIV particles, which can be seen attached to the cell's surface membrane.
© NIAID, USA

Longevity of HIV-neutralising antibodies explored

Despite decades of research, there is still no vaccine that protects against HIV infection. It is currently assumed, however, that such a vaccine can only be effective if it also produces so-called

A lab technician pipettes a sample into a sequencing device.
© FZB/Weller

When (new) drugs don’t work: Mozambique faces alarming multidrug-resistant tuberculosis epidemic

With one of the highest tuberculosis (TB) incidences (368 cases/100,000 population) in the African region, Mozambique is particularly affected by the TB epidemic. Drug-resistant TB is also a major

DZIF Executive Board member Prof. Maura Dandri, DZIF managing director Dr Timo Jäger and ANRS | MIE Director Prof. Yazdan Yazdanpanah at the signing ceremony of the MoU at ANRS | MIE in Paris. Standing in the background are Roll-ups of ANRS | MIE and DZIF.
© ANRS | MIE

Collaboration of the DZIF and the French ANRS | MIE to advance research in infectious diseases

The German Center for Infection Research (DZIF) and the French National Research Agency for HIV, viral hepatitis and emerging infectious diseases (ANRS | MIE) announced  their commitment to

Cryo-electron microscopic reconstruction of molecular structures: On the left, the vertical representation of the binding of a yellow-coloured antibody to the blue-coloured tip of the secretion system shown in grey. On the right, a top view of the binding structure, showing how the yellow antibody binds laterally to the blue tip of the secretion system, which is round in top view.
© CSSB/Biao Yuan

Neutralising antibodies that target resistant bacteria

Antibiotic-resistant bacteria pose a major challenge to healthcare systems worldwide. Due to numerous resistance mechanisms, infections with the pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa are particularly feared

An Indian female lab technician holds the test cartridge tested in the study in her right hand.
© LMU/Laura Olbrich, Craig Dalgarno

New tool makes it easier to diagnose tuberculosis in children

Around 240,000 children worldwide die of tuberculosis every year. The disease is among the top ten causes of death in children under the age of five. One of the main reasons for this mortality is that