Kyle Allison
Assistant Professor, Department of Medicine/Infectious Disease, Emory University
404-727-6974
Office Location:
Emory HSRB E146
University, College, and School/Department
Research Focus Areas:
- Systems Biology
Additional Research:
Our lab studies the response of bacteria to antibiotics in order to develop new methods for eradicating persistent bacteria. Bacterial persistence is a form antibiotic resistance in which a transient fraction of bacterial cells tolerates severe antibiotic treatment while the majority of the population is eliminated. These 'persisters' can contribute to chronic infections and are a major medical problem. Despite their medical and scientific importance, presistence is not fully understood. A crucial challenge in studying bacterial persistence results from a lack of methods to isolate persisters from the heterogeneous populations in which they occur. As a result, systems-level analysis of persisters is beyond current techniques, and fundamental questions regarding their physiological diversity remain unanswered. Our lab seeks to develop methods to isolate persisters and study them with systems-wide, molecular techniques. The resulting findings will be used to engineer improved antibiotic therapies. Dr. Allison's previous research included development of a novel method to eradicate pathogenic bacteria, includingEscherichia coliandStaphylococcus aureus,by metabolic stimulation and the finding that bacteria communicate with each other to alter their tolerance to antibiotics.
Our lab studies the response of bacteria to antibiotics in order to develop new methods for eradicating persistent bacteria. Bacterial persistence is a form antibiotic resistance in which a transient fraction of bacterial cells tolerates severe antibiotic treatment while the majority of the population is eliminated. These 'persisters' can contribute to chronic infections and are a major medical problem. Despite their medical and scientific importance, presistence is not fully understood. A crucial challenge in studying bacterial persistence results from a lack of methods to isolate persisters from the heterogeneous populations in which they occur. As a result, systems-level analysis of persisters is beyond current techniques, and fundamental questions regarding their physiological diversity remain unanswered. Our lab seeks to develop methods to isolate persisters and study them with systems-wide, molecular techniques. The resulting findings will be used to engineer improved antibiotic therapies. Dr. Allison's previous research included development of a novel method to eradicate pathogenic bacteria, includingEscherichia coliandStaphylococcus aureus,by metabolic stimulation and the finding that bacteria communicate with each other to alter their tolerance to antibiotics.
IRI Connections:
IRI And Role