Neisseria, Listeria and Bordetella
Publications
The formation of titan cells in Cryptococcus neoformans depends on the mouse strain and correlates with induction of Th2-type responses
García-Barbazán I, Trevijano-Contador N, Rueda C, de Andrés B, Pérez-Tavárez R, Herrero-Fernández I, Gaspar ML, Zaragoza O. The formation of titan cells in Cryptococcus neoformans depends on the mouse strain and correlates with induction of Th2-type responses. Cell Microbiol. 2016 Jan;18(1):111-24.
PUBMED DOIPrevalence and undiagnosed fraction of hepatitis C infection in 2018 in Spain: results from a national population-based survey.
• Estirado Gómez A, Justo-Gil S, Limia A, Avellón A, Arce-Arnáez A, González-Rubio R, Diaz A, Del Amo J; Prevalence and undiagnosed fraction of hepatitis C infection in 2018 in Spain: results from a national population-based survey. Sci Rep. 2018 Jan 30;8(1):1858.
PUBMED DOIComparative Analysis of Aspergillus fumigatus Strains: The Reference Genome as a Matter of Concern.
Buitrago MJ, Martín-Gómez T. Timely Diagnosis of Histoplasmosis in Non-endemic Countries: A Laboratory Challenge. Front Microbiol. 2020 Mar 24; 11:467. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.00467. eCollection 2020. PMID: 32269555.
PUBMED DOIAdditional Information
The Neisseria, Listeria and Bordetella Unit provides support to the National Health System with the aim of improving the health and well-being of citizens, through the development and application of diagnostic and molecular characterization techniques, generating laboratory data essential for the surveillance of infectious diseases covered by the Unit, as well as maintaining lines of research for microbiological and immunological evaluation of vaccines, both in development and those available.
The Unit has 4 microbiological surveillance programs at the National Center for Microbiology: For invasive meningococcal disease, for gonococcal infection, for listeriosis and for whooping cough. Likewise, the Unit maintains extensive activity in international networks and consortia: it is part of the EU-Ibis consortium for the study of Meningococcal Disease, the EURO-GASP program for the study of antibiotic resistance in gonococcus, the European Listeria typing group network and the European network for Bordetella, all of them coordinated and financed in whole or in part by the ECDC.
The Unit constitutes the External Reference Laboratory for meningococci of the PAHO/WHO SIREVAII network. Thus, the active lines of research in the Unit respond to the objectives defined both by the support for the National Health System and by the international collaborative work in which it actively participates.
The Neisseria, Listeria and Bordetella Unit provides support to the National Health System with the aim of improving the health and well-being of citizens, through the development and application of diagnostic and molecular characterization techniques, generating laboratory data essential for the surveillance of infectious diseases covered by the Unit, as well as maintaining lines of research for microbiological and immunological evaluation of vaccines, both in development and those available.
The Unit has 4 microbiological surveillance programs at the National Center for Microbiology: For invasive meningococcal disease, for gonococcal infection, for listeriosis and for whooping cough. Likewise, the Unit maintains extensive activity in international networks and consortia: it is part of the EU-Ibis consortium for the study of Meningococcal Disease, the EURO-GASP program for the study of antibiotic resistance in gonococcus, the European Listeria typing group network and the European network for Bordetella, all of them coordinated and financed in whole or in part by the ECDC.
The Unit constitutes the External Reference Laboratory for meningococci of the PAHO/WHO SIREVAII network. Thus, the active lines of research in the Unit respond to the objectives defined both by the support for the National Health System and by the international collaborative work in which it actively participates.