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Fasel Nicolas

Faculty of Biology and Medicine
Department of Biochemistry
University of Lausanne
Switzerland

Biography

Nicolas Fasel is full professor at the Faculty of Biology and Medicine at the University of Lausanne. After studying biology at the University of Fribourg (Switzerland) and obtaining a doctoral degree at the Swiss Institute for Experimental Cancer Research working on mouse mammary tumor virus, he took up a post-doctoral position at the University of California Los Angeles working on immunoglobulin gene regulation. On his return to Switzerland, he studied post-translational modifications of cell surface antigens. As an independant researcher of the Dr. Max Cloëtta Research Foundation, he had the opportunity to establish his own group investigating the molecular and cellular biology of protozoan parasites. His more recent research focuses on the host-pathogen interaction and the impact of co-infections. From 2003 to 2016, he directed the Department of Biochemistry of the Faculty and since August 2015 he is the Vice-Dean for Research and Innovation of the Faculty of Biology and Medicine.  

Research Interest

  VIRULENCE FACTORS IN THE HUMAN PROTOZOAN PARASITE LEISHMANIA The human parasite Leishmania is the causative agent of leishmaniasis. After malaria, leishmaniasis stands as the most important protozoan parasitic disease in the world, with 350 million people at risk on 5 continents in 98 countries and steadfastly listed in the top 10 most debilitating infectious diseases in the world (according to DALY units). Cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) is, by far, the most prevalent form of the disease with symptoms ranging from a single self-healing lesion to chronic metastatic leishmaniasis (ML). In an increasingly immunocompromised population, complicated CL is becoming a more likely outcome, characterised by an allergic hyper-reactivity and resulting in severely inflamed, destructive lesions that are often refractory to current treatment. Despite its staggering prevalence and morbidity, it has been categorised as a ‘neglected disease’, with little clinical research interest, no vaccine and a vastly inadequate therapeutic arsenal.

Publications

  • Rossi M, Castiglioni P, Hartley MA, Eren RO, Prével F, et al., (2017). Type I interferons induced by endogenous or exogenous viral infections promote metastasis and relapse of leishmaniasis. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 2017 Apr 24:201621447.

  • Castiglioni P, Hartley MA, Rossi M, Prevel F, Desponds C, et al., (2017). Exacerbated leishmaniasis caused by a viral endosymbiont can be prevented by immunization with its viral capsid. PLoS neglected tropical diseases. 2017 Jan 18;11(1):e0005240.

  • Kuhlmann FM, Robinson JI, Bluemling GR, Ronet C, Fasel N, et al., (2017). Antiviral screening identifies adenosine analogs targeting the endogenous dsRNA Leishmania RNA virus 1 (LRV1) pathogenicity factor. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 2017 Jan 31;114(5):E811-9.

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