Louis Pasteur
... .
Immunology
His later work on diseases included work on chicken
cholera . During this work, a culture of the responsible bacteria had spoiled ... of actual smallpox material in inoculation. The difference with chicken
cholera and anthrax was that the weakened form of the disease organism had been ...
Robert Koch
... famous for the discovery of the
tubercle bacillus ( 1882 ) and the
cholera bacillus ( 1883 ) and for his development of Koch's postulates .
He was ... worked with a French research team in Alexandria , Egypt , studying
cholera . Koch identified the vibrio bacterium that caused cholera, though he ...
Bacterium
... of bacteria in disease and infection is important. Some bacteria act as pathogens and cause tetanus , typhoid fever , pneumonia , syphilis ,
cholera , foodborne illness and tuberculosis . Sepsis , a systemic infectious syndrome characterized by shock and massive vasodilation, or localized ...
Bacterium
... of bacteria in disease and infection is important. Some bacteria act as pathogens and cause tetanus , typhoid fever , pneumonia , syphilis ,
cholera , foodborne illness and tuberculosis . Sepsis , a systemic infectious syndrome characterized by shock and massive vasodilation, or localized ...
Phage
... lysogenic conversion . A famous example is the harmless Vibrio bacteria strain, which is turned into Vibrio cholerae by a phage, causing
cholera .
Phages play an important role in molecular biology as cloning vectors to insert DNA into bacteria. Phage therapy has been used since the ...
Vaccine
...
Inactivated - these are previously virulent micro-organisms that have been killed with chemicals or heat. Examples are vaccines against flu ,
cholera , plague , and hepatitis A . Most such vaccines may have incomplete or short-lived immune responses and are likely to require booster shots.
...