
Future Day 2026 at TWINCORE
Eleven pupils gain an insight into infection research

TWINCORE was founded in 2008 by the Helmholtz Centre for Infection Research and the Hannover Medical School. We combine the expertise of medical professionals and scientists from a wide range of disciplines to find answers to the pressing questions in infection research. Our focus: translational research – the bridge between basic science and clinical application.
The LISA Summer School 2026 takes place from 23 August to 11 September 2026. Registration is open until 31 March.
We conduct translational infection research to improve the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of infectious diseases in humans. We focus on three areas that characterize our research work. Find out here how we proceed and what results we achieve.
Under the leadership of our best scientists, various labs are working on different projects within our research topics.
Vos W, De Ruijten S, Jiang X, van Unen N, van Snippenberg W, Groenendijk A, Blaauw M, Eekeren L, Vadaq N, Maas H, Östman M, Cleophas M, Brinkman K, van Lunzen J, Blok W, Stalenhoef J, Li Y, Netea M, Vandekerckhove L, Dos Santos J, Matzaraki V, Xu C, Ven A
Silvestre-Roig C, Chevre R, Farjia M, Bender A, Vöcking L, Richter M, Hageb A, Suerdieck V, Arenas Cerro F, Braster Q, Guzman M, Sintes J, Sharma S, Lemnitzer P, Tulotta C, Börgeling Y, Herrero-Cervera A, Flueter H, Reinartz Groba S, Ahern D, Osei-Sarpong C, Zimmer R, Alonso-Gonzalez N, Ortega E, Lienenklaus S, Kalinke U, Ludwig S, Engel D, Rosenbauer F, Monaco C, Dersch P, Kibler A, Cerutti A, Chavakis T, Benedito R, Hidalgo A, Jablonska J, Palomino-Segura M, Soehnlein O
Liu Z, Ziogas A, Zhang Y, Gupta M, Föhse K, Taks E, Dulfer E, Sarlea A, Ventriglia L, Geckin B, Ballan M, van Unen N, Helder L, Trittel S, Riese P, Moorlag S, de Bree C, Koeken V, Mourits V, Jaeger M, Pessler F, Guzmán C, Joosten L, Li Y, Xu C, Netea M
Patients with chronic rheumatic diseases have an increased risk of infection due to severe inflammation. This project investigates inflammation in various tissues, particularly in systemic sclerosis, in order to develop targeted therapies.
This project focuses on lung infections such as influenza, COVID-19, pneumonia and tuberculosis in order to improve diagnostics, patient stratification and therapy. RNA molecules and metabolites are being investigated as biomarkers and complementary therapies.
We are investigating how the association of HCV with lipoproteins contributes to the persistence of the virus by influencing entry into liver cells and protecting against antibodies. The aim is to gain new insights for the development of an HCV vaccine.
The CoViPa consortium uses computer-assisted high-throughput virus discovery and evolutionary analyses to identify RNA viruses with high spillover risk and potential animal host reservoirs and to investigate new pathogenicity factors.
"Interaction with regulators, e.g. in preparation of a first clinical study"
Dr. Verena Krähling
Institute of Virology
Medical Faculty
Marburg University
"Development of vaccine candidates against highly pathogenic viruses"
Prof. Dr. Andrea Maisner
Institute of Virology
Medical Faculty
Marburg University
"Unconventional plasma membrane clusters as assembly platforms for highly pathogenic Nipah virus: An imaging study"

