Research Focus
The van Hoek lab is focused on the study of antibiotic-resistant and biothreat bacteria, especially gram-negative bacteria. We have projects to discover and invent antimicrobial peptides against the multi-drug resistant ESKAPE (wound-infecting) pathogens as well as biothreat bacteria. We have been developing computational approaches to design novel antibacterial peptides, using database-filtering technology and some machine learning. We also study cell-to-cell communication and biofilm formation in bio threat bacteria, including new ways to disperse biofilms (peptides, DSF, chitinase) and regulate biofilm formation (quorum sensing via small molecules). Additionally, we are exploring new antibacterial treatments such as peptide nucleic acids. We have discovered powerful antimicrobial peptides naturally expressed by alligators, crocodiles, and Komodo dragons, and continue to develop novel synthetic antimicrobial peptides for in vivo studies. Biothreat Bacteria: We study the fundamental microbial physiology of Francisella tularensis, the causative agent of tularemia. Additionally, we have projects focused on Yersinia pestis, Burkholderia, and Bacillus anthracis, including the ability of Nanotrap particles to be used in the detection and study of these organisms.
Current Projects
■ Antimicrobial peptides to combat antibiotic-resistant bacteria and biothreat bacteria
■ Computational design of antimicrobial peptides against multi-drug resistant gram-negative infection
■ Francisella physiology (protein secretion, PGA production, regulatory systems, quorum sensing); Francisella chitinase enzymatic activity and biofilm regulation
■ Nanotrap particles to detect markers of bacterial biothreat agents