Parasitic Biology and Immunology (BIPAR) UMR
Head of Unit: Sara Moutailler
The Parasitic Biology and Immunology (BIPAR) Joint Research Unit (UMR), created in 1998, brings together employees from ANSES, INRAE and the Alfort National Veterinary School. Its activities focus on the study of host-pathogen interactions. The unit is divided into two teams: Paralim, which specialises in foodborne parasites, and MiTick, which focuses on ticks and the pathogens they transmit
Reference activities
The unit has two national reference laboratory (NRL) mandates, for foodborne parasites except for Echinococcus, and besnoitiosis.
It is also a World Organisation for Animal Health (WOAH) Collaborating Centre for foodborne parasites.
Surveillance activities
Within the unit, the Paralim team carries out surveillance activities under the NRL and WOAH Collaborating Centre mandates on foodborne zoonotic parasites. These include the detection, control and surveillance of studied or emerging parasitic diseases. The unit, as an NRL, also helps coordinate networks of about 60 regional laboratories.
Research activities
The BIPAR UMR's activities focus on the study of host-pathogen interactions, with its models being vectors (ticks, mosquitoes) and the pathogens (bacteria, parasites and viruses) they transmit. It also studies foodborne zoonotic parasites. It develops the following:
- fundamental and applied research to gain a better understanding of these interactions (at the molecular, cellular, tissue/salivary gland level or in the food matrix, host or ecosystem, including vertebrate and invertebrate host microbiota) and of the circulation of these pathogens;
- innovative control strategies against ticks, arthropod-borne pathogens and foodborne zoonotic parasites (improved detection and surveillance, "universal" vaccine strategies, "green" alternatives to antiparasitic treatments and acaricides, etc.).