• Memorial prize presented to SfAM member Brian Jones
    Dr Brian Jones (left) received the Oxoid W H Pierce TO FIND OUT MORE CIRCLE NO. 508 Memorial Prize from Mr Richard Marsh, director of sales (microbiology), Northern Europe and ROW, Thermo Fisher Scientific.

News & Views

Memorial prize presented to SfAM member Brian Jones

Thermo Fisher Scientific, has announced that the 2011 Oxoid W H Pierce Memorial Prize, which commemorates the late W H (Bill) Pierce, has been awarded to Dr Brian Jones, Senior Lecturer at the University of Brighton, England. The award acknowledges Dr Jones’ research into the human gut mobile metagenome, the mobile genetic elements (such as plasmids) that are associated with gut microbiota.

Awarded under the auspices of the Society for Applied Microbiology (SfAM), the Oxoid W H Pierce Memorial Prize is
presented every year to a young Society member who has made a substantial contribution to microbiology. Dr Jones is
developing methods to study the transfer of genetic material within the whole gastric microbial community. This work will shed valuable light on our understanding of what is happening in the human gut microbiota and how it is
involved in various diseases.


Dr Brian Jones graduated from the University of Cardiff in 2000 with a 1st Class Honours degree in Genetics and went
on to complete his PhD on bacterial pathogenesis at the same university. He then spent four years in the Alimentary
Pharmabiotic Centre at the University College of Cork in Ireland where he began the application of metagenomic
approaches to understand the functioning of the human gut microbiota. It was at this time that he became interested in
mobile genetic elements associated with this community and began to develop strategies to investigate the human gut
mobile metagenome. In 2008, Dr Jones accepted a lectureship in the School of Pharmacy and Biomolecular Sciences at the University of Brighton, where he has established his own research group.

His research continues to investigate the human gut mobile metagenome as well as the gut microbiota in general, with a major project currently underway aimed at understanding the role of gut bacteria in colon cancer. “I’m delighted to be awarded this prize, but I can’t take all the credit,” said Dr Jones. “I’ve been lucky enough to work with many excellent and supportive people over the last 10 years, most recently colleagues at the University of Brighton and my research group.”

For further information about the Oxoid W H Pierce Memorial Prize, please visit the SfAM website at www.sfam.org.uk.


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