Martin Antonio | |
Workplaces: | Warwick Medical School |
Alma Mater: | Queen Mary University of London |
Thesis Title: | Molecular biological studies on Staphylococcus aureus |
Thesis Url: | https://worldcat.org/en/title/1006195022 |
Thesis Year: | 1997 |
Martin Antonio is a Ghanaian Biologist who is Principal Investigator at the Medical Research Council Unit (The Gambia) at London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. He is Director of the World Health Organization Centre for New Vaccines Surveillance and leads the West and Central Africa Regional Reference Laboratory for Invasive Bacterial Diseases.
Antonio is from Ghana.[1] He moved to Queen Mary University of London for his doctoral research, where he studied Staphylococcus aureus.[2] He moved to the University of Birmingham as a research fellow in 2001.
Antonio joined the Medical Research Council (the Gambia, MRCG) in 2005, where he set up the molecular biology research group.[3] His research develops molecular diagnostics for tropical infections. He has led several multi-national research projects to better understand the causes and prevalence of pneumonia and diarrhoea.[4] His research group developed large disease surveillance platforms across Africa, and became the World Health Organization Reference Laboratory for Pneumococcal Disease.
In 2016, Antonio started working with the WHO on an outbreak of meningitis in Ghana. He leveraged the Medical Research Council (the Gambia) to identify the causative pathogens. In 2020 he was elected Fellow of the African Academy of Sciences.