Scientists

Infection research at the interface between clinical practice and basic 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.

TWINCORE Symposium 2026

This year's TWINCORE Symposium will take place on 3 - 4 September.

Research

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.

Discover our research projects

Bartsch Lab
Immunology

Harnessing antibody Fc effector functions as therapeutic target

The project is researching how the effect of monoclonal antibodies can be improved. These antibodies are already being used successfully against viruses. The aim is to optimize the so-called Fc effector functions in order to fight infections even more effectively.

Pessler Lab
Immunology

Cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers for early diagnosis and risk stratification of CNS infections

In collaboration with the Department of Neurology and the Metabolomics Department, the project is investigating metabolic products in cerebrospinal fluid in order to identify biomarkers for CNS infections and cell damage and to distinguish long COVID and viral from autoimmune diseases.

Pietschmann Lab
Virology

Principles of HCV assembly and entry and their role in virus persistence

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.

Kalinke Lab
Bartsch Lab
Behrendt Lab
Pietschmann Lab
Immunology

Platform for the rapid development of new pathogen-directed humanized or fully human monoclonal antibody candidates (MEMUMAB)

Monoclonal antibodies are transforming modern medicine. At Helmholtz Infection Medicine at MHH, bringing together TWINCORE and CiiM, advanced technologies and AI drive the development of next-generation human antibodies against major infectious diseases.

Career at TWINCORE

A researcher in a lab using a microscope

Want to become part of TWINCORE?

Take a look at our job advertisements to see if there is something suitable for you or send us an unsolicited application.
Cover image of CoreNews 06/2026

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