Introducing the Department of Microbiology, Genetics, & Immunology

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Article Highlights

  • The department formerly known as MMG — the Department of Microbiology & Molecular Genetics — has officially changed its name to the Department of Microbiology, Genetics, & Immunology, or MGI.
     
  • The name change will bolster Michigan State University’s efforts to recruit world-class faculty, to educate future leaders and to do transformative research, especially in the field of immunology.
     
  • The change was made with support from partners across campus who have been working to advance the impact and profile of MSU’s immunology work.

The department formerly known as MMG — the Department of Microbiology & Molecular Genetics — has officially changed its name to the Department of Microbiology, Genetics, & Immunology, or MGI.

There are several reasons for the change, although Victor DiRita, the department chairperson, needed just a couple of sentences to summarize why the decision was made.

“This change is largely to reflect reality,” said DiRita, who is a Rudolph Hugh Endowed Chair in the College of Natural Science. “Our department is much broader than what our previous name indicated.”

The name change will bolster Michigan State University’s efforts to recruit world-class faculty, to educate future leaders and to do transformative research, especially in the field of immunology, the study of the immune system.

“People didn’t feel like this was their home because our name didn’t reflect the work that they do or the classes that they teach,” DiRita said. “This also gives us a bigger profile when we start writing grants for research and training students.”

The name change will also help strengthen existing collaborations with external partners, like the Henry Ford Health + MSU Health Sciences, and create new opportunities within them, DiRita said,

MGI is the first department on campus to explicitly include the term “immunology” in its name, although DiRita stressed it’s far from the only department at MSU where immunologists are furthering the field with their research and training.

“There is a lot of immunology on campus,” said DiRita, who also holds appointments in the Colleges of Human Medicine, Osteopathic Medicine and Veterinary Medicine. These colleges, along with AgBioResearch in the College of Agriculture and Natural Resources, support MSU’s immunology work.

“There was a lot of wind in our sails internally when it came to this decision. We’ve had nothing but support from the colleges and AgBioResearch,” DiRita said. “This name change creates a defined locus for everyone to see and to hopefully start developing new programs around.”

In fact, this name change is just the latest development around immunology at Michigan State University. Over the past several years, MSU’s immunology leaders across campus have been collaborating to hire new immunology faculty, largely through efforts led by the College of Osteopathic Medicine and its Applied Immunology Center for Education and Research, or AICER.

 

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