The institute is divided into three research sections: the
Molecular Biology and
Immunology Division, the Clinical Research Division and the
Epidemiology and Diagnostics Division. The National Reference Centre for Tropical Pathogens is also located at BNITM. Until the end of 2007, the Bernhard Nocht Institute was supported by the
Federal Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Social Affairs, Family, Health and Consumer Protection of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg. On 1 January 2008, the BNITM merged into the
Leibniz Association. The Institute's current scientific focus is on
malaria,
haemorrhagic fever viruses (
Lassa,
Marburg,
Ebola and
Crimean Congo Virus), on immunology, epidemiology and clinical studies of tropical infections as well as on the mechanisms of the viral transmission by mosquitoes. For the handling of highly pathogenic
viruses and infected insects, the Institute has laboratories of the highest biosafety level (
BSL-4) and a
BSL-3 insectary. The BNITM comprises the National Reference Centre for the detection of all tropical pathogens and the
WHO Collaborating Centre for
arboviruses and haemorrhagic fever viruses. Recent successes of the institute include the identification and development of a test for the
SARS pathogen (
Christian Drosten, 2003), the development of new therapeutic approaches against nematodes, especially in
river blindness (Achim Hörauf 1998), on bacteria living symbiotically with the worms, and the clarification of a still missing transitional stage of the malaria pathogen (Merosome, 2006). The couple and Klara Tenner-Racz from the Institute's Pathology Department is also known for their achievements in
AIDS research.
Research contributions The following list contains a few of the contributions made at the Bernhard Nocht Institute: • 1904 Nocht's assistant, chemist
Gustav Giemsa creates the
Giemsa stain, an improvement of the existing
Romanowsky stain. • 1916
Pathologist Henrique da Rocha Lima identifies the causative agent (
Rickettsia prowazeki) of
epidemic typhus. • 1911-1926 Improvements regarding
malaria therapy are made; experimentation is concentrated on producing effective derivatives of
quinine to reduce side-effects. • 1918 Dr. Rocha-Lima identifies the causative agent of
trench fever (
Rochalimea quintana), later renamed
Borrelia. • 1943 The discovery concerning the missing part of the reproduction cycle of
Plasmodium praecox in
bird malaria is made. • 1950
Helminthologist Hans Vogel demonstrates that
macaques can be immunized against
Schistosoma japonicum, the cause of Far Eastern
schistosomiasis. • 1961 Dr. Vogel publishes the life cycle of
Echinococcus multilocularis. • 1968 Dr. Mueller identifies the
Marburg virus in electronmicroscopy. • 1985 In a joint project with American scientists, Paul Racz and Klara Tenner-Racz exhibit that in patients infected with HIV, massive viral replication takes place in the
lymph nodes. • 2003 BNITM virologists identify the
SARS virus as a
Coronavirus == Directors ==