Professor Ebdon is one of three invited experts discussing bacteriophages – commonly called phages – on which airs on Thursday 4 July and is hosted by Melvyn Bragg.
Phages are a type of virus, present wherever bacteria are found, which are capable of infecting and destroying certain types of bacteria while leaving ‘good’ bacteria untouched.
Professor Ebdon will share his expertise with In Our Time’s weekly audience of 2 million listeners, discussing the therapeutic potential of phages and their role in identifying faecal contamination. He will also draw on his current work in the world’s largest refugee camp in Bangladesh, where he is part of an international team aiming to reduce the risk of potentially deadly waterborne diseases.
said: “I’ve been working with phages for 24 years now and I think we’ve got an important role to show the public that phages are already being used as a force for good in many applications relevant to our lives.
“Phages themselves are tiny, we’re talking 24 to 200 billionths of a metre (nanometres), but we can actually visualise them because they will leave holes in a bacterial lawn in a petri dish as they destroy the bacteria. And sometimes they can do this in a matter of hours so they can give us results quicker than previous tests as well.
“I liken them to fussy diners in a Michelin-starred restaurant, they are incredibly choosy about which bacteria they infect.”