Dr
Odbileg
Raadan
Dr
Odbileg
Raadan
Leading researcher
Institute of Veterinary Medicine
Biography
CURRENT POSITION: LEADING RESEARCHER
Laboratory of Virology, Institute of Veterinary medicine
GRADUATE EDUCATION:
- Ph.D 2005 Hokkaido university, Graduate School of Veterinary Medicine, Laboratory of Infectious Diseases, Japan
- M.Sc. 1998 Mongolian University of Live Sciences
- B.A. 1992 Mongolian Agricultural University
AREAS OF RESEARCH INTEREST: Virology, Immunology, veterinary diagnosis, genetic analysis, biotechnology
WORK EXPERIENCE:
1992 – present Leading Researcher in the Laboratory of Virology, Institute of Veterinary Medicine, MULS, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia
2006 - 2007 JSPS Postdoctoral Fellow, Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Japan
PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONS AND ACTIVITIES
2012-2019 Leading member of Mongolian Society of Virology
2013-2020 Member of JUGAMO (Japanese University Graduate Association of Mongolia)
2013-present Member of the Master`s Defense Council in Veterinary Infectious Disease of MULS
2015-present Teacher of Virology for Master`s students and post graduate veterinary credentialing course of school Veterinary Medicine of the MULS
PUBLICATIONS : More than 70 scientific papers published in international and domestic journals
PRESENTATIONS: Around 60 presentations at the international and domestic conferences Research interests
Virology, Immunology, veterinary diagnosis, genetic analysis, biotechnology Projects you're working on
Viral diseases Discipline
Epidemiology Immunology – T-cells Immunology – innate Virology Host species
Camels Cattle Horses Pigs Small ruminants Zoonoses Pathogen
Viruses Viruses›Adenovirus Viruses›Bluetongue virus Viruses›Bovine viral diarrhoea Viruses›Capripoxvirus Viruses›Classical swine fever virus Viruses›Foot-and-mouth disease virus Viruses›Herpesvirus Viruses›Paramyxoviruses Viruses›Peste des petits ruminants virus Viruses›Respiratory syncytial virus Viruses›Retroviruses Stage of vaccine development
Adjuvants Clinical trials Commercialisation Field trials Pre-clinical trials Vaccine delivery