citizenship: u.s. citizen raleigh, nc 27613

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CURRICULUM VITA PHILIP BRIAN CARTER February, 2006 PERSONAL: Birth Date : July 31, 1945 Residence: Birth Place: Chicago, Illinois 12916 Barsanlaw Drive Citizenship: U.S. Citizen Raleigh, NC 27613 tel: 919/848-2192; fax: 919/848-3166 EDUCATION and TRAINING: University of Notre Dame, Indiana B.S. 1967 (Advisor: Robert E. Gordon, PhD) Biology University of Notre Dame, Indiana Ph.D. 1971 (Advisor: Morris Pollard, DVM, PhD) Microbiology Trudeau Institute, Saranac Lake, NY Post-Doctoral 1971-74 (Advisor: F.M. Collins; G.B. Mackaness) Immunobiology Oxford University, England Visiting Scientist 1978 (Sponsor: A.F. Williams; D. Mason) Immunochemistry University of Alabama, Birmingham Visiting Professor 1993-94 (Sponsor: J.R. McGhee) Mucosal Immunology APPOINTMENTS: December 1981 - present Professor of Microbiology and Immunology, College of Veterinary Medicine, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC; Professor Emeritus, January, 2006

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Page 1: Citizenship: U.S. Citizen Raleigh, NC 27613

CURRICULUM VITA

PHILIP BRIAN CARTER February, 2006

PERSONAL:

Birth Date : July 31, 1945 Residence:Birth Place: Chicago, Illinois 12916 Barsanlaw DriveCitizenship: U.S. Citizen Raleigh, NC 27613

tel: 919/848-2192; fax: 919/848-3166

EDUCATION and TRAINING:

University of Notre Dame, Indiana B.S. 1967(Advisor: Robert E. Gordon, PhD) Biology

University of Notre Dame, Indiana Ph.D. 1971(Advisor: Morris Pollard, DVM, PhD) Microbiology

Trudeau Institute, Saranac Lake, NY Post-Doctoral 1971-74(Advisor: F.M. Collins; G.B. Mackaness) Immunobiology

Oxford University, England Visiting Scientist 1978(Sponsor: A.F. Williams; D. Mason) Immunochemistry

University of Alabama, Birmingham Visiting Professor 1993-94(Sponsor: J.R. McGhee) Mucosal Immunology

APPOINTMENTS:December 1981 - present

Professor of Microbiology and Immunology, College of Veterinary Medicine, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC; Professor Emeritus, January, 2006

January 1983 – December 2005Charter Professor - Interdepartmental Biotechnology Faculty, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC

September 1988 - presentMember of the Advisory Council of the Baker Institute for Animal Health, Cornell University

December, 1989 - presentMember and Chairman, Board of Trustees, Assoc. for Assessment and Accreditation of Lab. Animal Care (AAALAC Int’l., Inc.); elected to Executive Committee (1996-2005; Vice Chairman, 1998-2000; Chairman, 2000-2003; Immediate Past Chair, 2003-2005)

January, 1999 - presentChairman, Diarrheal Diseases Panel, Chairman of Steering Committee (2001), Review Board of the Military Infectious Disease Research Program

June, 1999 – presentElected to Common Room, Brasenose College, Oxford University

April, 2001 – present

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President, Thurman-Zumwalt Foundation for Infectious and Toxic AgentsApril, 2004 – present

Member, Advisory Council, National Food Safety Institute (Veterinary Training and Research Initiative), University of Bristol (U.K.)

January, 2005 – presentAssociate editor, Microbial Ecology in Health & Disease; Taylor & Francis, publishers

July, 2000 – June, 2003Chair-Elect and Chair of the Faculty, NC State University

August, 1991 - 2002Director, NC State University Hybridoma Facility

July, 2000 – June, 2002Foundation for Microbiology National Lecturer, American Society for Microbiology

July, 1999 – June, 2002President of the International Association for Gnotobiotics

July, 1999 – June, 2000Secretary of the General Faculty, NC State University

September 1993 - July 1994Visiting Professor, Mucosal Immunology Research Group, Department of Microbiology, University of Alabama at Birmingham

July 1986 - January 1990Associate Vice Chancellor for Research, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina

July 1986 - January 1990Director of Biotechnology, North Carolina State University

September 1985 - presentMember and co-founder, Assistant Director (9/85-12/87) and Member of Executive Committee (1985-93) - NIH Core Center in Diarrheal Diseases, in charge of Core Center operations at NC State University, Raleigh, NC; Schools of Medicine and Public Health, Chapel Hill, NC; colleges of Veterinary Medicine and Agriculture and Life Sciences, Raleigh, NC

August 1983 - June 1986Founding Director - NC State University FACS/Hybridoma Facility

July 1988 - July 1989University Liaison, Co-Chairman of the Operating Committee and Board Member of BITAC, the Business Innovation and Technology Advancement Corporation, a joint incubator program of North Carolina State University, Greater Raleigh Chamber of Commerce and the City of Raleigh

September 1989 - June 1991Member-At-Large, Board of Directors, and co-founder, North Carolina Association for Biomedical Research, a state affiliate of the Foundation for Biomedical Research and NABR, Washington, D.C.; the Board is composed of the medical and veterinary school deans of North Carolina and vice presidents for research from industry and government

February 1981 - June 1982Associate Professor, Department of Veterinary Pathobiology, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL

January 1979 - January 1981Associate Professor, Trudeau Institute, Saranac Lake, NY

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September 1978 - July 1979Visiting Professor, MRC Cellular Immunology Research Unit, Sir William Dunn School of Pathology, Oxford University, England

May 1976 - May 1982Adjunct Associate Professor, Department of Microbiology, School of Medicine, University of Alabama, Birmingham, AL

October 1974 - December 1978Assistant Professor, Trudeau Institute, Saranac Lake, NY

November 1971 - October 1974Research Associate, Trudeau Institute, Inc.

June 1971 - November 1971Research Scientist and Project Leader, Immunology Section, Ames Research Laboratories, Miles Laboratories, Inc., Elkhart, IN

January 1971 - June 1971Associate Faculty Member, Department of Biology, Indiana University, South Bend, IN

February 1968 - June 1971Doctoral Candidate, University of Notre Dame

June 1967 - September 1967Summer Trainee in Bacteriology, Research and Development Laboratories, Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago, IL

June 1966 - September 1966Entomologist and Acting Technical Director of the Desplaines Valley Mosquito Abatement District, IL

June 1965 - September 1965U.S.P.H.S. Sponsored Summer Trainee in Microbiology (Morris Pollard, supervisor), University of Notre Dame

AWARDS AND HONORS:

National Defense Education Act Graduate Fellowship, 1968 - 1970Research Career Development Award, NIH (1 of 12 nationally in 1975), June 1, 1975 - May 31, 1980Honorary Member, Omega Tau Sigma Veterinary Fraternity, elected 1982Honorary Member, Phi Zeta Veterinary Honor Society, elected 1985Award of Recognition, Greater Raleigh Chamber of Commerce, 1989Person of the Year, Notre Dame Alumni Club of Eastern North Carolina, 1991Outstanding Teacher Award, elected to the Academy of Outstanding Teachers, NC State Univ., 1998College of Veterinary Medicine nominee, Alumni Distinguished Professor Award, NC State University, 1999, 2001Waksman Foundation for Microbiology Lecturer, American Society for Microbiology, 2001, 2002Huffman Leadership Award, College of Veterinary Medicine, NC State University, 2003Japanese Association of Germ-free Life and Gnotobiology, elected as honorary member, 2004

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PROFESSIONAL SOCIETIES:

Association for Assessment and Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care (AAALAC), Int’l., Inc.Consultant, 1977 - 1982Member, Board of Directors, 1990 - present; Executive Comm., 1996 - 2005Chairman, Nominating Committee, 1991, Secretary of Board, 1997-1998, Vice Chairman of Board, 1998 – 2000, Chairman 2000 – 2003, Chairman, Search Committee: Senior Asso. Dir., 2004, Chairman, Governance Committee, 2005

American Association of Immunologists, 1983 - presentAmerican Association for Laboratory Animal Science (AALAS), 1976 – 1992; 2000 - presentAmerican Asso. for Laboratory Animal Science, Research Triangle Branch, 1982- present

President-Elect, 1988President, 1989

American Society for Microbiology, 1970 - presentAmerican Society for Microbiology, North Carolina Branch, 1982 - presentAmerican Association of Pathologists, 1982 - 1987American Thoracic Society, 1975 - 1980Association for Gnotobiotics, 1970 - present

Chairman, Publications Committee, 1973 - 1987Member, Board of Directors, 1975 - 1979; 1986 - 1990, 1993-1996Vice President, 1976 - 1977; 1994 - 1995President, 1977 - 1978; 1995 – 1996

British Society for Immunology, 1979 – 1980; 1995 - presentInternational Association for Gnotobiotics, 1984 - present

Council Member, 1992 - 1996President-Elect, 1996 – 1999President, 1999 – 2002

National Research Council, National Academy of Sciences, Institute of Laboratory Animal Resources

Council Member, 1978 - 1984North Carolina Academy of Laboratory Animal Medicine, 2003 - presentNorth Carolina Association for Biomedical Research, 1989 - present

Founding Member, Organizing Committee, 1988 - 1989Member, Board of Directors, 1989 - 1991Chairman, Publications Committee, 1989 – 1991

Phi Zeta, Veterinary Honor Society, 1985 – present (elected Honorary Member, 1985)Secretary/Treasurer, Psi Chapter, 1991 - 1993Vice President, Psi Chapter, 1993 - 1995President, Psi Chapter, 1995 - 1997

Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society, 1990 - presentBook Review Committee, 1991 - 1999Secretary-Treasurer, N.C. State Univ. Chapter, 1995 - 1997

Society for Analytical Cytology, 1984 - 1987Society for Leukocyte Biology (Reticuloendothelial Society), 1975 - 2000Society for Mucosal Immunology, 1991 - presentSociety for Intestinal Microbial Ecology and Disease, 1983 - presentTriangle Area Research Directors Club, 1986 – 1990; 1998 – present

Chairman, Board of Directors, 2002-03

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EXTERNAL RESEARCH and PROGRAM SUPPORT:

North Carolina Biotechnology Center, event grant, "Partial support for the annual meeting of the Society for Industrial Microbiology", PI, 1996, $3,000 TDC

USDA (subcontract from Cornell Univ.) 3 year grant, “Leadership Training for Veterinary Students.” Carter, P.B. (PI for NCSU), September 15, 1995 - September 30, 1998, $41,735 TDC ($13,650 TDC for first year)

Research Triangle Pharmaceuticals, “Testing Adjuvanticity of Novel Compounds.” Carter, P.B. (PI), April 1, 1995 - August 30, 1995, $5,000 TDC

NIH, 1 year subcontract from UNC-CH, "TNF- and IFN--mediated effects in nonspecific antibacterial resistance in the intestine", Coinvest., $19,764 TDC

Pew Foundation, 1 year subcontract, "Improved Interactive Multimedia Course Authoring and Delivery", PI, July 1, 1990 - June 30, 1991, $6,000 TDC

NIDDK, 20 year grant, "Core Center in Diarrheal Diseases,"$750,000 TDC/year (Joint grant with UNC-Chapel Hill; Assistant Director; PI for NCSU from September 1, 1985 - August 31, 1989; grant renewed three times, most recently through December 1, 2009

NIAMDDK, 11 year grant, "Host Response to Intestinal Flora", ($56,782) PI Funded renewal for June 1, 1978 - May 31, 1981 = $141,500 TDC. Renewed 1981 - 1986 for $466,773 TDC

North Carolina Biotechnology Center, 1 year equipment grant, "NCSU Cell Analyzer", PI, 1989, $95,000 TDC

North Carolina Biotechnology Center, 1 year event grant, "Joint international meeting of the Association for Gnotobiotics and the Society for Intestinal Microecology and Disease", PI, 1987, $3,000 TDC

Accu-Med Products, continuing memorandum of agreement,"Development of Uterine Culture Apparatus for Food Animals," PI, $10,000 TDC per annum 1984-86

Environmental Diagnostics, Inc., continuing memorandum of agreement, "Development of monoclonal antibodies to microbial and antibiotic antigens," PI, $10,000 TDC per annum 1984 - 86

NHLBI, 9 year grant, "Murine CRD: A Model of Chronic Pulmonary Inflammation," June 30, 1976 - May 31, 1979 ($51.916) (Joint grant with Dr. Gail Cassell (PI), University of Alabama, Birmingham, Alabama, P.I. for North Carolina State University. Funded renewal for July 1, 1979 - June 30, 1982 ($79,851 TDC/yr). Funded renewal for July 1, 1982 - June 30, 1985 ($152,040 TDC)

NIH, Research Resources, 1 year shared equipment grant, "Fluorescence-Activated Cell Sorter," August 1, 1983 - July 31, 1984, $80,000 TDC. P.I.

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Food and Drug Administration, 2 years, "Development of a Virulence Test for Yersinia enterocolitica Isolated from Food," June 1976 - June 1978, $26,204 TDC. P.I.

American Lung Association, 2 years, "A Laboratory Animal Model for Assessing the Protective and Immunopotentiating Capacity of BCG Vaccine Administered by the Oral Route,", July 1975 - June 1977, $31,268 TDC. P.I.

National Foundation for Ileitis and Colitis, Cystic Fibrosis Foundation: Miscellaneous small fellowships obtained for postdoctoral fellows and graduate students.

PATENTS and LICENSES:

Coinventor of OX-8, OX-9, and OX-10 monoclonal antibodies recognizing the T suppressor/cytotoxic lymphocytes in the rat (license held by the Medical Research Council of Great Britain); these were the first to define CD-8 in any species.

Coinventor of LSM 8.53, LSM 8.358, LSM 1.140, LSM 4.78, and LSM 12.125 monoclonal antibodies recognizing subsets of canine leukocytes (license held by North Carolina State University)

GRADUATE STUDENTS DIRECTED:

MS Thesis:

Roger J. Brideau:Monoclonal Antibodies to Rat Lymphocyte Antigens, 1979

Stephen G. Simkins:Host Responses to Intestinal Flora, 1987

Ph.D. Dissertation:

Sarah J. Mason, DVM:Modulation of MHC Molecules on Intestinal Epithelial Cells, 1989

Guy R. Beretich, Jr., M.S.:Immunologic control of intestinal antibacterial responsiveness, 1997

GRADUATE STUDENT COMMITTEES:

Judy Liu, Ph.D. (Immunology, University of Illinois), 1984

C. J. Jansen van Vuuren, Ph.D. (Microbiology, University of Witwatersrand, South Africa), 1985

Richard Dobrowsky, M.S. (Biochemistry, NCSU), 1985

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Gerald E. Hancock, Ph.D. (Microbiology, Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania), 1986

Melinda Hollingshead, Ph.D. (Immunology, NCSU), 1986

Mina Dalili, Ph.D. (Chemical Engineering, NCSU), 1988

M. Gerald O'Sullivan, Ph.D. (Pathology, NCSU), 1989

Eiji Suzuki, Ph.D. (Chemical Engineering, NCSU), 1990

Martha E. Stebbins, DVM, Ph.D. (Microbiology, NCSU), 1994

Maria Christina de Vera, Ph.D. (Immunology, NCSU), 1995

Ann Gore, M.S. (Poultry Science, NCSU), 1996

Anthony Blikslager, DVM, Ph.D. (Veterinary Medical Sciences, NCSU), 1997

Mayra Verònica Herìas, PhD, (Immunology, University of Göteborg, Sweden), 1998

Nyla Dil, DVM, Ph.D. (Poultry Science, NCSU), 2002

Somsak Pakpinyo, DVM (Comparative Biomedical Sciences, NCSU), 2002

Aramsri Sriburi, B.S. (Microbiology, NCSU), incomplete

POSTDOCTORAL ADVISEES AND VISITING SCHOLARS:

Thomas T. MacDonald, Ph.D., University of Glasgow, Scotland (1976-78)

Daniel Mazigh, Ph.D. Institut Pasteur, Paris, France (1978)

Ann Mortimer, M.Sc., University of Leicester, England (1979)

Patrick Berche, M.D., Hôpital Necker Enfants, Paris, France (1979-81)

Robert R. Brubaker, Ph.D. Michigan State University (1980)

Thomas Hebell, M.D., University of Hamburg, Germany (1981-82)

Ken-ichi Kaneko, DVM, Ph.D., University of Tokyo, Japan (1984-86)

Marius Pirvulescu, Ph.D., National Inst. of Vet. Med., Bucharest, Romania (1992-93) [Fulbright Scholar]

Moira Stevenson, B.Sc., University of Glasgow, Scotland (1994)

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William Arts, B.Sc., University of Wageningen, the Netherlands (1995)

Igor M. Belyakov, MD, PhD, DSc, Institute of Immunology, Moscow, Russia (1995-96)

Marcia Fantoni Torres, MD, PhD, School of Medicine, Federal University of Minas Gerais, Brazil (1997-99)

TEACHING EXPERIENCE:

Associate Faculty Member, Department of Biology, Indiana University, South Bend, IN, January - June 1971

Full responsibility for teaching the Introduction to Microbiologycourse to 96 undergraduate students.

Adjunct Associate Professor, University of Alabama, Birmingham, AL, 1976-1982

Annually presented 3 lectures on the "Enterobacteriaceae" to the first year medical students.

Associate Professor, Department of Veterinary Pathobiology, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.

Full responsibility for teaching a 4 credit hour/semester lecture and laboratory course in Pathogenic Bacteriology and Mycology (VP 331) to 80 first-year veterinary students.

Coinstructor (5 lectures) in the graduate level Immunoparasitology course (VP 437), 3 credit hours.

Visiting Lecturer (3 lectures) in the graduate level course on Pathogenic Mechanisms (VP 415), 2 credit hours.

Professor, Department of Microbiology, Pathology, and Parasitology, North Carolina State University

Full responsibility for teaching a 3 credit hour/semester lecture and laboratory course in Pathogenic Bacteriology and Mycology (VMM 814/914) to 72 first-year veterinary students (1984-86; 1994: Course Coordinator with primary responsibility; 1986-present: 9-15 lectures). Autumn semester.

Coinstructor (7 lectures) in the graduate Immunology course (MB551), 3 credit hours. Spring semester, 1983-89.

Course Developer and Coinstructor with Herman Berkhoff of the graduate course: Bacterial Pathogenic Mechanisms (VMS 650), 2 credit hours. Spring semester, alternating years.

Course Developer and Coinstructor with Edward De Buysscher of the graduate course: Mucosal Immunology (VMS 590C), 2 credit hours. Spring semester, alternating years.

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Course Developer and Coinstructor with Tim Ritter of the graduate course: Flow Cytometry (VMS 590A; 590B), 2 credit hours lecture/1 credit hour lab. Spring semester, 1982-86.

Visiting lecturer in VMC 853 (Lab Animal Medicine) and VMS 540 (Research Animal Care and Use).

NATIONAL COMMITTEES:

Board Member, American Association for Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care (AAALAC), 1990 - 1993; Chair, Nominations Committee, 1991; Executive Committee, 1996 - present; Secretary, 1997-98, Vice Chairman, 1998 – 2000, Chairman, 2000 – 2003, Immediate Past Chair, 2004 - present

Department of Defense, ConsultantMember, Medical R&D Command Review Committee, 1991Advisor, US Navy Medical Command, Cairo, Egypt, 1992Member, Gulf War Illnesses Advisory Committee, 1992-94President’s Commission on Gulf War Illnesses, Testimony requested, 1994Member and Chair of the Bacterial Diseases Committee and Review Steering Committee, Military Infectious Diseases Research Program, 1999 – present; Chairman, Steering Committee, 2001

USDA / Army MRMC Biodefense Scientific Executive Review Panel, March, 2003

CORETECH (Council on Research and Technology, a national consortium of research universities and private industry), 1986 - 1990

Foundation for Biomedical Research, 1986 - 1990

Institute for Laboratory Animal Resources, National Academy of Sciences, Council Member, 1979 - 1984

National Association for Biomedical Research, 1986 - 1992

Ad hoc Study Section, Research Resources, NIH; Member, 1983

Ad hoc Study Section, NIAID, NIH; Member, 1988, 2001

Ad hoc Study Section, Infectious Diseases, Veterans Administration; Member, 1993

Grant Review Committee, SeaGrant, 1989

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INTRAMURAL COMMITTEES:

North Carolina State University:

Ex officio member, representing the Vice Chancellor for Research, on the following committees relating to compliance with federal regulations (1986-90):

Institutional Animal Care and Use CommitteeUniversity Biosafety CommitteeUniversity Committee on the Use of Human Subjects in ResearchUniversity Hazardous Materials Committee

Other university committees (1986-90):

Graduate School Administrative BoardInstitutional EffectivenessInterdisciplinary Research CommitteePlanning Committee for Centennial Research Campus (Staff)Research Operations Council (Chair in absence of Vice Chan.)

Research Ethics Subcommittee (Chair)Superconducting Supercollider Advisory CommitteeUniversity Academic Computing Advisory CommitteeUniversity Academic Computer Planning CommitteeUniversity Biomedical Research Support Grant (BRSG) Committee (Chair)University Biotechnology Policy CommitteeUniversity Research CommitteeAd hoc Committee on Shared Instrumentation and Services

Faculty Senate, 1985 – 1986; 1995 – present; Secretary, 1998 – 2000; Chair-elect, 2000 - 2001; Chair of the Faculty, 2001 - 2003

NCSU Biosafety Committee, 1985 - 1986: Responsible for evaluating dangers associated with working with microbial pathogens and other biohazards on the campus

Provost's Ad hoc Advisory Committee on the Future of North Carolina State University, 1993Watauga Seminar (NCSU) Steering Committee, 1991 - presentUniversity Honors Council, 1995 – 2000Faculty-Trustee Committee on Honorary Degrees, 1997 – 2003Faculty Council on Athletics, 2003 - 2004Holladay Medal Selection Committee, 1998 – 2003 (Chairman, 2000)Watauga Medal Selection Committee, 1997 – 2001Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC), 1998 - 2000 (Chairman, 1999- 2000)Select Committee on Reappointment, Promotion, and Tenure, 2000 - 2001, 2004 - 2005Council on the Status of Women, 2000 – 2003University of North Carolina Faculty Assembly, Delegation Chair, 2001 - 2005Task Force on Sustainable Environment, 2000

College of Veterinary Medicine:

Dean’s Cabinet, 1996 - 1999

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Open House Committee, 1995 - 1997; chairman, 1997Laboratory Animal Resources, 1994 - 2003 (Chairman, 1997 - 2001)Chairman, Search Committee for Director of Animal Resources, 1992Research Committee, 1982 - 1986 (Chair, 1983 - 1986): Responsible for the

establishment of faculty symposia on research development and grant writing; established the CVM extramural funding reference area in the CVM library; assisted in developing guidelines for review of proposals for internal grant support which are reviewed annually by this committee

Academic Performance Committee, 1984 - 1986, 1999 - 2002: One of four faculty members responsible for overseeing the academic progress of the veterinary students.

Deputy Secretary of the Faculty, 1985 - 1986, 2005Faculty Senate, North Carolina State University, 1985 - 86, 1996 - 2004: One of 35

university faculty members elected to represent the general faculty in the Senate; elected to Executive Comm., 1997 - 2003.

Awards and Scholarships Committee, 2000 - 2001 (Chairman, 2000)Library Committee, 2004- present

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign:

Elections and Credentials Committee, College of Veterinary Medicine, 1981 - 1982Capricious Grading Committee, Department of Veterinary Pathobiology, 1981 - 1982Research Advisory Committee, College of Veterinary Medicine, 1981 - 1982: Served as a research

representative from the Department of Veterinary Pathobiology to assist in the evaluation of research proposals that are funded from selected sources within the College, to provide priority rankings of other proposals which are supported from the Illinois Department of Agriculture, Agriculture Experiment Station, and USDA Animal Program sources, and to provide advice to administrative officers of the College on research policies and planning.

Chair, Steering Committee for the Campus Immunology Seminar Group, 1981 - 1982: Responsible for organizing the immunology seminar program for the Urbana-Champaign campus of the University of Illinois, to foster the development of interest in immunology on the campus, and to encourage interdepartmental interaction and discussion in the field of immunology

Trudeau Institute:

Animal Health Officer and Chair of the Animal Health Committee, 1976 - 1980: Responsible for chairing the monthly meetings and upgrading the Institute's animal care program to accreditable standards. The latter involved: establishing a gnotobiotic unit for quarantine use and for cesarean-derivation of all animal strains into a pathogen-free breeding facility; directing an animal health surveillance laboratory; overseeing the training of animal care personnel; and filing reports to government agencies. The institute was granted full accreditation by the American Association for Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care (AAALAC) in June 1980. In addition, supervised establishment of a system through which surplus animals would be sold commercially; in 1981, income for this program defrayed 1/3 of the annual running costs of the pathogen-free breeding facility (personnel, feed, bedding, building, maintenance, heating, and cooling).

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CONTINUING EDUCATION

Advanced Management Seminar, Dale Carnegie Courses, April-May, 1988

Race Awareness, C. T. Vivian Course, April 10-11,1989

NCSU Training Program on the Humane Care and Use of Animals, January-February, 1991; certification dated February 12, 1991 (in fulfillment of USDA Animal Welfare requirements)

RELATED ACTIVITIES:

Member, Organizing and Program CommitteeInternational Symposium for Gnotobiology, Tokyo, Japan, June 20-24, 2005

Member, Organizing and Program Committee2002 Association of American Veterinary Colleges (AAVMC) symposium: “Agenda for Action: Veterinary Medicine's Role in Biodefense and Public Health”, Nov. 1-3, 2002, National Press Club, Washington, D.C.

Chairman, Organizing and Program Committees2002 Meeting of the Int’l. Association for Gnotobiotics, Raleigh, NC

Co-chairman, Organizing and Program Committees2000 Annual Meeting of the Association for Gnotobiotics, Raleigh, NC

Chairman, Organizing and Program Committees1998 Old Herborn University Seminar: “Vaginal Flora in Health and Disease”, Herborn, Germany

Chairman, Organizing and Program Committees1996 Symposium: “Perspectives in Molecular Medicine”, Notre Dame, IN

Chairman, Organizing and Program Committees1995 Annual Meeting of the Association for Gnotobiotics, Raleigh, NC

Chairman, Organizing and Program Committees1987 Joint Annual Meeting of the Asso. for Gnotobiotics and SIMED, Raleigh, NC

Chairman, Organizing and Program Committees1977 Annual Meeting of the Association for Gnotobiotics, Saranac Lake, NY

Cochairman, Organizing and Program CommitteesSeptember 1977 International Symposium of Yersinia, Montreal, P.Q. and Senior Editor of the Proceedings: Contrib. Microbiol. Immunol. Vol. 5, 1979, Karger, Basel

Program Committee1990 AALAS District IV regional meeting, Raleigh, NC

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Member1976 - 1980 Board of Advisors , North Country Community College, Saranac Lake, NY

ReviewerFor the Journal of Immunology, Infection and Immunity, Laboratory Animal Science, and American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, others

OTHER

President, Thurman-Zumwalt Foundation - 2001-present(This 501 (c)(3) organization supports research, education, and public outreach addressing health concerns of those who serve in the military, Peace Corps, Red Cross.)

Advisory Council, Food Bank of North Carolina - 1992 - 1995

Executive Producer, Search, a monthly UNC-TV PBS show highlighting NC State University research - 1989

Chairman, State Employees Combined Campaign (United Way) - 1985College of Veterinary Medicine, North Carolina State University(24% increase in donations over 1984)

Chairman, State Employees Combined Campaign - 1990Dept. of MPP, College of Veterinary Medicine, North Carolina State University

Cabinet, representing College of Veterinary Medicine, NCSU Century II Capital Campaign, 1991

Vice Chairman, State Employees Combined Campaign, N. C. State University - 1991

Co-chairman, Steering Committee, State Employees Combined Campaign, Wake County, North Carolina - 1991

Chairman, State Employees Combined Campaign for North Carolina State University – 1992

Notre Dame Alumni Club of Eastern North Carolina (~500 members)Secretary 1984-86, Representative to Alumni Senate 1984-86; 2004, President 1986-88, Board Member, 1984 – present, Chairman, Alumni Schools Committee, 1985 – present; Chairman, Hesburgh Lectureship, 1987-present

Alumni Board of Directors, University of Notre Dame – 2005-2008

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PERSONAL PUBLICATIONS (excluding abstracts and presentations):

(Notes: Citation #5 is under consideration for designation as a Citation Classic; #1 is the first description of nonimmunogenic autochthonous flora; #4 is the first proof of Yersinia enterocolitica as a human pathogen; #19 is the first demonstration of complete T cell activity in mammalian Peyer's patches; #29 is the first description of CD-8; #46 is the first in vivo evidence for the existence of suppressor macrophages.)

1. Carter, P.B. and M. Pollard. 1971. Host Responses to "normal" microbial flora in germ-free mice. J. Reticuloendothelial Soc. 9:580-587.

2. Collins, F.M. and P.B. Carter. 1972. Comparative immunogenicity of heat-killed and living oral Salmonella vaccines. Infec. Immun. 6:451-458.

3. Carter, P.B. and M. Pollard. 1973. Studies with Lactobacillus casei in gnotobiotic mice. p. 379-383. In: Germfree Research, ed. J. B. Heneghan. Academic Press, New York, p. 643.

4. Carter, P.B., C.F. Varga, and E.E. Keet. 1973. New strains of Yersinia enterocolitica pathogenic for rodents. Appl. Microbiol. 26:1016-1018.

5. Carter, P.B. and F.M. Collins. 1974. The route of enteric infection in normal mice. J. Exp. Med. 139:1189-1203.

6. Carter, P.B. and F.M. Collins. 1974. Experimental Yersinia enterocolitica infection in mice. Kinetics of growth. Infec. Immun. 9:851-857.

7. Carter, P.B. and F.M. Collins. 1974. Growth of typhoid and paratyphoid bacilli in intravenously infected mice. Infec. Immun. 10:816-822.

8. Collins, F.M. and P.B. Carter. 1974. Cellular immunity in enteric disease. Am. J. Clin. Nutr. 27:1424-1433.

9. Carter, P.B. 1975. Pathogenicity of Yersinia enterocolitica for mice. Infec. Immun. 11:164-170.

10. Carter, P.B. 1975. Animal model: Oral Yersinia enterocolitica infection of mice. Am. J. Pathol. 81:703-706.

11. Carter, P.B., J.B. Woolcock, and F.M. Collins. 1975. Upper respiratory tract involvement in oral salmonellosis in mice. J. Inf. Dis. 131:570-574.

12. Carter, P.B. and F.M. Collins. 1975. Peyer's patch responsiveness to Salmonella in mice. J. Reticuloendothelial Soc. 17:38-46.

13. Carter, P.B. 1975. Spread of enteric fever bacilli from the intestinal lumen. Microbiology - 1975. pp. 182-187. Am. Soc. for Microbiology, Washington, DC.

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14. Carter, P.B. 1976. The use of mice in assessing the protective immunopotentiating capacity of BCG vaccine administered orally. Am. Rev. Resp. Dis. 113:154.

15. Carter, P.B. and F.. Collins. 1977. Assessment of typhoid vaccines by using the intraperitoneal route of challenge. Infec. Immun. 17:555-560.

16. Despommier, D.D., D.D. McGregor, E.D. Crum and P.B. Carter. 1977. Immunity to Trichinella spiralis. II. Expression of immunity against adult worms. Immunology, 33:797-805.

17. Collins. F.M. and P.B. Carter. 1978. Growth of salmonellae in orally infected germfree mice. Infec. Immun. 21:41-47.

18. Carter, P.B. 1978. How gnotobiotic isolators can assist bio-hazard control. Lab Animal 7:36-39.

19. MacDonald, T.T. and P.B. Carter. 1978. Mouse Peyer's patches contain T. cells capable of inducing the Graft-versus-Host reaction (GVHR). Transplantation 26:162-165.

20. Scott, M.T., T.T. MacDonald, and P.B. Carter. 1978. C. parvum in germ-free mice. Cancer Immunol. Immunotherapy 4:136-137.

21. MacDonald, T.T. and P.B. Carter. 1978. Contact sensitivity in the germ-free mouse. J. Reticuloendothel. Soc. 24:287-293.

22. MacDonald, T.T., P.B. Carter, and P.G. Phillips. 1979. Modulation of cellular immunity by the enteric flora: Delayed-type hypersensitivity in the gnotobiotic mouse. p. 221-226. In: Clinical and Experimental Gnotobiotics, eds. T.M. Fliedner, H. Heit, and D. Niethammer. Supple. No. 7 to Zentrablatt Fur Bacteriologie. Gustav Fisher Verlag, New York.

23. Carter, P.B., T. T. MacDonald and F.M. Collins. 1979. Host responses to infection with Yersinia enterocolitica. p. 347-351. In: Contributions to Microbiology and Immunology, 3rd International Symposium on Yersinia, Vol. 5, edited by P. Carter, L. Lafleur and S. Toma. Karger, Basel.

24. MacDonald, T.T. and P. B. Carter. 1979. Requirement for a bacterial flora before mice generate cells capable of mediating the delayed hypersensitivity reaction to sheep red blood cells. J. Immunol. 122:2624-2629.

25. Carter, P.B. and C. A. Sunderland. 1979. Rat alloantisera A.R.T. and Ly-1 detect a polymorphism of a leukocyte-common antigen. Transplantation Proc. XI:1646-1647.

26. Carter, P.B. and H. Bazin. 1980. Immunology. Vol. II, p. 181-212. In: The Laboratory Rat, Ed. H. Baker, S. H. Weisbroth, J. R. Lindsey. Academic Press. New York.

27. Collins, F. M. and P. B. Carter. 1980. Development of delayed hypersensitivity in gnotobiotic mice. Int. Archs. Allergy Appl. Immun. 61:165-174.

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28. Carter, P.B., R. J. Zahorchak, and R. R. Brubaker. 1980. Plague virulence antigens from Yersinia enterocolitica. Infec. Immun. 28:638-640.

29. Brideau, R.J., P.B. Carter, D. W. Mason, W.R. McMaster, and A.F. Williams. 1980. Two subsets of rat T lymphocytes defined with monoclonal antibodies. Eur. J. Immunol. 10:609-615.

30. Carter, P.B. and C. A. Sunderland. 1980. Biochemical identification of the ART-1 and Ly-1 alloantigens as a leukocyte-common antigen purified from rat thymocytes. Immunogenetics 10:583-593.

31. MacDonald, T.T. and P.B. Carter. 1980. Cell-mediated immunity to intestinal infection. Infec. Immun. 28:516-523.

32. Carter, P.B. 1980. Human Yersinia enterocolitica infection: Laboratory models. In: Yersinia enterocolitica ed. by E. J. Bottone. CRC Press, Miami. pp. 73-81.

33. Murphy, J.R., P. B. Carter, and T.T. MacDonald. 1980. Host defenses in murine malaria: failure of vaccination with formolized blood parasites to protect athymic mice from Plasmodium berghei. Infec. Immun. 29:827-830.

34. MacDonald, T.T. and P.B. Carter. 1981. A functional relationship between delayed hypersensitivity and antibacterial immunity. Immunologic Communications 10:591-599.

35. MacDonald, T.T. and P.B. Carter. 1981. Immunity to infections across mucosal surfaces, In: Recent Advances in Germfree Research. pp. 503-509, ed. by S. Sasaki. Tokai University, Press.

36. Berche, P. and P.B. Carter. 1982. Calcium requirement and virulence in Yersinia enterocolitica. J. Med. Microbiology 15:277-284.

37. Carter, P.B. 1982. Enteric Bacteria, pp. 461-478 In: Dental Microbiology, ed. J. R. McGhee, S. M. Michalek, and G. H. Cassell. Harper and Row, Philadelphia.

38. MacDonald, T.T., M. Bashore, and P. B. Carter. 1982. Nonspecific resistance to infection expressed within the Peyer's patches of the small intestine. Infection and Immunity. 37:390-392.

39. MacDonald, T.T. and P.B. Carter. 1982. Isolation and functional characteristics of adherent phagocytic cells from mouse Peyer's patches. Immunology 45:769-774.

40. Carter, P.B. and B. Perry. 1985. Yersiniosis. pp.49-65. In: Animal Models of Intestinal Disease, ed. by C. L. Peiffer. CRC Press, Miami.

41. Straw, B.E., N.J. MacLachlan, W.T. Corbett, P.B. Carter, and H.M. Schey. 1985. Comparison of tissue reactions produced by Haemophilus pleuropneumoniae vaccines made with six different adjuvants in swine. Can. J. Comp. Med. 49:149-151.

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42. Carter, P.B. 1986. Pasteurella. pp.375-376. In: Manual of Clinical Immunology, ed. Rose & Friedman. 3rd Edition. Am. Soc. Microbiol., Washington.

43. Carter, P.B., K.H. Beegle, and D.H. Gebhard. 1986. Monoclonal Antibody: Clinical Application and Potential Uses. In: Veterinary Clinics of North America: Small Animal Practice, ed. R. B. Ford. 16:1171-1179. Saunders Co., Philadelphia.

44. Corbett, W.T., J. Cullen, M. Levy, J. Guy, H. Berkhoff, B. Hammerberg, P. Carter, J. Fetrow, K. Anderson, G. Dial, C. Grindem, and L. Hunter. 1986. Epidemiological animal disease survey of cattle and swine in Suriname, South America. PAHO Publication No. VPH 8527, p. 1-64.

45. Kaneko, K., S.G. Simkins, K. Beegle and P.B. Carter. 1987. Efficacy of monoclonal antibodies in the treatment of enteric fevers. Microecology and Therapy 17:49.

46. Simkins, S.G. and P.B. Carter. 1987. Suppression of host antimicrobial immune responses by plastic-adherent cells. Microecology and Therapy 17:139-142.

47. Stimpson, S.A., R.E. Esser, P.B. Carter, R.B. Sartor, W.J. Cromartie, and J.H. Schwab. 1987. Recurrence of arthritis induced by lipopolysaccharide in rat joints previously exposed to peptidoglycan-polysaccharide. J. Exp. Med. 165:1688-1702.

48. Kaneko, K., S.G. Simkins, G. Hancock, T.T. MacDonald, and P.B. Carter. 1987. Early pathogenesis of yersiniosis in conventional mice: Evidence of limited Peyer's patch invasion. Microecology and Therapy 17:149.

49. Woolverton, C.J, E.J. Chapman, P.B. Carter, and R.B. Sartor. 1988. Systemic immunoregulation in germfree mice fed bacterial cell wall polymers. In: Inflammatory Bowel Disease. Current Status and Future Approach, p.207-212. Ed. by R.P. MacDermott. Elsevier, Amsterdam.

50. Carter, P.B. and S.G. Simkins 1992. The effect of the intestinal microflora on systemic delayed hypersensitivity. Microecology and Therapy 21: 348-354.

51. Gebhard, D. and P.B. Carter. 1992. Identification of canine T lymphocytes and T lymphocyte subsets by monoclonal antibodies. Vet. Immunol. Immunopathol. 33:187-199.

52. VanCott, J.L., H.F. Staats, D.W. Pascual, M. Roberts, S.N. Chatfield, M. Yamamoto, M. Coste, P.B. Carter, H. Kiyono, and J.R. McGhee. 1996. Regulation of mucosal and systemic antibody responses by T helper cell subsets, macrophages, and derived cytokines following oral immunization with live recombinant Salmonella. J. Immunol. 156:1504-1514.

53. Perkins, Paula C., Carol B. Grindem, and Philip B. Carter. 1996. Flow cytometry: The next step in diagnostic testing. Compend. Cont. Ed. 18:421-426, 1996.

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54. Carter, Philip B., Guy R. Beretich, Jr., Moira C.M. Stevenson, and EdwardA. Havell. 1998. Host interactions with intestinal Listeria: Exception orthe rule? In: Old Herborn University Seminar Monograph 11, Immunomodulationof the Gastrointestinal Mucosa, p. 28-44. Edit. by P.J. Heidt, J.C. Cebra,V.D. Rusch, D. van der Waaij, and R. I. Walker. ISBN 3-923022-22-0. HerbornLitterae, Germany.

55. Beretich Guy R., Jr., Philip B. Carter, and Edward A. Havell. 1998. Roles for tumor necrosis factor and gamma interferon in resistance to enteric listeriosis. Infect Immun 66:2368-2374.

56. Carter, Philip B. 1999. The vaginal flora in idiopathic reproductive tract diseases of women and an animal model In: Old Herborn University Seminar Monograph 12 Vaginal Flora in Health and Disease, p. 63-68. Edit. by P.J. Heidt, P.B. Carter, V.D. Rusch, and D. van der Waaij. ISBN 3-923022-23-9. Herborn Litterae, Germany.

57. Carter, Philip B. and Peter J. Heidt. 1999. Old Herborn University Seminar on the Vaginal Flora in Health and Disease: Minutes and Review of the Discussion. In: Old Herborn University Seminar Monograph 12 Vaginal Flora in Health and Disease, p. 101-108. Edit. by P.J. Heidt, P.B. Carter, V.D. Rusch, and D. van der Waaij. ISBN 3-923022-23-9. Herborn Litterae, Germany.

58. Havell, E.A., G.R. Beretich, Jr., and P. B. Carter. 1999. The mucosal phase of Listeria infection. Immunobiology 201:164-177.

59. Carter, P.B. 2003. The current state of veterinary vaccines: Is there hope for the future? J. Vet. Med. Ed. 30: 227-229.

60. Carter, P.B. and L.E. Carmichael. 2003. Veterinary vaccines and the Shaman’s apprentice. Comp. Immunol. Microbiol. Infec. Dis. 26 (5-6): 389-400.

61. Foster, H. and P.B. Carter. 2006. Gnotobiotics. In: The Laboratory Rat. Edit. By M. A. Suckow. Academic Press, New York. Pp. 693-710.

62. Amano, M., J.R. McGhee, M.J. McCutcheon, K. Fujii, P.B. Carter, J.-P. Vaerman, S. Depelchin, and H. Kiyono. 2006. Immunofluorescence digital analysis reveals a compartmentalized common mucosal immune system. International Immunology. (accepted).

63. Carter, P.B., S. Zartarian, D. Fraser, D.D. McGregor. 2006. Inexpensive, computer-based Internet conferencing to expedite team building in the international arena. Draft completed.

Video Publications:Ethical issues in scientific research [videorecording] / produced by the Research Triangle Park Club of Sigma Xi. Research Triangle Park Club of Sigma Xi. Publisher: Research Triangle Park, NC (P.O. Box 13068, Research Triangle Park, 27709) Research Triangle Park Club of Sigma Xi 1992. Description: 1 videocassette (62 min.) sd., col. 1/2 in. ISBN: 0964302209

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PHILIP B. CARTER

HIGHLIGHTS OF TENURE AS ASSOCIATE VICE CHANCELLOR FOR RESEARCH

• Gained approval for and produced a monthly PBS television show (Search) on NCSU research with pilot aired October, 1989

• Represented and defended the university research program involving animals in numerous television and public radio interviews

• Expanded the influence of the University Animal Care Committee while streamlining approval procedures

• Drafted university research ethics policy

• Developed continuing process for university accreditation reviews

• Testified before a Congressional committee on patents (the subsequent committee report incorporated all three recommendations)

• Initiated and planned the first college research administrators retreat and infrastructure planning session

• Assisted in the establishment of a novel university-public incubator partnership for high tech start-up companies for university technology transfer (BITAC)

• Initiated campus-wide coordination and expansion of the summer program for high school minority students in science and engineering

• Developed program for graduate recruitment visitations

• Developed novel plan for supporting rental lab space and funding new laboratory construction

• Initiated and fostered the development of university high technology shared instrumentation and service facilities

• Developed a truly university-wide program in biotechnology, involving 57 faculty in 16 departments in 6 different colleges

• Developed the first biennial budget for biotechnology for research and graduate teaching ($2,000,000 p.a.)

• Initiated and developed numerous publications on the NCSU biotechnology program for use in graduate student recruitment and public information

• Contributed toward better intercollege collaboration and interaction between the three Triangle universities, between public, land-grant and private universities

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• Furthered contacts with NIH, NSF, DoD, industry; speaker at NCSU alumni functions