Personal
Information
Name:
Terri Snodgrass Hamrick
Phone:
(910)
893-1705
E-mail
address:
hamrick@campbell.edu
Education
5/85 B.A.
Biology and Religious Studies; University of
Virginia; Charlottesville, Virginia.
5/96 Ph.D
Microbiology & Immunology; University of
North Carolina-Chapel Hill; Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
8/96 Postdoctoral
research; North Carolina State University,
College of Veterinary Medicine.
Professional
Affiliations
American Society for
Microbiology, 1995-present.
American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy, 2001-present.
Professional Activities
2001 Assistant Professor, Campbell University, School of Pharmacy, Department
of Pharmaceutical Sciences.
2000 Course director for MCR 51, Introduction to Medical Microbiology, UNC-Chapel Hill, Department of Microbiology and Immunology.
2000 Special lecturer, UNC-Chapel Hill graduate course in Pathogenesis.
1992 Member of the graduate student admission committee, UNC-Chapel Hill Department of Microbiology and Immunology.
1991 Teaching assistant, Undergraduate Nursing Medical Microbiology Lab section.
1990 Teaching assistant, Dental student Medical Microbiology Lab section.
1989 Seminar, Geographic Medicine Research Conference; University of Virginia;
Charlottesville, Virginia.
Professional Activities promoting Microbiology education
Co-director "Microbiology: How can I use that in my classroom" workshop for high school biology teachers. July, 2003
Co-director of American Society for Microbiology "microbial Discovery Institute' for High school biology teachers, July 2004.
Seminar, American Society for Microbiology, Microbiology education meeting, "Student incivilities", May, 2004. New Orleans, LA
Author, "Discussion as a learning tool and keeping the peace". Strategies for Success Newsletter, Benajmin-cummings Publisher, Spring 2006 issue.
Awards
2002 Dean's Award for Teaching Excellence, Campbell University, School of Pharmacy.
1999
Center for Gastrointestinal Biology and Diseases, Pilot/feasibility
award.
1994 STD and AIDS
Training Grant Appointment.
1990 Honorable
Mention, National Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship Program.
Specialized
training
6/97 “Light Microscopy for the Biomedical Sciences”, Carolina Workshops, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.
Community
activities
4/93-4/00
American Heart Association, CPR Instructor.
8/89-12/94 Emergency Medical Technician, South Orange Rescue Squad, Chapel Hill, NC.
Publications
In
Refereed Journals:
Orndorff, P.E., T.S. Hamrick, I.W. Smoak, and E.A. Havell. 2006. Host and bacterial factors in listeriosis pathogenesis. Vet. Microbiol. 114:1-15
Hamrick, T.S., J.R. Horton, P.A. Spears, E.A. Havell, I.W. Smoak, and P.E. Orndorff. 2003. Influence of pregnancy on the pathogenesis of listeriosis in mice inoculated intragastrically. Infect. Immun. 71:5202-5209.
Hamrick, T.S., A.H. Diaz, E.A. Havell, J.R. Horton, and P.E. Orndorff. 2003. Influence of extracellular bactericidal agents on bacteria within macrophages. Infect. Immun. 71:1016-1019.
Hamrick, T.S., J.A.F. Dempsey, M.S. Cohen and J.G. Cannon. 2001. Antigenic variation of gonococcal pilin expression in
vivo: analysis of the strain FA1090 pilin repertoire and
identification of the pilS gene copies
recombining with pilE during
experimental human infection. Microbiology 147:839-849.
Harris, S.L., P.A. Spears,
E.A. Havell, T.S. Hamrick, J.R. Horton, and P.E. Orndorff. 2001.
Isolation and characterization of Escherichia coli type 1 pili mutants that have altered binding
specificities. J. Bacteriol. 183:
4099-4102.
Hamrick, T.S., S. Harris, P. Spears, E.A. Havell, J.R. Horton, Russell,
and P.E. Orndorff. 2000.
Genetic characterizaion of Escherichia
coli type 1 adhesin mutants, and identification of a novel binding
phenotype. J. Bacteriol. 182:4012-4021.
Hamrick, T.S., E.A. Havell, J.R. Horton, and P.E. Orndorff. 2000. Host and
bacterial factors involved in the innate ability of mouse macrophages to
eliminate internalized unopsonized Escherichia
coli. Infect. Immun. 68:125-132.
Mann, B.J., C.Y. Chung, J.M. Dodson, L.L. Braga, and T.L. Snodgrass.
1993. Neutralizing
monoclonal antibody epitopes of the Entamoeba histolytica galactose adhesin map to the 170 kDa subunit
cysteine-rich extracellular domain. Infect.
Immun. 61:1772-1778.
Dempsey, J.A., W. Litaker, A. Madure, T. Snodgrass, and J.G. Cannon.
1991. Physical map the
chromosome of Neisseria gonorhoeae
strain FA1090 with locations of genetic markers, including opa
and pil genes. J. Bacteriol.
173:5476-5486.
Petri, Jr., W.A., T.L. Snodgrass, T.F.H.G. Jackson, V. Gathiram, A.E.
Simjee, K. Chadee, and M.D. Chapman. 1990.
Monoclonal antibodies against the Galactose-binding lectin of Entamoeba
histolytica enhance adherence. J.
Immunol. 144:4803-4809.
Petri, Jr., W.A., T.F.H.G. Jackson, V. Gathiram. K. Kress, L.D. Saffer,
T.L. Snodgrass, M.D. Chapman, Z. Keren, and D. Mirelman. 1990. Pathogenic
and nonpathogenic strains of Entamoeba
histolytica can be differentiated by monoclonal antibodies to the Galactose-specific
adherence lectin. Infect. Immun. 58:1802-1806.
Petri,
Jr., W.A., M.D. Chapman, T. Snodgrass, B.J. Mann, J. Broman, and J.I. Ravdin.
1989. Subunit structure of
the Galactose and N-acetyl-D-galactosamine-inhibitable adherence lectin of Entamoeba histolytica. J.
Biol. Chem. 264:3007-3012.