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Joseph Mougous

John F. Enders Professor of Microbial Pathogenesis
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Contact Info

Yale University

Yale West Campus, 300 Heffernan Dr, ABC 267

West Haven, Connecticut 06516

United States

Additional Titles

Enders Professor , Microbial Pathogenesis

Investigator, Howard Hughes Medical Institute

About

Titles

John F. Enders Professor of Microbial Pathogenesis

Enders Professor , Microbial Pathogenesis

Positions outside Yale

Investigator, Howard Hughes Medical Institute

Biography

Joseph Mougous is an HHMI Investigator, the Enders Professor of Microbial Pathogensis and a member of the Microbial Sciences Institute. Dr. Mougous received his Bachelor’s degree in Biochemistry from Western Washington University and his PhD in Molecular and Cell Biology from the University of California-Berkeley. After completing postdoctoral studies in Microbiology at Harvard University, he was appointed an Assistant Professor of Microbiology at the University of Washington. He received tenure in 2013 and was promoted to Professor in 2018. Dr. Mougous joined the faculty at Yale in 2025. Dr. Mougous’s work on the molecular mechanisms underlying interbacterial interactions has been recognized by numerous honors, including the National Academy of Sciences Award in Molecular Biology, recognitions as a Blavatnik National Award Finalist for Young Scientists, election to the National Academy of Sciences and selection as a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator.

Last Updated on September 02, 2025.

Appointments

Research

Overview

Bacteria have been engaged in fierce competition with each other for at least three billion years. It is therefore not surprising that they have evolved a diverse array of sophisticated mechanisms for interbacterial antagonism. These pathways, and the countermeasures bacteria employ to defend themselves against them, are the focus of research in the Mougous Laboratory. Early on, we discovered that the type VI secretion system (T6SS) is widely employed by bacteria to deliver antibacterial toxins directly to contacting bacterial cells. We went on to identify and define the mechanisms employed by many of these toxins, to show that the Esx pathway plays a similar role in mediating toxin delivery in Gram-positive bacteria, and to demonstrate that both of these pathways are widespread in mammalian gut microbiomes. We have also investigated the role of T6SS effectors in bacterial pathogenesis, and have developed biotechnological applications of several antibacterial toxins, including harnessing a bacterial cytosine deaminase to produce the first mitochondrial genome base editor.

Current work in the Mougous lab focuses on: 1) identifying and characterizing new interbacterial antagonism pathways and toxins; 2) developing new biotechnological applications for our discoveries; 3) uncovering the molecular mechanisms by which epibiotic, parasitic bacteria interact with their bacterial hosts; 4) elucidating the role of interbacterial antagonism in the gut microbiome and 5) defining mechanisms by which bacteria defend themselves against antagonistic attacks.

Medical Research Interests

Bacteria; Bacterial Toxins; Microbiology; Microbiota

Get In Touch

Contacts

Mailing Address

Yale University

Yale West Campus, 300 Heffernan Dr, ABC 267

West Haven, Connecticut 06516

United States

Locations

  • West Campus Advanced Biosciences Center

    Academic Office

    840 West Campus Drive, Rm 209A

    West Haven, CT 06516

  • West Campus Advanced Biosciences Center

    Lab

    840 West Campus Drive, Rm 267

    West Haven, CT 06516