# David Taylor-Robinson: Medical Microbiologist and Research Pioneer of Sexually Transmitted Infections

**Authors:** Simon D Taylor-Robinson, Andrew W Taylor-Robinson

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.66319 · 2024-08-06

## TL;DR

David Taylor-Robinson was a pioneering medical microbiologist who made significant contributions to the study of sexually transmitted infections and mentored many scientists.

## Contribution

David Taylor-Robinson's pioneering research on STIs and his global mentorship of scientists have left a lasting legacy in medical science.

## Key findings

- David Taylor-Robinson discovered Mycoplasma genitalium, a significant cause of genitourinary tract infections and female infertility.
- He researched associations between mycoplasmas and rheumatological conditions, as well as chlamydia and coronary artery plaque formation.
- His work and mentorship have inspired hundreds of scientists and had a major public health impact.

## Abstract

David Taylor-Robinson has been an inspiration to many investigators in the field of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) as, arguably, the father of modern mycoplasmology. Born in 1931, his career as a physician-scientist was initially in virology, researching chickenpox and the common cold, for both of which he made key discoveries at a time when little was known about these conditions. Soon, however, David’s attention turned to bacteriology, developing a passionate interest in mycoplasmas and chlamydia. This gave rise to research collaborations all around the world in marginalized and regional communities, stretching from Tristan da Cunha and Antarctica to the South Pacific and sub-Saharan Africa. He was the discoverer of Mycoplasma genitalium, which today is a commonly diagnosed and increasingly antibiotic-resistant pathogen of the genitourinary tract and a significant cause of female infertility. His problem-solving mindset led to research on associations between mycoplasmas with rheumatological conditions and chlamydia with coronary artery plaque formation late into his working life. Throughout his distinguished career, David Taylor-Robinson, affectionately truncated to “DTR” to all who knew him professionally, has been a beloved mentor to hundreds of aspiring scientists, some of whom are now leaders in their field. His open-door policy meant that there was rarely a time when there was no visiting researcher from each of the six inhabited continents under his expert tutelage. A strong work ethic and drive for scientific excellence, allied to his unstinting kindness and jovial demeanor, has provided a source of inspiration to a wide diaspora of research colleagues over more than six decades. This is as much David’s legacy to medical science as the undoubted public health impact of his own pioneering research on STIs.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** sexually transmitted infections (MONDO:0021681), female infertility (MONDO:0021124)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** female infertility (MESH:D007247), chickenpox (MESH:D002644), coronary artery plaque (MESH:D003324), STIs (MESH:D012749), common cold (MESH:D003139), rheumatological conditions (MESH:D020763)
- **Species:** Chlamydia (genus) [taxon 810], Mollicutes (mycoplasmas, class) [taxon 31969], Mycoplasmoides genitalium (species) [taxon 2097]

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11377102/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11377102