This Week In Microbiology

  • Author: Vários
  • Narrator: Vários
  • Publisher: Podcast
  • Duration: 367:02:10
  • More information

Informações:

Synopsis

This Week in Microbiology is a podcast about unseen life on Earth.

Episodes

  • TWiM #25: Magnetotactic bacteria and totally drug resistant TB

    25/01/2012 Duration: 01h16min

    On episode #25 of the podcast, Vincent, Elio, and Michael review bacteria that use the earth’s magnetic field for navigation, and identification of totally drug resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

  • TWiM #24: This year in microbiology

    11/01/2012 Duration: 01h19min

    Vincent, Michael, and Cliff review ten compelling microbiology stories from 2011.

  • TWiM #23: Fighting antibiotics with toxic gas and starvation

    28/12/2011 Duration: 01h16min

    Vincent, Jo, Elio, and Michael explain how a swarming bacterium helps disperse a non-motile fungus, and bacterial antibiotic tolerance mediated by hydrogen sulfide and starvation responses.

  • TWiM #22: Microbiology 911

    14/12/2011 Duration: 01h38min

    Vincent and Michael speak with Alfred Sacchetti, MD, Chief of Emergency Services at Our Lady of Lourdes Medical Center, about microbial infections encountered in the emergency room.

  • TWiM #21: Symbiotic margheritas

    30/11/2011 Duration: 01h08min

    Vincent and Elio discuss ancient symbiosis between Alphaproteobacteria and catenulid flatworms, and a toxin from Helicobacter pylori that engages the mitochondrial fission machinery to induce host cell death.

  • TWiM #20: Facebook for bacteria

    16/11/2011 Duration: 01h07min

    On episode #20 of the podcast This Week in Microbiology, Vincent, Michael, and Elio follow up on the outbreaks of E. coli in Germany and cholera in Haiti, then discuss genes that confer self-identity to Proteus mirabilis.

  • TWiM #19: Your microbiome is what you eat

    02/11/2011 Duration: 59min

    Vincent, Michael, Elio, and Jo discuss the genome sequence of Y. pestis from victims of the Black Death, and the effect of diet on gut microbial enterotypes.

  • TWiM #18: Escherichia coli K-12, an emerging pathogen?

    19/10/2011 Duration: 01h14min

    Vincent, Michael, Elio, and Stanley explain how to make the human intestinal commensal and benign laboratory bacterium Escherichia coli K-12 into an invasive organism, and the unearthing of century-old spores in New York City.

  • TWiM #17: Debugging endosymbiosis

    05/10/2011 Duration: 01h10min

    Vincent, Michael, and Elio focus on endosymbiosis: the rapid spread of Ricekttsia in whitefiles, and a metabolic patchwork in nested symbionts of mealybugs.

  • TWiM #16: ICAAC Live

    22/09/2011 Duration: 01h29min

    On episode #16 of the podcast This Week in Microbiology, Vincent, Michael, Arturo, Stuart, and David converse about antimicrobial resistance and why most fungi do not cause disease at the 51st Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC).

  • TWiM #15: Microbial long distance relationships

    07/09/2011 Duration: 58min

    On episode #15 of the podcast This Week in Microbiology, Vincent, Michael and Jo review the number of species on Earth, evidence that the 2010 Haitian cholera outbreak originated in Nepal, and how gut microbiota influence the immune response to influenza virus infection of the lung. 

  • TWiM #14: Vomocytosis and microbial transistors

    24/08/2011 Duration: 01h07min

    On episode #14 of the podcast This Week in Microbiology, Stanley, Margaret, Michael and Elio review how the fungus Cryptococcus escapes from macrophages, and electrical conductivity in nanowires formed by the bacterium Geobacter.

  • TWiM #13: Probiotics and inflammasomes: Telling good bacteria from the bad

    10/08/2011 Duration: 57min

    On episode #13 of the podcast This Week in Microbiology, Stanley, Jo, Michael and Elio discuss how colonic microbial ecology and risk for colitis are regulated by an inflammasome, and amelioration of intestinal inflammation in mice by delivery of a probiotic-derived soluble protein to the colon.

  • TWiM #12: Photothermal nanoblades and genome engineering

    27/07/2011 Duration: 01h15min

    Vincent, Margaret, Michael and Elio review the use of photothermal nanoblades to dissect the Burkholderia intracellular life cycle, and manipulation of chromosomes in vivo for genome-wide codon replacement in E. coli.

  • TWiM #11: Chickens, antibiotics, and asthma

    13/07/2011 Duration: 01h12min

    Vincent, Margaret, Michael and Elio review the presence of extended spectrum beta-lactamase genes in chicken meat and in humans, and a beneficial effect of Helicobacter pylori colonization on the development of allergen-induced asthma.

  • TWiM #10: A symbiotic cloaking device

    29/06/2011 Duration: 01h08min

    On episode #10 of the podcast This Week in Microbiology, Vincent, Margaret, Elio, Michael and Dickson discuss the symbiosis between the Hawaiian bobtail squid and the luminous, gram-negative bacterium Vibrio fischeri.

  • TWiM #9: Bean sprouts and E. coli O104:H4

    15/06/2011 Duration: 01h16min

    Vincent, Michael, and Cliff review the outbreak of bloody diarrhea and hemolytic uremic syndrome in Germany caused by Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli O104:H4.

  • TWiM # 8: Live in NOLA

    01/06/2011 Duration: 01h26min

    Vincent, Michael, and Stanley recorded TWiM #8 live at the 2011 ASM General Meeting in New Orleans, with guests Andreas Baümler, Nicole Dubilier, and Paul Rainey. They spoke about how pathogens benefit from disease, symbioses between chemosynthetic bacteria and marine invertebrates, and repetitive sequences in bacteria.

  • TWiM #7: Cycles of life and death, light and dark

    18/05/2011 Duration: 01h04min

    Vincent, Cliff, Elio, Margaret, and Michael discuss programmed cell death in E. coli, and the daily synthesis and degradation of enzymes needed for photosynthesis and nitrogen fixation by cyanobacteria.

  • TWiM #6: Antibacterial therapy with bacteriophage: Reality or fiction?

    04/05/2011 Duration: 01h22min

    Vincent, Cliff, Michael and Elio review the use of bacteriophages to manage infections, and the presence of antibiotic resistance genes in the bacteriophage from urban sewage and river water.

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