by Elio — I have long enjoyed the journal 'Nature Microbiology', but the August 2016 issue surpasses what I have read before. Practically every entry is it standout.I will mention only a few but encourage all to have a look... Read more →
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by Elio — I have long enjoyed the journal 'Nature Microbiology', but the August 2016 issue surpasses what I have read before. Practically every entry is it standout.I will mention only a few but encourage all to have a look... Read more →
Posted on July 27, 2016 at 11:17 PM in Odds & Ends | Permalink | Comments (0)
by Daniel P. Haeusser — This June Disney released the anticipated Pixar Animation Studios sequel 'Finding Dory' to earn the largest animated film opening receipts in North America ever. The popularity of the original 'Finding Nemo' in 2003 led to reportedly increased demand for clownfish like Nemo for pets; some concerned environmentalists worry that... Read more →
Posted on July 24, 2016 at 11:47 PM in Ecology, Pathogens, Physiology & Genetics, Symbioses, Teachers Corner | Permalink | Comments (0)
"Invasive species" is a common topic among plant and animal ecologists. Why is it not much used in the context of microbial diversity? Read more →
Posted on July 20, 2016 at 10:43 PM in Talmudic Questions, Teachers Corner | Permalink | Comments (0)
by Christoph — Imagine you equip your standard E. coli cells with a few additional genes, conveniently placed on plasmids and under control of inducible promoters. You grow the cells and induce the expression of these additional genes. Not long after, the cytoplasm of the cells turns reddish, when looked at under the fluorescence microscope, due to... Read more →
Posted on July 17, 2016 at 11:33 PM in Methodology, Pictures Considered | Permalink | Comments (0)
by Michael Malamy — For at least twenty years now I have given a few lectures with discussion sections on the early papers of Benzer on rII, followed by the exploitation of the rII system by Crick, Brenner and their colleagues to study the nature of mutations arising spontaneously or after treatment with mutagenic agents, the nature of the genetic code... Read more →
Posted on July 13, 2016 at 11:10 PM in Teachers Corner, The View From Here | Permalink | Comments (0)
by Elio — The much admired late marine microbiologist Ralph Lewin coined the term "ixotrophy" to describe how certain bacteria catch their prey by having a sticky surface. ('Iχo-' is derived from the Greek for "sticky" and 'iχos' means birdlime, the name of the gluey stuff used for trapping birds). Many readers, at least the older ones, will be reminded of flypaper. Read more →
Posted on July 10, 2016 at 10:28 PM in Ecology, Symbioses, Teachers Corner | Permalink | Comments (0)
by Elio — While attending this year's ASM Microbe conference in Boston, MA., Elio had a chance to sign copies of his newest books, 'In The Company of Microbes' and 'Microbe, Second Edition'. And we were there to film it. Watch as Elio and co-author Michele Swanson describe what you'll find in the pages of these great new books. Read more →
Posted on July 07, 2016 at 09:42 AM in Odds & Ends | Permalink | Comments (0)
by Michael Haar — Deep in the Amazon, a supervillain of microscopic proportions strikes fear into the ganglion of honest tree-dwelling ants in every canopy. Myrmeconema neotropicum is a parasitic nematode, one of the countless species in the phylum Nematoda that exist in nearly every location on Earth. For many, parasitism is a topic that can... Read more →
Posted on July 03, 2016 at 11:12 PM in Behavior, Symbioses, Teachers Corner | Permalink | Comments (0)