Imagine that the great majority of the microbes on Earth could be cultivated on laboratory media. How do you suggest that, in practice, we handle their humongous number?
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Imagine that the great majority of the microbes on Earth could be cultivated on laboratory media. How do you suggest that, in practice, we handle their humongous number?
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Posted on February 27, 2020 at 02:35 AM in Talmudic Questions | Permalink | Comments (0)
by Daniel
The paradoxes surrounding the concept of 'kin' are not only an aspect of human familial relationships, but also central components of biology through evolution. As far as we know, all of the astounding variety of life we observe on Earth descends from a single cell, a primordial, universal common ancestor that gave rise to all current cells. In metaphor, a seed growing into all of the branches on the Tree of Life.
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Posted on February 24, 2020 at 04:00 AM in Book Reviews | Permalink | Comments (0)
by Christoph
When searching the metagenomes obtained from single Trichoplax H2 individuals for 16S and 18S rRNA-specific sequences, Gruber-Vodicka et al. found, next to the prevalent Trichoplax and Grellia sequences a third sequence at high frequency that matched well with known 16S rRNA sequences from the Marinamargulisbacteria (ZB3), a branch within the phylum Margulisbacteria...
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Posted on February 19, 2020 at 11:57 PM in Physiology & Genetics, Symbioses, Teachers Corner | Permalink | Comments (0)
by Christoph
Take a few thousand small eukaryotic cells, allow for a few different cell types, and season the cells generously with endosymbionts (no, not mitochondria, they already have these!). Let the cells self-organize into a patty – or a potato chip, if you're more into a vegan lifestyle – with a diameter of approximately 0.5–1.0 mm, and a mere 25 µm thick.
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Posted on February 17, 2020 at 12:27 AM in Physiology & Genetics, Symbioses, Teachers Corner | Permalink | Comments (0)
by Elio
Among the blood tests that your doctor may prescribes is the one for C-Reactive Protein (CRP). What is it? CRP is a protein made by the liver in response to inflammation anywhere in the body, so a positive result will alert the physician that something along those lines is going on some place within you.
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Posted on February 13, 2020 at 04:00 AM in Pathogens, Pictures Considered | Permalink | Comments (0)
The TWiM team reviews the coronavirus outbreak that began in Wuhan, China, and the finding that an TLR4 deficiency underlies Whipple’s disease.
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Posted on February 13, 2020 at 03:59 AM in This Week in Microbiology | Permalink | Comments (0)
by Mechas Zambrano and Roberto
For most English speakers, CPR would be assumed to stand for cardiopulmonary resuscitation, oftentimes a real life saver. But for many readers of this blog, the acronym has a whole different meaning. For the last few years, CPR, has stood for the "Candidate Phyla Radiation." The discovery of the CPR superphylum was (and remains) one of the most remarkable developments in our growing realization that the genetic diversity...
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Posted on February 10, 2020 at 03:01 AM in Ecology, Evolution, Symbioses | Permalink | Comments (0)
by Roberto
Plasmids, autonomously replicating extrachromosomal elements, have long been recognized as important HGT agents. A striking early example of this was the discovery – some sixty years ago – of the very rapid and efficient plasmid-mediated transfer of multiple antibiotic resistance genes in clinical settings.
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Posted on February 06, 2020 at 04:00 AM in Ecology, Evolution | Permalink | Comments (0)
by Elio
Whipple’s disease is both uncommon and strange. Among clinicians, it is best known for causing malabsorption, leading to malnutrition and even death. The causative agent is a bacterium but its identity was mysterious, being that it was (and remains) "not-yet-cultured" in laboratory media. It was one of the first bacterial pathogens to be identified using molecular techniques (see this 1992 paper by Relman
Posted on February 03, 2020 at 04:00 AM in Pathogens | Permalink | Comments (0)