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In his weekly clinical update, Dr. Griffin begins with discussing if the antibiotic neomycin is really a pan-antiviral countermeasure, then reviews the recent statistics on SARS-CoV-2 infection before deep diving into if shedding and the rapid antigen test results correlate, the guidelines for spring administration of COVID vaccines boosters, whether COVID booster associates with the long COVID prevalence, discusses the emergency use application of a pre-exposure prophylactic, revised guidelines for how to treat respiratory viral infection guidelines by the CDC, the caveats for improper use of antibiotics to treat SARS-CoV-2 (a viral infection), continues to dispel the myth of viral rebound, when to use steroids and the benefits of convalescent plasma, what do when healthcare workers succumb to SARS-CoV-2 infection, if administration of an anti-immunoglobulin E monoclonal antibody can be used for COVID-19 treatment, if inhibiting T-cell activation will reduce secretion and production of inflammatory cytokines including IL-6, if changes in the gut microbiome associate with post -acute COVID-19 syndrome, and the pulmonary and neurologic determinants of long COVID-19 such as the presence of neurofilament light chain in plasma. For more information about this body of work, listen to TWiV 1088. Subscribe (free): Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, RSS, email Become a patron of TWiV! Links for this episode Intranasal antibiotic evokes antiviral response (PNAS) COVID-19 national trend (CDC) COVID-19 deaths (CDC) SARS-CoV-2 shedding vs rapid antigen test performance (MMWR) Spring vaccineadvice (CIDRAP) Older adult spring booster available (CDC) Advisory committee for immunization practices slides (CDC) Advisory committee for immunization practices spring 2024 COVID-19 boosters (CDC) COVID-19 booster take: cross-sectional study (Vaccine) EUA for pemgarda (FDA) CDC Quarantine guidelines (CDC) NIH COVID-19 treatment guidelines (NIH) Infectious Disease Society guidelines for treatment and management (IDSociety) Overuse ofantibiotics for COVID-19: a viral disease (European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases) Can you believe that antibiotics are ineffective against a viral illness (NKT Institute) Molnupiravir safety and efficacy (JMV) Convalescent plasma recommendation for immunocompromised (IDSociety) Outpatient treatment with concomitant vaccine-boosted convalescent plasma (mBio) Updated respiratory virus guidances (CDC) What do when your heathcare provider is infected with SARS-CoV-2 (CDC) Managing healthcare staffing shortages (CDC) Steroids,dexamethasone at the right time (OFID) Anticoagulation guidelines (hematology.org) Immunologic antiviral therapy with omalizumab (OFID) Abatacept pharmacokinetics and exposure response (JAMA Network Open) Long COVID evidence based review TWiV shout out (TWiV 1088) Gut microbiome and post-acute COVID-19 syndrome, ugh? (Cell Host and Microbe) Pulmonary long COVID (JCI Insight) Neurofilament light chain in long COVID019 neurocognitive symptoms (Molecular Psychiatry) Contribute to our Floating Doctors fundraiser Letters read on TWiV 1110 Dr. Griffin's COVID treatment summary (pdf) Timestamps by Jolene. Thanks! Intro music is by Ronald Jenkees Send your questions for Dr. Griffin to daniel@microbe.tv
Joining me today is Jay Couey PhD, here to discuss the ongoing COVID-19 illusion, the many and varied dangers of the COVID injections, and the very serious risk of blindly following the consensus (scientific or otherwise) instead of considering all possibilities and coming to your own conclusions. We also review the overlap of nanotechnology with this conversation, focusing on the lipid nanoparticles within the injections, and discuss the possibility of there being more to these lipids than we have been told. !function(r,u,m,b,l,e){r._Rumble=b,r[b]||(r[b]=function(){(r[b]._=r[b]._||[]).push(arguments);if(r[b]._.length==1){l=u.createElement(m),e=u.getElementsByTagName(m)[0],l.async=1,l.src="https://rumble.com/embedJS/u2q643"+(arguments[1].video?'.'+arguments[1].video:'')+"/?url="+encodeURIComponent(location.href)+"&args="+encodeURIComponent(JSON.stringify([].slice.apply(arguments))),e.parentNode.insertBefore(l,e)}})}(window, document, "script", "Rumble"); Rumble("play", {"video":"v4c2pcc","div":"rumble_v4c2pcc"}); Source Links: GigaohmBiological's Videos - Twitch (50) Gigaohm Biological Archive Gigaohm Biological (27)
Disturbo dello Spettro Autistico: uno studio internazionale pubblicato sulla rivista Cell Host & Microbe sottolinea che un batterio può mitigare i sintomi psicosociali del disturbo dello Spettro Autistico. A Obiettivo Salute il prof. Luigi Mazzone, Neuropsichiatra Infantile del Policlinico Tor Vergata di Roma che ha coordinato lo studio.
Questo è quanto sottolinea uno studio pubblicato su Cell Host & Microbe che commentiamo a Obiettivo Salute con Nicola Segata, professore del Dipartimento di Biologia cellulare, computazionale e integrata Cibio dell'Università di Trento e dell'Istituto Europeo di Oncologia.
Resumo da semana: - Cirurgia é melhor que terapia endovascular para a maioria dos pacientes com isquemia que ameaça os membros (The New England Journal of Medicine) - Novo medicamento para hepatite B sugere uma "cura funcional" de longo prazo, com 10% de eficácia 6 meses após o tratamento (The New England Journal of Medicine) - O fungo Candida albicans implanta uma enzima que digere gordura para minar as defesas imunológicas do hospedeiro (Cell Host & Microbe) - Sucesso de ensaio clínico utilizando CRISPR para tratamento do câncer abre caminho para tratamentos personalizados (Nature) - Olpasiran, um pequeno RNA de interferência, reduz a lipoproteína (a) na doença cardiovascular (The New England Journal of Medicine) - Estudo apoia tratamento da amiloidose cardíaca precoce mesmo em pacientes assintomáticos (JACC: CardioOncology) - Iluminação externa à noite foi associada à prevalência de diabetes (Diabetologia) - Síndrome de Sjögren responde ao tratamento com citocinas, mostram dados iniciais (JAMA Network Open) Veja mais notícias em news.med.br Este podcast é oferecido por HiDoctor – o software médico mais usado em consultórios e clínicas no país.
Panamá, 11 de mayo de 2021.Aquí Los Bochinches de hoy:1. Ciudadana española denuncia el calvario que viven al ser enviados a hoteles. Denuncia que son mal atendidos. No les dan papel de baño y jabón.2. Perro servía de mensajero en el centro penitenciario la joyita. portaba una nota donde se describe venta de sustancias ilícitas.3. En estudio publicado en la revista científica Cell Host & Microbe sugiere que las personas que pasaron por la covid 19 de una forma leve tienen un buen nivel de anticuerpos, incluso 10 meses después de haber padecido la enfermedad.
In this episode Dr Bahijja Raimi-Abraham provides an update on the latest findings in Science, Technology and Health this last week. Additional Information Neutralizing Antibody and Soluble ACE2 Inhibition of a Replication-Competent VSV-SARS-CoV-2 and a Clinical Isolate of SARS-CoV-2 Case et al 2020 Cell Host and Microbe (In press) accessible via Science Direct . Episode summary available MondayScience.Medium.com Let us know what you thought of the episode. Subscribe, follow, comment and get in touch! Submit your questions or send your voice note questions (up to 30 seconds) via www.mondaysciencepodcast.com e. MondayScience2020@gmail.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/mondayscience/message
Learn about why bats are the source of so many deadly virus outbreaks; and the surprisingly strong influence older siblings can have on their brothers and sisters — just in time for Siblings Day. Then, test your knowledge from this podcast with a Curiosity Challenge trivia game. Why bats are the source of so many deadly virus outbreaks by Andrea Michelson Coronavirus outbreak raises question: Why are bat viruses so deadly? (2020, February 11). University of California. https://www.universityofcalifornia.edu/news/coronavirus-outbreak-raises-question-why-are-bat-viruses-so-deadly Brook, C. E., Boots, M., Chandran, K., Dobson, A. P., Drosten, C., Graham, A. L., Grenfell, B. T., Müller, M. A., Ng, M., Wang, L.-F., & van Leeuwen, A. (2020). Accelerated viral dynamics in bat cell lines, with implications for zoonotic emergence. ELife, 9. https://doi.org/10.7554/elife.48401 Xie, J., Li, Y., Shen, X., Goh, G., Zhu, Y., Cui, J., Wang, L.-F., Shi, Z.-L., & Zhou, P. (2018). Dampened STING-Dependent Interferon Activation in Bats. Cell Host & Microbe, 23(3), 297-301.e4. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chom.2018.01.006 How Do Bats Live With So Many Viruses? (2020, January 28). The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/28/science/bats-coronavirus-Wuhan.html Older Siblings Might Be More Influential to a Child Than Parents by Anna Todd https://curiosity.com/topics/siblings-shape-our-close-relationships-curiosity Hear the answers to today’s trivia questions in these episodes of Curiosity Daily: Memory’s Role in Social Anxiety, The First Synthetic Self-Replicating Genome, and Penguins Can Call Underwater https://curiositydaily.com/memorys-role-in-social-anxiety-the-first-synthetic-self-replicating-genome-and-penguins-can-call-underwater/ Speed Listening’s Effects on Emotion, Surprising Differences Between White and Brown Rice, and Pi Almost Legally Changed to 3.2 https://curiositydaily.com/speed-listenings-effects-on-emotion-surprising-differences-between-white-and-brown-rice-and-pi-almost-legally-changed-to-3-2/ Dr. Amesh Adalja Explains Social Distancing for COVID-19, Birds Won’t Spread Fake News, and Using Auroras to Find Exoplanets https://curiositydaily.com/dr-amesh-adalja-explains-social-distancing-for-covid-19-birds-wont-spread-fake-news-and-using-auroras-to-find-exoplanets/ Pick up “Wanderers: A Novel” by Chuck Wendig on Amazon: https://amzn.to/2Xvx20x Subscribe to Curiosity Daily to learn something new every day with Cody Gough and Ashley Hamer. You can also listen to our podcast as part of your Alexa Flash Briefing; Amazon smart speakers users, click/tap “enable” here: https://curiosity.im/podcast-flash-briefing See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Após uma breve pausa nos episódios do Microbiando, estamos de volta! E, no episódio dessa semana, vamos comentar o artigo "Metabolismo do colesterol por bactérias intestinais humanas não cultivadas influencia o nível de colesterol do hospedeiro", publicado na revista Cell Host & Microbe. Caso você queira acompanhar o episódio com a leitura do roteiro, acesse o link. Você pode ouvir os episódios do Microbiando através do iTunes, Spotify, Google Podcast, TuneIn e outros aplicativos de podcast
In this episode Dr Bahijja Raimi-Abraham provides an update on the latest findings in Science, Technology and Health this last week. Additional Information Neutralizing Antibody and Soluble ACE2 Inhibition of a Replication-Competent VSV-SARS-CoV-2 and a Clinical Isolate of SARS-CoV-2 Case et al 2020 Cell Host and Microbe (In press) accessible via Science Direct . Subscribe, follow, comment and get in touch! Submit your questions or send your voice note questions (up to 30 seconds) via https://mondayscience.wixsite.com/podcast e. MondayScience2020@gmail.com Monday Science is part of STEAM:ED Collective. Episode image credit: https://unsplash.com/ Episode summaries available now for episodes 2-11 (check website for further details)! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/mondayscience/message
COVID-19 is a devastating disease, and the elderly and those with chronic medical conditions are especially at risk. But why is it that some seemingly healthy people also get so sick that they have to be put on a ventilator? The answer may lie in our immune system. This week on Beyond the Abstract, Ellen and Derek explore a new paper that begins to investigate how differences in our immune response to the coronavirus explain why some people get so sick while others do not. Amazingly, they found a key player that causes immune dysregulation and a drug to stop it. Listen as they talk about the implications of this work as well as perhaps the first signs of quarantine insanity... Giamarellos-Bourboulis et al. Complex immune dysregulation in COVID-19 patients with severe respiratory failure. Cell Host and Microbe, April 2020. DOI: 10.1016/j.chom.2020.04.009 (https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chom.2020.04.009) . PMID: 32320677. The information presented here is not medical advice. Please follow all guidelines from the CDC in regards to social distancing. Consult your physician on any questions regarding your personal health.
Learn about why bats are the source of so many deadly virus outbreaks; and the surprisingly strong influence older siblings can have on their brothers and sisters — just in time for Siblings Day. Then, test your knowledge from this podcast with a Curiosity Challenge trivia game. Why bats are the source of so many deadly virus outbreaks by Andrea Michelson Coronavirus outbreak raises question: Why are bat viruses so deadly? (2020, February 11). University of California. https://www.universityofcalifornia.edu/news/coronavirus-outbreak-raises-question-why-are-bat-viruses-so-deadly Brook, C. E., Boots, M., Chandran, K., Dobson, A. P., Drosten, C., Graham, A. L., Grenfell, B. T., Müller, M. A., Ng, M., Wang, L.-F., & van Leeuwen, A. (2020). Accelerated viral dynamics in bat cell lines, with implications for zoonotic emergence. ELife, 9. https://doi.org/10.7554/elife.48401 Xie, J., Li, Y., Shen, X., Goh, G., Zhu, Y., Cui, J., Wang, L.-F., Shi, Z.-L., & Zhou, P. (2018). Dampened STING-Dependent Interferon Activation in Bats. Cell Host & Microbe, 23(3), 297-301.e4. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chom.2018.01.006 How Do Bats Live With So Many Viruses? (2020, January 28). The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/28/science/bats-coronavirus-Wuhan.html Older Siblings Might Be More Influential to a Child Than Parents by Anna Todd https://curiosity.com/topics/siblings-shape-our-close-relationships-curiosity Hear the answers to today’s trivia questions in these episodes of Curiosity Daily: Memory’s Role in Social Anxiety, The First Synthetic Self-Replicating Genome, and Penguins Can Call Underwater https://curiositydaily.com/memorys-role-in-social-anxiety-the-first-synthetic-self-replicating-genome-and-penguins-can-call-underwater/ Speed Listening’s Effects on Emotion, Surprising Differences Between White and Brown Rice, and Pi Almost Legally Changed to 3.2 https://curiositydaily.com/speed-listenings-effects-on-emotion-surprising-differences-between-white-and-brown-rice-and-pi-almost-legally-changed-to-3-2/ Dr. Amesh Adalja Explains Social Distancing for COVID-19, Birds Won’t Spread Fake News, and Using Auroras to Find Exoplanets https://curiositydaily.com/dr-amesh-adalja-explains-social-distancing-for-covid-19-birds-wont-spread-fake-news-and-using-auroras-to-find-exoplanets/ Pick up “Wanderers: A Novel” by Chuck Wendig on Amazon: https://amzn.to/2Xvx20x Subscribe to Curiosity Daily to learn something new every day with Cody Gough and Ashley Hamer. You can also listen to our podcast as part of your Alexa Flash Briefing; Amazon smart speakers users, click/tap “enable” here: https://curiosity.im/podcast-flash-briefing
已知人类肠道中存在的大多数病毒是噬菌体,但它们如何与定植在体内的细菌相互作用一直是个悬而未决的问题。虽然微生物组近年来成了研究热点,但科学家们仍然有很多关于肠道菌群的未解之谜,尤其是涉及到肠道中的病毒。近日,发表在Cell Host & Microbe上的一项研究中,来自爱尔兰科克大学的研究团队为揭开肠道病毒谜题,对九名参与者的肠道病毒进行了整整一年的监测,而且对其中一人的肠道病毒进行了两年以上的监测。他们发现肠道中存在许多类型的噬菌体,每个人的病毒随时间推移都是稳定的,并且与其他受试者存在差异。
Plants are a great source of fiber and micronutrients, which makes them an important component of a heathy diet. However, it was recently shown that there is another aspect of plants that allows them to contribute to well-being –- exosomes. In this episode, Kellen reviews a paper published in 2018 in Cell Host & Microbe by Yun Teng and colleagues titled “Plant-Derived Exosomal MicroRNAs Shape the Gut Microbiota”. Paper: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6746408/ Please take a few minutes to write us a review on iTunes –- it will help us spread science! And please send any questions and comments to inflammatory.content.w.kc@gmail.com or interact with him on Twitter @KellenCavagnero
Season 2 Episode: 6 I hope you enjoyed last week’s episode with Jack, Douglas and Greg Towers because now we’re continuing on that theme and speaking with Dr Adam Fletcher, a fellow innate/intrinsic immunity enthusiast, like Greg. Adam (https://scholar.google.co.uk/citations?user=cEzmpPEAAAAJ&hl=en), has led work on fantastic papers onto the detailed molecular mechanisms that our cells use to seek, destroy and ultimate block disease-causing viruses, like HIV, from infecting us. One example if the very recent paper in Cell Host & Microbe https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1931312818305456 (from which our cover image is from). Adam worked previously with Leo James at the Laboratory of Molecular Biology or LMB in Cambridge, and actually with Greg Towers at University College London. Adam is currently a postdoc working 'around the corner' from us here at in the CVR at the University of Dundee, MRC PPU. In this episode, Adam tells us about his work on antiviral immunity and what it is like being an early-career researcher in virology. As always, you can find our previous content on antiviral immunity over at cvrblog.myportfolio.com, email us at cvrcontagiousthinking@gmail.com or tweet us @CVRblog Join us next week, where we’ll be joined by Dr Marlene Dreux, who tell us some more about the antiviral immune response through the lens of cell biology. Featuring: Elihu Aranday-Cortes, Connor Bamford and Adam Fletcher. Editing: Connor Bamford Music: Inspire - Benjamin Tissot - www.bensound.com
How can the humble zebrafish teach us about the human microbiome? John Rawls discusses the benefits of using animal models Take the MTM Listener Survey Julie’s Biggest Takeaways: Zebrafish and other model animals provide opportunities to understand host-microbe interactions. Zebrafish are particularly useful for imaging studies, due to their translucent skin and the ease of in vivo microscopy. This allows zebrafish to be used to in studies of spatial architecture or longitudinal studies (imaging the same fish specimen over time) in ways that other model organisms can’t be. Zebrafish get their first microbes from their mother, just like mammals! The chorion, a protective coating that surrounds the zebrafish embryo, is seeded with microbes from passing through the cloaca of the female zebrafish. Surface-sterilizing this chorion allows researchers to generate germ-free animals that are very useful for microbiome studies. A gut epithelial transcription factor is regulated by a signal from the gut microbiota, and this signaling interaction is conserved among all vertebrates. The transcription factor itself, HNF4, is found in both complex and simple animals, like the sea sponge, and may serve a long-conserved function in regulating interactions between animals and their microbiota. Enteroendocrine cells release hormones based on specific chemical cues, but they can also interact with the nervous system. This makes them an important part of the gut-brain system, and the power of in vivo imaging has made zebrafish a great model for better understanding their function. Specific members of the microbiome specifically stimulate these EECs, sending signals up the vagus nerve to the brain. Featured Quotes: “We know that the zebrafish functionality of its intestine is very similar to what one encounters in the mouse or human intestine and we and others have been able to translate our findings from zebrafish studies into human biology.” On genomic studies that have found similar transcription profiles in zebrafish, stickleback fish, mice, and humans: “This suggested that there is a core transcriptome that gut epithelial cell use in different vertebrate species that haven’t shared an ancestor in 420 million years!” Comparing fish and mouse: “Genes regulated by microbiota in these respective hosts display a lot of overlap. Many of the same signaling pathways and metabolic processes are affected by microbiotas in different hosts in similar ways.” “There’s been a lot of interesting research documenting the role of the intestinal microbiome in promoting harvest of dietary nutrients we consume. Much of that literature has been focused on the events that occur in the distal intestine, in the colon, where recalcitrant carbohydrates and proteins that make it that far, many of which we are unable to digest, are made available to the colonic microbiome, members of which are able to digest and degrade them to things such as short chain fatty acids, which we can consume.” “Eventually, we’ll have some strong candidates in terms of specific bacterial strains or communities or factors or pharmacologic agents that could be used to affect dietary fat absorption or metabolism. We’re still a long ways away from that.” “One of the fascinating things about developmental biology is that the only way you get a viable animal is if the different tissues and the different cells within the body are coordinating amongst themselves for energy, for nutrients, for oxygen, et cetera. As you’re building an animal and as you’re sustaining an animal, the different tissues have to cooperate. When that doesn’t happen, when tissues or cells become selfish or don’t play by the rules, you get things like cancer and other diseases as well...when I began learning about the field of microbiome science and some of the work that was coming out from that field, it sounded to me like the microbiome was going to be a really important part of that. Not only can we think of the microbiome as a ‘microbial organ,’ as it is sometimes called, and therefore worthy of consideration within the context of developmental biology, but also the influence of the microbiome on any one tissue is going to modify its need and its ability to cooperate within the integrated system.” Links for this Episode: John Rawls’ lab website More amazing zebrafish images from the Rawls lab Duke University Microbiome Center Genome Research article on HNF4 regulation Cell Host and Microbe article on microbial influence on fatty acid absorption
In this edition, we’ll hear about a new technique to inject information into the brain of monkeys, with Kevin Mazurek and Marc Schieber, Neuron (00:00); how to convert yogurt waste into biofuels, with Lars Angenent, Joule (9:31); why should we eat a high-fiber diet, with Fredrik Bäckhed, Cell Host & Microbe (16:45); and how CRISPR holds promise for epigenetic therapies, with Hsin-Kai Liao, Cell (22:09).
In this edition, we hear about whether your genes influence your risk of tooth decay, with Karen Nelson from Cell Host & Microbe (00:00); a possible roadmap for making the world run on clean energy by 2050, with Mark Jacobson from Joule (10:00); and a look at how the collaborative peer review process works with Editor Ruth Zearfoss (26:15).
Last November, Cell published a popular study explaining how the glycemic response to foods can differ greatly by individual. This landmark paper on personalized nutrition has since yielded follow-up research and a perspective on how our gut microbes play a role in our individual responses to diet. Catarina Sacristan discusses the findings with Eran Elinav and Eran Segal of the Weizmann Institute of Science.Related Papers: Cell Host & Microbe, Zmora, Zeevi, and Korem et al.: Taking it Personally: Personalized Utilization of the Human Microbiome in Health and Disease; Cell, Levy and Thaiss et al.: Microbiota-Modulated Metabolites Shape the Intestinal Microenvironment by Regulating NLRP6 Inflammasome Signaling; Cell, Zeevi and Korem et al.: Personalized Nutrition by Prediction of Glycemic Responses
In this edition, we’ll hear about what happens after a mass extinction event (00:00, Current Biology), how cells destroy pathogens without damaging themselves (10:25, Cell Reports), how bacteria can evade our immune system (18:35, Cell Host and Microbe), and a round-up of great science stories from Cell Press this month! (27:27).
In this edition, we learn about how microbes in our gut help us keep to a daily schedule, with Vanessa Leone and Eugene Chang (00:00) (Cell Host & Microbe), designing drugs that influence cyclic AMP, with Stephen Yarwood (10:57) (Trends in Pharmacological Sciences) and around-up of recent research highlights from around Cell Press (17:30).
Our bodies are home to thousands of species of good bacteria that keep us healthy by aiding with digestion, defending against harmful bacteria, even possibly promoting mental health. A recent study shows how our body has adapted to help these microbes flourish. And what happens when things go wrong. An interview with three of the study’s authors including June Round, Ph.D., assistant professor of pharmacology, explores how the research was done and the implications of their findings for treating inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Link to the study published on Jan. 22, 2015, in Cell Host and Microbe
In this edition, we learn about about recent discoveries that may explain how gut bacteria can affect brain development, with Michael Fischbach (0:00) (Cell Host and Microbe). A celebratory conversation as the journal Chemistry and Biology marks its 20th anniversary, with Hiroaki Suga and Milka Kostic (9:04) (Chemistry and Biology). More great research highlights from around Cell Press (15:03).
Listen to the Editor of Cell, Emilie Marcus, explore the history of the journal and the roots of Cell's ongoing commitment to a strong editorial voice, as well as the new horizons of biology, in an interview with long-time Cell author, reviewer, and reader, Tony Hunter from the Salk Institute (0:00) (Cell). Learn about the possible links between retroviruses and cancer, with John Coffin (9:40) (Cell Host and Microbe). Hear from multiple scientists who study drivers of cancer and discover how these genes and proteins might be targeted to prevent cancer’s spread (16:26) (from Cancer Cell). Plus, sample a selection of the hottest new papers from Cell Press (24:15).
How microbes use various tricks to evade the immune system over time, with Christopher Sassetti (0:00) (Cell Host & Microbe). How the aggregation of proteins can sometimes be helpful to an organism, with Amy Gladfelter (8:15) (Developmental Cell). Plus, sample a selection of the hottest new papers from Cell Press (17:23).
In this month's Cell Podcast, we cover how a scorpion venom-derived peptide might be used to treat glioma, with Harald Sontheimer (0:00) (Trends in Neurosciences June issue), visualizing the immune system in 3D to monitor inflammation in a whole organism, with Eric Skaar (7:58) (Cell Host and Microbe June 14 issue), and understanding how mothers tolerate the "alien within" during pregnancy, with Alexander Rudensky (14:31) (Cell July 6 issue). Plus, sample a selection of the hottest new papers from Cell Press (22:01).