Skip to main content

Home/ Groups/ WSU BIOL209 Microbiology
Katelyn Madigan

Discovery of wound-healing genes in flies could mitigate human skin ailments - 0 views

  • key to their technique was the use of trypsin, a member of a family of enzymes called serine proteases, which activates genes involved in wound healing
  • incorporating specific, regulated series proteases and antimicrobial peptides at the sites of diabetic ulcers or skin grafts for more efficient wound healing
  •  
    A specific approach to target the genes that are involved in wound healing seems like a progressive approach for several skin disorders.
Casey Finnerty

A New Germ Theory - 99.02 - 0 views

  •  
    The recent papers from the Cleveland Clinic on the role of microbiome in heart disease jogged my memory of Paul Ewald's work on this subject. In a way, he predicted the papers that appeared this week over 15 years ago. Put succinctly, "big, old, diseases are infectious." If they weren't, natural selection would have reduced their incidence. Fascinating theory, worth a read.
Casey Finnerty

Eggs, Too, May Provoke Bacteria to Raise Heart Risk - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • The lecithin study, published Wednesday in The New England Journal of Medicine, is part of a growing appreciation of the role the body’s bacteria play in health and disease. With heart disease, investigators have long focused on the role of diet and heart disease, but expanding the scrutiny to bacteria adds a new dimension.
  • “Heart disease perhaps involves microbes in our gut,”
  •  
    First carnitine and meat, now lecithin and eggs! Darn it! All things in moderation, I guess.
Casey Finnerty

Study Points to New Culprit in Heart Disease - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  •  
    NYTimes report on Nathan's post about carnitine and it's conversion to TMAO by gut bacteria.
Samantha Mishall

ScienceDirect.com - Current Opinion in Microbiology - T cell responses to Chlamydia tra... - 0 views

  •  
    An interesting paper about Chlamydia and the body's immune response against infection. Although the article doesn't discuss it, I believe further research could lead to development of a vaccine. A potential paper to use for our presentation.
Jeremiah Williamson

Cold Plasma Kills Bacteria Better Than Antibiotics : Discovery News - 0 views

  •  
    If we could somehow find a way to work in on humans this could be huge. Many burn victims and other people with wound infections could be save from deadly bacteria, and without some of the harmful side effects of antibiotics.
loryn_micro

'Very large outbreak' of measles could hit London - 0 views

  •  
    London could be hit by a "very large outbreak" of measles because so few young people are vaccinated, according to the country's immunisation chief. In some of the capital's boroughs, more than half of children in some age groups have not been fully vaccinated against the disease.
loryn_micro

Host range relationships and the evolution of ... [Vet Microbiol. 1999] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

  •  
    Review Journal Article for Presentation
loryn_micro

Limited Transferrin Receptor Clustering Allows Rapid Diffusion of Canine Parvovirus int... - 0 views

  •  
    Supplemental Journal Article for Presentation
loryn_micro

ScienceDirect.com - The Veterinary Journal - Accuracy of a point-of-care ELISA test kit... - 0 views

  •  
    Supplementary Journal Article for Presentation
loryn_micro

Binding site on the transferrin receptor for the par... [J Virol. 2010] - PubMed - NCBI - 1 views

  •  
    Focus Paper for our Presentation
loryn_micro

Canine parvovirus in asymptomatic feline carri... [Vet Microbiol. 2012] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

  •  
    Supplemental journal article for our presentation
Megan Goldman

Human Female Genital Tract Infection by the Obligate Intracellular Bacterium Chlamydia ... - 0 views

  •  
    Abstract While Chlamydia trachomatis infections are frequently asymptomatic, mechanisms that regulate host response to this intracellular Gram-negative bacterium remain undefined. This investigation thus used peripheral blood mononuclear cells and endometrial tissue from women with or without Chlamydia genital tract infection to better define this response.... The focus paper of me and Samantha Mishall's presentation on Tuesday April 30th.
Megan Rasmussen

Tumors Fall to Radioactive Bacteria | The Scientist Magazine® - 0 views

  •  
    Researchers use bacteria to deliver radiation to shrink pancreatic tumors in mice. This is really cool because I work with Listeria to form biofilms. It is known for causing food poisoning outbreaks from contaminating ready to eat deli meats or soft cheeses in food processing plants, so it is interesting to see a different take on this bacteria!
Emma Radzak

First vaccine to help control some autism symptoms - 0 views

  •  
    A vaccine to combat the microorganism C. bolteae may be the solution for alleviating digestion symptoms often associated with autism. Children with autism have been known to have higher levels of this organism than that of a healthy child. It is assumed that toxins produced by the C. bolteae may be associated with severe symptoms that autistic children typically have, such as diarrhea. I found it ironic that many people still think that vaccines cause autism, and here is a vaccine to assist in alleviating the digestive symptoms associated with it.
  •  
    A vaccine to combat the microorganism C. bolteae may be the solution for alleviating digestion symptoms often associated with autism. Children with autism have been known to have higher levels of this organism than that of a healthy child. It is assumed that toxins produced by the C. bolteae may be associated with severe symptoms that autistic children typically have, such as diarrhea. I found it ironic that many people still think that vaccines cause autism, and here is a vaccine to assist in alleviating the digestive symptoms associated with it.
Emma Radzak

Foodborne urinary tract infections: a new paradigm for anti-microbial resistant foodbor... - 0 views

  •  
    E. coli has been known to cause G.I tract infections for a long time, but now studies have been finding the same strain in the urinary tract as well. This is leading to a progressive antimicrobial resistance that is combining the effects of increased UTI antibiotic usage and agricultural antibiotic use against the same strain of E. coli.
Amanda Bergstedt

Nematode worm infection fights obesity, related metabolic disorders - 1 views

  •  
    Many studies are currently being done on the mutualistic affects of nematodes on humans. This study could potentially help the vast obesity epidemic.
Tyrell Varner

Bacteria evolve resistance more quickly when stronger antibiotics are used - 1 views

  • they found that the rate of evolution of antibiotic resistance speeds up when potent treatments are given because resistant bacterial cells flourish most during the most aggressive therapies.
  •  
    Hmm common sense?
  •  
    Kind of. So if you remove the competition more completely with aggressive antibiotics, the proportion of remaining bacteria that are resistant is higher. Of course, the opposite happens when you treat incompletely with antibiotics (i.e. stop taking them early). In that case our thinking is that the immune system is unlikely to kill all the remaining bacteria, increasing the chance resistant bacteria will survive.
« First ‹ Previous 801 - 820 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page