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This Week in Microbiology

This Week in Microbiology

Von: Vincent Racaniello
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This Week in Microbiology is a podcast about unseen life on Earth.Creative Commons Attribution - Noncommercial Wissenschaft
  • 349: Punctured to Death by Spikes
    Feb 1 2026

    TWiM explains how mechano-bactericidal surfaces made from diverse materials and patterned with spikes kill bacteria on contact, and virus-host evolution is reshaped by microgravity aboard the International Space Station.

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    Links for this episode:

    • Mechano-Bactericidal Surfaces (Adv Sci)

    • Piercing pathogens (ASM)

    • Natural bactericidal surfaces (Small)

    • Virus-host evolution in microgravity (PLoS Biol)

    Music used on TWiM is composed and performed by Ronald Jenkees and used with permission.

    Send your microbiology questions and comments to twim@microbe.tv

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    59 Min.
  • 348: The Bark Side of the Microbiome
    Jan 21 2026

    TWiM explains the finding that owning a dog during adolescence alters the microbiota and improves mental health, and the molecular basis for multidrug efflux by an anaerobic-associated resistance-nodulation-cell division transporter.

    Hosts: Vincent Racaniello, Michael Schmidt, Michele Swanson and Petra Levin.

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    Music used on TWiM is composed and performed by Ronald Jenkees and used with permission.

    Links for this episode
    • Dog ownership and the microbiome during adolescence (iScience)
    • Molecular basis for multidrug efflux (Nat Comm)
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    Send your microbiology questions and comments (email or recorded audio) to twim@microbe.tv

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    54 Min.
  • 347: At Wound's Edge
    Jan 5 2026

    TWiM explains how S. aureus pathogenicity is a dynamic, niche-specific choreography that constantly recalibrates in response to the host microenvironment, and short chain fatty acids produced by commensal microbiota reduces its competitive fitness.

    Hosts: Michael Schmidt, Michele Swanson and Petra Levin.


    Guest:
    Mark O. Martin

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    Links for this episode:

    • Niche-specific fitness of S. aureus at the wound edge (Nat Comm)

    • Commensal derived short chain fatty acids attenuate S. aureus (mBio)

    • Ditch the term pathogen (Nature)

    Music used on TWiM is composed and performed by Ronald Jenkees and used with permission.

    Send your microbiology questions and comments to twim@microbe.tv

    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    55 Min.
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