This Week in Microbiology   /     Cancer and E. coli

Description

TWiM describes a potential connection between a bacterial protein that damages DNA, and human cancers, and how to synthesize antimicrobial natural products from reconstructed bacterial genomes of the Middle and Upper Paleolithic. Hosts: Vincent Racaniello, Michael Schmidt, Michele Swanson, Petra Levin. Become a patron of TWiM. Links for this episode Colorectal cancer and E. coli (Nature) Natural products from ancient bacterial genomes (Science) Underexplored bacteria reservoirs of antimicrobial lipopeptides (Front Chem) Fries With That Mammoth Burger? (Mother Jones) 25-40 million year old spores (Science) 250 million year old bacterium from salt crystal (Nature) 1918 influenza with Jeffery Taubenberger (TWiV 966) Take the TWiM Listener survey! Send your microbiology questions and comments (email or recorded audio) to twim@microbe.tv

Subtitle
TWiM describes a potential connection between a bacterial protein that damages DNA, and human cancers, and how to synthesize antimicrobial natural products from reconstructed bacterial genomes of the Middle and Upper Paleolithic. Hosts: , , , . Become...
Duration
01:06:49
Publishing date
2023-06-09 22:55
Link
https://asm.org/Podcasts/TWiM/Episodes/Cancer-and-E-coli-TWiM-288
Contributors
  Vincent Racaniello, Michael Schmidt, Michele Swanson, Petra Levin
author  
Enclosures
https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/twimshow/TWiM288.mp3?dest-id=53322
audio/mpeg

Shownotes

TWiM describes a potential connection between a bacterial protein that damages DNA, and human cancers, and how to synthesize antimicrobial natural products from reconstructed bacterial genomes of the Middle and Upper Paleolithic.

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

Become a patron of TWiM.

Links for this episode

Send your microbiology questions and comments (email or recorded audio) to twim@microbe.tv