This Week in Microbiology   /     Can Our Microbiome Break Our Hearts?

Description

TWiM reveals a database of genome sequences of thousands of Mycobaterium tuberculosis, allowing association with resistance phenotypes to 13 antibiotics, and microbe-derived uremic solutes that enhance thrombosis potential in the host. Hosts: Vincent Racaniello, Michael Schmidt, and Michele Swanson. Become a patron of TWiM. Links for this episode M. tuberculosis genomes and antimicrobial resistance (PLoS Biol) The CRyPTIC consortium BashTheBug Zooniverse Microbial solutes enhance thrombosis (mBio) Can our microbiome break our heart? (mBio) Pathogenesis of cardiovascular disease (EJIFCC) How Kidneys Work Video (Mayo Clinic) What is a metaorganism? (Zoology) Take the TWiM Listener survey! Send your microbiology questions and comments (email or recorded audio) to twim@microbe.tv

Subtitle
TWiM reveals a database of genome sequences of thousands of Mycobaterium tuberculosis, allowing association with resistance phenotypes to 13 antibiotics, and microbe-derived uremic solutes that enhance thrombosis potential in the host. Hosts: , , and...
Duration
56:32
Publishing date
2024-02-03 00:44
Link
https://www.microbe.tv/twim/twim-303/
Contributors
  Vincent Racaniello, Michael Schmidt, Michele Swanson.
author  
Enclosures
https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/twimshow/TWiM303.mp3?dest-id=53322
audio/mpeg

Shownotes

TWiM reveals a database of genome sequences of thousands of Mycobaterium tuberculosis, allowing association with resistance phenotypes to 13 antibiotics, and microbe-derived uremic solutes that enhance thrombosis potential in the host.

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

Become a patron of TWiM.

Links for this episode

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