Dive into the complete episode list for Matters Microbial. Each episode is cataloged with detailed descriptions, making it easy to find and explore specific topics. Keep track of all episodes from your favorite podcast and never miss a moment of insightful content.
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1–50 of 87
Pub. Date
Title
Duration
25 Apr 2024
Matters Microbial #37: Wolbachia and STEM: Two symbioses!
00:52:03
Today, Sarah Bordenstein, Associate Research Professor of Biology & Entomology at Penn State University and Director of Discover the Microbes Within! The Wolbachia Project joins the #QualityQuorum to tell us about the most successful pandemic on the planet, the fascinating endosymbiotic bacterium Wolbachia, and how she has used this fascinating system to teach young people about molecular biology, bioinformatics, and evolution.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
06 Oct 2023
Matters Microbial #10: Bacterial fight club
00:36:59
Today Dr. David Baltrus, Associate Professor of Plant Sciences at the University of Arizona, talks with us about how his laboratory studies bacteria that battle one another; the first rule of this fight club is that EVERYONE talks about Microbial Fight Club.
A really interesting article on this topic—and how tailocins might be used in agriculture— from Dr. Baltrus’ laboratory.
Dr. Baltrus’ laboratory website can be found here.
Intro music is by Reber Clark
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
27 Mar 2025
Matters Microbial #84: Detecting Pathogens — and Worse — in Wastewater
01:01:30
Matters Microbial #84: Detecting Pathogens — and Worse — in Wastewater
March 27, 2025
Today, Dr. Rachel Poretsky, Associate Professor of Biological Sciences at the University of Illinois Chicago joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss how examining wastewater (and related water) can give insights into the presence of pathogen antimicrobial resistance genes and even microbial ecology.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
01 Sep 2023
Matters Microbial #5: Mothers, Microbes, and Dung Beetles
00:25:41
It’s interesting to think about the microbes in and on us—some of which are vital to our well being—and how we came to possess them. Mark introduces Dr. Anne Estes of Towson University, who will discuss this very topic as it applies to dung beetles.
Here is an article that Dr. Estes wrote: “Brood Ball-Mediated Transmission of Microbiome Members in the Dung Beetle, Onthophagus taurus.”
Intro music is by Reber Clark
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
24 Oct 2024
Matters Microbial #62: Should I Stay, or Should I Go—How Bacteriophage are Released from Host Cells
01:07:16
Matters Microbial #62: Should I Stay, or Should I Go—How Bacteriophage are Released from Host Cells
October 23, 2024
Today, Dr. Jolene Ramsey, of the Biology Department of Texas A&M University and Affiliate of the Center for Phage Technology, joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss how bacteriophages release themselves from host cells, her efforts to teach students to work with the primary literature, and her own path to the microbial sciences.
A truly wonderful reminder video about bacteriophages.
A link with a 3D printer design of capsid model pieces (personally, I am really interested in making one of these!).
A video demonstrating how the capsid model pieces self assemble—something like real viruses can?
An essential book about bacteriophage authored by my late friend Merry Youle.
A fine book describing how bacteriophages can be used to fight bacterial diseases.
This “first person” book by #MattersMicrobial podcast guest Steffanie Strathdee about how she was able to use bacteriophages to save her husband’s life is a must read.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
14 Mar 2024
Matters Microbial #31: Spirochetes do things...differently
01:07:31
Today, Dr. Brian Stevenson of the University of Kentucky College of Medicine joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss a twisty twirling form of life, spirochetes, ticks, and human diseases like Lyme Disease.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
06 Jun 2024
Matters Microbial #43: New Archaea from old habitats
01:03:02
Today, Dr. Roland Hatzenpichler of Montana State University joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss the central importance of archaea to our knowledge of the microbial world, ranging from history of their study, misconceptions about archaea, the microbiological bounty of Yellowstone National Park, and how ancient archaea may be the Asgard like ancestors of us all.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
20 Mar 2025
Matters Microbial #83: Helicobacter — Passing the Acid Test
01:07:13
Matters Microbial #83: Helicobacter — Passing the Acid Test
March 19, 2025
Today, Dr. Karen Ottemann, Professor and Chair of the Department of Microbiology and Environmental Toxicology at the University of California Santa Cruz joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss the fascinating strategies of Helicobacter pylori, which can cause gastric ulcers and even stomach cancer in people.
One of the articles from Dr. Ottemann’s research group discussed in this episode: “Bacterial flagella hijack type IV pili proteins to control motility.”
Another of the articles from Dr. Ottemann’s research group discussed in this episode: “Helicobacter pylori cheV1 mutants recover semisolid agar migration due to loss of a previously uncharacterized Type IV filament membrane alignment complex homolog.”
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
22 Aug 2024
Matters Microbial #53: Heavy metal microbes!
01:06:33
Today, Dr. Jennifer Goff of the Department of Chemistry at SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss her laboratory’s work studying the relationship between microbes in metal, as well as her path in the microbial sciences.
Dr. Goff’s fascinating laboratory group website, including links to the papers discussed by Dr. Goff.
Intro music is by Reber Clark
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
03 Oct 2024
Matters Microbial #59: Some (Microbes) Like It Hot—Discussions with the Thermal Biology Institute
01:10:09
Matters Microbial #59: Some (Microbes) Like It Hot—Discussions with the Thermal Biology Institute
October 3, 2024
Today is an unusual episode of the podcast. I am visiting four microbiologists in the Thermal Biology Institute at Montana State University of Bozeman, Montana. They discuss their work exploring the unusual microbes and environments to be found in Yellowstone National Park, ranging from the history of the park to opportunities for undergraduate students, as well as up-to-the-minute research done on the microbial denizens of this microbiological landmark.
An article describing some of Dr. Kohtz’ (and Dr. Jay’s) work.
Intro music is by Reber Clark
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
23 Jan 2025
Matters Microbial #75: Do Gut Microbes Watch their Carbs?
01:07:06
Matters Microbial #75: Do Gut Microbes Watch their Carbs?
January 22, 2025
Today, Dr. Darrell Cockburn, Associate Professor of Food Science at Penn State, joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss the work his research group has done exploring how starches and other polysaccharides are used by the gut microbiome.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
06 Mar 2025
Matters Microbial #81: Viruses, Innate Immunity, and Undergraduates
01:05:55
Matters Microbial #81: Viruses, Innate Immunity, and Undergraduates
March 5, 2025
Today, Dr. Brianne Barker, Associate Professor of the Biology Department at Drew University, joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss how her undergraduate research group studies how innate immune mechanisms of cells recognize viral invasion.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
28 Nov 2024
Matters Microbial #67: Chemical Communication in Microbe Symbioses
01:06:45
Matters Microbial #67: Chemical Communication in Microbe Symbioses
November 27, 2024
Today, Dr. Marcy Balunas, Associate Professor of Microbiology and Immunology, as well as part of the Department of Medicinal Chemistry at the University of Michigan, joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss how her group investigates the chemical signals—the language—between host and microbe symbioses.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
09 May 2024
Matters Microbial #39: Global flatulence: Mysterious Archaea and methane
00:58:34
Today, Dr. Geo Santiago-Martinez, Assistant Professor of Molecular and Cell Biology and Microbiology at the University of Connecticut joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss the mysteries of the archaeal world, and how one group of these organisms produce methane gas as a byproduct of metabolism. These methanogens are thus involved in climate, symbioses, biotechnology, and even astrobiology!
An essay about how cyanobacteria changed our very planet.
A truly wonderful and highly recommended video about Leeuwenhoek and how he was the first to “see through microbial eyes.” PLEASE WATCH THIS AMAZING VIDEO!.
A link to the Boerhaave Museum in Amsterdam (well worth the visit!) including how to obtain a replica of the Leeuwenhoek microscope (*I* do not have one—they are awesome!).
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
03 Apr 2025
Matters Microbial #85: The Microbiomes of Hawai’ian Seascapes
01:00:13
Matters Microbial #85: The Microbiomes of Hawai’ian Seascapes
April 3, 2025
Today, Dr. Rosie ’Anolani Alegado of the University of Hawai’i at Mānoa joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss how weather, climate, and human intervention impact the microbiota to be found in human related seascapes around Hawai’i.
An overview of how Hawai’i was settled from Polynesia.
An essay describing indigenous Hawai’ian culture and its collaborative relationship to the land and sea.
A must read book “Coral Reefs in a Microbial Sea,” by the late Merry Youle, Forest Rohwer, and Derek Vosten.
Here areseverallinks related to the work of Dr. Isabella Abbott, including this one from Pacific Science. Again, well worth your reading.
An overview of the field of ethnobotany, championed by Dr. Abbott.
Dr. Alegado’s previous research was with the fascinating choanoflagellates, which can tell us about the evolution of complex life. Here is a video about these ancient relatives of us all. Here is a article from Dr. Alegado describing a bacterial role in the development of this fascinating organism.
An overview of the “One Health” concept linking human interactions, animals, plants, the land, and the ocean.
A focus of Dr. Alegado’s group research involving the indigenous Hawai’ian fishponds.
An overview of community restoration of these ancient structures.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
06 Feb 2025
Matters Microbial #77: It’s a Germ-Eat-Germ World!
01:04:09
Matters Microbial #77: It’s a Germ-Eat-Germ World!
February 6, 2025
Today, Dr Laura Williams, Director of Undergraduate Research at Georgia Institute of Technology, joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss some of the exciting work she did as an associate professor at Providence College with undergraduate students studying predatory bacteria and why we should care about this fascinating topic!
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
10 Oct 2024
Matters Microbial #60: Influenza, Epidemics, Pandemics, and Fortunate Mistakes
01:10:34
Matters Microbial #60: Influenza, Epidemics, Pandemics, and Fortunate Mistakes
October 9, 2024
Today, Dr. Adam Lauring of the University of Michigan joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss the job of a physician-scientist, RNA viruses, the tricks that influenza uses to create epidemics and pandemics, and the science behind flu vaccines.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
09 Jan 2025
Matters Microbial #73: Seeing the Microbiome
01:05:44
Matters Microbial #73: Seeing the Microbiome
January 8, 2025
Today, Dr. Travis Wiles, Assistant Professor of Molecular Biology and Biochemistry at the University of California, Irvine, joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss the work he and his research group have done to visualize the changing dynamics of the gut microbiome—including bacteriophages residing there.
Use of zebrafish as a model system for developmental biology.
An article exploring the effects of the microbiome on gnotobiotic (“germ free”) zebrafish.
An essay on both lytic and lysogenic bacteriophages.
An essay describing how bacteriophage interact with the gut microbiota. One of my former undergraduate research students, Dr. Danielle Campbell, works in this area!
An article suggesting that bacteriophage do in fact interact with eukaryotic cells.
The concept of phage conversion: how some bacteriophages carry bacterial genes, including toxin genes.
An article about bacteriophages and bacterial evolution.
An article about the study of the zebrafish gut microbiome.
An article about research with zebrafish and Mycobacterium.
The article discussed in this episode by Dr. Wiles’ group: “Phollow: Visualizing Gut Bacteriophage Transmission within Microbial Communities and Living Animals .”
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
13 Oct 2023
Matters Microbial #11: Viruses from hell with Ken Stedman
00:45:30
Today Dr. Ken Stedman, Professor of Biology at Portland State University, tells us about the strange and wonderful viruses of heat loving extremophilic archaea—truly viruses from Hell!
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
18 Apr 2024
Matters Microbial #36: Leafy microbial strangers with benefits
01:06:25
Today, Dr. Jeri Barak of the University of Wisconsin Madison joins the #QualityQuorum to chat about how various microbes (some of which can cause disease in humans) can gain access to plants, sometimes via group behavior. With media coverage of Salmonella contamination in lettuce, Dr. Barak’s work is especially timely! She will also discuss what it is like to be a plant pathologist!
An article about the amazing glowing petunia. And here is a second popular article on the Firefly Petunia. Finally, here is a more scientific article describing this achievement.
An overview of produce contamination by Salmonella and other pathogens. Here is another article worth your time.
An overview of pathogens to be found in the environment.
CDC guidelines and information about bacterial contamination of produce.
An absolutely fabulous overview of some of the work done in Dr. Barak’s lab discussed during this episode. It is a wonderful science-communication with art essay. A must read for any interest level!
A article by Dr. Barak’s group describing how a plant infection can allow human pathogens to proliferate inside of a plant.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
02 Jan 2025
Matters Microbial #72: Who is in Your Water?
01:05:20
Matters Microbial #72: Who is in Your Water?
January 2, 2025
Today, Dr. Ameet Pinto, Carlton S. Wilder Associate Professor in Civil and Environmental Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology, joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss the microbiome of drinking water and how it can be used to optimize safety and health.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
15 Sep 2023
Matters Microbial #7: Microbiology from the refrigerator with Elinne Becket
00:36:56
We exist in a sea of microbes, it is true. We only need to look. And Dr. Elinne Becket of California State University San Marcos, joins Mark to describe some of the work she and her undergraduate colleagues are doing. And a popular hashtag on social media: #BlueSoup. Welcome to our quality quorum, Elinne!
Dr. Becket’s wonderful laboratory website can be found here.
Dr. Becket’s thread on Twitter/X describing the #BlueSoup excitement as it happened is here.
Intro music is by Reber Clark
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
12 Apr 2024
Matters Microbial #35: Clostridioides difficile: From Bench to Bedside and Back Again
01:03:10
Today, Dr. Vincent Young of the University of Michigan Department of Internal Medicine and Infectious Disease Division in Ann Arbor, joins the #QualityQuorum to chat about the ecology of the human gut as it relates to a serious bacterial disease caused by Clostridiodes difficile. He will also discuss what it is like to be a medical scientist with both MD and PhD degrees.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
01 Dec 2023
Matters Microbial #18: The Perfect Predator: Why Phage is Rage
00:48:29
Today Dr. Steffanie Strathdee, Associate Dean of Global Health Sciences at UC San Diego and Co-Director at the Center for Innovative Phage Applications and Therapeutics, will chat with us about how bacteriophages—viruses that attack bacteria—changed her life and are becoming part of our future.
A link to the website of the Center for Innovative Phage Applications and Therapeutics (IPATH).
Intro music is by Reber Clark
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
29 Sep 2023
Matters Microbial #9: Colorful microbes, citizen science, and tools for all
00:43:33
Today Sebastian Cocioba, a citizen scientist with myriad interests, talks with us about his path in science, some of the tools he has made for others, and how he views science and scientists.
Sebastian Cocioba’s online research notebook is here.
Intro music is by Reber Clark
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
17 Nov 2023
Matters Microbial #16: What’s bugging the fruit fly microbiome?
00:42:21
Today Dr. Nichole Broderick, Assistant Professor in the Biology Department at Johns Hopkins University, will chat with us about how the study of the fruit fly microbiome can give us insights into human health and disease.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
02 Aug 2024
Matters Microbial #50: One versus many, the evolution of multicellularity
01:07:45
Today, Dr. Will Ratcliff of the Georgia Institute of Technology joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss the fascinating work his group has done exploring the evolution of multicellularity, and the wonderful example of “snowflake yeast.”
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
11 Aug 2023
Matters Microbial #2: Shock and awe microbiology and a chat with Mya Breitbart
00:44:19
Mark discusses some “shock and awe” concepts about the microbial world that he introduces to his microbiology students, and asks three important questions about microbiology and microbiologists with guest Dr. Mya Breitbart of the University of South Florida.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
24 Nov 2023
Matters Microbial #17: Evolution in action for everyone with Vaughn Cooper
00:49:57
Today Dr. Vaughn Cooper, Professor in the Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics at the University of Pittsburgh, will chat with us about how he and his team teach high school students and undergraduates about evolution occurring in real time—using bacteria.
A wonderful video by Dr. Cooper about Evolving STEM.
Intro music is by Reber Clark
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
28 Mar 2024
Matters Microbial #33: Ancient Fats in Modern Microbes with Paula Welander
01:02:51
Today, Dr. Paula Welander, Associate Professor of Environmental Earth System Science at Stanford University (and #DocMartian #4) joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss the work she and her colleagues are doing probing at early life by studying lipid biosignatures that can appear in the fossil record—and the role that cholesterol and related molecules have on microbial life.
A blog post I wrote about the truly remarkable late Dr. Abigail Salyers, who taught me the importance of being authentic as a scientist, educator, and human being.
The “Echoes of Life” book mentioned in the podcast.
A fascinating article by Jo Handelsman and coauthors about implicit and unconscious bias in science. Here is an update on this work, and a video presentation.
A really interesting video interview with Dr. Welander.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
18 Jan 2024
Matters Microbial #24: It takes a quorum to cause disease
01:00:39
Today, Associate Professor of Biology Dr. Julia van Kessel of Indiana University will chat with us about how groups of bacteria can sense one another and carry out behavior as a collective…including some kinds of disease!
A video that two of my Bio350 Micronauts (including a former guest of our podcast, Dr. Ruth Isenberg) put together some years ago to illustrate the idea of quorum sensing.
A very clear overview of quorum sensing by the highly energetic and brilliant Dr. Bonnie Bassler, one of the giants of this field.
A #LuxArt show I organized a few years ago at Carleton College, where I encouraged students to create art by “painting” with luminous bacteria on Petri dishes. It is a true merger of art and science.
Using Chromobacterium to “look” for quorum sensing molecules. I made this imperfect video to illustrate the concept.
My old friend Vibrio harveyi, which Dr. van Kessel uses in her laboratory.
Vibrio coralliilyticus, which causes coral diseases.
If you are interested in learning about how some bacteria have what seems to be a molecular switchblade knife—the Type 6 Secretory System— to use against other bacteria or other organisms, the link above is a fine place to start. In addition, a Bio350 student of mine made a lovely Claymation video of the process some years ago.
Here is Dr. van Kessel’s faculty website at Indiana University in Bloomington.
Here is the laboratory website—with excellent graphics and videos—of Dr. van Kessel’s group.
Intro music is by Reber Clark
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
15 Dec 2023
Matters Microbial #20: Who You Calling Weird? Diving into Microbes at the Bottom of the Ocean
00:59:55
02 Feb 2024
Matters Microbial #26: Cultivating the hidden microbial majority
00:52:07
Today, Dr. Cameron Thrash of the University of Southern California will discuss marine microbiology, an extremely…ubiquitous…microbe (with a name every #Micronaut should know!), conducting research at sea, and his path in science.
For indispensable links to myriad fascinating articles about microbiology, check out Cameron Thrash on X (formerly Twitter) (@jcamthrash) and BlueSky (@jcamthrash .bsky.social)
Intro music is by Reber Clark
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
19 Sep 2024
Matters Microbial #57: Pitting Metabolic Inhibitors Against Viruses
01:04:49
Matters Microbial #57: Pitting Metabolic Inhibitors Against Viruses
September 18, 2024
Today, Dr. Tracie Delgado of the Biology Department at Seattle Pacific University joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss her undergraduate research team’s explorations of how some herpesviruses can cause cancer . . . and how to use the host cell’s metabolism to fight those viruses!
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
20 Feb 2025
Matters Microbial #79: How Amoebae Beat the Heat
00:59:13
Matters Microbial #79: How Amoebae Beat the Heat
February 20, 2025
Today, Dr. Angela Oliverio, Assistant Professor in the Biology Department at Syracuse University, joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss what her research group has been learning about extremophilic single-celled eukaryotes!
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
07 Aug 2023
Matters Microbial #1: A microbiological introduction and a chat with Vincent Racaniello
00:40:07
In the first episode of Matters Microbial, Mark introduces himself and his history, talks a bit about his goals for this podcast, then asks three important questions about microbiology and microbiologists with his first guest, Vincent Racaniello.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
12 Dec 2024
Matters Microbial #69: Can Eating Microbes Make You Healthy?
01:12:03
Matters Microbial #69: Can Eating Microbes Make You Healthy?
December 11, 2024
Today, Dr. Maria Marco, Professor of Food Science and Technology at the University of California Davis, joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss microorganisms in food, intestinal ecosystems, and the role that lactic acid bacteria can play in health and well-being.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
21 Nov 2024
Matters Microbial #66: Digesting the Science of Fermented Foods
01:06:40
Matters Microbial #66: Digesting the Science of Fermented Foods
November 20, 2024
Today, Dr. Ben Wolfe, Associate Professor of Biology at Tufts University, joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss how he and his collaborators study novel food fermentations, helping the public understand more about the gut microbiome, and outreach projects involving microbially-associated food.
A link to a remarkable article by Dr. Wolfe’s research group that we discussed in this episode: “Novel Fermentations Integrate Traditional Practic and Rational Design of Fermented-Food Microbiomes.”
A video of a presentation by Dr. Wolfe on cheese microbiology.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
27 Oct 2023
Matters Microbial #13: (Magnetically) attractive bacteria with Arash Komeili
01:01:41
Today Dr. Arash Komeili, professor of plant and microbial biology at UC Berkeley, joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss compartmentalization in bacteria, and the amazing world of living magnets—the magnetotactic bacteria!
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
16 May 2024
Matters Microbial #40: Using THOR's hammer to investigate microbial communities
01:03:11
Today, Dr. Jo Handelsman of the University of Wisconsin Madison and Director of the Wisconsin Institute for Discovery joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss the work she and her research collaborators do on interactive microbial communities, using THOR (the hitchhikers of the rhizosphere) as a model system. She will also remind us how vital soil is to our lives.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
10 Nov 2023
Matters Microbial #15: A Gut Feeling About Precision Medicine
00:46:29
Today Dr. Sean Gibbons, Associate Professor at the Institute for Systems Biology, will chat with us about how the study of host-associated microbial communities can give us insights into evolution, ecology, and even human health.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
19 Dec 2024
Matters Microbial #70: Food Safety and Antibiotic Resistance
01:04:45
Matters Microbial #70: Food Safety and Antibiotic Resistance
December 18, 2024
Today, Dr. Dr. Erika Ganda, Assistant Professor of Food Animal Microbiomes in the Department of Animal Science at Pennsylvania State University, joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss the varied interests of her research team studying the intersection of animal husbandry, microbiome studies, and the threat of antimicrobial resistance.
Today, Dr. Manu Ramalho of West Chester University in Pennsylvania joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss the wonderful world of ants, their microbiomes, and what their intersection can teach us about our place in the natural world.
When Wolbachia creates plant hormones to provide food for its insect hosts.
The website for “Discover the Microbes Within” which is a CURE based student sourced investigation of Wolbachia in arthropods. It was designed by Seth Bordenstein and Sarah Bordenstein.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
20 Oct 2023
Matters Microbial #12: Shedding light on symbiosis with Ruth Isenberg
00:42:59
Today Dr. Ruth Isenberg, postdoctoral scholar (and former #DocMartian!) in the Willett Lab at the University of Minnesota, will tell us about her first generation path in science, the squid-Vibrio symbiosis work she did for her PhD, and her current career path.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
13 Mar 2025
Matters Microbial #82: Melanin, Fungi, and Global Warming
00:59:16
Matters Microbial #82: Melanin, Fungi, and Global Warming
March 13, 2025
Today, the impressive Dr. Arturo Casadevall of Johns Hopkins University returns to the podcast to discuss how fungal disease is a looming threat on our warming planet, and how these organisms can use pigmentation to adapt to human-associated environments . . . and increase their chances of causing disease.
A hopeful study: fungi, frogs, and purple bacteria. A less scholarly but highly recommended essay is here.
Dr. Casadevall’s earlier visit to #MattersMicrobial.
The story of Alexander Fleming, a stray fungal spore, and penicillin.
The story of fungi and cyclosporins, which help with organ transplantation in humans.
A recent New York Times article on fungal networks.
An article about mass extinctions and “fungal overgrowth.”
A review of the structure and function of melanin.
An overview of how melanin can be used to turn various forms of radiation into energy.
A review of high body temperatures versus fungal infections.
One of the articles discussed today, from Dr. Casadevall’s group: “Impact of Yeast Pigmentation on Heat Capture and Latitudinal Distribution.”
Another article from Dr. Casadevall’s group discussed today: “The hypothermic nature of fungi.”
A really fascinating preprint from Dr. Casadevall’s group discussed today: “Thermal and pigment characterization of environmental fungi in the urban heat island of Baltimore City”
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
05 Sep 2024
Matters Microbial #55: An accidental microbiologist
01:03:56
Today, the award winning and affable Dr. David Westenberg of the Missouri University of Science and Technology joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss his efforts at microbial outreach from K-12 (and beyond), his fascinating research program, and his experiences teaching microbiology to engineers.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
08 Aug 2024
Matters Microbial #51: From Legionella to mentoring to outreach
01:01:57
Today, Dr. Michele Swanson, Professor of Microbiology at the University of Michigan, joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss the her journey to microbiology, the mysterious disease causing bacterium Legionella, and how to best create a better scientific ecosystem.
Dr. Swanson coauthored a fine textbook on microbiology.
Dr. Swanson is a cohost on the This Week in Microbiology podcast.
Intro music is by Reber Clark
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
05 Dec 2024
Matters Microbial #68: Social Evolution in Viruses
01:02:04
Matters Microbial #68: Social Evolution in Viruses
December 4, 2024
Today, Dr. Sam Díaz-Muñoz, Assistant Professor of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, as well as a Faculty Member of the Genome Center at the University of California Davis, joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss how their group, and a growing community of researchers, investigates the social lives of viruses: the many ways that viruses interact and the ways that interactions shape infections and viral evolution.
An overview of the use of cystoviruses in the study of evolution.
A relevant article: “Open Questions in the Social Lives of Viruses,” Leeks et al. 2023:
Another relevant article: “Sociovirology: Conflict, Cooperation, and Communication among Viruses,” Díaz-Muñoz et al. 2017:
The website for the Social Lives of Viruses Meetings
An article from Jesse Bloom’s lab showing the variation in single cell infection outcomes (Figure 4 is one of Dr. Díaz-Muñoz’s favorites from any paper).
The faculty website for Dr. Lin Chao, who was very influential in Dr. Díaz-Muñoz’s background and promoted the study of evolution in microbes.
The website for Dr. Paul Turner, who was very influential in Dr. Díaz-Muñoz’s background and promoted the study of evolution in microbes.
The website for Dr. Rich Lenski, who was very influential in Dr. Díaz-Muñoz’s background and promoted the study of evolution in microbes.
A CDC article about “shift” versus “drift” in influenza.
A video by Dr. Díaz-Muñoz from 2020 about viruses.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
22 Dec 2023
Matters Microbial #21: Microbes, mermaids and coral reefs with Chris Kellogg
00:54:13
Today Dr. Christina Kellogg of the USGS St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center in St. Petersburg Florida chats with the podcast about her many diverse adventures in marine microbial ecology! It’s quite a high energy microbial journey!
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
09 Feb 2024
Matters Microbial #27: Broccoli sprouts, gut health, and microbes for all with Dr. Sue Ishaq
01:07:14
Today, Dr. Sue Ishaq of the University of Maine joins the #QualityQuorum to tell us about the relationship between what we eat and our microbes, as well as making microbiology more inclusive to everyone.
An introductory article for the public about broccoli consumption and IBD.
A 2023 article from Dr. Ishaq’s group suggesting a relationship between consuming broccoli sprouts and reduction of inflammatory bowel disease in mice.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
31 Oct 2024
Matters Microbial #63: A Symphony of Cyanobacteria
01:11:58
Matters Microbial #63: A Symphony of Cyanobacteria
October 30, 2024
Today, Dr. Nathan Algren, Associate Professor of Biology at Clark University, joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss the centrality of cyanobacteria to our biosphere, the viruses that prey upon them, and his interests in outreach and science-oriented art.
The Great Oxidation EventCyanobacteria are thought to have radically changed our planet 2.5-3.5 billion years ago by producing oxygen through photosynthesis. In essence, they and other microbes are the original terraformers.
The Purple Earth Hypothesis Photosynthesis as we know it, using chlorophyll, may have evolved after another way of doing photosynthesis, with retinal that looks purple. This means that our planets and other ‘younger’ planets may look or have looked purple rather than green.
Rapid diversification of coevolving marine Synechococcus and a virus Study showing stable co-existence and co-evolution of a single Synechococcus host and phage over time. The emergence of resistance hosts and phage that overcome them demonstrate the principles of the Red Queen hypothesis and phage-host ‘arms race’.
Link to 3D prints that Dr. Ahlgren made an are available on NIH page
Some resources on how to 3D protein structures: I like this guide on the practical guide of how to do actually to do it (going from PDB to print files):
A link to another resource for 3D printing of protein structures.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
14 Nov 2024
Matters Microbial #65: Squishy Tissues and Hints from Archaea
01:06:28
Today, Dr. Alex Bisson, Assistant Professor of Biology at Brandeis University, joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss how he and his collaborators use a variety of tools to study the mechanobiology of archaea (such as how some respond to being “squished”), and how those studies can shed light on the evolution of complex eukaryotes like humans.
Dr. Bisson’s very interesting research team website.
Intro music is by Reber Clark
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
29 Aug 2024
Matters Microbial #54: In the shadow of giant viruses
01:06:21
Today, Dr. Mohammad Moniruzzaman, Assistant Professor at the Rosenstiel School of Marine, Atmospheric, and Earth Science at the University of Miami joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss his laboratory group’s work investigating a remarkable group of giant viruses and how they can shape marine algal community structure.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
08 Dec 2023
Matters Microbial #19: You are what you(r microbes) eat
00:46:29
Today Dr. Suzanne Devkota of the Cedars-Sinai Division of Gastronterology and Director of the Cedars Sinai Human Microbiome Research Institute will tell us about the role that our diet plays in the gut microbiome, and how that can impact health. So it really is true: you ARE what you(r microbes) eat!
In addition, Dr. Devkota sent along two links: one to an overview of the microbiome institute at Cedars-Sinai, and one about how the Western diet impacts the human microbiome.
Intro music is by Reber Clark
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
18 Aug 2023
Matters Microbial #3: How much of you is microbial? With Seth Bordenstein
00:28:37
Who are you? Human or a group of microbes? Mark discusses this with this with Dr. Seth Bordenstein of Penn State. Seth teaches Mark about a new word, holobiont, and the most successful pandemic in history (of invertebrates) that may help in the fight against malaria, Wolbachia! Finally, Seth discusses his team outreach efforts to teach critical thinking and STEM in students with Discover the Microbes Within.
A review on Wolbachia and the effect it has on hosts in Nature Reviews in Microbiology.
An article describing how Wolbachia can be used to fight viral diseases in Frontiers in Immunology.
Intro music is by Reber Clark
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
12 Sep 2024
Matters Microbial #56: Marine Microbial Echoes of Evolution
00:57:24
Matters Microbial #56: Marine Microbial Echoes of Evolution
September 11, 2024
Today, Dr. Carolina Martinez Gutierrez of the Department of Earth Science at the University of California Santa Barbara joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss her research team’s efforts to unravel how ancient microbes thrived in the early oceans of Earth’s history . . . and to sing the praises of marine microbiology!
An overview of the microbiome of the ocean and geochemistry.
A description of likely conditions on Ancient Earth.
An essay about the Great Oxidation Event—the event that changed our entire planet.
An article by Dr. Martinez Gutierrez and colleagues discussing how phylogenomics can help dissect microbial evolution without fossils.
An overview of Prochlorococcus, one of the microbes Dr. Martinez Gutierrez discussed.
A wonderful video about Prochlorococcus and a remarkable scientist.
An overview of Pelagibacteri ubique (SAR11), one of the microbes Dr. Martinez Gutierrez discussed. An article about the work of Dr. Martinez Gutierrez and her research interests while a postdoctoral scholar
The departmental website for Dr. Martinez Gutierrez
The laboratory website for Dr. Martinez Gutierrez’s research group.
Intro music is by Reber Clark
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
16 Jan 2025
Matters Microbial #74: Podcasting to Combat Microbial Misinformation
01:01:56
Matters Microbial #74: Podcasting to Combat Microbial Misinformation
January 16, 2025
Today, Dr. Jessica Coates of the Biology Department at Spelman College joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss her work combating microbial misinformation in the classroom and to share her journey to the microbial sciences.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
27 Feb 2025
Matters Microbial #80: Do Microbes Make the Best Chemists?
00:59:58
Matters Microbial #80: Do Microbes Make the Best Chemists?
February 27, 2025
Today, Dr. Marc Chevrette, Assistant Professor of Microbiology and Cell Science at the University of Florida, joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss how his research group can study novel metabolites and even interactions via study of microbial genomes! Dr. Chevrette reminds us all that microbes are the best chemists!
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
05 Jan 2024
Matters Microbial #23: Fungi: Cool Friends and Looming Foes
00:58:01
Today, the impressive Dr. Arturo Casadevall of Johns Hopkins University will joint #MattersMicrobial to discuss his path in science, how fungi need more study, that some fungi are literally cool, and others a looming threat.
The wonderful Tiny Earth program that uses a CURE type approach to allow students to search for new antibiotic producing microbes. Also, a fine publication describing this worldwide program.
An overview of the diverse and dizzying fungal world all around us.
Dr. Casadevall group’s article on how fungi are cooler than the environment around them, including the “mycorefrigerator.”
Evidence that high body temperatures defend against fungal disease. Dr. Casadevall wrote an article suggesting that fungal diseases might have helped lead to the extinction of dinosaurs.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
10 Apr 2025
Matters Microbial #86: Intraterrestrials — the Strangest Life on, and in, the Earth
01:02:38
Matters Microbial #86: Intraterrestrials — the Strangest Life on, and in, the Earth
April 10, 2025
Today, Dr. Karen Lloyd, Professor of Earth Science at the University of Southern California, joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss her upcoming book Intraterrestrials (Princeton University Press). Dr. Lloyd will describe the 25 year journey she and her coworkers have had exploring microbial life deep underground, and even less likely places.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
25 Jul 2024
Matters Microbial #49: Microbes and Macrobes: Always Interconnected
00:58:14
Today, Dr. Margaret McFall-Ngai of the California Institute of Technology, joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss her philosophy of the future of biology. Dr. McFall-Ngai has been described as “…a recognized thought leader regarding the cornerstone role microbiology plays in the life sciences.” I could not agree more.
For beginning #Micronauts, I suggest this overview of the amazing roles microbes play in the lives of animals and plants: “We are living in a bacterial world, and it’s impacting us more than previously thought“.
Here is the more advanced article coauthored by Dr.McFall-Ngai on this topic: “Animals in a Bacterial World.” A must read.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
25 Jan 2024
Matters Microbial #25: Gut feelings about phage and the gut microbiome
00:59:23
Today, Dr. Danielle Campbell (and former #DocMartian!), a postdoctoral scholar of the Baldridge group at Washington University in St. Louis, will share her research into the relationship between bacteriophage and the gut microbiome…as well as chat about her path in science.
A link to the Baldrige Laboratory at Washington University of St. Louis, where Dr. Campbell is a postdoctoral scholar.
Intro music is by Reber Clark
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
21 Jun 2024
Matters Microbial #44: Labs, Labs, Congress, and Classrooms!
00:59:15
Today, Dr. Kimberly Walker, Assistant Professor and Director of Medical Diagnostics at the University of Delaware, joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss her interesting path in microbiology, from pathogenic bacteria, to predatory microbes, to Congress, to science policy, and then to educating others about medical diagnostics.
An article on the value of mentorship in general and the challenges to be faced. If you would like to dig deeper, here is an entire book on the vital subject.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
23 May 2024
Matters Microbial #41: Giant Bacteria: Not All Are Small! with Esther Angert
00:56:22
Today, Dr. Esther Angert of Cornell University joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss the role her research collaborators have had studying truly gigantic bacteria, and the adaptations these enormous microbes must make to their size!
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
27 Jun 2024
Matters Microbial #45: CU Later Microbes: Copper as an Antimicrobial Agent!
00:45:37
Today, Dr. Michael Schmidt of This Week in Microbiology and Professor of Microbiology and Immunology of the Medical University of South Carolina, joins the Quality Quorum (at a special “live audience” podcast session at the American Society for Microbiology in Atlanta, Georgia) to discuss his fascinating work with copper as an antimicrobial agent.
The laboratory website for Dr. Schmidt (with many excellent references on this topic to peruse).
Intro music is by Reber Clark
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
18 Jul 2024
Matters Microbial #48: Many are bright but few are chosen
00:56:04
Today, Dr. Mark Mandel, Professor of Medical Microbiology & Immunology at University of Wisconsin-Madison, joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss the research his laboratory group does exploring how the luminous bacterium Vibrio fischeri finds its way into its symbiotic partner, the Hawai’ian Bobtail squid Euprymna scolopes. It will be an enlightening podcast!
A video for introductory #Micronauts about the squid-Vibrio symbiosis featuring science journalist Ed Yong and two founders of the field, Dr. Ned Ruby and Dr. Margaret McFall-Ngai.
An engaging video about Euprymna scolopes, the larger partner in this symbiosis, described by Dr. McFall-Ngai.
A more advanced overview to this field, authored by Dr. Ned Ruby, Dr. Eric Stabb, and Dr. Karen Visick.
A very complete recent review of the field from Dr. Visick’s lab.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
02 May 2024
Matters Microbial #38: Microbes, cheese, and Brie-ond!
01:11:10
Today, Dr. Rachel Dutton, Science Resident at the Astera Institute in Berkeley, California, joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss the complex (and tasty) microbial communities responsible for cheese as a model system for microbial interactions, as well as her interesting path through science.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
17 Apr 2025
Matters Microbial #87: Dietary Protein and the Microbiome
01:02:32
Matters Microbial #87: Dietary Protein and the Microbiome
April 17, 2025
Today, Dr. Manuel Kleiner, Associate Professor of Microbiomes and Complex Microbial Communities at North Carolina State University, joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss how diet can influence the microbiome in fascinating ways.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
13 Feb 2025
Matters Microbial #78: An EXTREME Close Up of the Squid-Vibrio Symbiosis
00:59:11
Matters Microbial #78: An EXTREME Close Up of the Squid-Vibrio Symbiosis
February 13, 2025
Today, Dr Ariane Briegel, Professor and head of the Integrative Structural Cell Biology research unit at the Institut Pasteur in Paris, France, joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss some of the exciting findings of her research group studying how bacteria and the ever-popular Hawaiian bobtail squid work together at a molecular level—using cutting-edge cryo-electron tomography!
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
04 Jul 2024
Matters Microbial #46: Parsley, Sage, Cholera, and Thyme with Nkrumah Grant
00:59:41
Today, Dr. Nkrumah Grant, Assistant Professor of Microbiology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, joins the Quality Quorum today to discuss aspects of his work in bacterial evolution, the challenges of setting up a new research laboratory, and his quite inspiring journey in academia.
An article by Dr. Grant’s institution, welcoming him to Urbana, Illinois.
Dr. Grant’s faculty page at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Intro music is by Reber Clark
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
26 Dec 2024
Matters Microbial #71: Disinfecting the Built Environment
01:07:34
Matters Microbial #71: Disinfecting the Built Environment
December 25, 2024
Ever wonder what’s growing on your toothbrush? Today, Dr. Erica Hartmann, Associate Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Northwestern University, joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss how antimicrobial resistance can occur in the built environment we see all around us every day—and why it is vital to learn more about this association.
Today, Dr. George Schaible, Postdoctoral Scholar at the University of California, Santa Barbara, joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss the exciting work he did during his PhD to unravel a fascinating topic: multicellular magnetotactic microbes!
A research paper on genetic interactions within the pink berry consortium, coauthored by a former undergraduate researcher of mine, Dr. Danielle Campbell. Yes, I am very proud.
A strategy to easily enrich for magnetotactic bacteria from nature. Here is a video that informs and amuses.
An early report of multicellular magnetotactic microbes.
A link to Dr. Roland Hatzenpichler’s laboratory website (Dr. Hatzenpichler was the originator of this research, all the way back to his own attending the Microbial Diversity Course.).
The laboratory website of Dr. Jean-Marie Volland, where Dr. Schaible works at UC Santa Barbara
Intro music is by Reber Clark
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
23 Feb 2024
Matters Microbial #29: Exploring cave microbiology and career paths with Hazel Barton
01:15:07
Today, Dr. Hazel Barton, Loper Endowed Professor of Geological Sciences at the University of Alabama, joins the #QualityQuorum to tell us about her explorations of cave microbiology and the relationship between microbiology and geology!
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
30 May 2024
Matters Microbial #42: Many paths to microbiology with Jessica Buchser
00:59:54
Today, Jessica Buchser, graduate of West Chester University and entering PhD student at Pennsylvania State University joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss being an older student, how social media and podcasts fueled her interest in the microbial sciences, and her future path as a microbiologist!
An overview of scanning electron microscopy (SEM).
Website for West Chester University’s Biology Department, where Jess Buchser just earned her undergraduate degree.
The website of Dr. John Pisciotta, one of Jess Buchser’s mentors at West Chester University.
The website of Dr. Manu Ramalho, one of Jess Buchser’s mentors at West Chester University (an prior podcast guest for #MattersMicrobial episode #32).
The website of Dr. Seth Bordenstein, who will be Jess Bucher’s PhD advisor at Pennsylvania State University in the Fall (and also a prior podcast guest for #MattersMicrobial episode #3).
An essay on the importance of mentors and mentorship in the microbial sciences.
Useful resources for older and nontraditional undergraduate students in STEM fields. Here is another essay on this topic.
Intro music is by Reber Clark
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
16 Feb 2024
Matters Microbial #28: From Lizard Cloacal Microbes to CPG in the Business Sector with Franny Gilman
00:46:15
Today, Dr. Franny Gilman, Principal Scientist at the Kraft-Heinz Company (and another #DocMartian who worked in my undergraduate research lab), joins the #QualityQuorum to tell us about the path that took her from studying the cloacal microbiome of lizards to Greenland and eventually to food science!
The paper that first caught Dr. Gilman’s eye when I suggested she read it while in my laboratory: “The influence of sex, handedness, and washing on the diversity of hand surface bacteria.”
Another paper suggested by Dr. Gilman: “Boomerang academics: why we left academia for industry, but then came back.”
Still another paper: “Academia or Industry: Where Would I Fit In?”
A website for the Institute of Food Technologists, with wonderful links and information.
A nonspecialist’s introduction to Aspergillus oryzae that makes koji.
A review article about the koji mold, Aspergillus oryzae.
A conference website devoted to the study of koji and A. oryzae.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
04 Apr 2024
Matters Microbial #34: Artificial gut feelings: Gut microbes and the ECM
01:08:57
Today, Dr. Ana Maria Porras of the Department of Biomedical Engineering at the University of Florida, joins the #QualityQuorum to chat about her work studying gut microbes and the gut, IBDs, representation, and even how fiber arts can inspire microbial wonder!
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
22 Sep 2023
Matters Microbial #8: Who goes there? Going deep in the Pine Barrens with Lauren Seyler
00:42:35
Microbes are everywhere and do remarkable things—-like breathing metal! Lauren Seyler joins us today to discuss the microbial mysteries of New Jersey’s Pine Barrens.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
29 Dec 2023
Matters Microbial #22: A microbial path through the graduate school maze with Lauren Augusta
00:46:37
Today my former undergraduate student Lauren Augusta, currently in a PhD program in Microbiology at the University of Indiana, joins the podcast to chat about how she chose her career path in the microbial sciences, and her future path.
The program for creating the maze on this session’s thumbnail image is here.
Here is the website for Micropia, the microbiology museum in Amsterdam in the Netherlands. SO WORTH YOUR TIME. I wish that I worked there!
Here is a description of Micropia’s “tardigrade chair” which is kind of a tourist destination!
Lauren Augusta, today’s guest on the podcast, did a wonderful video advertisement for my institution, the University of Puget Sound.
An introduction for beginning micronauts about Agrobacterium, and why you should care about this natural genetic engineer, as well as a more advanced review. Plus another fine review from Dr. Clay Fuqua and coworkers.
Lovely overviews of the global signaling molecule of bacteria that Lauren studies, cyclic-di-GMP, can be found here, here, and here.
The faculty webpage of Lauren’s Ph.D. supervisor, Dr. Clay Fuqua.
Intro music is by Reber Clark
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
11 Jul 2024
Matters Microbial #47: A lifetime enamored with microbes
01:00:55
Today, Dr. Roberto Kolter, Emeritus Professor of Microbiology at Harvard University (and past President of the American Society for Microbiology), joins the Quality Quorum to discuss his life long interest in microbes and microbiology, and how best to present microbiology to the public.
A wonderful article about the complexities of how microbes look and grow with live graphics. I use this article with my introductory #Micronauts every Fall. Beautiful!
An article by Dr. Kolter discussing how to choose a study problem in microbiology…and other areas.
The book “Life at the Edge of Sight” by Dr. Roberto Kolter and Dr. Scott Chimileski is very much worth your time. Highly recommended.
Dr. Scott Chimileski’s website, with beautiful photographs of bacterial colonies.
An article on the history of microbiology by Dr. Kolter.
The article by Dr. Kolter I discussed during the podcast, “Biofilms in lab and nature: a molecular geneticist’s voyage to microbial ecology.”
A lecture by Dr. Kolter and Dr. Chimileski at Harvard University Museum of Natural History.
Another lecture at the Harvard University Museum of Natural History by Dr. Kolter and Dr. Chimileski.
Images from the “World in a Drop Exhibition” can be found here.
An essay from “Small Things Considered” on abortive transduction, discussed in the podcast. Here is another essay on that topic.
Dr. Kolter’s laboratory website with many interesting links.
Intro music is by Reber Clark
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
07 Nov 2024
Matters Microbial #64: Making Sense of the Microbiome
01:01:26
Today, Dr. Patrick Schloss, Professor in the Department of Microbiology and Immunology in the School of Medicine at the University of Michigan, joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss how the human microbiome is studied, possible pitfalls in such data analysis, and what tools he and his coworkers have developed to lead toward repeatable, hypothesis-driven science.
An overview of how the gut microbiome is analyzed.
One of the articles discussed by Dr. Schloss exploring reproducibility in microbiome studies: “Identifying and Overcoming Threats to Reproducibility, Replicability, Robustness, and Generalizability in Microbiome Research.”
Another article discussed by Dr. Schloss, regarding the link between the microbiome and obesity: “Looking for a Signal in the Noise: Revisiting Obesity and the Microbiome.”
An article from Dr. Schloss’ research team that explores a link between the human microbiome and a type of colorectal cancer.
A link to the MOTHUR project, used to analyze microbiome data.
A link to a video by Dr. Schloss: “Understanding Disease Through the Lens of the Microbiome.”
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
07 Sep 2023
Matters Microbial #6: What's the buzz on honeybee microbes? With Irene Newton
00:36:18
It is true that microbes are everywhere, and have impacts and applications that are often unexpected. Today, a true microbial force of nature visits Matters Microbial: Dr. Irene Newton of the Biology Department of the University of Indiana. Irene will tell us about some of her laboratory group’s recent research on how microbes interact with honeybees!
Dr. Newton’s laboratory website can be found here.
Intro music is by Reber Clark
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
25 Aug 2023
Matters Microbial #4: Extreme Microbial Closeups: Cryo-EM and Fine Structure of Microbes with Ariane Briegel
00:31:27
Everyone thinks microbes are very small, and most of them are. But how to see them? The microscope opened a whole new world to the observer, starting with the Dutch microbiologist Antonie van Leeuvenhoek. But photographs and peering through lenses have limitations. Mark introduces his friend and colleague, Ariane Briegel of the Institute of Biology at Leiden University to Matters Microbial. She discusses how her own work can allow us to see microbes at extremely fine detail using a technique called cryo-electron microscopy (cryEM). She will also discuss her path in science.
A really fine talk by Dr. Briegel about her work from ASM Microbe a few years ago.
Intro music is by Reber Clark
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
17 Oct 2024
Matters Microbial #61: All In Due Time–How Bacteria Wake from Dormancy
01:01:17
Matters Microbial #61: All In Due Time–How Bacteria Wake from Dormancy
October 17, 2024
Today, Dr. Paul Carini, of the Environmental Science department of the University of Arizona, joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss how soil bacteria can become dormant, “wake up,” and why that is more relevant than you might suppose.
Dr. Carini’s Substack page, where he explores many microbiological ideas.
Intro music is by Reber Clark
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
15 Aug 2024
Matters Microbial #52: A relationship between the microbiome and nasopharyngeal cancer?
00:52:32
Today, Dr. Justine Debelius of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss her fascinating work relating the human microbiome to nasopharyngeal cancer, as well as her path in the microbial sciences.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
03 Nov 2023
Matters Microbial #14: An inordinate fondness for viruses with Jack Gilbert
00:45:40
Today Dr. Jack Gilbert, Professor of Pediatrics and of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, chats with us about his MANY interests in microbiology, from human health to marine environments.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
01 Mar 2024
Matters Microbial #30: Deep (Marine Microbial) Thoughts with Jennifer Biddle
01:00:43
Today, Dr. Jennifer Biddle of the School of Marine Science and Policy at the University of Delaware joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss deep microbial life in marine environments (and why you should care about it), as well as her fascination with archaea!
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
26 Sep 2024
Matters Microbial #58: The Virosphere from Coral Reefs to Other Worlds
00:53:43
Today, Dr. Cynthia Silveira of the Department of Biology at Miami University joins the #QualityQuorum to discuss her research team’s efforts to explore how bacterial viruses interact with their host cells from coral reefs to other planets! In addition, Dr. Silveira will discuss her microbiological path and a course she teaches on virology.
Send your questions and comments to mattersmicrobial@gmail.com
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