Microbiology Automatic Plater_easySpiral_Interscience_TMS – Video


Microbiology Automatic Plater_easySpiral_Interscience_TMS
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Microbiology Automatic Plater_easySpiral_Interscience_TMS - Video

The World of Microbiology: Growing Microorganisms – Video


The World of Microbiology: Growing Microorganisms
Presented by staff from the School of Life Health Sciences at Aston University this video aims to demonstrate good practice when delivering the practical sessions associated withThe World of Microbiology It #39;s designed as ateaching tool to aid teachers of schools and FEHE institutions and demonstrates how to grow transient and resident microorganisms from human skin as well as bacteria from within our environment The video also provides educational material relating to the types of organisms we ...

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Biological wires carry electricity thanks to special amino acids

Public release date: 12-Mar-2013 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Jim Sliwa jsliwa@asmusa.org 202-942-9297 American Society for Microbiology

Slender bacterial nanowires require certain key amino acids in order to conduct electricity, according to a study to be published in mBio, the online open-access journal of the American Society for Microbiology, on Tuesday, March 12.

In nature, the bacterium Geobacter sulfurreducens uses these nanowires, called pili, to transport electrons to remote iron particles or other microbes, but the benefits of these wires can also be harnessed by humans for use in fuel cells or bioelectronics. The study in mBio reveals that a core of aromatic amino acids are required to turn these hair-like appendages into functioning electron-carrying biological wires.

"It's the aromatic amino acids that make it a wire," says lead author Derek Lovley of the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Lovley and his colleagues removed the pivotal amino acids from the pili and replaced them with smaller, non-aromatic amino acids. Without these key components, Lovley says, the pili are nothing more than protein strings. "We showed it's not good enough to just make the string - you've got to make a wire," says Lovley.

G. sulfurreducens "breathes" by removing electrons from organic materials and funneling them to iron oxides or to other microorganisms, much the way humans pull electrons out of organic molecules in food and dump them on oxygen. The bacteria use their pili to reach out to iron oxides or other microbes, transferring the "waste" electrons along the structure to the destination. Geobacter's pili are only 3-5 nanometers wide, but they can be 20 micrometers long, many times longer than the cell itself.

Trafficking in electrons is how all living things breathe, but it is normally carried out by discrete proteins or other molecules that act like containers for shuttling electrons from one place to another. Lovley says earlier results showed the pili in G. sulfurreducens possess metallic-like conductivity, the ability to carry electrons along a continuous structure, a controversial finding in biology.

To investigate how pili accomplish this singular feat, Lovley says they looked to non-biological organic materials that can conduct electricity. "In those synthetic materials, it's aromatic compounds that are responsible for the conductivity. We hypothesized that maybe it's similar in the Geobacter pili. In this case, it would be aromatic amino acids." Aromatic compounds have a highly stable ring-shaped structure made of carbon atoms.

Turning to the pili, Lovley says his group looked for aromatic amino acids in the parts of the pili proteins that would most likely contribute to the conductivity. Using genetic techniques, they developed a strain of Geobacter that makes pili that lack aromatic amino acids in these key regions, then they tested whether these pili could still conduct electricity. They could not. Removing the aromatic amino acids was a bit like taking the copper out of a plastic-covered electrical wire: no copper means no current, and all you're left with is a string.

Removing aromatic amino acids from the pili prevents the bacteria from reducing iron, too, says Lovley, an important point because it adds further proof that Geobacter uses its pili as nanowires for carrying electrons to support respiration.

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Biological wires carry electricity thanks to special amino acids

87 scientists elected to the American Academy of Microbiology

Public release date: 11-Mar-2013 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Garth Hogan ghogan@asmusa.org 202-942-9389 American Society for Microbiology

Washington, DCMarch 11, 2013Eighty-seven microbiologists have been elected to Fellowship in the American Academy of Microbiology. Fellows of the Academy are elected annually through a highly selective, peer-review process, based on their records of scientific achievement and original contributions that have advanced microbiology. There are over 2,000 Fellows representing all subspecialties of microbiology, including basic and applied research, teaching, public health, industry, and government service. The new Fellows are as follows:

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For information about election to the Fellowship in the American Academy of Microbiology, please visit: http://academy.asm.org/index.php/fellows-info.

The American Academy of Microbiology is the honorific leadership group of the American Society for Microbiology. The mission of the Academy is to recognize scientific excellence, as well as foster knowledge and understanding in the microbiological sciences. More information on the Academy can be found online at http://academy.asm.org.

The American Society for Microbiology is the largest single life science society, composed of over 39,000 scientists and health professionals. ASM's mission is to advance the microbiological sciences as a vehicle for understanding life processes and to apply and communicate this knowledge for the improvement of health and environmental and economic well-being worldwide. For more information, visit http://www.asm.org.

AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.

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87 scientists elected to the American Academy of Microbiology

WSU microbiology students present research

Weber State University students from the College of Sciences microbiology department attended the American Society of Microbiology meeting in Pocatello, Idaho, on Saturday. Many students from the department presented undergraduate research through poster presentations to peers and society leaders.

Alessia Banning, a senior in microbiology, said presenting research at the meeting has been an eye-opening experience.

The questions about my research have helped me learn how to discuss current research techniques and justify our results, Banning said. This experience has prepared me for graduate-school research opportunities.

Students from Idaho State University, Brigham Young University and WSU meet with student leaders to discuss research and microbiological topics at the event. Seniors from other schools gave the oral presentations on mostly environment-based microbiology topics.

Karen Nakaoka, a microbiology professor at WSU, gave two separate sponsored poster presentations at the conference.

I sparked this research from an idea I had on comparison of clinical samples to environmental samples of antibiotic-resistant organisms growing in the Great Salt Lake, Nakaoka said. It is important that students are contributing to the research and presenting on findings to their peers. It has helped the students gain research experience and helped the project move along at a good pace.

Different students can contribute at different stages of the project to promote research. For example, one group of students can write the grant proposal while another group performs the research and analysis.

The keynote speaker of the conference, Carolyn Weber, discussed microbial gas components of volcanoes. Weber presented on her experiences in Hawaii sampling from volcanic eruption sites for her Ph.D. project. The breakthrough in her research came from carbon monoxide oxidation in volcanic rock to help boost the botanical growth post eruption.

Students need to see that research ideas can be part of thinking outside the box in graduate settings, Weber said. I hope that those students attending the conference take away the concept of bigger picture within their research ideas.

This yearly meeting of the intermountain branch is usually months before the nationwide meeting, which is being held in Colorado this year.

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WSU microbiology students present research

UNMC Develops Library for Researchers of Staph Infections

Newswise Through the creation of a library of more than 2,000 mutant strains of the Staphylococcus aureus bacteria, the University of Nebraska Medical Center has provided an important tool for scientists around the world seeking answers for how to better deal with staph infections.

The project detailed in the Feb. 12 issue of mBio, the journal of the American Society for Microbiology was spearheaded by Paul Fey, Ph.D., first author, and Ken Bayles, Ph.D., senior author.

Dr. Fey is professor, pathology and microbiology, and medical director of clinical microbiology. Dr. Bayles is associate vice chancellor for basic science research and director of the UNMC Center for Staphylococcal Research.

Developed over the past four years, the library of mutant staph bacteria is essential in allowing scientists to better understand how staph genes cause infections. It also is critical in helping pharmaceutical companies develop new drugs to combat staph infections.

The mutant strains have been deposited in the Network on Antimicrobial Resistant Staphlococcus Aureus (NARSA), a repository funded by the National Institutes of Health. There is no cost for scientists to acquire these mutant strains.

NARSA has already provided nearly 2,600 mutant strains to scientists from 85 different laboratories and 12 countries. The entire library has been sent to 20 different labs around the world including labs in Germany, Switzerland, China, Ireland and England.

Based on the high usage, its clearly making a difference to the scientific community, Dr. Fey said. This was a significant undertaking, so its rewarding to see that other investigators appreciate what we have done.

Dr. Fey said it often takes several months for scientists to develop a single mutant strain. Having access to the library of mutant strains saves them a lot of time and work, and it allows for rapid hypothesis generation for their research, he said.

To complement the library of mutant strains, Jeffrey Bose, Ph.D., a fellow in pathology and microbiology, created a variety of genetic tools to help investigators better utilize the library. His work will be featured next month in Applied and Environmental Microbiology.

Dr. Fey also cited Robert Boissy, Ph.D., internal medicine administration, for providing his biomedical informatics expertise in the analysis of the genetic data. Three research techs Jennifer Endres, Vijaya Kumar Yajjala and Todd Widhelm also were involved on the project.

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UNMC Develops Library for Researchers of Staph Infections

American Academy of Microbiology releases resistance report

Public release date: 7-Mar-2013 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Garth Hogan ghogan@asmusa.org 202-942-9389 American Society for Microbiology

What do cancer cells, weeds, and pathogens have in common? They all evolve resistance to the treatments that are supposed to eliminate them. However, researchers developing the next generation of antibiotics, herbicides, and anti-cancer therapeutics rarely come together to explore the common evolutionary principles at work across their different biological systems. The new American Academy of Microbiology report "Moving Targets: Fighting Resistance in Infections, Pests, and Cancer" concludes that scientists working on different kinds of treatments have much to learn from each other. Applying lessons learned about the evolution of resistance in different biological systems during the earliest stages of drug and pesticide design could lead to more effective treatments for patients, farmers, and public health organizations.

Do you think the oncologists at a cutting-edge research hospital ever sit down with local farmers? Do you think the pharmaceutical researchers developing the next generation of anti-HIV drugs spend any time with the plant scientists working on the next generation of Roundup Ready soybeans? If your answer to both questions is no, you would be mostly right. Even though all of these people are dealing with exactly the same evolutionary phenomena, they do not recognize themselves as a single scientific community and rarely get a chance to learn from each other. What they all have in common is that they are trying to eliminate an unwanted living entity but the treatments they develop eventually lose effectiveness because the target evolves resistance.

The emergence of resistance is a phenomenon with ancient evolutionary roots, although the human role in triggering resistance was little appreciated before the advent of widespread antibiotic and pesticide use in the 1950s. In Silent Spring, the prescient Rachel Carson wrote in 1962 that "by their very nature chemical controls are self-defeating, for they have been devised and applied without taking into account the complex biological systems against which they have been blindly hurled." Sadly, in the fifty years since Silent Spring was published, biologists, doctors, and farmers continue to be plagued with resistance evolution by the species they seek to control. This phenomenon is witnessed in medicine in the emergence of antibiotic resistance and when tumors become intractable to standard anti-cancer medications, in agriculture when insecticides and herbicides lose effectiveness, and in public health when disease-carrying insects develop resistance to control strategies. The report "Moving Targets: Fighting Resistance in Infections, Pests, and Cancer" makes clear that a multi-disciplinary approach to the phenomenon of resistance can be very powerful.

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A PDF of Moving Targets can be found here: http://bit.ly/XV0NSu.

The American Academy of Microbiology is the honorific leadership group of the American Society of Microbiology. The mission of the Academy is to recognize scientific excellence, as well as foster knowledge and understanding in the microbiological sciences. A full list of Academy colloquia reports can be found at http://academy.asm.org/colloquia. For more information about the American Society for Microbiology, visit http://www.asm.org.

AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.

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American Academy of Microbiology releases resistance report

Food Micro, Sixth Edition – Food Microbiology Testing in Europe

DUBLIN, March 8, 2013 /PRNewswire/ --

Research and Markets has announced the addition of the "Food Micro, Sixth Edition - Food Microbiology Testing in Europe" report to their offering.

Food Micro, Sixth Edition: Food Microbiology Testing in Europe

(Food Micro6) is the first definitive report to focus exclusively on the European food microbiology testing market. Food Micro6 reviews the methods, technologies, companies, regulations and trends shaping food safety testing in Europe. Europe is a substantial market for food microbiology testing. With a population of over 500 million, the 27 countries of the European Union (EU) conducted an estimated 275 million food safety microbiology tests in 2011. In comparison, there were 213 million tests conducted in the US in 2010.

(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20130307/600769 )

In addition to size, the European food safety testing market differs from the US market in areas such as methods used, organisms tested and regulations. As a result, Europe must be examined and understood as a separate entity as it relates to food microbiology testing, and not simply thought of and treated as like the US. Food Micro6 tracks, analyzes and reports on the distinct and important EU food microbiology testing market.

According to Tom Weschler, president of Strategic Consulting and lead author of Food Micro6, Food safety microbiology testing in the EU will reach close to 350 million tests in 2016, at which point we expect the market to top $1 billion in value. A resurgence in public awareness in the wake of the 2011 E.coli outbreak in Germany, and the continued focus of the European Food Safety Authority on EU-wide systems, could drive test volumes even higher.

In preparing this new and comprehensive review of the European food microbiology testing market, Strategic Consulting (SCI) conducted more than 175 detailed interviews in 11 European countries accounting for 77% of all agricultural/food value-added in the European Union.

Because SCI conducted primary research with food-processing plants in Europe, Food Micro6 is able to offer new, detailed data on European food safety testing such as test volumes, methods used for routine and pathogen testing, and costs per test performed. Differences in testing practices are analyzed for the meat, dairy, fruits/vegetables, and processed food segments. Variations within countries are outlined, and expected changes in future testing practices are discussed.

Food Micro6 incorporates:

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Food Micro, Sixth Edition - Food Microbiology Testing in Europe

Food Micro-Fifth Edition: Microbiology Testing in the US Food Industry

DUBLIN, March 8, 2013 /PRNewswire/ --

Research and Markets has announced the addition of the "Food MicroFifth Edition: Microbiology Testing in the US Food Industry " report to their offering.

Food Microbiology Testing Shows Healthy Growth

(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20130307/600769 )

New regulations and public demand for safe food fuel growth in testing volume in the food processing industry and competition among industrial diagnostics companies. Woodstock, VT Industrial diagnostic companies competing in the food sector will continue to face exciting but turbulent times in the coming few years, according to a new report from Strategic Consulting, Inc., a leading knowledge resource for the industrial diagnostics industry.

This new report, "Food MicroFifth Edition: Microbiology Testing in the US Food Industry, tracks changes to microbiology testing practices as the U.S. food industry strives to produce safe and wholesome foods in an increasingly global market. According to the report, new regulatory requirements and heightened public concern about food safety issues have increased concern and testing in the food sector: In 2010, 213.2 million microbiology tests were collected in the US food processing industry, a 14.4% increase since 2008.

After a decade of solid but quiet growth, the microbiology testing requirements of the food processing industry have been thrust into the public spotlight again, driving healthy growth in food diagnostic testing, says Thomas Weschler, president of SCI and lead author of Food Micro5. Given the opportunities in this market, strong industrial diagnostic companies prone to action should do well, he says.

Food Micro5 examines the market, methods, technologies and key companies involved in microbiology testing in the food processing industry.

Primary research was conducted with more than 100 food processing plants producing a broad range of products in the meat, dairy, fruit/vegetable, and processed food segments. SCI also contacted many of the senior quality and food safety officers at the top-30 food companies in order to include both the strategic and the operational perspective on the U.S. food processing industry.

TVO, Coliform/E. coli, Yeast/Mold, and Staphylococcus are the routine microbiology tests that are generally used in the food processing industry as indicators of microorganisms in the plant or food product. The test volume for routine/indicator organisms went up by just over 10% between 2008 and 2010. During that same two-year period, however, testing for specific pathogens such as Salmonella, Listeria, Campylobacter, and E. coli O157 increased by more than 30%.

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Food Micro-Fifth Edition: Microbiology Testing in the US Food Industry

LifeSciences BC Announces Recipients of the 2013 LifeSciences British Columbia Awards

VANCOUVER, British Columbia--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

LifeSciences BC is pleased to announce the recipients of the 2013 LifeSciences British Columbia Awards. They are:

Dr. Don Rix Award for Lifetime Achievement Dr. Joseph M. Connors, Clinical Professor, University of British Columbia, and Clinical Director, BC Cancer Agency Centre for Lymphoid Cancer

Genome British Columbia Award for Scientific Excellence Dr. B. Brett Finlay, UBC Peter Wall Distinguished Professor, Michael Smith Laboratories and the Departments of Microbiology and Immunology, and Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of British Columbia

Milton Wong Award for Leadership Kenneth Galbraith, General Partner, Ventures West Capital Ltd.

Innovation and Achievement Award Dr. Richard Harrigan, Director, Laboratory Program, British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS

Medical Technology Company of the Year STEMCELL Technologies Inc.

Life Sciences Company of the Year Xenon Pharmaceuticals Inc.

Emerging Life Sciences Company of the Year Zymeworks Inc.

These awards are presented annually to recognize individuals and organizations that have made significant contributions to the development of British Columbias life sciences industry.

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LifeSciences BC Announces Recipients of the 2013 LifeSciences British Columbia Awards

Biology Breakthroughs – Microbiology Breakthroughs – Health Science – Video


Biology Breakthroughs - Microbiology Breakthroughs - Health Science
Biology Breakthroughs - Microbiology Breakthroughs - Health Science http://www.PaulFDavis.com has touched 70 countries w life-changing messages (info@PaulFDavis.com) http://www.NY-life-coach.com http://www.Facebook.com http://www.Twitter.com/PaulFDavis http://www.Linkedin.com/in/worldproperties biology breakthroughs - microbiology breakthroughs - health science

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Biology Breakthroughs - Microbiology Breakthroughs - Health Science - Video

SHENANIGANS! Episode #37 – Video


SHENANIGANS! Episode #37
LET #39;S GET 200 LIKES FOR THIS OVERDUE SHENANIGANS! I #39;ve been really busy studying for a Microbiology test I got coming up so I decided to take a break and whipped up this Shenanigans episode for all of you, enjoy! Other people in this video Avenge Razor http://www.youtube.com Avenge Walabos http://www.youtube.com Avenge Heist (Acarius/Surrealest) http://www.youtube.com Avenge Apex http://www.youtube.com Avenge Blood http://www.youtube.com My Twitter: http://www.Twitter.com My Gears of War Team http://www.youtube.com My Teams Multi-Game Channel http://www.youtube.com

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Scytek Laboratories : Special Stains, Antibodies, Hematology, Microbiology, Hematoxlyn,histology – Video


Scytek Laboratories : Special Stains, Antibodies, Hematology, Microbiology, Hematoxlyn,histology
ScyTek Laboratories, Inc. a Utah, USA http://www.scytek.com corporation involved in the manufacture of diagnostic reagents Special Stains, Antibodies, Hematology, Microbiology, Hematoxlyn http

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Scytek Laboratories : Special Stains, Antibodies, Hematology, Microbiology, Hematoxlyn,histology - Video

OMICS Group-Journal of Medical Microbiology-2161-0703-S1-001 – Video


OMICS Group-Journal of Medical Microbiology-2161-0703-S1-001
Genetic fine typing of Mycobacterium ulcerans, the causative agent of the neglected tropical disease Buruli ulcer, has been hampered by the remarkable genetic homogeneity of patient isolates. An LSP-based rapid PCR typing scheme proved beneficial for these mycobacteria.

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OMICS Group-Journal of Medical Microbiology-2161-0703-S1-001 - Video