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Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with bacteria across World Wide.
46 curated items42 Seminars4 ePosters
Updated about 1 year ago
46 items · bacteria
46 results
SeminarOpen SourceRecording

Trackoscope: A low-cost, open, autonomous tracking microscope for long-term observations of microscale organisms

Priya Soneji
Georgia Institute of Technology
Oct 7, 2024

Cells and microorganisms are motile, yet the stationary nature of conventional microscopes impedes comprehensive, long-term behavioral and biomechanical analysis. The limitations are twofold: a narrow focus permits high-resolution imaging but sacrifices the broader context of organism behavior, while a wider focus compromises microscopic detail. This trade-off is especially problematic when investigating rapidly motile ciliates, which often have to be confined to small volumes between coverslips affecting their natural behavior. To address this challenge, we introduce Trackoscope, an 2-axis autonomous tracking microscope designed to follow swimming organisms ranging from 10μm to 2mm across a 325 square centimeter area for extended durations—ranging from hours to days—at high resolution. Utilizing Trackoscope, we captured a diverse array of behaviors, from the air-water swimming locomotion of Amoeba to bacterial hunting dynamics in Actinosphaerium, walking gait in Tardigrada, and binary fission in motile Blepharisma. Trackoscope is a cost-effective solution well-suited for diverse settings, from high school labs to resource-constrained research environments. Its capability to capture diverse behaviors in larger, more realistic ecosystems extends our understanding of the physics of living systems. The low-cost, open architecture democratizes scientific discovery, offering a dynamic window into the lives of previously inaccessible small aquatic organisms.

SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

Mechano-adaptation in a large protein complex

Navish Wadhwa
Harvard
Nov 21, 2021

Macromolecular protein complexes perform essential biological functions across life forms. A fundamental, though yet unsolved question in biology is how the function of such complexes is regulated by intracellular or extracellular signals. For instance, we have little understanding of how forces affect multi-protein machines whose function is often mechanical in nature. We address this question by studying the bacterial flagellar motor, a large complex that powers swimming motility in many bacteria. This rotary motor autonomously adapts to changes in mechanical load by adding or removing force-generating ‘stator’ units that power rotation. In the bacterium Escherichia coli, up to 11 units drive the motor at high load while all the units are released at low load. We manipulate motor load using electrorotation, a technique in which a rapidly rotating electric field applies an external torque on the motor. This allows us to change motor load at will and measure the resulting stator dynamics at single-unit resolution. We found that the force generated by the stator units controls their unbinding, forming a feedback loop that leads to autoregulation of the assembly. We complemented our experiments with theoretical models that provide insight into the underlying molecular interactions. Torque-dependent remodeling takes place within seconds, making it a highly responsive control mechanism, one that is mediated by the mechano-chemical tuning of protein interactions.

SeminarNeuroscience

Role of the gut microbiota in the development of alcohol use disorder

Philippe de Timary
UCLouvain, Belgium, Institute of Neuroscience and Department of Adult Psychiatry
Nov 18, 2021

The gut microbiota is composed of a very large number of bacteria, viruses, fungi and yeasts that play an important role in the body, through the production of a series of metabolites (including neurotransmitters), and through an essential role in the barrier function of the gut and the regulation of immunity and stress response. In this lecture I will present, based mainly on human studies but also on preclinical studies, the evidence for a role of the gut microbiota in the development of alcohol use disorder. I will show the first results of trials to test the effects of nutritional approaches to address these deficits.

SeminarNeuroscience

Adapt or Die: Transgenerational Inheritance of Pathogen Avoidance (or, How getting food poisoning might save your species)

Coleen Murphy
Princeton University
Nov 14, 2021

Caenorhabditis elegans must distinguish pathogens from nutritious food sources among the many bacteria to which it is exposed in its environment1. Here we show that a single exposure to purified small RNAs isolated from pathogenic Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA14) is sufficient to induce pathogen avoidance in the treated worms and in four subsequent generations of progeny. The RNA interference (RNAi) and PIWI-interacting RNA (piRNA) pathways, the germline and the ASI neuron are all required for avoidance behaviour induced by bacterial small RNAs, and for the transgenerational inheritance of this behaviour. A single P. aeruginosa non-coding RNA, P11, is both necessary and sufficient to convey learned avoidance of PA14, and its C. elegans target, maco-1, is required for avoidance. Our results suggest that this non-coding-RNA-dependent mechanism evolved to survey the microbial environment of the worm, use this information to make appropriate behavioural decisions and pass this information on to its progeny.

SeminarNeuroscience

Microbiota in the health of the nervous system and the response to stress

Andrea Calixto
Universidad de Valparaiso, Chile
Sep 26, 2021

Microbes have shaped the evolution of eukaryotes and contribute significantly to the physiology and behavior of animals. Some of these traits are inherited by the progenies. Despite the vast importance of microbe-host communication, we still do not know how bacteria change short term traits or long-term decisions in individuals or communities. In this seminar I will present our work on how commensal and pathogenic bacteria impact specific neuronal phenotypes and decision making. The traits we specifically study are the degeneration and regeneration of neurons and survival behaviors in animals. We use the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans and its dietary bacteria as model organisms. Both nematode and bacteria are genetically tractable, simplifying the detection of specific molecules and their effect on measurable characteristics. To identify these molecules we analyze their genomes, transcriptomes and metabolomes, followed by functional in vivo validation. We found that specific bacterial RNAs and bacterially produced neurotransmitters are key to trigger a survival behavioral and neuronal protection respectively. While RNAs cause responses that lasts for many generations we are still investigating whether bacterial metabolites are capable of inducing long lasting phenotypic changes.

SeminarPhysics of Life

Bacteria, soil, carbon, and biosurfactants:From climate related themes to bacterial spreading in unsaturated porous media

Howard Stone
Princeton
Aug 19, 2021
SeminarPhysics of Life

Spatio-temporal control over near critical-point operation ensures fidelity of bacterial genome partition

Jian Liu
Johns Hopkins
Jul 29, 2021
SeminarNeuroscience

As soon as there was life there was danger

Joseph LeDoux
New York University
Jun 28, 2021

Organisms face challenges to survival throughout life. When we freeze or flee in danger, we often feel fear. Tracing the deep history of danger gives a different perspective. The first cells living billions of years ago had to detect and respond to danger in order to survive. Life is about not being dead, and behavior is a major way that organisms hold death off. Although behavior does not require a nervous system, complex organisms have brain circuits for detecting and responding to danger, the deep roots of which go back to the first cells. But these circuits do not make fear, and fear is not the cause of why we freeze or flee. Fear a human invention; a construct we use to account for what happens in our minds when we become aware that we are in harm’s way. This requires a brain that can personally know that it existed in the past, that it is the entity that might be harmed in the present, and that it will cease to exist it the future. If other animals have conscious experiences, they cannot have the kinds of conscious experiences we have because they do not have the kinds of brains we have. This is not meant as a denial of animal consciousness; it is simply a statement about the fact that every species has a different brain. Nor is it a declaration about the wonders of the human brain, since we have done some wonderful, but also horrific, things with our brains. In fact, we are on the way to a climatic disaster that will not, as some suggest, destroy the Earth. But it will make it inhabitable for our kind, and other organisms with high energy demands. Bacteria have made it for billions of years and will likely be fine. The rest is up for grabs, and, in a very real sense, up to us.

SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

Bacterial rheotaxis in bulk and at surfaces

Anke Lindner
ESPCI
Jun 22, 2021

Individual bacteria transported in viscous flows, show complex interactions with flows and bounding surfaces resulting from their complex shape as well as their activity. Understanding these transport dynamics is crucial, as they impact soil contamination, transport in biological conducts or catheters, and constitute thus a serious health threat. Here we investigate the trajectories of individual E-coli bacteria in confined geometries under flow, using microfluidic model systems in bulk flows as well as close to surfaces using a novel Langrangian 3D tracking method. Combining experimental observations and modelling we elucidate the origin of upstream swimming, lateral drift or persistent transport along corners. [1] Junot et al, EPL, 126 (2019) 44003 [2] Mathijssen et al. 10:3 (2019) Nature Comm. [3] Figueroa-Morales et al., Soft Matter, 2015,11, 6284-6293 [4] Darnige et al. Review of Scientific Instruments 88, 055106 (2017) [5] Jing et al, Science Advances, 2020; 6 : eabb2012 [6] Figueroa-Morales et al, Sci. Adv. 2020; 6 : eaay0155, 2020, 10.1126/sciadv.aay0155

SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

3D Printing Cellular Communities: Mammalian Cells, Bacteria, And Beyond

Tapomoy Bhattacharjee
Princeton University
Jun 20, 2021

While the motion and collective behavior of cells are well-studied on flat surfaces or in unconfined liquid media, in most natural settings, cells thrive in complex 3D environments. Bioprinting processes are capable of structuring cells in 3D and conventional bioprinting approaches address this challenge by embedding cells in bio-degradable polymer networks. However, heterogeneity in network structure and biodegradation often preclude quantitative studies of cell behavior in specified 3D architectures. Here, I will present a new approach to 3D bioprinting of cellular communities that utilizes jammed, granular polyelectrolyte microgels as a support medium. The self-healing nature of this medium allows the creation of highly precise cellular communities and tissue-like structures by direct injection of cells inside the 3D medium. Further, the transparent nature of this medium enables precise characterization of cellular behavior. I will describe two examples of my work using this platform to study the behavior of two different classes of cells in 3D. First, I will describe how we interrogate the growth, viability, and migration of mammalian cells—ranging from epithelial cells, cancer cells, and T cells—in the 3D pore space. Second, I will describe how we interrogate the migration of E. coli bacteria through the 3D pore space. Direct visualization enables us to reveal a new mode of motility exhibited by individual cells, in stark contrast to the paradigm of run-and-tumble motility, in which cells are intermittently and transiently trapped as they navigate the pore space; further, analysis of these dynamics enables prediction of single-cell transport over large length and time scales. Moreover, we show that concentrated populations of E. coli can collectively migrate through a porous medium—despite being strongly confined—by chemotactically “surfing” a self-generated nutrient gradient. Together, these studies highlight how the jammed microgel medium provides a powerful platform to design and interrogate complex cellular communities in 3D—with implications for tissue engineering, microtissue mechanics, studies of cellular interactions, and biophysical studies of active matter.

SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

Flocking through complex environments

Suraj Shankar
Harvard University
Jun 6, 2021

The spontaneous collective motion of self-propelled agents is ubiquitous in the natural world, and it often occurs in complex environments, be it bacteria and cells migrating through polymeric extracellular matrix or animal herds and human crowds navigating structured terrains. Much is known about flocking dynamics in pristine backgrounds, but how do spatio-temporal heterogeneities in the environment impact such collective self-organization? I will present two model systems, a colloidal active fluid negotiating disordered obstacles and a confined dense bacterial suspension in a viscoelastic medium, as controllable platforms to explore this question and highlight general mechanisms for active self-organization in complex environments. By combining theory and experiment, I will show how flocks on disordered substrates organize into a novel dynamic vortex glass phase, akin to vortex glasses in dirty superconductors, while the presence of viscoelasticity can calm the otherwise turbulent swarming of bacteria, allowing the emergence of a large scale coherent and even oscillatory vortex when confined on the millimetre scale.

SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

Trapping active particles up to the limiting case: bacteria enclosed in a biofilm

Chantal Valeriani
Complutense Madrid
May 25, 2021

Active matter systems are composed of constituents, each one in nonequilibrium, that consume energy in order to move [1]. A characteristic feature of active matter is collective motion leading to nonequilibrium phase transitions or large scale directed motion [2]. A number of recent works have featured active particles interacting with obstacles, either moving or fixed [3,4,5]. When an active particle encounters an asymmetric obstacle, different behaviours are detected depending on the nature of its active motion. On the one side, rectification effects arise in a suspension of run-and-tumble particles interacting with a wall of funnelled-shaped openings, caused by particles persistence length [6]. The same trapping mechanism could be responsible for the intake of microorganisms in the underground leaves [7] of Carnivorous plants [8]. On the other side, for aligning particles [9] interacting with a wall of funnelled-shaped openings, trapping happens on the (opposite) wider opening side of the funnels [10,11]. Interestingly, when funnels are located on a circular array, trapping is more localised and depends on the nature of the Vicsek model. Active particles can be synthetic (such as synthetic active colloids) or alive (such as living bacteria). A prototypical model to study living microswimmers is P. fluorescens, a rod shaped and biofilm forming bacterium. Biofilms are microbial communities self-assembled onto external interfaces. Biofilms can be described within the Soft Matter physics framework [12] as a viscoelastic material consisting of colloids (bacterial cells) embedded in a cross-linked polymer gel (polysaccharides cross-linked via proteins/multivalent cations), whose water content vary depending on the environmental conditions. Bacteria embedded in the polymeric matrix control biofilm structure and mechanical properties by regulating its matrix composition. We have recently monitored structural features of Pseudomonas fluorescens biofilms grown with and without hydrodynamic stress [13,14]. We have demonstrated that bacteria are capable of self-adapting to hostile hydrodynamic stress by tailoring the biofilm chemical composition, thus affecting both the mesoscale structure of the matrix and its viscoelastic properties that ultimately regulate the bacteria-polymer interactions. REFERENCES [1] C. Bechinger et al. Rev. Mod. Phys. 88, 045006 (2016); [2] T. Vicsek, A. Zafeiris Phys. Rep. 517, 71 (2012); [3] C. Bechinger, R. Di Leonardo, H. Lowen, C. Reichhardt, G. Volpe, and G. Volpe, Reviews of Modern Physics 88, 045006 (2016); [4] R Martinez, F Alarcon, DR Rodriguez, JL Aragones, C Valeriani The European Physical Journal E 41, 1 (2018); [5] DR Rodriguez, F Alarcon, R Martinez, J Ramírez, C Valeriani, Soft matter 16 (5), 1162 (2020); [6] C. O. Reichhardt and C. Reichhardt, Annual Review of Condensed Matter
Physics 8, 51 (2017); [7] W Barthlott, S Porembski, E Fischer, B Gemmel Nature 392, 447 (1998); [8] C B. Giuliano, R Zhang, R.Martinez Fernandez, C.Valeriani and L.Wilson (in preparation, 2021); [9] R Martinez, F Alarcon, JL Aragones, C Valeriani Soft matter 16 (20), 4739 (2020); [10] P. Galajada, J. Keymer, P. Chaikin and R.Austin, Journal of bacteriology, 189, 8704 (2007); [11] M. Wan, C.O. Reichhardt, Z. Nussinov, and C. Reichhardt, Physical Review Letters 101, 018102 (2008); [12] J N. Wilking , T E. Angelini , A Seminara , M P. Brenner , and D A. Weitz MRS Bulletin 36, 385 (2011); [13]J Jara, F Alarcón, A K Monnappa, J Ignacio Santos, V Bianco, P Nie, M Pica Ciamarra, A Canales, L Dinis, I López-Montero, C Valeriani, B Orgaz, Frontiers in microbiology 11, 3460 (2021); [14] P Nie, F Alarcon, I López-Montero, B Orgaz, C Valeriani, M Pica Ciamarra

SeminarPhysics of Life

From topological defects to fruiting bodies in bacterial colonies

Ricard Alert
Princeton
May 20, 2021
SeminarPhysics of Life

From individual to collective intermittent motion: from bacteria to sheep

Fernando Peruani
Apr 29, 2021
SeminarPhysics of Life

Bacterial active nematics: how modeling can be really quantitative

Hugues Chate
CEA-Saclay
Apr 22, 2021
SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

Frustrated Self-Assembly of Non-Euclidean Crystals of Nanoparticles

Xioaming Mao
University of Michigan
Apr 13, 2021

Self-organized complex structures in nature, e.g., viral capsids, hierarchical biopolymers, and bacterial flagella, offer efficiency, adaptability, robustness, and multi-functionality. Can we program the self-assembly of three-dimensional (3D) complex structures using simple building blocks, and reach similar or higher level of sophistication in engineered materials? Here we present an analytic theory for the self-assembly of polyhedral nanoparticles (NPs) based on their crystal structures in non-Euclidean space. We show that the unavoidable geometrical frustration of these particle shapes, combined with competing attractive and repulsive interparticle interactions, lead to controllable self-assembly of structures of complex order. Applying this theory to tetrahedral NPs, we find high-yield and enantiopure self-assembly of helicoidal ribbons, exhibiting qualitative agreement with experimental observations. We expect that this theory will offer a general framework for the self-assembly of simple polyhedral building blocks into rich complex morphologies with new material capabilities such as tunable optical activity, essential for multiple emerging technologies.

SeminarPhysics of Life

Tutorial talk: Bacterial Chemotaxis

Thiery Emonet
Yale
Apr 1, 2021
SeminarNeuroscience

New Strategies and Approaches to Tackle and Understand Neurological Disorder

Mauro Costa-Mattioli
The Memory & Brain Research Center (MBRC), Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, USA
Mar 17, 2021

Broadly, the Mauro Costa-Mattioli laboratory (The MCM Lab) encompasses two complementary lines of research. The first one, more traditional but very important, aims at unraveling the molecular mechanisms underlying memory formation (e.g., using state-of-the-art molecular and cell-specific genetic approaches). Learning and memory disorders can strike the brain during development (e.g., Autism Spectrum Disorders and Down Syndrome), as well as during adulthood (e.g., Alzheimer’s disease). We are interested in understanding the specific circuits and molecular pathways that are primarily targeted in these disorders and how they can be restored. To tackle these questions, we use a multidisciplinary, convergent and cross-species approach that combines mouse and fly genetics, molecular biology, electrophysiology, stem cell biology, optogenetics and behavioral techniques. The second line of research, more recent and relatively unexplored, is focused on understanding how gut microbes control CNS driven-behavior and brain function. Our recent discoveries, that microbes in the gut could modulate brain function and behavior in a very powerful way, have added a whole new dimension to the classic view of how complex behaviors are controlled. The unexpected findings have opened new avenues of study for us and are currently driving my lab to answer a host of new and very interesting questions: - What are the gut microbes (and metabolites) that regulate CNS-driven behaviors? Would it be possible to develop an unbiased screening method to identify specific microbes that regulate different behaviors? - If this is the case, can we identify how members of the gut microbiome (and their metabolites) mechanistically influence brain function? - What is the communication channel between the gut microbiota and the brain? Do different gut microbes use different ways to interact with the brain? - Could disruption of the gut microbial ecology cause neurodevelopmental dysfunction? If so, what is the impact of disruption in young and adult animals? - More importantly, could specific restoration of selected bacterial strains (new generation probiotics) represent a novel therapeutic approach for the targeted treatment of neurodevelopmental disorders? - Finally, can we develop microbiota-directed therapeutic foods to repair brain dysfunction in a variety of neurological disorders?

SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

Exploring the evolution of motile curved bacteria using a regularized Stokeslet Boundary Element Method and Pareto optimality theory

Rudi Schuech
Tulane University
Feb 16, 2021

Bacteria exhibit a bewildering diversity of morphologies, but despite their impact on nearly all aspects of life, they are frequently classified into a few general categories, usually just “spheres” and “rods.” Curved-rod bacteria are one simple variation observed in many environments, particularly the ocean. However, why so many species have evolved this shape is unknown. We used a regularized Stokeslet Boundary Element Method to model the motility of flagellated, curved bacteria. We show that curvature can increase swimming efficiency, revealing a widely applicable selective advantage. Furthermore, we show that the distribution of cell lengths and curvatures observed across bacteria in nature is predicted by evolutionary trade-offs between three tasks influenced by shape: efficient swimming, the ability to detect chemical gradients, and reduced cost of cell construction. We therefore reveal shape as an important component of microbial fitness.

SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

Light-bacteria interactions

Roberto Di Leonardo
Sapienza University of Rome
Feb 2, 2021

In 1676, using candle light and a small glass sphere as the lens, van Leeuwenhoek discovered the microscopic world of living microorganisms. Today, using lasers, spatial light modulators, digital cameras and computers, we study the statistical and fluid mechanics of microswimmers in ways that were unimaginable only 50 years ago. With light we can image swimming bacteria in 3D, apply controllable force fields or sculpt their 3D environment. In addition to shaping the physical world outside cells we can use light to control the internal state of genetically modified bacteria. I will review our recent work with light-bacteria interactions, going from some fundamental problems in the fluid and statistical mechanics of microswimmers to the use of bacteria as propellers for micro-machines or as a "living" paint controlled by light.

SeminarPhysics of Life

Single molecule motion and mixtures: how do human gut bacteria recognize carbohydrates?

Julie Biteen
University of Michigan
Jan 14, 2021
SeminarNeuroscience

Bacterial Peptidoglycans from Microbiota in Neurodevelopment and Behavior

Rochellys Diaz-Heijtz
Karolinska Instiute, Stockholm, Sweden
Nov 4, 2020
SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

Heterogeneity in environment, growth, and cell size in Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Bree Aldridge
Tufts University, USA
Nov 2, 2020
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Modulation of C. elegans behavior by gut microbes

Michael O'Donnell
Yale University
Oct 25, 2020

We are interested in understanding how microbes impact the behavior of host animals. Animal nervous systems likely evolved in environments richly surrounded by microbes, yet the impact of bacteria on nervous system function has been relatively under-studied. A challenge has been to identify systems in which both host and microbe are amenable to genetic manipulation, and which enable high-throughput behavioral screening in response to defined and naturalistic conditions. To accomplish these goals, we use an animal host — the roundworm C. elegans, which feeds on bacteria — in combination with its natural gut microbiome to identify inter-organismal signals driving host-microbe interactions and decision-making. C. elegans has some of the most extensive molecular, neurobiological and genetic tools of any multicellular eukaryote, and, coupled with the ease of gnotobiotic culture in these worms, represents a highly attractive system in which to study microbial influence on host behavior. Using this system, we discovered that commensal bacterial metabolites directly modulate nervous system function of their host. Beneficial gut microbes of the genus Providencia produce the neuromodulator tyramine in the C. elegans intestine. Using a combination of behavioral analysis, neurogenetics, metabolomics and bacterial genetics we established that bacterially produced tyramine is converted to octopamine in C. elegans, which acts directly in sensory neurons to reduce odor aversion and increase sensory preference for Providencia. We think that this type of sensory modulation may increase association of C. elegans with these microbes, increasing availability of this nutrient-rich food source for the worm and its progeny, while facilitating dispersal of the bacteria.

SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

Motility-dependent pathogenicity of a spirochetal bacterium

Shuichi Nakamura
Tohoku University
Oct 13, 2020

Motility is a crucial virulence factor for many species of bacteria, but it is not fully understood how bacterial motility is practically involved in pathogenicity. This time I will give a talk on the association of motility with pathogenicity in the zoonotic spirochete bacterium Leptospira. Recently, we measured swimming force of individual leptospires using optical tweezers and found that they can generate ~30 times of the swimming force of E. coli. We also observed that leptospires increase the reversal frequency of swimming at the gel-liquid interface, resembling host dermis exposed to contaminated water (Abe et al., 2020, Sci Rep). These could be involved in percutaneous infection of the spirochete. We have shown that Leptospira not only swims in liquid but also moves over solid surfaces (Tahara et al., 2018, Sci Adv). We quantified the surface motility called “crawling” on cultured kidney tissues from various mammals, showing that pathogenic leptospires crawl over the tissue surfaces more persistently that non-pathogenic ones (Xu et al., 2020, Front Microbiol). I will discuss the spirochete motility related to pathogenicity from the biophysical viewpoint.

SeminarPhysics of Life

“DNA sensing in Bacillus subtilis”

Christopher V. Rao
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Oct 12, 2020

Chemotaxis is the process where cells move in response to external chemical gradients. It has mainly been viewed as a foraging and defense mechanism, enabling bacteria to move towards nutrients or away from toxins. We recently found that the Gram-positive bacterium Bacillus subtilis performs chemotaxis towards DNA. While DNA can serve as a nutrient for B. subtilis, our results suggest that the response is not to DNA itself but rather to the information encoded within the DNA. In particular, we found that B. subtilis prefers DNA from more closely related species. These results suggest that B. subtilis seeks out specific DNA sequences that are more abundant in its own and related chromosomes. In this talk, I will discuss the mechanism of DNA sensing and chemotaxis in B. subtilis. I will conclude by discussing the physiological significance of DNA chemotaxis with regards to natural competence and kin identification.

SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

TBC

Marco Cosentino-Lagomarsino
Marco Cosentino-Lagomarsino (IFOM Foundation / University of Milan, Italy)
Sep 21, 2020
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Neuro-immune interactions in pain and host defense

Isaac Chiu
Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA
Sep 20, 2020

The Chiu laboratory focuses on neuro-immune interactions in pain, itch, and tissue inflammation. Dr. Chiu’s research has uncovered molecular interactions between the nervous system, the immune system and microbes that modulates host defense. He has found that sensory neurons can directly detect bacterial pathogens and their toxins to produce pain. Neurons in turn release neuropeptides that modulate immune cells in host defense. These interactions occur at major tissue barriers in the body including the gut, skin and lungs. In this talk, he will discuss these major neuro-immune interactions and how understanding them could lead to novel approaches to treat pain or inflammation.

SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

Swimming in the third domain: archaeal extremophiles

Laurence Wilson
University of York
Aug 17, 2020

Archaea have evolved to survive in some of the most extreme environments on earth. Life in extreme, nutrient-poor conditions gives the opportunity to probe fundamental energy limitations on movement and response to stimuli, two essential markers of living systems. Here we use three-dimensional holographic microscopy and computer simulations to show that halophilic archaea achieve chemotaxis with power requirements one hundred-fold lower than common eubacterial model systems. Their swimming direction is stabilised by their flagella (archaella), enhancing directional persistence in a manner similar to that displayed by eubacteria, albeit with a different motility apparatus. Our experiments and simulations reveal that the cells are capable of slow but deterministic chemotaxis up a chemical gradient, in a biased random walk at the thermodynamic limit.

SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

No membrane, no problem: condensing bacterial organelles

Steph Weber
McGill University
Aug 11, 2020
SeminarPhysics of Life

Homeostatic principles of bacterial cell size control: from phenomenology to mechanistic origin

Suckjoon Jun
UCSD, USA
Aug 10, 2020
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

CRISPR-based functional genomics in iPSC-based models of brain disease

Martin Kampmann
UCSF Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics
Jul 29, 2020

Human genes associated with brain-related diseases are being discovered at an accelerating pace. A major challenge is an identification of the mechanisms through which these genes act, and of potential therapeutic strategies. To elucidate such mechanisms in human cells, we established a CRISPR-based platform for genetic screening in human iPSC-derived neurons, astrocytes and microglia. Our approach relies on CRISPR interference (CRISPRi) and CRISPR activation (CRISPRa), in which a catalytically dead version of the bacterial Cas9 protein recruits transcriptional repressors or activators, respectively, to endogenous genes to control their expression, as directed by a small guide RNA (sgRNA). Complex libraries of sgRNAs enable us to conduct genome-wide or focused loss-of-function and gain-of-function screens. Such screens uncover molecular players for phenotypes based on survival, stress resistance, fluorescent phenotypes, high-content imaging and single-cell RNA-Seq. To uncover disease mechanisms and therapeutic targets, we are conducting genetic modifier screens for disease-relevant cellular phenotypes in patient-derived neurons and glia with familial mutations and isogenic controls. In a genome-wide screen, we have uncovered genes that modulate the formation of disease-associated aggregates of tau in neurons with a tauopathy-linked mutation (MAPT V337M). CRISPRi/a can also be used to model and functionally evaluate disease-associated changes in gene expression, such as those caused by eQTLs, haploinsufficiency, or disease states of brain cells. We will discuss an application to Alzheimer’s Disease-associated genes in microglia.

SeminarPhysics of Life

Dynamics of microbiota communities during physical perturbation

Carolina Tropini
UBC – Vancouver BC – Canada
Jul 28, 2020

The consortium of microbes living in and on our bodies is intimately connected with human biology and deeply influenced by physical forces. Despite incredible gains in describing this community, and emerging knowledge of the mechanisms linking it to human health, understanding the basic physical properties and responses of this ecosystem has been comparatively neglected. Most diseases have significant physical effects on the gut; diarrhea alters osmolality, fever and cancer increase temperature, and bowel diseases affect pH. Furthermore, the gut itself is comprised of localized niches that differ significantly in their physical environment, and are inhabited by different commensal microbes. Understanding the impact of common physical factors is necessary for engineering robust microbiota members and communities; however, our knowledge of how they affect the gut ecosystem is poor. We are investigating how changes in osmolality affect the host and the microbial community and lead to mechanical shifts in the cellular environment. Osmotic perturbation is extremely prevalent in humans, caused by the use of laxatives, lactose intolerance, or celiac disease. In our studies we monitored osmotic shock to the microbiota using a comprehensive and novel approach, which combined in vivo experiments to imaging, physical measurements, computational analysis and highly controlled microfluidic experiments. By bridging several disciplines, we developed a mechanistic understanding of the processes involved in osmotic diarrhea, linking single-cell biophysical changes to large-scale community dynamics. Our results indicate that physical perturbations can profoundly and permanently change the competitive and ecological landscape of the gut, and affect the cell wall of bacteria differentially, depending on their mechanical characteristics.

SeminarPhysics of Life

Measuring transcription at a single gene copy reveals hidden drivers of bacterial individuality

Ido Golding
UIUC - Urbana-Champaign IL – USA
Jul 28, 2020

Single-cell measurements of mRNA copy numbers inform our understanding of stochastic gene expression, but these measurements coarse-grain over the individual copies of the gene, where transcription and its regulation take place stochastically. We recently combined single-molecule quantification of mRNA and gene loci to measure the transcriptional activity of an endogenous gene in individual Escherichia coli bacteria. When interpreted using a theoretical model for mRNA dynamics, the single-cell data allowed us to obtain the probabilistic rates of promoter switching, transcription initiation and elongation, mRNA release and degradation. Unexpectedly, we found that gene activity can be strongly coupled to the transcriptional state of another copy of the same gene present in the cell, and to the event of gene replication during the bacterial cell cycle. These gene-copy and cell-cycle correlations demonstrate the limits of mapping whole-cell mRNA numbers to the underlying stochastic gene activity and highlight the contribution of previously hidden variables to the observed population heterogeneity.

SeminarPhysics of Life

Interactions of antibodies and bacteria in the digestive tract

Claude Loverdo
Institut de Biologie Paris-Seine – Paris, France
Jul 28, 2020
SeminarPhysics of Life

Coordination of cell volume with biomass growth in bacteria

Sven van Teeffelen
Institut Pasteur, France
Jul 27, 2020
SeminarPhysics of Life

Bacterial cell size, scaling laws and the physicochemical properties of the cell

Christine Jacobs-Wagner
Stanford, USA
Jul 13, 2020
ePoster

Gut bacterial toxin further enhances blood-brain barrier alterations in a progressive mouse model of Parkinson’s disease

Kristina Lau, Lisa Porschen, Anna-Sophia Hartke, Christopher Käufer, Birthe Gericke, Franziska Richter

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Happy Brain – Happy Bacteria? The effect of electroconvulsive therapy on gut bacteria

Else Schneider, Yasser Morsy, Michael Scharl, Annette Brühl

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

The pro-resolving effect of new FPR2 agonist on the evoked by bacterial endotoxin changes in microglia isolated from adult APP^NL-F/NL-F mice brains

Ewa Trojan, Jakub Frydrych, Enza Lacivita, Marcello Leopoldo, Agnieszka Bast-Kaim

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Zebrafish infection model to study oral bacteria-driven neuroinflammation

Dawid Kozłowski, Magdalena Widziołek, Anna Mieszkowska, Magdalena Marcinkowska, Jan Potempa, Magdalena Chadzińska

FENS Forum 2024