Microbiology and Immunology News | Grad News Forum

  Chelsea Boyd of the O’Toole lab won the best poster at this year’s Graduate Student Poster Session, and Crissy Megli of the Taylor lab won the John Collier award for one of the top student posters at the Microbial Toxins and Pathogenicity Gordon... Representing the Hogan lab, Diana Morales won a Best Poster Award at the Microbial Stress Response Gordon Conference, Amy Piispanen received an ASM Conference Travel Award, and Angelyca Jackson was appointed to the Epithelial Cell Training Grant,...   From the Berwin lab, Rustin Lovewell was an invited speaker at the New York Immunology Conference, and Kevin Hart won ‘Best Poster’ at the Vermont Cancer Center Clinical and Translational Research Symposium.   Several members of the Microbiology and Immunology Department are also participating in a nanotechnology grant award aimed at cancer therapeutics, and which represents a collaborative effort between Dartmouth Medical School, the Norris Cotton... The students of the Microbiology and Immunology Program have had a remarkably successful year, receiving a variety of awards and recognition.   On a more light-hearted note, Jay Baird of the Fiering lab won the First Annual Pumpkin Carving Contest that was organized by the Lieb lab.   Mike Molloy from the Usherwood lab won a Copenhaver Fellowship, which recognizes outstanding senior graduate students, and Yolanda Nesbeth was a Kauffman Fellow Finalist. Ron Taylor is the director of a recently awarded INBRE grant from the NIH, whose central goal is to develop interactions among the various colleges in NH and to provide students at those colleges research experience. Deb Hogan and Brent Berwin were promoted to Associate Professor, and Dr. George O’Toole was promoted to Full Professor. David Leib and Bruce Stanton also joined the Microbiology and Immunology Department. We had several students graduate this year: Carla Cugini (Deborah Hogan’s lab). In other news, there were several faculty promotions. Yolanda Nesbeth was also named the Class Day graduate student speaker. Raquel Martinez (Taylor lab).   Both are senior faculty with a wealth of research experience. As only approximately 30 such fellows are chosen globally each year, being named a finalist is a huge honor. The success of our students on a local and national level speaks volumes, and we extend our congratulations and thank them for their hard work. by George O’Toole.

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Oral bacterium that may cause heart disease and meningitis identified

Washington, Feb 22 (ANI): Researchers have identified a novel bacterium, thought to be a common inhabitant of the oral cavity, which has the potential to cause serious disease if it enters the bloodstream.

 

The finding will allow scientists to work out how it causes disease and evaluate the risk that it poses.

 

The bacterium was identified by researchers at the Institute of Medical Microbiology of the University of Zurich and has been named Streptococcus tigurinus after the region of Zurich where it was first recognised.

 

S. tigurinus was isolated from blood of patients suffering from endocarditis, meningitis and spondylodiscitis (inflammation of the spine). It bears a close resemblance to other Streptococcus strains that colonise the mouth. Bleeding gums represent a possible route of entry for oral bacteria into the bloodstream.

 

The similarity of S. tigurinus to other related bacteria has meant that it has existed up until now without being identified.

I need to write a paper for microbiology on a current topic in the news. I don't want to use the E. coli story

Subject must have appeared in the news no earlier than 9/20/2006


Not sure of your location or if it matters; this is a good page from the UK with lots of ideas
(Until I looked at this I hadn't heard about the spinach - thanks!)
http://www.sgm.ac.uk/news/


Go to Google news. Search microbiology. They have a lot of great topics there.

Is today's Republican Party anything like the party of Abe Lincoln?

I'm not into politics that much, I'm a microbiology major, but I was watching the news the other day and someone called the Democratic Party "the party of plantation owners"

While this is perhaps historically true, I find it incredibly


All the old racist democrats are now republicans. They are the party of racism now. That's what "states rights" means. It's a code word against civil rights.



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