Deadline approaching:
Submit an abstract until 12th of May to present at the UK Cellular Microbiology Meeting 2026! Great opportunity for early career researchers!
www.ukcellmicro.org
The 2026 UK Cellular Microbiology Network Meeting is approaching fast!
Submit an abstract until May, 12th and join us June, 22nd/23rd in Belfast!
Exiting keynote speakers and opportunities for early career researchers from the UK, Ireland and beyond to share their work.
www.ukcellmicro.org
shocking statistics, but only limited public outcry.. We should be more vocal about this
tb.impactcounter.com
Only a couple of days left to register for the UK Cellular Microbiology Network Meeting - we will have a great line up of speakers and poster presenters investigating various pathogens in cell-based, tissue and in vivo models.
Oh wow, amazing: "Discovery and identification of a handwritten laboratory notebook by Albert Calmette and Camille Guérin describing experimental studies and development of the BCG vaccine for tuberculosis at the Institut Pasteur" doi.org/10.1016/j.tu...
This is cool - ‘Descent from a common ancestor restricts exploration of protein sequence space’ - www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/... & a great commentary piece too- ‘Maynard Smith’s analogy, realized: Common ancestry constrains evolutionary percolation through protein space’ www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/...
Become a citizen scientist and help map red and grey squirrels and pine martens across Ireland.
Submit your sighting to the All-Ireland Squirrel and Pine Marten Survey:
ROI: tinyurl.com/276jjna2
NI: tinyurl.com/2s4c2cc6
#NVWIreland
Led by @uniofgalway.bsky.social @ulsterwildlife.bsky.social VWT
‼️ A really good meeting for people working on host-pathogen interactions! Great keynote speakers this year: Raphael Valdivia and Florence Niedergang. Please repost!
UK Cellular Microbiology
UK Cellular Microbiology
Gunnar N. Schroeder
Wilbert Bitter
Stephen Gordon
Really important and relevant study in TB from @danbarberphd.bsky.social and colleagues. We need to re-think many assumptions. Nitric oxide production in mice has been a confounding factor. #tuberculosis
Interested in the societal & scientific dynamics shaping microbial #conservation, #assetization & #biodiversity research? Then these back-to-back articles with Fred Vagneron on microbial culture collections in JHB's new Microbes & Health collection are for you!
link.springer.com/collections/... 1/3
Registration and abstract submission for the 2026 UK CellularMicrobiologyNetwork Meeting are now open!
Exiting keynote speakers and opportunity for researchers from the UK, Ireland and beyond to share their work on host-pathogen interactions.
June 22nd/23rd @WWIEM in Belfast.
www.ukcellmicro.org
Paul Hoskisson 🧫 🦠🐸
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), a peer reviewed journal of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) - an authoritative source of high-impact, original research that broadly spans...
Registration and abstract submission for the 2026 UK CellularMicrobiologyNetwork Meeting are now open!
Exiting keynote speakers and opportunity for researchers from the UK, Ireland and beyond to share their work on host-pathogen interactions.
June 22nd/23rd @WWIEM in Belfast.
www.ukcellmicro.org
Registration and abstract submission for the 2026 UK CellularMicrobiologyNetwork Meeting are now open!
Exiting keynote speakers and opportunity for researchers from the UK, Ireland and beyond to share their work on host-pathogen interactions.
June 22nd/23rd @WWIEM in Belfast.
www.ukcellmicro.org
UK Cellular Microbiology
UK Cellular Microbiology
The past century has seen an extraordinary shift in the perception of microbes, both within biomedical science and in the broader culture, from deadly enemies ...
So we blocked IFNγ in Mtb infected macaques and….the animals were fine. Turns out mice overestimate the importance of IFNγ in TB because IFNγ drives iNOS in mice but not macaques or humans. This means we don’t actually know how T cells suppress Mtb. rdcu.be/ff9GB #tuberculosis #immunology
Nature Communications - Here, the authors show that IFNγ blockade does not impair resistance to Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection in macaques, opposed to what has been observed in mice, due...