Please RT: I'm looking for an awesome postdoc to come and help us define how exposure to environmental pollutants disrupts the gut microbiome's contribution to behavioral development.
Learn more at https://t.co/jIW6fkeo8T or contact me with questions.
@tjsharpton What a coincidence! Let me give you the view from the opposite coast: sitting in my office at 9 pm, struggling with a complicated microbiome analysis problem & thinking who would be a great person to consult with or to have them take a look at the solution; let’s poke @tjsharpton
Thanks, everyone. It is by the support of this extremely kind community that we survive day to day. There are so many people who helped us here, from ones who helped us get samples when we couldn’t travel, to others who allowed us to use their enabling equipment. 1 M thanks.
Sponges, the oldest living animals, dedicate one of the few types of specialized cells they harbor towards housing intracellular symbionts for the production of complex defense chemicals, which is pretty much all these symbionts do.
Tianero et al.: Marine sponges retain symbionts that produce the defense chemical renieramycin in specialized reservoirs (chemobacteriocytes): https://t.co/Qggf3VzAyc
If you are interested in learning more about our recent study in marine sponges, please check out this piece by Dai Tianero, the amazing post doc who led this work: Cellular reservoirs of defensive symbionts in sponges https://t.co/yMczic6ry2 #behindthepaper
I am asking this genuinely. What is the best use of Twitter for the scientific community: 1. learn about other work in your field, 2. publicize your own work, travel, paper, or grant, 3. voice your opinion about scientific or other issues, 4. share usually untold experiences?
@ajlinklab@Princeton @BrianOBachmann Thanks @BrianOBachmann for an inspirational talk today — I wish we could all be as brave as you are in jumping into these uncharted territories!
@BrianOBachmann Looking forward to having you here @BrianOBachmann, and to learning more about the awesome NP science coming out of your lab. I hope you will enjoy the snow storm!
Very grateful to have worked with an amazing team of scientists on this project throughout the last 3.5 years: 6 people from 6 countries! I am also very thankful to the continuous support of remarkable colleagues at @Princeton & mentors throughout the journey of a #YoungPI 6/6
Here we go world, our first @donia_lab preprint and manuscript to hit the web: @biorxivpreprint@biorxiv_micrbio "Systematic mapping of drug metabolism by the human gut microbiome" https://t.co/nAY7Y6KxIl -- more details in this thread 1/6
We hope that our systematic screen will be a resource for the @US_FDA, a starting point for many follow-up investigations, and a motivation for including microbiome studies in future drug development. 5/6