**The conference is limited to 120 participants. Registration will close once we reach capacity, so we encourage early registration to secure your spot.
Don't miss registration for the M2C2-2025: Marine Microbial Chemical Communication conference! ππ’
Early-bird registration, including abstract submission, is extended until Sunday, December 8th
https://t.co/AKrkv7km24
Can we trace the #metabolic footprint of viral infection in the ocean? In our new preprint by Constanze Kuhlisch, in collaboration with @guy_schleyer and @TaraOcean_ , we mapped metabolic biomarkers for the #viral shunt across the Atlantic Ocean π https://t.co/oaC9KFhUlf
π’ Registration is now open for MβCβ 2025:
Marine Microbial Chemical Communicationββββββββββββββββββ Conference!
π¦ ππ¦ π
17-20 March 2025
NIOZ β Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research in Texel, The Netherlands π³π±
Register now:
https://t.co/AKrkv7km24
Giant viruses invade single-celled algae - vital to Earth's oxygen supply. Prof. Assaf Vardiβs team developed a new method to track algae infected by these microbial giants, with hope to better understand their impact on the ecosystem >> https://t.co/lAIOIk4HBH @VardiLab@amir_fromm
Save the date! π’
We are excited to announce M2C2-2025: Marine Microbial Chemical Communication, a conference exploring cutting-edge research on chemically mediated microbial interactions in the marine environment. The conference will take place from March 17-20, 2025, at NIOZ >>
Being on a ship and collecting samples is not everything Constanze Kuhlisch from the @WeizmannScience (former @PohnertL, now @vardilab) likes about being a marine microbiologist. Read the interview with our editor @TobiasGoris below
https://t.co/muAJbhOGVC
We are thrilled to share our latest paper, led by @amir_fromm and Gur Hevroni (@hevronig), in collaboration with the Aylward Lab, published today in @NatureMicrobiol! A thread below (1/10) π½
https://t.co/9n1Ech3Pvv
So, we started from a natural sample, went down to the individual cells, and back to the population level. We believe that this method can help pair viruses with their native host and identify co-occurring viral infections in the natural environment (9/10)