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Author: Jennifer Tsang

Red Serratia Marcescens colonies on an agar plate

Secret Serratia: Then and Now

Posted on December 19, 2018July 3, 2022 by Jennifer Tsang

If you’re a microbiologist, the acronym HGT may have you thinking about horizontal gene transfer, the transfer of genes between microbes. But during the months of November and December, HGT takes on a different meaning: holiday gift transfer. As part of the annual #SecretSerratia holiday gift exchange, pairs of microbiologists exchange gifts, usually science and…

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Move over flu season, there’s an entire epidemic calendar

Posted on November 24, 2018July 3, 2022 by Jennifer Tsang

Flu season is upon us, but there are actually “seasons” for many other infectious diseases. Chickenpox outbreaks peak each spring and polio transmission historically occurred in the summer. In fact, at least 69 infectious diseases vary seasonally. Micaela Elvira Martinez, assistant professor in the Department of Environmental Health Sciences at Columbia University, found this out…

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The double-edged sword called oxygen

Posted on November 2, 2018May 9, 2021 by Jennifer Tsang

By Ananya Sen If you were to enter a time machine and go back to about 3.8 billion years ago, what would you find? Volcanoes spewing carbon dioxide, hydrogen, and methane into the atmosphere, some water, and no oxygen, which means that you would be dead in about six minutes. So how did humans, who…

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Are we more bacteria than human? That depends when you last pooped

Posted on October 11, 2018July 3, 2022 by Jennifer Tsang

For decades, the notion that bacteria living on our bodies outnumbered human cells 10 to 1 was popular among microbiologists and the public. Turns out, this estimation is wrong. In 2016, Ron Sender, Shai Fuchs, and Ron Milo from the Weizmann Institute examined the origins of this estimation and found that the ratio is actually…

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Meet Carsonella ruddii, a Microbe so Small That Might Not Even Be a Microbe

Posted on September 13, 2018July 3, 2022 by Jennifer Tsang

In 2006, Carsonella ruddii was reported as the smallest of the small: this microbe contains the smallest genome identified at the time, clocking in at 159,662 base pairs encoding 182 genes. The Escherichia coli genome on the other hand contains over 4 million base pairs encoding about 4,000 genes. Unlike E. coli, Carsonella ruddii is…

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