microbe talk: march 2016
posted on march 24, 2016 by benjamin thompson
this week has seen the society decamp to liverpool for our annual conference 2016. it’s been a fantastic event with over 1,400 delegates in attendance and more than 300 scientific presentations and posters. for this month’s edition of microbe talk, anand and i got to speak to a few researchers about the work they were presenting at the conference.
this week has seen the society decamp to liverpool for our annual conference 2016. it’s been a fantastic event with over 1,400 delegates in attendance and more than 300 scientific presentations and posters. for this month’s edition of microbe talk, anand and i got to speak to a few researchers about the work they were presenting at the conference.
up first is dr lucy gilbert from the james hutton institute, who told anand about her work investigating how climate change will affect tick distribution and disease risk.
next up is an excerpt from an on-stage interview i did with professor philippe sansonetti, this year’s prize medal winner. philippe has had a long and distinguished career, and has published hundreds of research papers. i asked him to describe a key experiment that stood out to him throughout his work.
finally in this month’s edition of the podcast, i spoke with professor george weinstock, one of the first researchers to use genomic sequencing to better understand microbial processes. we talked about the early days of modern dna technology, and the direction that current microbiome research is taking.
don’t forget, you can subscribe to microbe talk on itunes. you can also find us on soundcloud and stitcher.