So proud of everyone for representing our lab and research with posters, talks, and networking!
We all arrived safely in Glasgow for the 24th C. elegans Meeting in Glasgow!
We have 6 undergraduates graduating this semester! Congratulations to Cece, Kayla, Makaela, Meena, Nathan, and Sandra the Class of 2023!!!
We went bowling with the House lab and also played a little ping pong. Thanks to Omar for organizing this.
We found phage that can infect microbiome bacteria in C. elegans. Thanks to Hamza Hajama from Anca Segall’s lab!!!
We are hunting for phage that can infect C. elegans microbiome bacteria around campus. The first pass plasmid is to go to areas where we normally find wild C. elegans to look for bacteriophage.
We had our first outreach for the Host-Bacteria Interactions Workshop! Undergrads Venus, Aaliyah, and Amanda presented their findings to juniors at High Tech High Mesa.
Super proud for all of our student presentations at the student research symposium!
Super proud for all of our student presentations at the student research symposium! Congratulations to Ila for winning the President’s Award for Best Biology Presentation!!!
We’re at it again. Looking for wild C.elegans and their associated bacteria. This is our second time sampling with the Host-Bacteria Interactions Workshop students.
Dalaena Rivera works with a videographer from JOVE to shoot our protocol describing how to conduct FISH for microbiome bacteria in C. elegans animals.
This is part of a collection of JOVE protocols on Methods for microbiome research in Caenorhabditis elegans
Congratulations to the Shikuma lab and our lab for receiving NIH MIRA grants! We’ve been having our Worm Rodeo joint lab meeting for years and its awesome/crazy to be funded by the same grant mechanisms at the same time.
Congratulations to Emily Morgan for graduating from SDSU with her BS in Biology!!!
Congratulations to the lab for receiving an NSF CAREER grant! We are celebrating with champagne and banh mi! That’s our third cork to be added the lab accomplishment shrine.
Undergraduate Emily Morgan give a talk on her research at the SDSU Student Research Symposium. Great job Emily, and good job answering all those questions!
Congratulations Tuan for your Nature Comms paper!
Paper here: Bacterial filamentation as mechanism for cell-to-cell spread within an animal host
News items here:
Thread spread - A never-before-seen way bacteria infect cells
Scientists Discover A Novel Way That Bacteria Infect Cells
Behind the Paper article at Nature Portfolio: