Jorge L. Contreras is a Professor of Law at the University of Utah, specialising in Intellectual Property and Technology Law . He is the author of 150+ scholarly publications, alongside praised non-fiction books including “ The Genome Defense: Inside the Epic Legal Battle to determine who owns your DNA ” (2021). This book explores the AMP vs Myriad Case , which was sparked by patents litigations on the breast cancer gene BRCA for diagnostics, and historically determined that naturally occuring g...
Nov 13, 2022•50 min
Barry Marshall is a Professor of Clinical Microbiology at the University of Western Australia. Alongside Robin Warren, he received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 2005 for first showing that Helicobacter pylori bacteria, rather than acid, were the cause of stomach ulcers . For this, Marshall did a self-experiment where he ingested H.pylori and gave himself acute gastritis, establishing a first link between the infectious agent and the development of gastric disorders. We also embark...
Oct 30, 2022•1 hr 29 min
Thomas Pradeu is a CNRS Research Director in Philosophy of Science , leading a group at the ImmunoConcept called Conceptual Biology and Medicine . His group explores conceptual aspects spanning immunology, evolutionary biology, ageing and the microbiome. We discuss: What Philosophy of Immunology is How to assess the influence of an idea Misconceptions about the immune system The usefulness of the self/non-self framework Definitions of cancer in multicellular organisms How to integrate philosophy...
Jul 28, 2022•54 min
Prof Amaury Lambert is a mathematician, leading a research group called SMILE (Stochastic Models for Inference of Life Evolution) at the Collège de France in Paris. He is also a Professor at the Ecole Normale Superieure in Paris. In this conversation, we discuss Mathematical definition of species Modelling the birth and death of species Using DNA sequences to infer common ancestors and species history Contingency in evolution Beauty in mathematics vs biology SMILE webpage: https://smile.cnrs.fr ...
Jun 09, 2022•50 min
Miles Carrol l is leading a research group on High Consequence Emerging Viruses at the University of Oxford, and has previously worked at Oxford Biomedica and as head of research at Public Health England (PHE). This episode focuses on emerging viruses , which are viruses like coronaviruses and Ebola virus that have rising incidence or are increasing in distribution. We discuss: What makes an emerging virus successful Fieldwork during the West African Ebola outbreak (2013-2016) Using Nanopore seq...
May 09, 2022•53 min
Dr Minmin Yen (PhD) is the co-founder and CEO of PhagePro, an early stage bio-tech company spun out of the Camilli lab at Tufts University developing bacteriophage prophylactics against cholera, a diarrhoeal disease caused by Vibrio cholerae. Minimin Yen has been recognised by the MIT's Tech Review as 35 innovators under 35 for her work bridging biological engineering and public health. In this conversation we discuss: The evidence that bacteriophages play a role in cholera epidemics The strateg...
Mar 03, 2022•43 min
Prof. Mihai Netea is Head of the Division of Experimental Medicine at Radboud University (Netherlands) and group leader associated with the LIMES Institute in Bonn (Germany). He was the first to describe trained immunity, the ability of the innate immune system to display enhanced responsiveness to secondary stimuli. His group has studied the epigenetic modifications and metabolic reprogramming in trained immunity, especially in the context of BCG vaccination. We discuss: Challenging dogma in im...
Dec 08, 2021•38 min
Sir Andrew McMichael is a Professor of Immunology at the University of Oxford and previously Director of the Weatherall Institute of Molecular Medicine. He is a fellow of the Royal Society and Academy of Medical Sciences and has been a leader in human immunology for decades, notably focusing on responses to viral infections including influenza and HIV. We discuss: Prof McMichael's career in immunology spanning from his work in the 1980s on HLA restriction and recognition of viral peptides to the...
Nov 25, 2021•51 min
Sarah Fortune is a Professor of Immunology and Infectious Diseases at the Harvard T.H Chan School of Public Health and Director of the TB Research Program at the Ragon Institute of MGH, Harvard and MIT. We discuss her research into the interactions between Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), the causative agent of tuberculosis (TB) and its human hosts. Specifically, we explore some approaches to explain the variability in infection and treatment outcomes , as Mtb infection remains asymptomatic in ...
Oct 27, 2021•38 min
This episode explores the contributions of theoretical physics to understanding biological evolution and self-assembly. Ard Louis is a Professor of Theoretical Physics at the University of Oxford and leads a group that uses computational tools to answer fundamental questions about the emergence and evolution of protein and RNA structures and gene regulatory networks. An attractive proposal developed in his recent work is that there is a bias towards simplicity in biological outputs, using the fo...
Oct 04, 2021•1 hr 1 min
This episode focuses on ancient parasites as a glimpse into the life of past populations. With the help of modern genomics and bio-informatics , the study of parasite samples from archaeological sites can reveal patterns about sanitation, mobility, diet and other cultural aspects of past societies. Dr. Patrik Flammer , a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Oxford, speaks about a collaborative project sampling intestinal helminths ( a type of parasitic worm), from medieval graveyard site...
Sep 27, 2021•42 min
Dr. David Bikard is pioneering the use of CRISPR-Cas genetic systems re-programmed to target specific pathogenic or antibiotic resistant bacteria. This feat of ultra-precise genetic engineering represents a big shift from current approaches using broadly acting antibiotics that favour the spread of resistance and disturb the microbiome. David Bikard is the head of the Synthetic Biology Lab at the Institut Pasteur and also founded Eligo Biosciences, a biotech that is pushing for the translation o...
Sep 13, 2021•51 min
Tumours are not just self sustained masses of proliferating cancer cells! Tumours are cloaked in a "micro-environment" of immune cells like macrophages and neutrophils and even bacteria, as tumours also have their distinct microbiome, which plays a key role in shaping the outcomes of cancer. Matteo Massara, a post-doctoral research at the University of Lausanne (UNIL, Switzerland) studies the complexity of the immune micro-environment of tumours. In this episode, we discuss: how tumour inflammat...
Aug 06, 2021•35 min
Ellyn Ogden has been leading the polio eradication campaign for USAID for over 20 years and shares some powerful stories that shed light on the challenges that have surfaced along the way. From addressing vaccine hesitancy in different cultural settings, to negotiating cease fires with rebel groups in the Democratic Republic of Congo and responding to the issue of OPV vaccines reverting back to virulence, the road to polio eradication has not been smooth. In 1998, polio was actively circulating ...
Jul 25, 2021•50 min
Anna Dumitriu is an internationally renowned Bio-Artist who has pioneered artistic creations threading the fields of microbiology and infectious diseases, synthetic biology as well as artificial life and intelligence. On this special episode, we explore her conception of the "sublime" in the bacterial world, bacteria as vessels of poetry and beauty, symbiosis in the living world and whether we should anthropomorphise biology ( with detours via the history of antibiotics, neural networks and what...
Jul 09, 2021•59 min
Dr Pascale Guiton , an Assistant Professor at California State University, tells us about the fascinating biology of Toxoplasma gondii , a widely spread protozoan parasite that infects most warm blooded mammals and can cause severe disease in foetuses and immunocompromised hosts. We discuss how Toxoplasma gondii can modulate the behaviour of its hosts, why its sexual reproduction cycle only occurs in felines, the inflammatory response it elicits and its complex mechanisms of genome regulation. A...
Jul 02, 2021•39 min
Louisa Iselin, a PhD Student at the University of Oxford, speaks about her fundamental research on viral RNA structures and how they interact with host RNA binding proteins. RNA is not just a "squiggly line", like textbook diagrams could lead us to believe, but adopts higher order secondary structures that influence key steps in viral pathogenesis, including sensing by the innate immune system. This episode explores the association of distinctive RNA structures with persistence of viruses in the...
Jun 22, 2021•37 min
Shuailin Li, a PhD Student at the Jenner Institute in the group of Prof Helen McShane, studies the link between cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection and M.tuberculosis infection or tuberculosis(TB) disease. Infections rarely, if ever, happen in isolation: humans are infected with 10 chronic viruses on average and this imprint shapes our response to other pathogens. On this episode, find out how data from a vaccine study cohort uncovered a detrimental association between CMV infection and TB, the like...
Jun 10, 2021•20 min
Holly Everest, a DPhil Student working at the Pirbright Institute and previously a researcher at the Animal&Plant Health Agency, speaks about her research on avian influenza viruses. This episode explores the limitations of vaccines and antivirals to treat avian influenza, how epidemiological surveillance is conducted, how to predict whether avian influenza viruses are of pandemic concern and generally how influenza viruses are good at what they do.......
Jun 02, 2021•38 min
Nicola Wade, a 3rd year PhD student at Leiden University, shares her research on using the tools of chemistry to optimise antibiotic compounds and combat antibiotic resistance. This episode includes discussion on developing novel beta-lactamase inhibitors, challenges of developing narrow-spectrum antibiotics and the importance of science communication around antibiotic resistance. *** Music: "Fossiles" from the Carnival of the Animals (Saint Saëns). Recording by Seattle Youth Symphony, used unde...
May 15, 2021•31 min
This episode covers how RNA binding proteins can be targeted to antagonise viral infection, the challenges of host-directed therapies against HIV and promising future directions in the field of HIV/AIDS. Kate Dicker, a PhD student in Infection, Immunology and Translational Medicine at the University of Oxford, shares her research. *** Music: "Fossiles" from the Carnival of the Animals (Saint Saëns). Recording by Seattle Youth Symphony, used under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Ge...
May 09, 2021•21 min
This episode explores how genomics can be used to study ancient viruses, how viruses have provided benefits to their hosts over the course of evolution and how knowledge of virus evolution could have applications in genetic engineering and pandemic preparedness. I interview José Gabriel Niño Barreat, a DPhil candidate in Zoology at the University of Oxford. *** Music: "Fossiles" from the Carnival of the Animals (Saint Saëns). Recording by Seattle Youth Symphony, used under a Creative Commons Att...
May 02, 2021•37 min