北京大学定量生物学中心
学术报告
题 目: Using single cell tools to understand how cellular communities are organized
报告人: Dr. Adam Rosenthal
Senior Principal Investigator,Project leader (Human Microbiome Initiative),DuPont, Wilmington Delaware,
时 间: 11月9日(周一)9:00-10:00
地 点: Online (Zoom会议)
会议 ID:627 9242 4126
https://zoom.com.cn/j/62792424126
主持人: Lucas Carey
摘 要:
Microbial
communities are made up of interacting individuals that have distinct
ecological niches. As far back as early microscopy, specialization has
been observed not only in multi-species microbial communities, but also
in the structure of genetically clonal microbial isolates. However, due
to experimental limitations the physiological function of each cell-type
and the coordinated interactions between different bacterial cell-types
within these complex structures has remained largely unknown. In recent
years, interest in understanding the organization of microbial
communities, including clonal populations has resurfaced. In this
seminar, I will present recent works in which single-cell tools were
used to discover the physiological role of different bacterial players
in a clonal population of Bacillus subtilis. Interestingly, we find that
even in a clonal population of bacteria different cell-types not only
co-exist, but coordinate their metabolism for the greater good of the
community. Understanding the way in which this coordination is
regulated, and the properties that are conserved across different
biological systems, may explain important features of infectious disease
including the expression of virulence genes and antibiotic persistence.
In addition, these findings may offer insights into how cellular
differentiation and homeostasis are regulated in multi-cellular
organisms..
报告人简介:
Dr. Adam Rosenthal
was raised in a Kibbutz in southern Israel, where an early exposure to
farming and nature shaped his curiosity of biological systems. He got
his bachelor and master degree in biology. His PhD studies, in Jay
Gralla’s lab (UCLA), explored the mechanisms by which bacteria adapt to
stresses in the mammalian digestive tract. After graduating, motivated
to understand microbial cell-cell interactions in complex settings, he
studied the mutually beneficial symbiosis between termites and their
hindgut bacteria, and the inner-workings of microbial communities in
Jared Leadbetter’s and Michael Elowitz's labs in Caltech. He have since
been applying the tools and approaches he learned in his PhD and
Postdocs to industrial setting, first as a group leader at Calico
(Google's startup focused on aging) and currently as a Team Leader at
DuPont.