Lab Rat

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The idea of the blog was to provide accurate and interesting information and reflections on science from somebody currently in the field.

Lab Rat
88 posts

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  • June 3, 2010
  • 02:58 PM
  • 2,921 views

Antibiotics and Synthetic Biology

by Lab Rat in Lab Rat

The model for bacterial death by antibiotics was fairly simply until recently. Antibiotics work by targeting a certain area of the bacteria; beta-lactams target the cell wall, Rifamycins target RNA synthesis, tetracyclins inhibit protein synthesis etc. The theory was that by inhibiting these processes, a certain vital function within the bacteria would be stopped, leading to its death.However due to research done by Kohanski (references below) the story is looking a bit more complicated. Looking........ Read more »

Kohanski MA, Dwyer DJ, Hayete B, Lawrence CA, & Collins JJ. (2007) A common mechanism of cellular death induced by bactericidal antibiotics. Cell, 130(5), 797-810. PMID: 17803904  

Kohanski MA, Dwyer DJ, & Collins JJ. (2010) How antibiotics kill bacteria: from targets to networks. Nature reviews. Microbiology, 8(6), 423-35. PMID: 20440275  

  • September 28, 2009
  • 04:44 PM
  • 984 views

Bacterial Hunting Strategies

by Lab Rat in Lab Rat

Methods of bacterial predation, including a short exploration of the 'hunting' behaviour seen in Myxococcus xanthus.... Read more »

Berleman JE, & Kirby JR. (2009) Deciphering the hunting strategy of a bacterial wolfpack. FEMS microbiology reviews, 33(5), 942-57. PMID: 19519767  

  • November 16, 2010
  • 02:47 PM
  • 927 views

Storing DNA

by Lab Rat in Lab Rat

DNA is one of the most important components of the cell. In eukaryote cells (i.e the cells of humans and plants) it is stored inside a nucleus that keeps it safe and away from dangerous things like free radicals produced by the metabolic reactions of the cell. In bacterial cells the DNA isn't nearly as well protected, but the main bulk of the bacterial chromosome (excluding the little floating plasmids) is all kept together in a bundle usually referred to as a nucleoid. However the DNA in cells ........ Read more »

  • March 1, 2011
  • 06:04 AM
  • 926 views

Signals for Infection

by Lab Rat in Lab Rat

Neisseria meningitidis is a bacteria which lives in the throats of around 30% of the human population. In most cases it causes no problems at all and just exists as a normal part of the throat microbial flora. In some patients however it can start to colonise the bloodstream and brain, leading to cases of septicemia and meningitis which are highly dangerous and can be fatal.The invasion starts with individual bacteria, which adhere to the epithelial cells that cover the inside of the throat. Th........ Read more »

Chamot-Rooke J, Mikaty G, Malosse C, Soyer M, Dumont A, Gault J, Imhaus AF, Martin P, Trellet M, Clary G.... (2011) Posttranslational modification of pili upon cell contact triggers N. meningitidis dissemination. Science (New York, N.Y.), 331(6018), 778-82. PMID: 21311024  

  • September 14, 2009
  • 12:48 AM
  • 924 views

Living without a cell wall...

by Lab Rat in Lab Rat

Exploring work done on L-form baacilis subtilis (without cell walls) and how this provides clues to how early life might have grown and propagated.... Read more »

Leaver, M., Domínguez-Cuevas, P., Coxhead, J., Daniel, R., & Errington, J. (2009) Life without a wall or division machine in Bacillus subtilis. Nature, 460(7254), 538-538. DOI: 10.1038/nature08232  

Zhu TF, & Szostak JW. (2009) Coupled Growth and Division of Model Protocell Membranes. Journal of the American Chemical Society. PMID: 19323552  

  • April 22, 2011
  • 05:30 AM
  • 910 views

Life at zero growth rate - SGM series

by Lab Rat in Lab Rat

This is the third post in my latest SGM series.One of the first topics that I learnt in Biology was that there are two types of things; living things, and dead things. Living things are given a whole host of distinguishing characteristics (growth, reproduction and, my favourite, irritability) where as dead things are defined as everything else. Biology was usually defined as the study of living things.As I grew older, I found that there were many complications to this neat little classification......... Read more »

  • February 21, 2011
  • 01:33 PM
  • 882 views

Multicellular signalling

by Lab Rat in Lab Rat

I like studying bacteria. I find them fascinating, wonderful little creatures, able to do as much (and often more!) with a single cell as other organisms need whole multicellular bodies to achieve. I like exploring the places bacteria live, the things they can do, the ways they manage to exploit practically every niche on earth, and of course most importantly how I can exploit them.But not everyone loves bacteria, and at heart I am a biochemist which means, among other things, that I get to teac........ Read more »

Rajagopal S, Rajagopal K, & Lefkowitz RJ. (2010) Teaching old receptors new tricks: biasing seven-transmembrane receptors. Nature reviews. Drug discovery, 9(5), 373-86. PMID: 20431569  

  • August 17, 2010
  • 05:01 PM
  • 872 views

Hitchhiking through the nervous system

by Lab Rat in Lab Rat

I while ago I wrote a post about how virus's get from the outside of the cell to the interior of the nucleus and found that virus particles are able to hitchhike on the cells internal transport systems. I was quite interested therefore to find a paper in Nature Reviews (reference below) that revealed that not only do virus's latch on to host proteins to travel around inside the cell, they also use host extracellular processes for travelling around the body. And outside the cell it's not just vir........ Read more »

  • July 17, 2010
  • 02:53 PM
  • 855 views

How viruses hijack cellular transport systems

by Lab Rat in Lab Rat

Even in the world of the very small, there are significant differences in size. A eukaryote cell (i.e a human cell) for example is relatively big, in microscopic terms. Most other things that interact with the cell at the microscopic level, are far smaller than it, such as bateria, viruses and signalling molecules.A virus isn't much more than a small capsule of proteins with a little bit of DNA inside. Once it gets inside a eukaryote cell, it's very much in the position of a small child wanderin........ Read more »

Kerstin Radtke, Daniela Kieneke, André Wolfstein, Kathrin Michael, Walter Steffen, Tim Scholz, Axel Karger, Beate Sodeik. (2010) Plus- and Minus-End Directed Microtubule Motors Bind Simultaneously to Herpes Simplex Virus Capsids Using Different Inner Tegument Structures. PLoS Patholgens, 6(7). info:/e1000991

  • August 20, 2009
  • 04:45 AM
  • 834 views

Cell wall under attack - bacterial response to antibiotics

by Lab Rat in Lab Rat

The response of Strep. ceolicolor to cell-wall attacking antibiotics.... Read more »

  • April 27, 2011
  • 12:04 PM
  • 825 views

Social Evolution in Bacteria - SGM series

by Lab Rat in Lab Rat

This is the fourth post in my latest SGM series.


The social behaviour of bacteria is something that I get very excited about. From the wolf-pack hunting strategies of Myxococcus xanthus to the terminal differentiation of cyanobacteria, it's something that I never get tired of writing about. As well as providing interesting quirks of bacterial behaviour, living within a colony also gives new scope for exploring the evolution of bacteria; not just as single entities but as a fully functioning so........ Read more »

Sandoz, K., Mitzimberg, S., & Schuster, M. (2007) From the Cover: Social cheating in Pseudomonas aeruginosa quorum sensing. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 104(40), 15876-15881. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0705653104  

Paterson S, Vogwill T, Buckling A, Benmayor R, Spiers AJ, Thomson NR, Quail M, Smith F, Walker D, Libberton B.... (2010) Antagonistic coevolution accelerates molecular evolution. Nature, 464(7286), 275-8. PMID: 20182425  

  • August 31, 2010
  • 02:09 PM
  • 810 views

Getting OMPs to the membrane - SGM series

by Lab Rat in Lab Rat

This is the first post of my SGM conference series: I'm going to try and write about seven topics from the Society for General Microbiology September conference over the course of two weeks. The first topic I'm looking at is Protein Folding and Misfolding which consisted of thirteen presentations covering various aspects of protein folding in bacteria, fungi and yeast. As a quick background: when proteins are synthesized they are constructed as long chains of amino-acids which then need to fold........ Read more »

Johnson, A., & Jensen, R. (2004) Barreling through the membrane. Nature Structural , 11(2), 113-114. DOI: 10.1038/nsmb0204-113  

  • September 30, 2009
  • 10:09 AM
  • 804 views

Bacteria that use antibiotics...for food!

by Lab Rat in Lab Rat

Antibiotic resistance is by now a well-known phenomenon. Resistance is carried in both antibiotic producing bacteria to protect themselves from their own weaponry, and the soil bacteria they attack, in an attempt to defend themselves. The sudden influx of pharmaceutical antibiotics has encouraged the spread of resistance to human pathogenic strains, leading to the so-called 'superbugs' seen in the media such as MRSA and vancomycin-resistant C. difficile.However researchers at Harvard found that ........ Read more »

Dantas, G., Sommer, M., Oluwasegun, R., & Church, G. (2008) Bacteria Subsisting on Antibiotics. Science, 320(5872), 100-103. DOI: 10.1126/science.1155157  

  • June 14, 2010
  • 04:29 PM
  • 802 views

Colony behaviour and metatranscriptomics

by Lab Rat in Lab Rat

Most places which contain bacteria tend to contain lots of them. In the environment (i.e outside human bodies) bacteria often live in large colonies which can make it difficult to explore their reactions to changing conditions. In the lab, with just one bacteria, information about responses can be obtained by transcriptomics; looking at how the transcriptome changes as the environment does.The transcriptome is the set of all the mRNA within the cell. Unlike the genome, which is the all DNA prese........ Read more »

  • March 1, 2010
  • 11:00 AM
  • 782 views

Evolving Molecular Machines: The Plant Edition

by Lab Rat in Lab Rat

Over at Thoughtomics, Lucas has a post up about the evolution of mitochondrial import systems. He starts by going back in time two billion years:"Life was well underway at the time, with proto-bacteria already populating the oceans for over hundreds of millions of years. One of the cells alive at the time, swallowed an alpha-proteobacterium. Something remarkable happened: the alpha-proteobacterium did not die but survived in the host cell. Over time, the host and symbiont became to be dependent ........ Read more »

  • July 12, 2010
  • 11:32 AM
  • 772 views

Programming bacteria for search and destroy

by Lab Rat in Lab Rat

As iGEM season is now properly underway, I thought I'd have a look at a synthetic biology paper and found this fairly awesome one about programming bacteria to hunt out and destroy atrazine, a chemical herbicide pollutant. One of the most exciting things about this work was that it didn't just involve bacteria with the ability to remove atrazine from the environment but to actively migrate towards the chemical and then destroy it.The chemical structure of atrazineThe bacteria are controlled usin........ Read more »

Sinha J, Reyes SJ, & Gallivan JP. (2010) Reprogramming bacteria to seek and destroy an herbicide. Nature chemical biology, 6(6), 464-70. PMID: 20453864  

  • October 18, 2009
  • 12:44 PM
  • 757 views

Protists and their plastids

by Lab Rat in Lab Rat

A quick skim through this blog reveals fairly quickly that I have a slight fixation on bacteria. I like to research them, read about them, and then blog about them, most specifically about their cell walls. However life contains more than just bacteria, and occasionally, strange though it might seem, people write papers about such non-bacterial things, and they end up on my desk with a small post-it attached reminding me that I have a presentation for my supervision group coming up.So for the sa........ Read more »

  • November 28, 2010
  • 06:38 AM
  • 754 views

Bacterial comet tails

by Lab Rat in Lab Rat

I haven't worked very much with bacteria that infect humans. Most of my lab work has been done in the fields of either synthetic biology (which works with model organisms) or antibiotic production, which works on soil bacteria that produce the antibiotics. Human bacterial parasites therefore hold the fascination of the slightly exotic, not least because they sometimes do things like this:Figure from"Molecular Biology of the Cell, Fourth Edition"by Alberts et al.I've written before about some of ........ Read more »

  • October 28, 2010
  • 08:32 AM
  • 752 views

Bacterial cell division and membrane potential

by Lab Rat in Lab Rat

Bacterial cell division is usually quite a regular business. As I mentioned previously, not all bacteria use the regular FtsZ ring method of dividing, but for those that do division is mostly a matter of lining the right proteins along the middle of the bacteria, and then contracting a little ring of protein (FtsZ) around the centre of the bacteria to split the one cell into two cells.Many of the more critical proteins in the process are membrane-bound, in particular the Min proteins, which in E........ Read more »

Strahl H, & Hamoen LW. (2010) Membrane potential is important for bacterial cell division. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 107(27), 12281-6. PMID: 20566861  

  • November 23, 2010
  • 12:21 PM
  • 746 views

Breaking Biofilms with DNA

by Lab Rat in Lab Rat

I've written about biofilms a couple of times before but it's an interesting enough topic to keep returning to. As a brief summery, biofilms are large collected colonies of bacteria, often surrounded by a sticky mesh of glycoproteins. They are ultra-annoying in the case of infectious bacteria as the bacteria deep in the depths of the biofilm will not be exposed to any antibiotics, the layers of glycoprotein and surrounding bacteria will protect them.Although living within a biofilm contains sig........ Read more »

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