Advertisement Β· 728 Γ— 90

Posts by Knut Drescher

Tommy Cash - Espresso Macchiato (LIVE) | Estonia πŸ‡ͺπŸ‡ͺ | First Semi-Final | Eurovision 2025
Tommy Cash - Espresso Macchiato (LIVE) | Estonia πŸ‡ͺπŸ‡ͺ | First Semi-Final | Eurovision 2025 YouTube video by Eurovision Song Contest

The Eurovision Song Contest final will take place in my *Basel* tomorrow.
After watching thisπŸ‘‡, I realized it will be outstanding. There are only 36 other songs to watch. 12 points for Estonia.
m.youtube.com/watch?v=F3ws...

11 months ago 1 0 0 0
Preview
Biofilm architecture determines the dissemination of conjugative plasmids | PNAS Plasmid conjugation is a contact-dependent horizontal gene transfer mechanism that significantly contributes to the dissemination of antibiotic res...

Biofilm architecture determines the dissemination of conjugative plasmids: We measured the spatiotemporal spread of plasmids in biofilms and found that plasmids only spread in some biofilm regions!

Collab with lab of @sbigot.bsky.social & Christian Lesterlin
www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/...

11 months ago 45 16 1 0

Master in Physics of Life -
apply by April 30. πŸ‘‡

1 year ago 5 1 0 0
Post image

I’m back in Marburg today - very nice.

1 year ago 6 0 0 0
Post image

#BiozentrumResearchSummer 2025: Internships for #Bachelor Students in the #NaturalSciences! Engage in a real-life research project in one of the Biozentrum labs during 7 to 9 weeks. Application deadline is approaching: February 23, 2025. @biozentrum.unibas.ch @unibas.ch bit.ly/3mYZEsC

1 year ago 6 3 0 0
Post image

Proteomics LC-MS Specialist (100%)
Proteomics Core Facility, Biozentrum
www.biozentrum.unibas.ch/open-positio...

@biozentrum.unibas.ch @unibas.ch #Biozentrum #Basel #research #science #joboffer #proteomics #LC-MS #Specialist

1 year ago 10 5 0 0
CSSB Symposium 2025 Mechanisms of Infection: from structure to translation

I will join the CSSB Symposium on May 7-8 in Hamburg: "Mechanisms of Infection - from structure to translation"

symposium2025.cssb-hamburg.de

1 year ago 1 0 0 0
Post image Post image

🚨🚨 MEGA JOB ALERT 🚨🚨
Independent Group Leader Positions in Computational Biology @humantechnopole.bsky.social!

Are you ready to start your own lab? Do you know someone who is? Repost this + share with everyone who might want to know about it. Thanks!!! πŸ™

More details below... check it out! 🧡 1/3

1 year ago 57 63 1 2
Advertisement
I Have One Word For You: PETase! The discovery of microbial enzymes, PETases, that can degrade ubiquitous plastics, and how exogenous peptidoglycan is a danger signal to trigger biofilm formation.

ASM's podcast "This Week in Microbiology" discussed our peptidoglycan danger sensing manuscript in detail: It is a true joy to hear how the paper is perceived through someone else's eyes. The enthusiasm of the speakers is amazing.

[From 20 min onwards:] asm.org/Podcasts/TWi...

1 year ago 33 8 1 1

Great news, congratulations

1 year ago 1 0 0 0
Post image

Great recent work from Sanika Vaidya and Knut Drescher Lab

Mammalian innate immunity recognizes bacterial cell wall peptidoglycan (PG) via TLR2

Turns out multiple bacteria also sense PG from their lysed compatriots as a danger signal to trigger biofilm formation!

www.nature.com/articles/s41...

1 year ago 25 8 0 1

It’s a great tool, thanks for maintaining and updating it!

1 year ago 1 0 0 0
Preview
Sophisticated early warning system: How bacteria respond to threats University of Basel researchers have discovered that bacteria can sense threats in advance through a general danger signal. Bacteria detect when nearby cells are dying and proactively form a protectiv...

How do bacteria sense potential threats in their environment and initiate protective measures? Researchers led by @knutdrescher.bsky.social have discovered that fragments of the bacterial cell wall serve as an alarm signal indicating danger in the environment.
@biozentrum.bsky.social

1 year ago 11 2 0 0
Preview
Bacteria use exogenous peptidoglycan as a danger signal to trigger biofilm formation - Nature Microbiology Peptidoglycan released by neighbouring kin or non-kin cell lysis induces physiological changes that protect from a range of stresses, including phage predation.

We found that many bacterial species use exogenous peptidoglycan fragments - released by lysis of neighboring cells - as a general danger signal, triggering a danger response that protects bacteria against many dangers: biofilm formation.

Details here πŸ‘‡
www.nature.com/articles/s41...

1 year ago 142 56 0 0

I am just migrating from X right now. X has become unbearable. I hope we can recreate what science twitter used to be.

1 year ago 30 1 5 1