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Posts by Cadwell Lab
Poster of the 2026 CSHA meeting on Bacterial Infection & Host Defense.
Please join us for the Cold Spring Harbor Asia @cshlnews.bsky.social meeting on Bacterial Infection & Host Defense this May 11-15 in Suzhou, China! We have a fantastic lineup of speakers. Abstract deadline is March 6. Hope to see you there!
Picture of Arinjay Banerjee
Picture of Louise Moncla
Congrats to the 2026 Ann Palmenberg Junior Investigator Awardees Arinjay Banerjee (left) and Louise Moncla (right). Check out their accolades in your member email. Read more about Ann Palmenberg's impact on virology and ASV here:
news.wisc.edu/remembering-...
journals.asm.org/doi/10.1128/...
I am very excited to share our collaborative work on multiome profiling of gene expression and chromatin accessibility of more than 1 million immune cells in pancreatic lymph nodes and spleens in human type 1 diabetes in
@sciimmunology.bsky.social scim.ag/4o12TOZ
Department members sit at a very long table in the hallway eating a pre-Thanksgiving potluck feast.
Faculty search announcement 2025: Tenure-Track Assistant Professor in Microbiology at UT Southwestern. We seek candidates working in microbial pathogenesis (some preference may be given to bacterial pathogens). Come join our community! (1/5) www.utsouthwestern.edu/departments/...
Overall, we discovered that an intervention as simple as changing cages can control duration of viral infection in mice. Huge shoutout 🙏 to Christin and coauthors, the Gnotobiotics core at both Penn and NYU, and PennCHOP microbiome program for making this study possible 5/5
Cage change is a stress-inducing event for 🐭! We found that the fluctuation of glucocorticoids (hormones released under stress) contributes to viral clearance, and interference with this hormonal stress response actually inhibits MuAstV clearance after cage change! 4/5
Although continuous exposure to the viral reservoir does contribute to this persistent infection, we found that there is more at play here 🤔 In fact, cage change induces the activation of CD8 T cells and an interferon response in intestinal epithelial cells, driving the clearance of MuAstV. 3/5
We found in this study that Murine Astrovirus (MuAstV), an enteric RNA virus that is prevalent in wild, lab, and pet store mice, persists indefinitely in mice when they remain unperturbed in their cage. However, MuAstV is rapidly cleared after we change a mouse’s cage 🤯 2/5
Congratulations @christinviral.bsky.social and team for publishing this super cool discovery 😎 www.nature.com/articles/s41.... Here’s a quick summary of our cool findings about how stress due to simple mouse husbandry drives clearance of persistent enteric viral infection 🦠🐭 1/5
Review @natimmunol.nature.com @cadwelllab.bsky.social
Gene–environment interactions shape the host–microbial interface in inflammatory bowel disease
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
Congratulations @christinviral.bsky.social !!! Amazing job starting from an intriguing observation and drilling down to an exciting immune mechanism!
Thanks for highlighting our paper @lozanzi.bsky.social 🙏
Chris Hunter @kingofpathogens.bsky.social and colleagues review parasite and host immune factors that impact the development of a mucosal vaccine for #Cryptosporidium : www.mucosalimmunology.org/article/S193...
Once again, thank you NIH for making this possible and our amazing coauthors. Special shoutout to coauthors Patty Martin and @torreslab.bsky.social for launching this project 🚀 5/n
Maybe ATG16L1 T300A is under balancing selection, like hemoglobin and APOL1 variants that are protective if you have 1 copy but 2 copies are bad (sickle cell/kidney disease)🤷♀️? Lots of questions surrounding mechanism that we’re continuing to examine 4/n
Turns out mice heterozygous for the variant, but not homozygotes, are highly protected from Salmonella and Listeria due to enhanced inflammasome🔥 activity! Macrophages from T300A heterozygous humans displayed similar enhanced inflammasome 🔥 3/n
Most people have at least 1 copy of the ATG16L1 T300A variant even though it’s associated with increased susceptibility to Crohn’s disease. What gives? 2/n
Congratulations Xiaomin Yao and Eugene Rudensky for publishing this story @cp-immunity.bsky.social! Big thank you to NIH for making this work possible. Here’s a brief summary of this 🤯 finding about a gene variant that YOU 🫵 most likely have 1/n
Congratulations to Susan Weiss (@PennMicro), Dennis Discher, Cherie Kagan (@pennengineering.bsky.social), Michael Jones-Correa & Sophia Rosenfeld (@PennSAS) on their election to the American Academy of Arts & Sciences! tinyurl.com/rtdecs92
Fantastic. Congrats!!!
Your yearly reminder to acknowledge the core facilities you use and their staff scientists in your papers. These scientists are a crucial part of the scientific ecosystem and to continue to exist they need tangible credit for their work. Plus their associated expertise adds credibility to your work.
In other airborne news, here's a fabulous visual explanation of what measles does once it floats into your body. Gift link: www.nytimes.com/interactive/...
For those still interested in infection and the brain - here is a nice mix of math and pathogens - that tests the function of latency and how the immune system deals with a neuronal infection. Lots going on here to dissect - but turns out latency benefits host and parasite.
rdcu.be/efknc
What is up Bluesky!
I'm an Associate Editor working at #PLOSBiology with everything related with #Microbiology and #Immunology
Looking forward to all #science posts!
Also, if you wanna book a meet-the-editor zoom meeting with me and talk about your work, just click scheduler.zoom.us/melissa-vazq...!
Beautiful work @edelblumlab.bsky.social !
@cadwelllab.bsky.social has already posted about it, but we do have a new paper out about rewilding the immune system! This one is led by Ying-Han Chen (then NYU, now Academia Sinica) and Kimberly Zaldana (NYU), and it dives into the world of B cells.
www.science.org/doi/full/10....
There's more exciting work to come from the rewilding experiments, so please do stay tuned for work from @grahammunology.bsky.social @cadwelllab.bsky.social et al.
Let's not forget that apart from science advocacy the Rauch lab also does kick-ass science!
Together with the @psmitchej.bsky.social and Tait Wojno labs, we show that #tuftcells can induce specific protective signaling after recognition of intracellular bacterial infection via the #inflammasome!