tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8341686541622227200.post527141587136826239..comments2024-02-08T12:10:38.282+00:00Comments on Life of a Lab Rat: Cell wall under attack - bacterial response to antibioticsLab Rathttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07962574174521597312noreply@blogger.comBlogger5125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8341686541622227200.post-86676800808933049672009-09-11T18:59:54.609+01:002009-09-11T18:59:54.609+01:00Thanks for submitting this post to our blog carniv...Thanks for submitting this post to our blog carnival. We just published the <a href="http://brainblogger.com/2009/09/11/drugs-and-pharmacology-seventeenth-edition/" rel="nofollow">17th edition</a> of Drugs and Pharmacology and your article was featured!<br /><br />Thank you.<br /><br />Sincerely,<br />ShaheenShaheen Lakhanhttp://brainblogger.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8341686541622227200.post-55258942872579945342009-08-26T08:14:38.844+01:002009-08-26T08:14:38.844+01:00@rhan:
I totallly agree with you! The great thing...@rhan:<br /><br />I totallly agree with you! The great thing about this summer project though is it has introduced me to a large number of very basic DNA manipulation techniques, the sort of things you really need to say you can do XD which will be great for next year, and when I get to the scary-job-application time.Lab Rathttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07962574174521597312noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8341686541622227200.post-22318736073132987072009-08-25T17:37:11.134+01:002009-08-25T17:37:11.134+01:00This sounds like a nice change of scenery from syn...This sounds like a nice change of scenery from synthetics. Synthetic bio is all well and good, but manipulating extant pathways is much more fun. Good luck! :)Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8341686541622227200.post-83687349440171942322009-08-21T10:06:16.507+01:002009-08-21T10:06:16.507+01:00I'm not working with Buttner, but the PI I'...I'm not working with Buttner, but the PI I'll be working with has just moved here from working in his lab.<br /><br />Thank you! Even though I have enjoyed the synthetic biology work, I am really looking forward to getting stuck back into bacteria/antibiotic interactions.Lab Rathttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07962574174521597312noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8341686541622227200.post-74696868468161604642009-08-21T00:51:31.955+01:002009-08-21T00:51:31.955+01:00Ah, you'll be in the Buttner lab, jolly good. ...Ah, you'll be in the Buttner lab, jolly good. I played with Strepomyces many years ago, looking at their heat-shock proteins. That dalliance was short-lived as I switched to Rhodococcus equi as a model for M. tuberculosis.<br /><br />I was lucky enough years ago to get to know Prof Simon Baumberg, who was once a big player in identifying the mechanisms that regulate antibiotic production in S. coelicolor - in fact he was my internal examiner for my PhD. <br /><br />A fun area of molecular microbiology to get stuck in to. <br /><br />Good luck with that.Dr Jimhttp://www.mentalindigestion.netnoreply@blogger.com