Do Microbes have Immune Systems? - Robin May

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  • Опубликовано: 13 окт 2024
  • Watch the Q&A session here: • Q&A: Do Microbes have ...
    We often think of immunity as being a human, or at least mammalian, phenomenon. But in fact almost all living organisms have some form of immune system. In this lecture we’ll lift the lid on the astonishingly diverse immune mechanisms used by bacteria, amoebae, nematodes and many other microbial forms of life in their constant battle against viruses and each other.
    This lecture was recorded by Robin May on 2nd October 2024 at Barnard's Inn Hall, London
    Robin is Gresham Professor of Physic.
    He is also Chief Scientific Adviser at the Food Standards Agency (FSA) and Professor of Infectious Disease at the University of Birmingham.
    The transcript of the lecture is available from the Gresham College website:
    www.gresham.ac...
    Gresham College has offered free public lectures for over 400 years, thanks to the generosity of our supporters. There are currently over 2,500 lectures free to access. We believe that everyone should have the opportunity to learn from some of the greatest minds. To support Gresham's mission, please consider making a donation: gresham.ac.uk/...

Комментарии • 11

  • @sharonphillips3341
    @sharonphillips3341 3 дня назад +3

    Thank you. I thoroughly enjoy listening to Robin May's lectures.

    • @ThomasKnott
      @ThomasKnott 2 дня назад

      I got excited when I saw the new upload 🎉

  • @NancyLebovitz
    @NancyLebovitz 2 дня назад +4

    This is an excellent lecture. Plenty I didn't know before, including an extremely detailed decription of slime molds. However, i'm still not sure how single cells protect themselves without dying. Or do they all need to use smaller organisms?

  • @timoshea2449
    @timoshea2449 2 дня назад +1

    Great lecture. So much I didn't know. Thanks!

  • @danwylie-sears1134
    @danwylie-sears1134 2 дня назад +1

    My guess before hearing most of the lecture:
    No. Microbes have things that are analogous to immune systems, and include components that are homologous to parts of bilaterian immune systems. Probably enough to provide plenty of content for a textbook, let alone a lecture. But the bilaterian immune system didn't come together _as a system_ until almost the end of the proterozoic, long after the ancestors of our mitochondria diverged from other bacteria and the ancestors of our nuclei diverged from other archaea. So our immune system is not homologous to their immune-system analogs, and therefore should not be named as the same thing.

  • @mussaratshaheen3412
    @mussaratshaheen3412 3 дня назад

    Very nice

  • @parhwy
    @parhwy 2 дня назад

    Me, who had a tattoo two days ago, watching this: 😮

  • @gloriaroman8620
    @gloriaroman8620 3 дня назад

    Hi

  • @JamesBarry-j7m
    @JamesBarry-j7m 3 дня назад

    Now I want to know how do they vote labor or conservative 😂😅😆

    • @howard1beale
      @howard1beale 3 дня назад

      They're too intelligent to vote