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Lora Hooper (UT Southwestern) 2: Mammalian gut microbiota: Maintaining symbiosis in the intestine 

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Overview: Dr. Hooper studies how the gut microbiota changes during illness or disease and how it influences our ability to fight infections. In part 2, Hooper explains how a healthy gut microbes induce a host protein called RegIIIγ which helps to protect the host from infection by pathogenic gram-positive bacteria.
Detailed description:
In this lecture, Dr. Hooper introduces us to the fascinating world of human microbiota; the microorganisms that live within our bodies. Although we may think that most bacteria are harmful, Hooper provides ample evidence that symbiotic gut microbes are important to good human health. Her lab is interested in understanding how the microbiota changes during illness or disease and how it influences our ability to fight infections. Using germ-free mice, they were able to demonstrate that a healthy microbiota can shape development of the host immune system and provide protection against dangerous infections like salmonella.
In the second part of her talk, Hooper explains how the balance of organisms in the microbiota is maintained. By comparing DNA microarray data from normal mice and germ-free mice, Hooper’s lab was able to look for genes induced by the microbiota. They identified RegIIIγ, an important protein involved in the protection against pathogenic bacteria. They showed that RegIIIγ forms pore complexes in the membranes of gram-positive bacteria and kills them. In mice and humans, the intestinal epithelium is coated with a layer of mucus. Typically, there is a gap between gut bacteria, which are found in the outer part of the mucus layer, and the epithelial cells. Hooper’s lab showed that RegIIIγ helps to maintain this gap by preventing gram-positive bacteria from colonizing the intestinal epithelial surface. This, in turn, prevents infection of the host.
Speaker Biography:
Although she always was interested in science, Lora Hooper’s love for biology started after taking an introductory class at Rhodes College in Memphis, TN where she was an undergraduate. Hooper continued her graduate education in the Molecular Cell Biology and Biochemistry Program at Washington University in St. Louis where she joined Dr. Jacques Baenziger's lab. For postdoctoral training, she stayed at Washington University, in the lab of Jeffrey Gordon, where she began her studies of the interaction between gut bacteria and host cells and discovered that bacteria have the capacity to modify carbohydrates important for cell signaling.
Currently, Hooper is a Professor at The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator. She has established one of the handful of mouse facilities that have the capacity to breed germ-free mice. Using these mice, her lab explores the symbiotic relationship between a host and its microbiota with the aim of providing insight into human health.
Hooper was a recipient of the Edith and Peter O’Donnell Awards in 2013 and in 2015 she was elected to the National Academy of Sciences.

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5 июн 2016

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Комментарии : 9   
@LindyFordNutritionWellness
@LindyFordNutritionWellness 7 лет назад
Thank you, Dr. Hooper, for this interesting information on the MIcrobiome. I research this topic extensively because of the health implications it has for my patients. Lindy Ford, RD, LDN
@joelarnoldngassa8720
@joelarnoldngassa8720 2 года назад
great presentation , i usually heard about bacteria being important for our immune system yet i got some knowledge
@StewartChaimson
@StewartChaimson 5 лет назад
Thank you for producing this really great lecture on your interesting work!
@mohamedahmed-mc6jj
@mohamedahmed-mc6jj 4 года назад
I need to thank you very much for the great lecture you have , i was looking for this infomation for my seminar presentation and it s accually helping me to understand the whole topic so thank you again
@jaym9846
@jaym9846 7 лет назад
Amazing!
@karlpages1970
@karlpages1970 6 лет назад
great work.. thanks 4 thw vid :-)microbes are just as important as AI. We all share 10% of common microbes. MANY OF THESES COMMUNITIES ARE ESSENTIAL FOR HEALTHY CITIZENS. What is economic mindset destorying with its politics, weaponry and unnatural laws. Consumerism is not essential to progress. Conservation is...
@stevemitz4740
@stevemitz4740 6 лет назад
Wow! Thanks Dr. Hooper for magnificent lecture on that masterpiece of design & engineering! To P.C. pretend, all that exponentially complex symbiotic chemical feats just happened by dumb luck chance, demonstrates the power of P.C. but misses the point of a Masterpiece! I.E. To demonstrate the Masters handy work. It's sad the designer can't be credited. Thanks
@lokpasddq763
@lokpasddq763 7 лет назад
какой органоид живой клетки выполняет функцию "сердца"
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