Тёмный

Paul E. Turner (Yale) 3: Phage Therapy 

Science Communication Lab
Подписаться 180 тыс.
Просмотров 33 тыс.
50% 1

www.ibiology.org/microbiology...
Part 1: Introduction to Virus Ecology and Evolution: Dr. Paul Turner describes the fundamental biology of viruses, how they interact with their host organisms, and how they might have originally evolved long ago.
Part 2: Virus Adaptation to Environmental Change: Turner’s laboratory uses experimental evolution to study how viruses adapt to environmental changes.
Part 3: Phage Therapy: Turner provides an introduction to phage therapy, and how it can be improved by applying ‘evolution thinking’.
Talk Overview:
In his first lecture, Dr. Paul Turner describes the fundamental biology of viruses, how they interact with their host organisms, and how they might have originally evolved long ago. He provides an overview of the many reasons why viruses might be considered the most biologically successful inhabitants of earth, including their ability to rapidly reproduce, and adapt to environmental challenges. Turner explains how viruses have impacted human history, as well as earth’s history, due to their prevalent interactions with other species.
Viruses have an incredible capacity to adapt to environmental challenges, but sometimes, the environment constraints viral adaptation. Turner’s laboratory uses experimental evolution to study how viruses adapt to environmental changes (e.g. temperature changes), and the mechanisms by which viruses jump to novel host species. Turner’s work suggests that viruses with greater capacities to block the innate immune systems of their hosts, also have a greater likelihood of emerging on new host species. Also, he describes how virus adaptation to environmental change may be constraints by trade-offs: viruses can evolve either greater reproduction or greater survival, but not both simultaneously.
Before antibiotics were discovered, scientists were using viruses of bacteria, bacteriophages, to treat bacterial infections in humans. Given the rise of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, scientists are revisiting the idea of using phage therapy to treat infections. In his third lecture, Turner provides an introduction to phage therapy, and how it can be improved by applying ‘evolution thinking’. His laboratory discovered phage OMKO1 that can treat multi-drug resistant bacteria in human patients while causing these bacteria to evolve greater sensitivity to antibiotics.
Speaker Biography:
Dr. Paul Turner is Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at Yale University, and holds an appointment in the Microbiology Program at Yale School of Medicine. His laboratory studies how viruses evolutionarily adapt to overcome environmental challenges, such as temperature changes or infection of novel host species. Turner received his bachelor’s degree in Biology from the University of Rochester in 1988, and completed his graduate studies in microbial ecology and evolution at Michigan State University in 1995. Learn more about Dr. Turner’s research here:
turnerlab.yale.edu

Наука

Опубликовано:

 

25 июн 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 71   
@natassiacorrea7249
@natassiacorrea7249 7 лет назад
great teacher! loved this presentation!
@woloabel
@woloabel Год назад
This Doc is teaching you Criminal Enterprise 101: Si Vis Pacem Fare Bellum!
@marilu0007
@marilu0007 Год назад
Thank you for this charismatic presentation of an interesting topic 👍
@DrReginaldFinleySr
@DrReginaldFinleySr 3 года назад
Amazing. Thank you for sharing this with us. Looking forward to discussing this more with my students. The advances over the last 3 years have been astounding.
@woloabel
@woloabel Год назад
Virology unfortunately has become the new cash cow of the Qaukes and Pseudoscientists......These mferz are Criminals. To Build a Biohazard, Bill us for the Antidote-Vaccine and prance on towards a victory parade or Nobel Prize for doing such Beneficial, Lasting Goood to Mankind even. These are AIDS-carring, Rh Null Variation or some Disgusting Creature of Unknown Orgin/Aetiology. Aiding and Abetting this is unequivocally insanity and criminal, felonious enterprise. I ask of you to not Ecourage the Dogs lest you be one also. MD/PhD Finley, es muss besser sein am wenigstens. Heil!
@jjcool7967
@jjcool7967 4 года назад
outstanding Dr. Turner, my major is biology applying to med school 2023 can't afford Yale
@scottbruner9266
@scottbruner9266 4 месяца назад
I’m replying in February 2024. I’m curious how your schooling has progressed in the time since your post. Still heading to med school? I’m so glad to see people with dreams and ambitions. Best of luck to you!
@mirvine1
@mirvine1 4 года назад
Imagine if we lived in a world where this video had 10 billion views and Drake's shitty song "God's Plan" had 8 thousand views. .
@eniggma9353
@eniggma9353 Месяц назад
bell curve baby, Drake video is on the left side of it and the middle too. Far right side of it is what you are referring to. It would be more interesting for sure. In general.
@kamalsingh-rp9eo
@kamalsingh-rp9eo 6 лет назад
please dont stop uploading i love biology
@helencoltart3483
@helencoltart3483 3 года назад
Yes! Never had money for school, but never stoped learning. I’d be rich if I were paid to watch you tube!
@indieisin
@indieisin 4 года назад
Any argument to get our scientific community to seriously consider something new, we are running out of other options... This video is a bit old so I wonder how their research has progressed.
@annak29
@annak29 2 года назад
This is NOT new: it was a competing approach to treating infections when antibiotics were discovered. It is 100+ years old tech, used mainly by former Soviet countries bc they could not obtain antibiotics, which were patented.
@annak29
@annak29 2 года назад
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-fYg9m4EGb38.html This is Dr. Paul giving a comprehensive overview of the current research 1 year ago 👍💗
@princeentertainmenttricks7298
@princeentertainmenttricks7298 6 месяцев назад
Good Information 💯
@1033141
@1033141 4 года назад
thank you sir
@Ana-bw7gm
@Ana-bw7gm Год назад
By now you would have tested safety/efficacy in mouse model for lung pneumonia. Do you have results? Have you done clinical trail in human patients? Is phage treatment used in USA?
@ashburnconnecttv7860
@ashburnconnecttv7860 4 года назад
What about Quorum Sensing (QS) and Its Role in the P. aeruginosa Biofilm? Do you think biofilm is the cause of bacteria resistance to drugs? Do you think Sulforaphane can inhibit QS P. aeruginosa Biofilm?
@linapasteur
@linapasteur 7 лет назад
You can also use Endolysine from BP. There is no resistance reported.
@dragonx13x
@dragonx13x 7 лет назад
fart in that mouth I will
@analogkid63
@analogkid63 7 лет назад
I liked this very much
@soeminwaiyan2734
@soeminwaiyan2734 3 года назад
Wouldn’t our immune system try to eliminate those bacteriophages by recruiting memory cells, doctor? I don’t really know about the method of introducing the phages though.
@abbeyjosephine522
@abbeyjosephine522 Год назад
bacteriophages have undergone years of evolution to only infect/reproduce within bacteria, so our immune system would not attack/identify them as harmful
@johnnybrown542
@johnnybrown542 2 года назад
Ssethtzeentach brought me here. Very educational.
@haidenmorgan
@haidenmorgan 3 года назад
Talks about heart transplant on Dr Khodadoust at @17:30
@thornslove
@thornslove 4 года назад
CRISPR Cas9 + phage therapy?
@meepbeep2464
@meepbeep2464 2 года назад
yeah I was also thinking about this I'm not really a professional in science, but I am generally interested.
@christianrichmond4884
@christianrichmond4884 3 года назад
Would our immune system get rid of the phages? ive read that most phages are hunted from the environment. doesnt that means they are foreign particles?
@Carl1703
@Carl1703 3 года назад
Phages are most abundant in sewer waste believe it or not. Which may very well indicate that they come from living things like animals including humans. I'm no biologist myself but I find the idea very intriguing ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-uoaanINMq3Q.html
@matiasbenavidesdigitalvisu9511
@matiasbenavidesdigitalvisu9511 2 года назад
that theory is real? of bacteria phage resistance become weak to antibiotics and so on?
@catchfish2057
@catchfish2057 2 года назад
Americans... Go to Georgia... they have been using it for nearly a Century.... They have the experience.
@kathyjackson712
@kathyjackson712 6 лет назад
Mr.Turner,would that help my husband. He has bad lungs. (I can’t write it ,I have a stroke).
@SimpLich
@SimpLich 3 года назад
How is he?
@ianbrennan8974
@ianbrennan8974 4 года назад
I realise that creating the right phage lysin can take many years. Can they be used against covid 19?
@ccmkoho
@ccmkoho 4 года назад
Ian Brennan , no
@PolarIre
@PolarIre 4 года назад
@@ccmkoho can you ELI5?
@rh-qv6or
@rh-qv6or 3 года назад
Covid is a virus. Bacteriophages eat bacteria, not viruses
@meepbeep2464
@meepbeep2464 2 года назад
no, covid is a virus, bacteriophages are bacteria eaters. but, since you sound interested, there is a thing called virophages, although we don't know much about them since they were only discovered in 2008. And from what I know, covid isn't a giant virus. virophages only seem to attack big viruses like mimiviruses and pandoraviruses. but they do act like bacteriophages. I am just a highschool student though, a horrible one, so don't be surprised if I am wrong. I just started researching virophages the other day using google of all places.
@MrSouthsideMuscle
@MrSouthsideMuscle 2 года назад
Recently, the FDA has approved phage therapy as a compassionate treatment for COVID-19 patients (Adaptive Phage Therapeutics, Inc., 2020), due to the high incidence of MDR secondary infections mentioned previously.
@schnitzelschnizel9448
@schnitzelschnizel9448 4 года назад
I do not understand the chart he used.
@allyourcode
@allyourcode 4 года назад
I assume you are talking about @15:46. It shows that after bacteria are treated with phages, the bacteria become susceptible to certain kinds of antibiotics.
@Rishab1702
@Rishab1702 4 года назад
What happens if virus jumps from bacteria to humans??? Because in previous lectures u said how amazing viruses are when it comes to survival
@allyourcode
@allyourcode 4 года назад
That is why drugs need to be tested and approved before they are sold.
@Rishab1702
@Rishab1702 4 года назад
@@allyourcode bro I was asking what happens if virus changes its host not about any kind of drugs.
@gregorysmith1134
@gregorysmith1134 3 года назад
Phages can infect only bacteria.
@fieryice4749
@fieryice4749 3 года назад
@@Rishab1702 Bacteriophages specifically target bacteria, they are pretty much unable to infect eukaryotic cells, such as our own.
@martinssalmanis966
@martinssalmanis966 Год назад
21:20
@woloabel
@woloabel Год назад
(On Monday of April 10, 2023). On the Matter of PhD Paul E. Turner from Yale University on the Phage Therapy (Virus-Infection Anti-MDR Desensitization): 1) Lethal Force to be used with caution. Antibiotics themselves should be last choice yet People subsist taking Antibiotic Chemotherapy that mostly creates an Immunosuppression Profile, and these People are walking Biohazards (Aside from the Cystic Fibrosis, Diathesis of Immunosuppression or even the HIVs). To Kill anything is killing. The Bacteria will fight back understandably. What is not understood in this case is how people can continue to expose us all to their Human Laboratory Biohazards Manufactured Pathogenosis. Could it be because these Thugs are only doing the Bidding of most Detestable Profiteers on Earth? In short, the Goal should be to Exclude these people from the Average Good Old Folk since their Genetic, Environmental Antibiotic Abuse is Dictating the Molecular Mean of us all. Pardon me, but neither HeLa Cells, Phage Therapy, like Free Walking Pathogenic People are to be common fare for us ALL. Forget that! 2) Virus are to be Reckoned with certainly, but to kill them (an impossibility), or Grow them, or Design them, as is this Virology's Ability, is sheer madness no different than the Extremist Approach of Relying on Antibiotic, an Flagrant Abuse. This should include Prophylaxis of Vaccination. The Guts to manufacture Disease and unleash them on to US, let alone the charging often Exorbitant Fees for Such "Service and Product". Currently, this is more pathological than Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Multidrug Resistant Bacteria or Genetic Diseases (Cystic Fibrosis, Sickle Cell Anemia) Combined. However, this Virology like Walking, Talking Breathing Pathogen Disseminators are to be Illegal (because they are) and Definitely, for the Well-being and Goodness of us all, Segregated (Incarceration possibility even) as Disease Control and Prevention (Supposed Task of the State [CDC] however has become an AIDS Promoting-Unleashing Criminal Enterprise Rather). PhD Turner, es nicht gut zu vermehren Krankenheiten oder verkehren in Wissenschaften der Daemon et al: Heil!
@PointFear
@PointFear 4 года назад
Is the comment section ok?
@flapyack869
@flapyack869 6 лет назад
To inhibit the spread of Phage resistant / antibiotic-sensitive bacteria - shouldn't both treatments be used synchronously or at least administer antibiotics immediately following the Phage? As opposed to waiting for the patient to exhibit further symptoms (or through blood tests) that indicate a phage resistant / evolved strain has developed? We obviously don't want that new bug spreading to anyone. Or is the thought process that, even if it is Phage resistant, at least it is antibiotic sensitive in others? Seems like you would want to kill the new bug with Patient Zero. But, I guess that's just too reasonable? 09:20 You make the assumption that the Phage may cause the target Bacteria to become vulnerable to previously ineffective antibiotics. The data that you PRESENTED supports this. But, are there any examples where this regression to antibiotic sensitivity did not occur? What options would be left in that situation? Are there any processes to identify different Phages that might be useful if that mutation occurs? I see the massive benefits of this. I understand why pharmaceutical companies haven't worked on this, as they probably can't copyright/patent a lot of the processes or living organisms. Being a business, their only concern is money - not making people better. So, it's really up to people that actually care about each other's health to spread this information. Are there any resources that you could recommend that would help a community-based organization to start a Phagen bank?
@gusjan2
@gusjan2 6 лет назад
Indeed synergie demonstrated in laboratory and some clinical cases. More research needed.
@notthere83
@notthere83 5 лет назад
There's also phage.directory now. It looks like you could only help if you are actually a researcher. But since they among other things publish a weekly newsletter (all of the 24 so far can be found on the site under "Capsid & tail"), one could subscribe to that if one is interested in tracking the progress of phage therapy.
@64788946
@64788946 5 лет назад
What if you take garlic with meds?
@mor9192
@mor9192 Год назад
Podcast 1052 doesn’t exist
@Plateaudweller
@Plateaudweller Год назад
Why don't you just talk to the scientists at the Eliava Institute in Georgia....who have been studying phage since 1923. Starting from scratch makes no sense when phage therapy has been studied and used in ex Soviet countries for 100 years.
Далее
Ron Vale (UCSF, HHMI) 1: Molecular Motor Proteins
35:26
Спасибо Анджилишка, попил😂
00:19
Viruses: Molecular Hijackers
10:02
Просмотров 1,5 млн
David Baltimore (Caltech): Introduction to Viruses
19:07
Titering Phage - spot and whole plate methods
19:55
Просмотров 6 тыс.
Antimicrobial Drugs (cell wall synthesis inhibitors)
1:00
Bacteriophage Titer Lab.
14:27
Просмотров 16 тыс.
Fighting Antibiotic Resistance with Phage Therapy
6:40
Собери ПК и Получи 10,000₽
1:00
Просмотров 999 тыс.