Paul E. Turner (Yale) 2: Virus Adaptation to Environmental Change

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Science Communication Lab

Science Communication Lab

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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

Пікірлер: 44
@MilesBellas
@MilesBellas 4 жыл бұрын
This is a great professor. Simple and deep.
@irrationalpie3143
@irrationalpie3143 4 жыл бұрын
Extremely relevant today. Hope people studying viruses, including emergence, get a LOT MORE funding going forward
@seemaophk
@seemaophk 4 жыл бұрын
Sir, my query is that why we are not able to develop genomic therapy for Covid19.
@denisdaly1708
@denisdaly1708 4 жыл бұрын
@interpretation 21 deluded, and poor reasoning. It is nstural, and just the latest example of a zoonotic virus.
@mrtertg2603
@mrtertg2603 3 жыл бұрын
I think this is one of the best and most important scientific lectures on KZfaq and deserves way more appreciation . Thank you very much Prof Turner for Your excellent explanation and also for Your effort that You made it possible for general public to understand the subject .
@idrisea3247
@idrisea3247 4 жыл бұрын
This is gold, thank you for producing these team!
@Joybanglathe71
@Joybanglathe71 4 жыл бұрын
Amazing! Thank you, professor!
@ravindergusain2200
@ravindergusain2200 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this great education
@michaelrishot1839
@michaelrishot1839 4 жыл бұрын
There's always something new to learn.
@barryfennell9723
@barryfennell9723 6 жыл бұрын
I live where many exotic species are invasive and grow aggressively. I was wondering how soon does the species start to diverge from its native genetics and begin to show unique expressions.
@spikarooni6391
@spikarooni6391 Жыл бұрын
Smashing talk
@woloabel
@woloabel Жыл бұрын
(On Sunday of April 9, 2023). On the Matter of PhD E. Turner from Yale Microbiology Department on Virus Adaptation to Environmental Change: 1) I apply the Concept of Parasitology where the most successful Parasites really are those whose Virulence is enough to keep the Host/Infectee Alive rather than those whose Poison is Detrimentally Deadly. This would be consequently an adaptive Strategy of Virulence Modulation via Enzymes or what not. 2) Proteomics therefore of Virology is by Design a Function of its Environment as it is to the Host. 3) I find just about all c.....TBC Heil!
@1033141
@1033141 4 жыл бұрын
thank you sir
@kaycheng3237
@kaycheng3237 4 жыл бұрын
Evolutionary Naturalistic! - Finding future. This video stresses the Genome Advantages on Acquired Immunity from Environmental Evolutionary decides an achievement.
@kaycheng3237
@kaycheng3237 4 жыл бұрын
@interpretation 21 The virus is not natural, but from outer space, and the feeling it controls human is all because people's wrong demeanor of eating wildlife in major in China. The immune system has a big problem since some time ago, our immune ability is going down, but not for the Americans, the detailed reason is collaborative information-ology, and you mentioned the double sides attacks, it is like both with the development of chemical weapons and the way people accumulate wealth, the people didn't establish a good identification mechanism to tell the enemies nowadays, and they don't get use to no evil more wealth solution which is lacking of offer in modern. I can smell the virus, it gets worse because of potential of medication to develop in a mistake tolerable manner. So the rigor and biggest study is really needed, and it is an fatal asking to let people go into perfect and running with their intuition, however, things happen, welcome to futures. Thank you for these ideas, they are inspirational both in the understanding way and awareness way. Very much thanks for offer me.
@kaycheng3237
@kaycheng3237 4 жыл бұрын
@interpretation 21 That i s right, all the guess couldn't replace the fact every person wants to last, and all the evidences are summoning confidence in each of ourselves, this is a road of eternity.
@galadrael
@galadrael 3 жыл бұрын
@@kaycheng3237 Are glyphosate and COVID-19 connected? Glyphosate, one of the most toxic chemicals in the world, may be the key to why some people get severely ill from COVID-19. An MIT senior research scientist reports: By Stephanie Seneff, Ph.D. Special to JenniferMargulis.net
@lawrencewatkins4586
@lawrencewatkins4586 4 жыл бұрын
At 44:04 mathematical biologists...whew! Thank you for that.
@reinerwilhelms-tricarico344
@reinerwilhelms-tricarico344 3 жыл бұрын
I wonder about these evolutionary laboratory experiments, where artificial and nature imitating challenges to a virus are created to see what possible mutations might emerge - presumably to be prepared for discovering a strand that could result in a pandemic if it occurs in nature and jumps to humans. Does anyone actually try to assess how likely these lab outcomes actually are? And whether the potential dangers of lab-escape are truly outbalanced by the benefits? Isn't it true that after a few evolutionary steps in the lab one may have moved far enough away from the possible paths that are likely to occur in nature. Once you discover a new modified and more dangerous pathogen in the lab - by evolutionary experiments, you may have found something that might have been extremely improbable to occur in nature. Essentially you then have pushed open a door for evolution in the lab to create the very pathogens that we try to predict. But how likely is it that nature actually takes those paths in the wild, that is, without the deliberate and highly specific prodding in the lab experiment? It seems to me that nature has billions of possible Pandora's boxes that it could open, but in the laboratory we might create the conditions for new Pandora's boxes that we open and which might not have occurred in a million years. What I'm talking about is the so-called gain of function research on potential pandemic pathogens. The debate about that. which resulted in a temporary moratorium on GoF research, should be reopened.
@peacetoeveryone1795
@peacetoeveryone1795 4 жыл бұрын
I hope you could explain about corona virus how it evolved andh how can a person improve its immunisystem ...
@tardarsauce3355
@tardarsauce3355 3 жыл бұрын
In case he didn't answer your question yet... The coronavirus is believed to originate in bats, however unlike humans, bats usually do not experience severe disease despite harbouring many viruses like coronaviruses. Instead, it is believed that bats and viruses have a relationship where viruses are allowed to exist and persevere in bat populations, and this is because the immune systems of bats have various adaptations (different bat species have different immune adaptations, but many have higher baseline interferon levels compared to humans--for example) Interferons are the animal's natural antivirus system. The virus that causes Covid-19 (SARS-CoV-2) has special proteins that allow it to suppress the human immune response, and people think this is one of the major contributors to severe disease in humans. Some researchers, including myself, think that removing these interferon suppressing genes from SARS-CoV-2 can turn it into something that can be further developed into a Live Attenuated Vaccine Candidate.
@peacetoeveryone1795
@peacetoeveryone1795 3 жыл бұрын
@@tardarsauce3355 Hi! Thanks for taking some time and effort to answer my query, its been greatly appreciated . I hope you wont mind if I ask what field your into ? Your into virology or something?
@tardarsauce3355
@tardarsauce3355 3 жыл бұрын
@@peacetoeveryone1795 I have an undergrad in Human Biology, and am currently a Respiratory Therapy Student. My research into Covid-19 is something I do on the side in the hopes of helping to end this god awful pandemic
@peacetoeveryone1795
@peacetoeveryone1795 3 жыл бұрын
Are you planning to sell your research to pharma or something ??
@tardarsauce3355
@tardarsauce3355 3 жыл бұрын
​@@peacetoeveryone1795 Lol no! As much as I would like to gain recognition and money for my work, I believe life-saving info on the pandemic should be accessible to everyone. I'll send my research files to anyone who wishes to read them, free of charge.
@rickhunt3183
@rickhunt3183 7 ай бұрын
How can something that's not alive adapt?
@sislertx
@sislertx 4 жыл бұрын
Yeah lab worked great in Wuham
@walkerorr341
@walkerorr341 Жыл бұрын
I know that the sponsor logo is supposed to be an eagle, but I imagine it as an antibody.
@s.unosson
@s.unosson 4 жыл бұрын
Dr. Turner, our immune system adapts itself to new challenges, you say , but the viruses evolue. I think it is more correct to say, the viruses adapt as well, they don't evolue to anything else, they still are viruses. Unless you mean evolution IS adaptation. I gather, it is.
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