Heidi Goodrich-Blair
@hgblair.bsky.social
360 followers 520 following 76 posts
Microbiologist with a special fondness for symbiosis and certain nematodes.
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Reposted by Heidi Goodrich-Blair
carlzimmer.com
Today my @nytimes.com colleagues and I are launching a new series called Lost Science. We interview US scientists who can no longer discover something new about our world, thanks to this year‘s cuts. Here is my first interview with a scientist who studied bees and fires. Gift link: nyti.ms/3IWXbiE
nyti.ms
Reposted by Heidi Goodrich-Blair
Reposted by Heidi Goodrich-Blair
cosmicrami.com
4 October (today) is International Observe the Moon night!

It's super easy to do - just head out and look up at our celestial companion who has been with us for nearly all of our time. Without it, our world would be very different.

*There's a whole other world that just hangs in our sky for us*
International Observe the Moon Night
Join NASA and lunar observers around the world in a global celebration of the Moon.
moon.nasa.gov
Reposted by Heidi Goodrich-Blair
sejordt.bsky.social
Job @Rutgers !!!
annikabarber.bsky.social
Despite These Times...my department is hiring! I really like my department, we have a good mix of disciplines and organisms and we're really low-drama. We also get pizza at faculty meeting. So if you're a computational and structural biologist, join us! 🧪 jobs.rutgers.edu/postings/260...
Assistant Professor - Tenure Track Faculty
The Department of Molecular Biology and Biochemistry at Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, is inviting applicants for a tenure-track Assistant Professor position. The position requires a doc...
jobs.rutgers.edu
Reposted by Heidi Goodrich-Blair
blackinmicro.bsky.social
This is your daily reminder that registration is open and *FREE* for #BiM2025 #BlackInMicro Week. Get ready to join our online celebration: linktr.ee/BlackInMicro (or see link in bio)
The summarised schedule of Black in Micro Week 2025, October 14-16. All times are in Eastern Standard Time. Mon 14: Pathways for Change. Welcome and Keynote Address 12pm. Marian Johnson-Thompson, PhD. Panel Discussion: Finding Black Spaces in STEM, 1:15-2:15 PM. Weds 15, Careers & Research: ECR Symposium 9-12 PM. Panel discussion: Navigating Careers in Microbiology 2-3 PM. Thurs 16, Community: Panel Discussion - Empowering Your Science 12-1:15 PM. Workshop: Science in Action
Reposted by Heidi Goodrich-Blair
genetics-gsa.bsky.social
📢 Deadline extended! Apply by Oct 3 for the 2025 Sydney Brenner Thesis Award—honoring outstanding theses in nematode biology (defended Oct 1, 2024–Sept 30, 2025).
Send in your nomination today! 🔗:
2025 Brenner Award Nomination
This nomination form is for the 2025 Brenner Award Nomination. Due: September 30th, 2025. Please do not include any information besides what is asked as a formal nominee form and recommendation…
buff.ly
Reposted by Heidi Goodrich-Blair
microbiologysociety.org
External Event Grant awards of up to £750 are available for eligible members as a contribution towards the costs of registration, travel, and accommodation to attend an event beginning 01 Jan – 30 April 2026. Apply now before the deadline 01 Nov at 23:59: microb.io/ExternalEven...
External Event Grant
Login to apply
microb.io
Reposted by Heidi Goodrich-Blair
utehentschel.bsky.social
Interesting work on understudied sponge symbionts from the Arctic.
Reposted by Heidi Goodrich-Blair
joshuasweitz.bsky.social
Here's my NSF GRFP OpEd. Who wants to publish it?

"Revert text of NSF 25-547 (GRFP FY26) to NSF 24-591 (GRFP FY25) and keep current competition dates so that all applicants have a fair chance and awards can be made in advance of April 2026 decisions for graduate school."
A proposal to address the late release of the NSF GRFP call (25-547). 

Proposal: Revert text of NSF 25-547 (GRFP FY26) to
NSF 24-591 (GRFP FY25) and keep current competition dates so that all applicants have a fair chance and awards can be made in advance of April 2026 decisions for graduate school.
Reposted by Heidi Goodrich-Blair
joshuasweitz.bsky.social
We have limited time to act and a potential shutdown ahead. Candidates for the NSF GRFP need answers. The change in eligibility with <90 days before deadline is both unfair and contravenes NSF's own policy:

www.nsf.gov/funding/over...
Reposted by Heidi Goodrich-Blair
tlowepower.bsky.social
First, first-author publication from undergrad Tabitha Cowell is live!

She did some very cool comparisons of putative conjugative T4SS gene clusters and found neat eco evolutionary differences between the wilt pathogen and more environmental species!

I'll make an explainer sometime this week.
biorxiv-microbiol.bsky.social
Lifestyle-associated variation in type IV secretion systems between phytopathogenic and environmental Ralstonia https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.09.26.675681v1
Reposted by Heidi Goodrich-Blair
Reposted by Heidi Goodrich-Blair
elife.bsky.social
The gut-brain connection

Glia cells mediate cytokine signalling between the gut and the brain, linking sleep to inflammation in the gut.
The gut-brain connection
Glia cells mediate cytokine signaling between the gut and the brain, linking sleep to inflammation in the gut.
buff.ly
Reposted by Heidi Goodrich-Blair
aaas.org
Pond scum and platinum shared the stage this year as a packed house gathered to celebrate odd-sounding science.

Read more about the sometimes surprising societal benefits that come from basic research: https://www.aaas.org/news/odd-outstanding-why-basic-research-essential
Two golden statues in the shape of a goose on a display table with the text "from odd to outstanding: why basic research is essential" in a text box on the lefthand side of the image.
Reposted by Heidi Goodrich-Blair
nabroderick.bsky.social
SO much this!!! This is an incredibly disappointing change to the solicitation.
pratted.bsky.social
This also unfairly penalizes PhD programs with rotation programs, allowing junior scientists to try out different research areas before committing to a thesis. People who value the opportunity to explore shouldn't be punished for wanting to broaden their horizons.
Reposted by Heidi Goodrich-Blair
Reposted by Heidi Goodrich-Blair
perran.bsky.social
New paper on impacts of different larval diets on the fitness of Wolbachia mosquitoes

parasitesandvectors.biomedcentral.com/articles/10....
Impact of larval diet on fitness outcomes of Aedes aegypti mosquitoes infected with wAlbB and wMelM - Parasites & Vectors
Background Releases of Wolbachia-infected Aedes aegypti are being used to effectively control diseases caused by arboviruses, such as dengue. A well-balanced larval diet is essential for producing Wolbachia-infected mosquitoes with optimal fitness for release. Methods In this study, four diets with varying protein-to-carbohydrate ratios were tested with three Ae. aegypti lines (carrying the wAlbB, wMelM Wolbachia infections or uninfected) to identify optimal diets for larval rearing on the basis of diet allocations ranging from 0.4 to 3.2 mg/larva/day. The diets were selected on the basis of a review of existing literature and are characterized by progressively increasing protein and decreasing carbohydrate content: diet 1 (Pd) was based on plant-based protein (low protein and high carbohydrate), diet 2 (Kd) was based on animal-based protein (moderate protein and high carbohydrate), diet 3 (Fd) involved Hikari fish food (high protein and moderate carbohydrate), and diet 4 (IAEA) followed a widely used very-high-protein and low-carbohydrate diet developed by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). The optimal concentration for each diet was determined using a fitness index that incorporated pupation success, fecundity, hatch proportion and development time. Results The optimal dietary allocations for diets 1–4 were 1.6, 1.2, 1.2 and 0.8 mg/larva/day, respectively, regardless of Wolbachia status. There was a consistent significant positive relationship between female wing length and fecundity in wAlbB (r2 = 0.881), wMelM (r2 = 0.329), and uninfected (r2 = 0.886) mosquitoes. Diet 3 (Fd) at optimal food allocation reduced a fitness cost commonly associated with the wAlbB line compared with the uninfected line when provided at the optimal concentration. The wMelM line showed a persistently low fecundity regardless of diet and concentration. Conclusions These findings highlight the importance of an appropriate larval diet and dietary allocations in optimizing mosquito fitness for Wolbachia-based vector control programs. Further research into dietary composition, gut microbial interactions and Wolbachia associations could refine larval nutrition strategies, enhancing the effectiveness of mass-rearing for release programs. Graphical abstract
parasitesandvectors.biomedcentral.com
Reposted by Heidi Goodrich-Blair
kyt-thatsme.bsky.social
Oh this is cool! May have to send it to my micro class.
zaminiqbal.bsky.social
Delighted to see our paper studying the evolution of plasmids over the last 100 years, now out! Years of work by Adrian Cazares, also Nick Thomson @sangerinstitute.bsky.social - this version much improved over the preprint. Final version should be open access, apols.
Thread 1/n
Reposted by Heidi Goodrich-Blair
wormsrock.bsky.social
The goal was to understand biogeography, so we sequenced transcriptomes for the new species, and several others, and built the largest-yet Caenorhabditis phylogeny. The most common Pohnpeian species (C. pwilidak sp nov) is sister to a Hawaiian endemic clade!
A phylogeny of 70 Caenorhabditis species, based on protein sequences for 2955 genes. Adjacent to each species name is a set of colored circles indicating which continents each species is known from, with Remote Oceania included as its own region. Names of the nine species found in Pohnpei are bolded.
Reposted by Heidi Goodrich-Blair
hhmi.org
HHMI @hhmi.org · 22d
🎉Congratulations to @maribyndloss.bsky.social @jenniferdoudna.bsky.social and Kim Orth—three HHMI scientists recently honored by The American Society for Microbiology @asm.org
asm.org/press-releas...
Reposted by Heidi Goodrich-Blair
joshuasweitz.bsky.social
New from #SCIMaP - analysis of the White House’s Proposed FY 2026 National Science Foundation Budget.

Take-home: Slashing NSF by >50% will lead to ~$11 billion in economic loss and extensive job loss and reduced training opportunities in communities nationwide.

Report: osf.io/e8rnc

a 🧵
Economic loss from the White House's NSF FY 2026 Proposed Budget
Reposted by Heidi Goodrich-Blair
asaflevylab.bsky.social
A recent cool preprint by John Whitney's lab on a new family of antibacterial proteins secreted by Gram-positive bacteria that enter and kill a broad spectrum of bacteria. Cell entry is receptor-independent and relies on cleavage by a co-secreted protease and the PMF.
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
Proteolytically activated antibacterial toxins inhibit the growth of diverse Gram-positive bacteria
Many species of bacteria produce small-molecule antibiotics that enter and kill a wide range of competitor microbes. However, diffusible antibacterial proteins that share this broad-spectrum activity ...
www.biorxiv.org