[bioundgrd] FW: 7.341 Microbiome and Drug Delivery, Wednesday Sept 4th, 11am, 68-150, Coffee and cookies!
Crystal Boateng
cboateng at mit.edu
Tue Sep 3 10:40:11 EDT 2019
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Crystal Boateng (Pronouns: they/them/themselves)
Biology Education Office 68-120
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
31 Ames Street, Cambridge, MA 02139
ph: 617-252-1783 / f: 617-258-9329 / e: cboateng at mit.edu<mailto:cboateng at mit.edu>
Begin forwarded message:
7.341 The Microbiome and Drug Delivery: Cross-species Communication in Health and Disease
There are more microbes permanently living in our gut than there are cells in the human body. This rich community of bacteria, fungi and viruses, called the microbiome, plays a central role in human health and disease. Recent research has linked this passenger community to nutrition, circadian rhythms, infectious disease, inflammatory disease, cancer, diabetes, arthritis and even immune system and nervous system development. The connections seem to be so far-reaching that some scientists are starting to consider this human-microbiome system as a “holobiont” or “superorganism.”
Why are we realizing this situation only now? Are microbes actually interacting with us so fundamentally? What are the mechanisms by which effects of the microbiome are mediated? Can we survive without our microbiome? How can we analyze such a complex system? Can we exploit the microbiome to improve human health? Can interactions with microbes be harnessed for drug delivery?
In this course, we will explore the primary scientific literature to find the answers to these questions and learn to critically assess observational and experimental data and to distinguish between correlation and causality.
Website: https://bit.ly/2FT15WZ
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