no_show3 Profile Banner
Kazuki Nosho Profile
Kazuki Nosho

@no_show3

Followers
39
Following
111
Media
0
Statuses
9

Microbiologist, Assistant Professor, The University of Tokyo

Tokyo, Japan
Joined April 2017
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
@no_show3
Kazuki Nosho
2 years
One of my main projects has been published in @NatureMicrobiol !
@NatureMicrobiol
Nature Microbiology
2 years
Out now in @NatureMicrobiol: Simultaneous spatiotemporal transcriptomics and microscopy of Bacillus subtilis swarm development reveal cooperation across generations @HannahJeckel @no_show3 @knutdrescher & colleagues https://t.co/j9dVTzQi8j
1
2
15
@kyogok
kyogo kawaguchi
7 months
今年もやります、本郷で生物物理のミニシンポジウム: 第7回 「生物物理の新展開」 日時:2025年5月2日(金)16:50-18:15 場所:東京大学本郷キャンパス 理学部4号館1220教室 参加費無料、学部生歓迎、終了後に懇親会あり
1
23
87
@OhsumiFSF
大隅基礎科学創成財団
8 months
アカデミアと企業の協力で微生物学を発展させようと立ち上げた #微生物コンソーシアム も5年目をむかえ、嬉しいコラボが実現しています。今年1月からは、テルモ(株) @terumo_jp 様が東京大学グループの #協創研究テーマ 「#スポリクチア属放線菌の研究」に参画しています!
0
3
17
@knutdrescher
Knut Drescher
11 months
We found that many bacterial species use exogenous peptidoglycan fragments - released by lysis of neighboring cells - as a general danger signal, triggering a danger response that protects bacteria against many dangers: biofilm formation. Details👇: https://t.co/qWW3bk6NBN
Tweet card summary image
nature.com
Nature Microbiology - Peptidoglycan released by neighbouring kin or non-kin cell lysis induces physiological changes that protect from a range of stresses, including phage predation.
@NatureMicrobiol
Nature Microbiology
11 months
OUT NOW: Bacteria use exogenous peptidoglycan as a danger signal to trigger biofilm formation @knutdrescher @sneakystaph @biozentrum https://t.co/srnStUfhff
1
34
107
@RomainBriandet
romain briandet
2 years
The last article from Yasmine Dergham PhD is now published in Nature Communications "Direct comparison of spatial transcriptional heterogeneity across diverse Bacillus subtilis biofilm communities" https://t.co/97VoL8Qu3s
0
7
23
@knutdrescher
Knut Drescher
2 years
We developed a method for spatiotemporal transcriptome measurements during bacterial swarm development, which revealed cross-feeding across generations! Now out: 👇 https://t.co/7NuAirzenk
Tweet card summary image
nature.com
Nature Microbiology - Spatiotemporal transcriptomes during multicellular development of Bacillus subtilis swarms reveal supra-generational cooperation.
@Francois_Mayer1
François Mayer
2 years
How do microbial communities develop? Combining live-cell microscopy with a robotic arm for sampling reveals a cross-feeding mechanism during Bacillus subtilis swarm development. Congrats to @HannahJeckel @no_show3 @knutdrescher & colleagues! https://t.co/U8NIfEvIv9
5
37
123
@Francois_Mayer1
François Mayer
2 years
How do microbial communities develop? Combining live-cell microscopy with a robotic arm for sampling reveals a cross-feeding mechanism during Bacillus subtilis swarm development. Congrats to @HannahJeckel @no_show3 @knutdrescher & colleagues! https://t.co/U8NIfEvIv9
Tweet card summary image
nature.com
Nature Microbiology - Spatiotemporal transcriptomes during multicellular development of Bacillus subtilis swarms reveal supra-generational cooperation.
1
9
36