Notes from the ARAC Lab
Notes from the ARAC Lab!
One of the unique aspects of ARAC is that we have a team of researchers working day in and day out to study antibiotic resistance and develop novel solutions to fight superbugs. We prioritize closing critical knowledge gaps regarding the public health impact of antibiotic overuse and misuse in people and animals so that all the major drivers of antibiotic resistance are properly addressed. Each month, we feature a Notes from the Lab feature in our newsletter. Below are some highlights on our lab team and what they are working on!
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What It Means to Expand A Research Project |
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ARAC Receives $3 Million Grant to Study Impacts of Limiting Antimicrobial Drug Use in Livestock |
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DNA Extraction Explained DNA extraction is one of the first steps to most of the things that we do in our laboratory. Learn more about what DNA extraction is, how it’s done and why it’s so important to our work. Plus, we highlight our recent opportunity to teach young students how to extract DNA from strawberries and their own saliva! We hope these bright minds will go on to improve the DNA extraction process and the field of microbiology in the future! |
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Robots in the Lab! |
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Meet ARAC's Newest Team Member! |
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New Year, New Staff! |
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We're Making Blood Broth! To help unearth different types of bacteria, we have to create living conditions where the bacteria can thrive. Enter blood broth, a type of enrichment broth used to coax certain bacteria to multiply (i.e., grow -- we still haven’t figured out how to make them do math). Different bacteria thrive under different conditions. For example: Campylobacter likes to grow in a broth supplemented with blood while Salmonella and E. coli prefer broths supplemented with sugars and proteins. |
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We're Studying What Bacteria Live in Your Nose |
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Hunting for Bacteria in Our Lab |
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Genome Sequencing for Dummies Genome sequencing gives us even more detail to track important trends with particular bacteria of interest. Using this information, we hope to figure out new ways to stop superbugs from spreading and causing disease.
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Meet ARAC's Interns It’s been a busy summer here in the lab, and thanks to our two interns it has flown by! Hannah and Grace are GWU undergraduate students who took Dr. Price’s class last semester and decided they wanted first-hand experience working in his lab to learn more about antibiotic resistance. They have been taught dozens of lab techniques that are helping ARAC researchers on a number of research projects and experiments. |
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Meet the ARAC Superbug-Fighting Team |