Jens Walter
@jenswalter15
Keen interests in science, microbiome, music, travel, food, and cooking.
ID: 1534910234367516675
09-06-2022 14:48:20
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Drs Jeff Tomiak & Chr. Rune Stensvold highlight the recent Cell article from Nicola Segata, Francesco Asnicar & colleagues linking intestinal #Blastocystis to improved #gut health & favorable #cardiometabolic outcomes. Universitetet i Stavanger Statens Serum Inst. CIBIO - UniTrento Segata Lab authors.elsevier.com/a/1jV9x5Eb1xJI…
Amazing view to work on a presentation. Looking forward visiting Universidade Federal de Goiás tomorrow. With a big thank you to João Felipe Mota for hosting us.
It's not been a secret as such, but I'm delighted to (officially) share that I've joined APC Microbiome Ireland UCC Ireland earlier this year! APC & Cork are a microbiome research 'powerhouse' & it's a great privilege to now work among teams whose work I've admired for a long time 1/
APC welcomes Lisa Y Stein to UCC Ireland today for an important seminar on Microbial Solutions to Mitigate Climate Change. University of Alberta UCC Research #Sustainability #climatechange
It was a privilege to host Lisa Stein from University of Alberta at APC Microbiome Ireland and UCC Ireland. Amazing lecture on role of microbes in climate change, a topic that concerns us all. Great scientist and a real role model on how to use knowledge in microbiology to turn things around for humanity.
Jens Walter University of Alberta APC Microbiome Ireland UCC Ireland She is amazing and the chair of our also amazing ISME clinate change committee :-) isme-microbes.org/introducing-is…
Interesting paper on the metabolic effects of dietary fibre: sciencedirect.com/science/articl… I would however be cautious with conclusions that effects are "via Alterations in the Gut Microbiota" as these are just correlations. We learned this the hard way: microbiomejournal.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.11…
Publications from Christopher Stewart with important conclusions. Bacterial communities in breast milk are “skin commensal/pathobionts like Staphylococcus” that "do not colonise the infant gut". This suggests they are skin contaminants and should not be considered a 'milk microbiome'!
We are doing our final recruitment push for the Synbiotic Restore study at APC Microbiome Ireland and UCC Ireland. Please consider participating! Thank you!!!!