• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
virology blog

virology blog

About viruses and viral disease

TWiV 378: Herpes plays DUBstep

28 February 2016 by Vincent Racaniello

TWiVOn episode #378 of the science show This Week in Virology, Greg Smith joins the TWiVirate to reveal how his lab discovered a switch that controls herpesvirus neuroinvasion, and then we visit the week’s news about Zika virus.

You can find TWiV #378 at microbe.tv/twiv, or you may listen below.

[powerpress url=”http://traffic.libsyn.com/twiv/TWiV378.mp3″]

Click arrow to play
Download TWiV 378 (87 MB .mp3, 119 min)
Subscribe (free): iTunes, RSS, email

Filed Under: This Week in Virology Tagged With: de-ubiquitination, DUB, fetal demise, ganglion, herpes simplex virus, herpesvirus, latency, microcephaly, mosquito, nervous system, neuroinvasion, neuron, pseudorabies virus, sexual transmission, ubiquitination, viral, virology, virus, viruses, zika virus

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. alaine olivo says

    29 February 2016 at 9:32 pm

    Fantastic discussion ! I loved the info . Does someone know where my company might be able to access a sample a form form to type on ?

Primary Sidebar

by Vincent Racaniello

Earth’s virology Professor
Questions? virology@virology.ws

With David Tuller and
Gertrud U. Rey

Follow

Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Instagram
Get updates by RSS or Email

Contents

Table of Contents
ME/CFS
Inside a BSL-4
The Wall of Polio
Microbe Art
Interviews With Virologists

Earth’s Virology Course

Virology Live
Columbia U
Virologia en Español
Virology 101
Influenza 101

Podcasts

This Week in Virology
This Week in Microbiology
This Week in Parasitism
This Week in Evolution
Immune
This Week in Neuroscience
All at MicrobeTV

Useful Resources

Lecturio Online Courses
HealthMap
Polio eradication
Promed-Mail
Small Things Considered
ViralZone
Virus Particle Explorer
The Living River
Parasites Without Borders

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.