Behind the Paper

The real stories behind the latest research papers, from conception to publication, the highs and the lows

Approaching HIV prevention with young women’s preferences in mind

To many scientists, it may seem that HIV prevention research has succeeded – large clinical trials of oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) and vaginal formulations of antiretroviral drugs (ARVs) demonstrated that these products can indeed prevent HIV infection when used [1-3]. This is great news! But the problem we face as a global HIV prevention community is not whether or not we have efficacious products. The problem is whether or not the products will appropriately meet women’s needs and lifestyles and thus whether or not women will use them. Adherence to product use is quite possibly the biggest issue blocking the eradication of sexual HIV transmission [4].
Go to the profile of Nina Derby
Sep 24, 2018

Maternal gut and breast milk microbiota affect infant gut antibiotic resistome and mobile genetic elements

Infants are affected by the antibiotic resistance crisis and carry more resistant bacteria in their gut than adults, irrespective of whether they have been treated with antibiotics or not. It has been unclear where these bacteria come from and if the maternal gut microbiota and breast milk contribute to the assembly of the gut resistome in early life.
Go to the profile of Katariina Parnanen
Sep 24, 2018

The history of the paper “Equity and the Willingness to Pay for Green Electricity in Germany”

Germany is commonly seen as a global role model in transforming its electricity system from fossil-based power generation to the “green” electricity production based on renewable energy technologies. As a result of this so-called energy transition (Energiewende in German), the share of green electricity rose from around 6% in 2000 to about 36% in 2017.
Go to the profile of Manuel Frondel
Sep 19, 2018

Intestinal inflammation Salmonella style

It has been long known that intestinal inflammation is central for the pathology that follows infection with non-typhoidal Salmonellae such as Salmonella Typhimurium. However, in recent years work carried out in the laboratories of Wolf-Dietrich Hardt and Andreas Baumler have established that the inflammatory response is also required for Salmonella Typhimurium to compete with the resident intestinal microbiota and to secure essential nutrients. Unlike most other tissues, where the mere presence of bacterial products capable of stimulating innate immune receptors can trigger inflammation, the intestinal tract presents a challenge to those pathogens that need inflammation to sustain their livelihood. Indeed, the presence in the intestinal tract of an abundance of microbial products with the potential to stimulate innate immune receptors demands for the intestinal epithelium to be subject to negative regulatory mechanisms that can prevent the pathology that could result from the indiscriminate firing of these receptors. In fact, misregulation of those mechanisms can result in chronic inflammatory conditions such as inflammatory bowel disease. Consequently, to initiate an inflammatory response in the gut, S. Typhimurium cannot relay on the stimulation of innate immune receptors by the standard “pathogen-associated molecular patterns” (e. g LPS, peptidoglycan, flagellin) that, like many other bacteria, posses in abundance. Therefore, the mechanisms by which Salmonella trigger intestinal inflammation have been a long-standing question in the field and have been the subject of some controversy. We believe that a paper that we recently published in Nature Microbiology has finally clarified this important issue.
Go to the profile of Jorge Galan
Sep 17, 2018