
Álvaro AcostaSerrano
@aacostaserrano
Interested in vector-borne diseases, microbial glycobiology, food, wine and jazz, in no particular order. Views my own
ID: 3901185857
https://biology.nd.edu 08-10-2015 16:54:39
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Please RT: Applications are open at tinyurl.com/applyBoP for the 2024 Biology of Parasitism course BiologyofParasitism Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) with new deadline: January 3rd !! Come join us for an amazing summer of learning and camaraderie, exciting lectures, lab practicals and fun excursions.






***New Post Doc Opportunity*** Working on #Chagas Disease genomics, evolution, adaptation, immune escape 🦠🦠. With @DujardinBiomed Thomas D. Otto McCulloch Lab Group CISeAL open to all nationalities jobs.ac.uk/job/DEL085/res… deadline 11th Jan. Please RT !

New PhD on #Chagas Disease in Glasgow, Lancaster, Ecuador and Antwerp. Fab team, great training, #genomics #singlecell #evolution #adaptation with McCulloch Lab Group Mick Urbaniak Thomas D. Otto gla.ac.uk/postgraduate/d… please RT !


🏅Congratulations to @Jquintanalcala who has been awarded the British Society for Parasitology President's Medal for 2024! The award recognises ambitious, rising stars in the field, well on their way to world-leading status within the research community!


We are recruiting a Postdoc! Interested in trypanosomes, proteomics or gene regulation? Join our lab in BLS Lancaster University on a project studying heat-shock response, closing 21st July, details at tinyurl.com/2nrfuttm British Society for Parasitology, Women In Parasitology #Postdoc


Welcome to Stephanie Blandin and Alvaro Álvaro AcostaSerrano who lead the vector module BiologyofParasitism. Transgenic tsetsemosquitoes? Everything is possible now that the English even win in penalties.



Muchas gracias Elena Gómez-Díaz 🧬🦠🦟🌍 y Dr. Carlos Chaccour 🦟🔚💊 por los comentarios y difusión

News podcast: Richard Smith and Isabel Quiroga on the UK’s first uterus transplant birth; Pascal Geldsetzer on the shingles vaccine and dementia; Álvaro AcostaSerrano and Ghaith Aljayyoussi on a mosquito-killing drug; and Eleanor Scerri on early seafaring humans. thenakedscientists.com/podcasts/naked…


The FDA-approved drug nitisinone can quickly kill Anopheles mosquitoes fed human blood containing the drug, suggesting it could be explored as a new endectocide for mosquito control and malaria prevention. Learn more in Science Translational Medicine: scim.ag/4lhqbA7
