<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><item href="/news/cellular-matchmaking-how-viruses-connect-infect-bacterial-partners.aspx" dsn="blogs"><homehero>true</homehero><unit>Faculty &amp; Staff,Research,CMSE,College of Natural Science</unit><pubDate>06/07/2021</pubDate><title>Cellular matchmaking: How viruses connect, infect bacterial partners</title><description><p>Kristin Parent, J.K. Billman, Jr., M.D. Endowed Research Professor at MSU, is lead investigator on a $1.5 million National Institutes of Health (NIH) Maximizing Investigator’s Research Award (MIRA). Her pioneering research utilizes basic microbiology and cutting-edge cryo-microscopy to investigate, at the near atomic level, how viruses known as bacteriophage, or phage, use cell surface proteins to connect to, infect and reproduce inside some of the world’s deadliest gut bacteria—bacteria such as <em>Salmonella, E. coli </em>and<em> Shigella</em>—destroying them in the process.</p></description><author/><hero-image><img src="https://natsci.msu.edu/sites/_natsci/cache/file/D66F21DC-09C2-4A2A-9BB7D917B96A3374_newsarticlehero.jpg" alt="Hero image"/></hero-image><image><img src="https://natsci.msu.edu/sites/_natsci/cache/file/D66F21DC-09C2-4A2A-9BB7D917B96A3374_medium.jpg" alt="Hero image"/></image><tags><tag>bacteriophage</tag><tag>faculty</tag><tag>gut bacteria</tag><tag>phage therapy</tag><tag>research</tag><tag>viral infectivity</tag><tag>virus</tag></tags></item>