Science Editorials on Televised Immunology is pleased to present this special edition of Research Highlights in conjunction with the Science and Nature Television Association. In this issue, we address evolutionary...
[caption id="attachment_1639" align="alignright" width="376"] Dr. Juan Carlos Zúñiga-Pflücker, Chair, Department of Immunology, University of Toronto[/caption] As we start the New Year, it is worth noting that this also marks the...
[caption id="attachment_1634" align="aligncenter" width="622"] Co-Editors Kieran Manion (left) and Catherine Schrankel (right).[/caption] I entered medicine to use it as a vehicle for social change.” – Patch Adams Our theme for this...
More than 100 years ago, French pediatrician Henry Tissier declared that babies were bacteria-free in the womb. Colonization, he claimed, began during the birthing process, not before. While bacterial transmission...
[caption id="attachment_1855" align="aligncenter" width="539"] The Action Potential Lab. Image credit: Justin Easton Media.[/caption] A CENTURY AGO, the red-brick house on the corner of Christie and Davenport was a pharmacy. Now,...
What does the term “maternal immunology” mean to you? As a mammal yourself, you probably consider things like microbial colonization during live birth, or the transfer of maternal antibodies through...
[caption id="attachment_1882" align="alignleft" width="1275"] Continuing with our mission to merge art and science, this issue’s cover was inspired by Art Nouveau. Though it had a brief life, Art Nouveau reflected...
Without question, the most controversial, rumour-driven health debate of the past 15 years regards the safety and efficacy of vaccines. At face value, skepticism about vaccines makes sense. Why inject...