
Seth Thomas Scanlon
644 posts

Seth Thomas Scanlon
@ImmunoEditor
Editor, Science Immunology 🇺🇸 + 🇳🇱 & based in 🇪🇺 Bluesky: https://t.co/MXWrwj8Sak




In partnership with @VIBTrainConf, @SciImmunology is organizing #Type2Immunity26 in Ghent 9–10 March 2026, bringing together leaders in the field of #Type2Immunity. Check out our lineup here: vibbio.tech/3UwmTNk 🗓️15 DEC: Travel grant deadline 🗓️8 JAN: Abstract deadline

The December issue of Science #Immunology is out! This month's cover highlights the juvenile #axolotl's ability to regenerate its #thymus after complete removal—possibly making it an exception among vertebrates. Learn about this research and more: scim.ag/48fBhkF




Great abstracts submitted to #PeritonealSummit resulting in an awesome final program: peritoneal-summit.com/program. Registration open until December 15th. Only few spots left! @Kubes_Lab @erinadelle17 @ImmunoEditor @LucyHJackson @CecileBenezech @ProfJudiAllen

Science #Immunology's December issue is out! This month's cover spotlights how worm-like #parasites called #helminths suppress immune responses and facilitate chronic infections in mice. Read this research and more: scim.ag/4iqUYcb









Happy to share our latest work by @YYexin et al. on antibody-mediated control of endogenous retroviruses in mice. In the process, we found “natural antibodies” with broad reactivity against enveloped viruses. Here is how “panviral” antibodies work 🧵(1/) science.org/doi/10.1126/sc…



I’m delighted to share my postdoc work is now out in @SciImmunology! We investigated the role of liver-resident macrophages, #Kupffercell, in newborn bacterial infections and their link to #sepsis and #meningitis, unveiling a surprising phenomenon. science.org/doi/epdf/10.11…

Science #Immunology's November issue is out! This month's cover highlights new research that suggests that delayed relocation of liver macrophages, or #KupfferCells, into blood vessels underlies newborns' susceptibility to bloodstream infections. bit.ly/3AudbV5


