Amelia McKitterick
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amelia-mckitterick.bsky.social
Amelia McKitterick
@amelia-mckitterick.bsky.social
Incoming Assistant Professor at UMass Chan Medical School. Microbiologist with a passion for phages that infect mycolated bacteria.
https://www.umassmed.edu/mckitterick-lab/
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I'm pleased to announce that I will be starting my lab as an Assistant Professor at UMass Chan Medical School in August! My group will study phages that infect corynebacteria and mycobacteria to understand bacterial cell envelope assembly and phage gene function. Website and more info to come soon!
Reposted by Amelia McKitterick
We are hiring new a Tenure-track Assistant/Associate Professor in my division at UMKC! If you are interested, please apply by going to the link below and searching for Job ID 55628. It is a really wonderful place to live and work!

erecruit.umsystem.edu/psc/tamext/K...
July 9, 2025 at 9:23 PM
The excitement continues! Check out my latest preprint examining how phages have adapted to lyse different bacterial envelopes. I found a lysis gene (lysZ) that is conserved in phages that infect corynebacteria mycobacteria, and other actinos.

www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
Bacteriophages target membrane-anchored glycopolymers to promote host cell lysis and progeny release
Most bacteriophages lyse their host cell to release progeny virions. Double-stranded DNA phages typically promote host lysis using a holin-endolysin system. Holins form pores in the cytoplasmic membra...
www.biorxiv.org
June 25, 2025 at 3:49 PM
I'm pleased to announce that I will be starting my lab as an Assistant Professor at UMass Chan Medical School in August! My group will study phages that infect corynebacteria and mycobacteria to understand bacterial cell envelope assembly and phage gene function. Website and more info to come soon!
June 24, 2025 at 7:09 PM
Reposted by Amelia McKitterick
🚨👉 Please check our recent work on bacterial cell division. In situ Cryo-ET reveals the cellular function of the penicillin binding protein 1b supported by AFM, live-cell imaging, in silico AlphaFold proteome screen and TIRFM. Hope you enjoy the read! #teamtomo #cryo-ET ❄️🔬🐎 big thanks to the team!
The aPBP-type cell wall synthase PBP1b plays a specialized role in fortifying the Escherichia coli division site against osmotic rupture https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.04.02.646830v1
April 3, 2025 at 9:08 AM
Reposted by Amelia McKitterick
I'm so happy that I can finally share the results of my first postdoc paper with @baym.lol!!! Turns out plasmids are an amazing system to study multi-scale evolution and we can track within-cell and between-cell dynamics!
(1/n) www.biorxiv.org/content/earl...
Intracellular competition shapes plasmid population dynamics
Conflicts between levels of biological organization are central to evolution, from populations of multicellular organisms to selfish genetic elements in microbes. Plasmids are extrachromosomal, self-r...
www.biorxiv.org
February 21, 2025 at 8:36 PM
Reposted by Amelia McKitterick
How can single-cell transcriptomics profile phage infection in individual microbial cells? Check out our preprint with Anika Gupta, Norma Morella, Dmitry Sutormin & other authors, in collaboration with Georg Seelig (UW) and Neel Dey (Fred Hutch). www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
Combinatorial phenotypic landscape enables bacterial resistance to phage infection
Success of phage therapies is limited by bacterial defenses against phages. While a large variety of anti-phage defense mechanisms has been characterized, how expression of these systems is distribute...
www.biorxiv.org
January 16, 2025 at 2:26 AM