Together Again, the 11th Annual Symposium from Edinburgh Infectious Diseases, was held on Thursday 23 June at the Roslin Institute. We were delighted that it was our first in-person symposium for 2 years. The recordings from most of the talks are available below.Programme Document Edinburgh Infectious Diseases Symposium - Together Again 2022 (205.73 KB / PDF) COFFEE AND SET UP0930 - 0935Ross Fitzgerald, Director Edinburgh Infectious DiseasesWelcome and introduction0935 - 0955Kate Cuschieri, Royal Infirmary of EdinburghImpact of HPV vaccination in Scotland0955 - 1015Liam Morrison, Roslin InstituteDrug resistance in livestock trypanosomes: a neglected problem in neglected pathogens1015 - 1035Richard Sloan, Infection MedicineHow does the cellular protein RPRD2 inhibit HIV-1 infection?1035 - 1050Beth Mills, Centre for Inflammation ResearchRoutes to reducing the burden of microbial keratitis1050 - 1105Freya Bull, School of Physics and AstronomyListen to all the lightning talks in this session A model for the infection dynamics of a urinary catheterJamie Gorzynski, Roslin InstituteGenomic epidemiological analysis of Legionnaires’ Disease in Scotland uncovers long-term endemic L. pneumophila clones of public health importanceRose Doyle, School of Biological SciencesCharacterisation of novel dissemination genes in Burkholderia pseudomallei1105 - 1135COFFEE1135 - 1150Vasso Makrantoni, Infection MedicineGenome plasticity: A survival strategy for human fungal pathogens – please note only part of the talk is available1150 - 1205Joanna Young, School of Biological Sciences Toxoplasma gondii: dissecting chronic infection of a ubiquitous parasite1205 - 1220David Smith, Moredun Research InstituteBradyzoite biology: from invasion to persistence – please note this recording has been edited to remove disturbance from unwanted interruptions1220 - 1235Farren Yero, Inst. for Advanced Studies in the Humanities and Duke UniversityWhere Science Meets Slavery: Reimagining Vaccine History through Anti-Colonial Art1235 - 1250Will Harvey, Roslin Institute Listen to all the lightning talks in the session Predicting the direction of influenza evolutionPiotr Janas, Centre for Inflammation ResearchRespiratory syncytial virus infection causes long-term changes in the expression of major histocompatibility complexes in murine airway epithelial cellsRicha Sharma, School of ChemistryFluorescent smart probes – a "tag-and-kill" approach for infectious microbial pathogensNelly Mak, Infection MedicineDoes Allelic Variation in the IFITM Amphipathic Helix Influence Its Antiviral Activity?1250 - 1410LUNCH1410 - 1425Prerna Vohra, School of Biological SciencesSequencing approaches to understand and control zoonotic pathogens1425 - 1445Ian Laurenson, Royal Infirmary of EdinburghDiagnosing mycobacterial infection – where are we and where are we going?1445 - 1505Lonneke Vervelde, Roslin InstituteMucosal tissue models: from egg to enteroid1505 - 1525Katerina Guschanski, School of Biological SciencesAMR in ancient DNA1525 - 1540KER MEMORIAL PRIZE WINNER: Mabel Tettey, School of Biological SciencesAnalysis of released peptidases and their role in the transmission biology of African trypanosomes1540 - 1610COFFEE1610 - 1700KER MEMORIAL LECTURER: Dame Sarah Gilbert, University of OxfordChAdOx1-vectored vaccines against different viral targetsKer Memorial Lecture and PrizeWe were particularly pleased that the Ker Memorial Lecture was given by Professor Dame Sarah Gilbert from the University of Oxford, who spoke about her pioneering work to develop the Oxford AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine.And as is customary we also heard from the winner of the Ker Memorial Prize, Dr Mabel Tettey, awarded for the best PhD thesis in infectious diseases submitted in 2021.Poster sessionsWe very much encouraged all students and postdocs to present their work in the poster sessions.The People's Vote Winner was Fiona Sargison from the Fitzgerald lab for her poster on Genome-scale analysis of Staphylococcus aureus to identify determinants of avian host-adaptation. Publication date 28 Jun, 2022