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Microscopic view of glowing bacteria

‘Lessons from the squid-vibrio symbiosis’: Berg Lecture 2025

By Arie Henry

The squid Euprymna scolopes provides a home and nutrients for Vibrio fischeri bacteria, who in turn provide camouflaging luminescence for the squid.

Did you know that certain squid keep glowing bacteria in a special organ? This partnership between the Hawaiian bobtail squid and the luminescent bacterium Vibrio fischeri plays an important role in the ability of the squid to evade predators.

This symbiosis is at the heart of the 2025 Berg Lecture, "The recognition of partnering symbionts with each new generation: Lessons from the squid-vibrio symbiosis," presented by Dr. Margaret McFall-Ngai of Carnegie Science and the California Institute of Technology (Caltech).

Be sure to join us March 4, 2025 at the LaSells Stewart Center for the third annual installment of the Berg Lecture.


Portrait of woman smiling at camera, wearing blue blazer and glasses

Microbiologist Margaret McFall-Ngai is a scientist in the Carnegie Institute of Science Biosphere Sciences & Engineering Division and Faculty Associate at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech).

McFall-Ngai is a scientist and educator, renowned for her work on symbiosis between animals and bacteria, particularly the symbiosis between the bobtail squid and V. fischeri.

Many invertebrates and most, if not all, vertebrates acquire their bacterial symbionts by horizontal transmission; the symbionts are not present during embryogenesis but are recruited from the environment during or after birth or hatching. This presentation will cover how the embryo prepares the host animal for the first interactions with environmental V. fischeri and then how specific selection of this bacterial species occurs “against all odds.”

The model symbiosis between the Hawaiian bobtail squid Euprymna scolopes and its luminescent bacterial partner V. fischeri offers the opportunity to study the underlying mechanisms of the symbiont-acquisition process in the marine environment.

McFall-Ngai has also contributed to understanding how tissues interact with light, discovering the first protein-based animal reflector called reflectin, which has applications in industry and biomedicine.

McFall-Ngai was a Guggenheim Fellow in 2010, a Caltech Moore Scholar from 2011-2013 and an Andrew D. White Professor-at-Large at Cornell University between 2010 and 2016. She is a member of the National Academy of Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Academy of Microbiology.

She is a Senior Staff Scientist at Carnegie Science and a Faculty Associate in Biology and Biological Engineering at Caltech. She was the first hire for Carnegie’s newly launched research division for Biosphere Sciences & Engineering in November 2021. Before joining Carnegie Science, she was a professor and director emerita at the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa’s Pacific Biosciences Research Center.


Read about the 2024 Berg Lecture, highlighting biophysicist Jeff Gore.
Learn about the 2023 Berg Lecture, featuring soil scientist Jo Handelsman.


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