Human microbiome, June 19

The journal Immunity has a special with several great papers on (gut) microbiome and diet. And even Martha Stewart is writing about the microbiome! In style, of course.

Oral microbiome

Screen Shot 2014-06-19 at 10.50.07 PMMining the Mouth’s Many Microbes – Tracy Vence – The Scientist

““The whole world passes through the oral cavity,” said Purnima Kumar, an assistant professor of periodontology at the Ohio State University College of Dentistry. This makes investigating the microbial communities present in the mouth a challenge.”

Gut microbiome

Screen Shot 2014-06-19 at 10.49.36 PMFinding the Missing Links among Metabolites, Microbes, and the Host – Pieter C. Dorrestein – Immunity

“Here, we provide our perspective on these connections and outline a systematic research program that could turn these individual links into a broader network that allows us to understand how these components interact. “

Screen Shot 2014-06-19 at 10.51.41 PMMining the Human Gut Microbiota for Effector Strains that Shape the Immune System – Philip P. Ahern – Immunity

“Here, we discuss a scalable, less biased approach for identifying effector strains in complex microbial communities that impact immune function. The approach begins by identifying uncultured human fecal microbiota samples that transmit immune phenotypes to germ-free mice.”

Screen Shot 2014-06-19 at 10.51.09 PMDiet, Metabolites, and “Western-Lifestyle” Inflammatory Diseases – Alison N. Thorburn – Immunity

“This review highlights what is currently known about diet, metabolites, and their associated immune pathways in relation to the development of inflammatory disease.”

Screen Shot 2014-06-19 at 10.52.28 PMInflammatory Bowel Disease as a Model for Translating the Microbiome – Curtis Huttenhower – Immunity

“IBD thus represents perhaps the most comprehensive current model for understanding the human microbiome’s role in complex inflammatory disease. Here, we review the influences of the microbiota on IBD and its potential for translational medicine.”

Screen Shot 2014-06-19 at 10.54.48 PMCulturomics and pyrosequencing evidence of the reduction in gut microbiota diversity in patients with broad-spectrum antibiotics – Grégory Dubourg – International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents

“Culturomics was performed on four stool samples from patients treated with large-scale antibiotics to assess the diversity of their gut flora in comparison with other culture-dependent studies. Pyrosequencing of the V6 region was also performed and was compared with a control group.”

Screen Shot 2014-06-19 at 10.55.24 PMLong-term monitoring of the human intestinal microbiota from the 2nd week to 13 years of age – Akihito Endo – Anaerobe

“Few long term follow-up studies have been reported and we therefore characterized the development of intestinal microbiota of ten subjects from the 2nd week of life to 13 years of age. PCR-denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis combined with several bacterial group-specific primer sets demonstrated the colonization steps of defined bacterial groups in the microbiota”

Respiratory microbiome

Time between sputum sample collection and storage significantly influences bacterial sequence composition from Cystic Fibrosis respiratory infections – Leah Cuthbertson – Journal of Clinical Microbiology

“Aliquots were stored at room temperature before freezing at -80°C for increasing intervals up to 72 hour period. Samples were treated with propidium monoazide, to distinguish live from dead cells, prior to DNA extraction, and 16S rRNA gene pyrosequencing was used to characterise the bacterial composition.”

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Human Pharyngeal Microbiome May Play a Protective Role in Respiratory Tract Infections – Zhancheng Gao – Genomics, Proteomics & Bioinformatics

Recent studies have demonstrated that the pharyngeal microbiome comprises an abundance of bacterial species that interact with the local epithelial and immune cells, and together, they form a unique micro-ecological system.”

Skin and wounds microbiology

Screen Shot 2014-06-19 at 10.57.13 PMMicrobial profiling of combat wound infection through detection microarray and next-generation sequencing – Nicholas A. Be – Journal of Clinical Microbiology

“We employed a microarray capable of detecting all sequenced pathogens for interrogation of 124 wound samples from extremity injuries in combat-injured U.S. service members. A subset of samples was also processed via next-generation sequencing and metagenomic analysis. “

Press coverage:

Screen Shot 2014-06-19 at 11.00.07 PMHealing warriors by making a census of combat wounds’ microbiota – Melissa Healy – LA Times

“New research suggests that physicians treating future U.S. troops (and perhaps those treating some of today’s wounded warriors) may be able to take a fast and thorough census of the microorganisms living in a combat wound and tailor their treatment accordingly.”

Human microbiome in the news

Screen Shot 2014-06-19 at 10.56.06 PM4 habits for a healthy gut – Martha Stewart – CNN

“Studies also suggest that diabetic and obese patients tend to lack a diversity of bacteria, and the Cleveland Clinic found that some bacteria metabolize components of egg and meat to produce a compound that aids in the clogging of arteries.”

Screen Shot 2014-06-19 at 10.44.58 PMWebinar: The Promise of the Microbiome: Function and Dysfunction in Humans and Beyond – Science Magazine, featuring David Relman, Rob Knight, and Jack Gilbert

“During this webinar, the speakers will:

  • Provide a brief introduction to microbiomes and how they may fundamentally impact our study of the natural world
  • Share their research data on human and nonhuman microbiota, including microbe-associated environmental impacts on human health
  • Discuss the role of microbiomes in obesity and malnutrition
  • Answer your questions live during the webinar!”

Bacterial detection in blood and other sites

Screen Shot 2014-06-19 at 10.58.32 PMMassive Parallel Sequencing Provides New Perspectives on Bacterial Brain Abscesses – Øyvind Kommedal – Journal of Clinical Microbiology

“Bacterial 16S rRNA genes were amplified directly from the specimens and sequenced using Ion Torrent technology, with an average of 500,000 reads per sample. The results were compared to those from culture- and Sanger sequencing-based diagnostics.”

Animal models of microbiota

Screen Shot 2014-06-19 at 10.59.25 PMDiet-Induced Alterations in Gut Microflora Contribute to Lethal Pulmonary Damage in TLR2/TLR4-Deficient Mice – Yewei Ji – Cell Reports

“Here, we show that chronic intake of a high-fat diet (HFD), not a low-fat diet, leads to severe pulmonary damage and mortality in mice deficient in Toll-like receptors 2 and 4 (DKO).”

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General microbiology and science, June 18

Learn about dengue at the World Cup, a deadly lake, 3D structures of genomes, OTUs and tables, musical kids, and why your iPhone headphones are always in a knot.

Dengue

Evaluation of single-round infectious, chimeric dengue type 1 virus as an antigen for dengue functional antibody assays – Atsushi Yamanaka – Vaccine

“In the present study, SRIPs of DENV-1 (D1-SRIPs) were evaluated as an antigen for functional antibody assays.”

An inhibition model of BPTI to unlinked dengue virus NS2B-NS3 protease – Hua Li – FEBS Letters

“BPTI shows strong competitive inhibitory activity (Ki = 6.5 nM) against this unlinked protease, which adopts a closed conformation.”

The role of cell proteins in dengue virus infection – Ma. Isabel Salazar – Journal of Proteomics

“This review focuses on recent reports about cellular proteins involved along the dengue virus replication cycle, in prime cellular targets during the infection of both humans and mosquito hosts and also on the proteomics and other approaches that are being used to reveal the entire orchestration and most significant processes altered during infection.”

Dengue outlook for the World Cup in Brazil – Eduardo Massad – The Lancet Infectious Diseases

Correspondence on: Dengue outlook for the World Cup in Brazil: an early warning model framework driven by real-time seasonal climate forecasts

Arsenic metabolism

43,000 die annually in Bangladesh: Study – The Daily Star

“This rate is 25 percent all over Bangladesh, said Dr Kazi Matin Ahmed, geology professor of Dhaka University. He presented the paper at a seminar titled “Arsenic Activities, Research and Outcomes” organised by the Bangladesh Medical Research Council (BMRC) in its auditorium in the capital yesterday.”

Arsenic speciation in rice-based food for adults with celiac disease – Sandra Munera-Picazo – Food Additives and Contaminants

“…the objective of this study was to analyze the occurrence of arsenic (As) in gluten-free products, basically those rice-based, intended for celiac adult consumers.”

Could This Acid Lake Hold the Elixir of Life for Cancer Patients? – Ryot.org

“The Berkeley Acid Pit is a giant hole filled with arsenic and sulfuric acid, and has a history of causing disturbing deaths… and it’s making its way into the city’s water supply, according to PitWatch.”

Chromosomal Organization

Targeted chromatin capture (T2C): a novel high resolution high throughput method to detect genomic interactions and regulatory elements – Petros Kolovos – Epigenetics &

“We applied T2C on well-known model regions, the mouse beta-globin locus and the human H19/IGF2 locus. In both cases we identified all known chromatin interactions”

A statistical approach for inferring the 3D structure of the genome – Nelle Varoquaux – Bioinformatics

“We propose a novel approach to infer a consensus 3D structure of a genome from Hi-C data. The method incorporates a statistical model of the contact counts, assuming that the counts between two loci follow a Poisson distribution whose intensity decreases with the physical distances between the loci.”

Spatial organization of interphase chromosomes and the role of chromatin fibril dynamics in the positioning of genome elements – E. S. Gushchanskaya – Molecular Biology

In this review, we discuss the results of these projects, which allow us to explain the functional basis of nucleus multilevel compartmentalization and to identify the principles of high-level chromatin organization. “

Computational ecology

A fast and unbiased procedure to randomize ecological binary matrices with fixed row and column totals – Giovanni Strona – Nature Communications

“A well-known problem in numerical ecology is how to recombine presence-absence matrices without altering row and column totals. “

Consistent, comprehensive and computationally efficient OTU definitions – Jai Ram Rideout – PeerJ PrePrints

“We present a performance-optimized algorithm, subsampled open-reference OTU picking, for assigning marker gene (e.g., 16S rRNA) sequences generated on next-generation sequencing platforms to operational taxonomic units (OTUs) for microbial community analysis.”

 

Bacteria in blood and sterile sites

Rapid and direct MALDI-MS identification of pathogenic bacteria from blood using ionic liquid-modified magnetic nanoparticles (Fe3O4@SiO2) – Mukesh L. Bhaisare – Journal of Materials Chemistry B

“A novel method for pathogenic bacteria identification directly from blood samples using cationic ionic liquid-modified magnetic nanoparticles (CILMS) is reported.”

Metagenomics

GroopM: An automated tool for the recovery of population genomes from related metagenomes – Michael Imelfort – PeerJ PrePrints

“Here we introduce GroopM, an automated binning tool that primarily uses differential coverage to obtain high fidelity population genomes from related metagenomes. “

DNA-dependent RNA polymerase detects hidden giant viruses in published databanks – Vikas Sharma – Genome Biology and Evolution

“To explore the dark matter, we used viral RNAP2 and reconstructed putative ancestral RNAP2, which were significantly superior in detecting distant clades than current sequences, and we revealed two additional unknown mimiviruses, misclassified as an euryarchaeote and a oomycete plant pathogen, and detected unknown putative viral clades”

Metabolomics

Comparative Metabolomics and Structural Characterizations Illuminate Colibactin Pathway-Dependent Small Molecules – Maria I. Vizcaino – Journal of the American Chemical Society

“Here we implemented a comparative metabolomics and targeted structural network analyses approach to identify a catalog of small molecules dependent on the colibactin pathway from the meningitis isolate E. coli IHE3034 and the probiotic E. coli Nissle 1917.”

Scientific writing and publishing

Screen Shot 2014-06-18 at 11.01.34 PMColour blindness: Still too many red–green figures – S. Colby Allred – Nature

“People with red–green colour blindness cannot interpret figures in research papers that use these colours. We call for all journals to provide alternative versions of figures that are more accessible to such individuals.”

Open access: Sharing your data is easier than you think – Stephen Eglen – Nature

“Storing large volumes of raw data is costly, but many items destined for sharing are highly processed and relatively small. “

Dr. Bik’s Picks

The Irish potato famine pathogen Phytophthora infestans originated in central Mexico rather than the Andes – Erica M. Goss – PNAS

“We sequenced four nuclear genes in representative samples from Mexico and the South American Andes. An Andean origin of P. infestans does not receive support from detailed analyses of Andean and Mexican populations. “

Behavioral and Neural Correlates of Executive Functioning in Musicians and Non-Musicians – Jennifer Zuk – PLOS ONE

“Overall, musicians show enhanced performance on several constructs of EF, and musically trained children further show heightened brain activation in traditional EF regions during task-switching.”

There’s a scientific reason your iPhone headphones are always tangled – Fiona MacDonald – Science Alert

“But between 46 centimeters and 150 centimeters (about five feet), the probability of a knot forming rises dramatically.”

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Non-human microbiome, June 18

Microbiomes of horses, sheep, chicken, plants in Chili, built environment and rocks.

General microbiomes of animals

Viral Metagenomics on Animals as a Tool for the Detection of Zoonoses Prior to Human Infection? – Sarah Temmam – Int J Mol Sci

“In this review, we summarize our current knowledge of viral diversity within such animals (in particular blood-feeding arthropods, wildlife and domestic animals) using metagenomics and present its possible future application for the surveillance of zoonotic and arboviral diseases.”

Horse microbiome

Screen Shot 2014-06-18 at 9.39.22 PMFaecal Microbiome of the Thoroughbred Racehorse and Its Response to Dietary Amylase Supplementation – Proudman C – Equine Veterinary Journal

Amplicons for the V1-V3 region of the 16S rDNA gene were multiplexed and sequenced on the 454 resulting in ∼25,000 reads per sample. Differences in bacterial community structure were detected by linear discriminant analysis.”

Sheep microbiome

Screen Shot 2014-06-05 at 8.48.40 PMMethane yield phenotypes linked to differential gene expression in the sheep rumen microbiome – Weibing Shi – Genome Research

“Deep metagenomic and metatranscriptomic sequencing demonstrated the presence of methanogens both in the highest and lowest methane-producing sheep, with a similar abundance of methanogens and methanogenesis pathway genes in high and low methane emitters. “

Chicken microbiome

ChickenSpatial heterogeneity and stability of bacterial community in the gastrointestinal tracts of broiler chickens – J. H. Choi – Poultry Science

“Bacterial communities in the different regions of gastrointestinal tract (GIT) of broiler chickens were analyzed by pyrosequencing approach to understand microbial composition and diversity. “

Squid microbiome

SquidThe real threat posed by discover of antibiotic- resistent bacteria found in squid – Robert Lawrence and Patrick Baron, Baltimore – Washington Post

“The Food and Drug Administration can, and should, do more to limit the misuse of antibiotics in the production of food animals, whether terrestrial or aquatic, in order to reduce the risk of accelerating antibiotic resistance.”

Plant microbiome

Bacterial community structure and detection of putative plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria associated with plants grown in Chilean agro-ecosystems and undisturbed ecosystems – Milko A. Jorquera – Biology and Fertility of Soils

“Soil microorganisms with phytase- and 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylate (ACC) deaminase activities are widely studied as plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR). Here, we explored the bacterial community structure and occurrence of putative PGPR in plants grown in agro-ecosystems and undisturbed ecosystems from northern, central, and southern Chile.”

Built Environment Microbiome

housesmicroBEnet: Lessons Learned from Building an Interdisciplinary Scientific Community in the Online Sphere – Holly M. Bik, David A. Coil, Jonathan A. Eisen – PLOS Biology

“The microbiology of the Built Environment network (microBEnet: http://www.microbe.net/) was formed as an experiment in interdisciplinary community building, with an overarching goal to facilitate and nurture the development of a new research field: the microbiology of the built environment (MBE). “

Water microbiome

Review: Emerging Strategies and Integrated Systems Microbiology Technologies for Biodiscovery of Marine Bioactive Compounds – Javier Rocha-Martin – Marine Drugs

“Recent advances in genomics, metagenomics, proteomics, combinatorial biosynthesis, synthetic biology, screening methods, expression systems, bioinformatics, and the ever increasing availability of sequenced genomes provides us with more opportunities than ever in the discovery of novel bioactive compounds and biocatalysts.”

From community approaches to single-cell genomics: the discovery of ubiquitous hyperhalophilic Bacteroidetes generalists – María Gomariz – ISME Journal

“Here we have characterized the temporal variation during 1 year of the microbiota of five ponds with increasing salinity (from 18% to >40%), by means of CARD-FISH and DGGE.”

Soil and rock microbiome

Mineral Microniches Control the Diversity of Subsurface Microbial Populations – Aaron A. Jones – Geomicrobiology Journal

“These results suggest that adaptations to specific rocks are retained even when the organism is displaced in time and space from an ancestral rock habitat.”

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Human microbiome, June 18

Today we “Hover or Cover” the toilet seat, compare uBiome and American Gut results, and learn about bacterial diversity and stem cell transplants, breast milk microbiota, and culturomics.

Microbiome in the news

Screen Shot 2014-06-18 at 10.31.46 PMHere’s the poop on getting your gut microbiome analyzed – Tina Hesman Saey – ScienceNews

“When the second set of gut results came in, I was shocked. The results didn’t match at all with µBiome. “

WATCH: Is it OK to sit on a public toilet seat? – ScienceAlert

“It’s a dilemma we’ve all faced at some point: should you ever let your bum touch a public toilet seat? Thankfully Mitch and Greg from AsapSCIENCE have examined the evidence and come up with the (somewhat surprising) answer in their latest episode.”

Gut Reactions – Claudia Wallis – Scientific American

“Intestinal bacteria may help determine whether we are lean or obese”

10 Things You Need To Know About Your Microbiome – Raphael Kellman – MindBodyGreen

Pregnancy and Birth

Gut and Breast Milk Microbiota and Their Role in the Development of the Immune Function – Maria Elisabetta Baldassarre – Current Pediatrics Reports

“In newborns, the maternal gut microbiota may either come across into the amniotic fluid or secrete factors that enter the amniotic fluid and affect the development of oral tolerance in utero.”

Oral microbiome

Acquiring and maintaining a normal oral microbiome: current perspective
Egija Zaura – Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology

“In this review we present our hypothesis on how a healthy oral microbiome is acquired and maintained.”

Gut microbiome

The effects of intestinal tract bacterial diversity on mortality following allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation – Ying Taur – Blood

“Fecal specimens were collected from 80 recipients of allo-HSCT at the time of stem cell engraftment. Bacterial 16S rRNA gene sequences were characterized, and microbial diversity was estimated using the inverse Simpson index. “

Culturomics and pyrosequencing evidence of the reduction in gut microbiota diversity in patients with broad-spectrum antibiotics – Grégory Dubourg – International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents

“Culturomics was performed on four stool samples from patients treated with large-scale antibiotics to assess the diversity of their gut flora in comparison with other culture-dependent studies. Pyrosequencing of the V6 region was also performed and was compared with a control group. “

Screen Shot 2014-06-18 at 10.33.33 PMCharacterization of bacterial community shift in human Ulcerative Colitis
patients revealed by Illumina based 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing – Sandeep A Walujkar – Gut Pathogens

“Mucosal microbiota was analyzed by means of 16S rRNA gene-based Illumina high throughput sequencing. Quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) was performed to determine total bacterial abundances.”

Keeping peace with the microbiome: acetate dampens inflammatory cytokine production in intestinal epithelial cells – Nicholas Arpaia – Immunology & Cell Biology

“In this issue, Ishiguro et al.2 show that the short-chain fatty acid (SCFA), acetate, produced during carbohydrate fermentation by commensal microorganisms in the cecum, is capable of dampening responses within intestinal epithelial cells (IEC), and functions by targeting the downstream signaling proteins that are activated on recognition of bacterial flagellin by TLR5”

Respiratory microbiome

A large genomic island allows Neisseria meningitidis to utilize propionic acid, with implications for colonisation of the human nasopharynx – Maria Chiara E. Catenazzi – Molecular Microbiology

“Here we identify a genomic island (the prp gene cluster) in N. meningitidis that enables this species to utilize propionic acid as a supplementary carbon source during growth, particularly under nutrient poor growth conditions. “

Animal and in vitro models of human microbiome

Observation of Inflammatory Responses in Mice Orally Fed with Bacteriophage T7 – Kwangseo Park – Journal of Applied Microbiology

“This study investigated the inflammatory responses in mice fed orally with bacteriophages. The mice were fed with either murine norovirus (MNV) or bacteriophage T7 for 10 days and then sacrificed. “

Development of an oral mucosa model to study host-microbiome interactions during wound healing – Tine De Ryck – Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology

“Microbiota derived from oral swabs were cultured on an agar/mucin layer and challenged with monolayers of keratinocytes grown on plastic or collagen type I layers embedded with fibroblasts.”

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General microbiology and science, June 17

How to freeze and preserve communities, host response, standardized metadata for pathogens, primers for fungal detection and more. Check out Dr. Bik’s Picks for coffee in space and sticky tongues.

Infection and host response

The effect of age on the systemic inflammatory response in patients with community-acquired pneumonia – Lonneke A. van Vught – Clinical Microbiology and Infection

“Serum concentrations of pro-inflammatory (interleukin (IL)-6 and IL-8) and anti-inflammatory cytokines (IL-10 and IL-1 receptor antagonist) did not differ between age groups, although admission IL-8 levels tended to be higher in old patients (p = 0.05). “

Clinical Disease Severity of Respiratory Viral Co-Infection versus Single Viral Infection: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis – Sandra A. Asner – PLOS ONE

“No differences in clinical disease severity between viral co-infections and single respiratory infections were documented.”

Standardized Metadata for Human Pathogen/Vector Genomic Sequences – Vivien G. Dugan – PLOS ONE

“The standard includes data fields about characteristics of the organism or environmental source of the specimen, spatial-temporal information about the specimen isolation event, phenotypic characteristics of the pathogen/vector isolated, and project leadership and support. “

Discovering Hidden Connections among Diseases, Genes and Drugs Based on Microarray Expression Profiles with Negative-Term Filtering – Jain-Shing Wu – PLOS ONE

“This study proposes a novel means of employing existing GEPs to reveal hidden relationships among diseases, genes, and drugs within a rich biomedical database, PubMed. Unlike the co-occurrence method, which considers only the appearance of keywords, the proposed method also takes into account negative relationships and non-relationships among keywords, the importance of which has been demonstrated in previous studies.”

MS spectrometry and microbiology

A simple, robust and rapid approach to detect carbapenemases in Gram negative isolates by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry: validation with triple quadripole tandem mass spectrometry, microarray and PCR – Christelle Vogne – Clinical Microbiology and Infection

“Here, we developed a simple, easy and rapid MALDI-TOF-based assay to detect carbapenemases and compared this innovative test with 4 other diagnostic approaches on 47 clinical isolates. “

Source-Identifying Biomarker Ions between Environmental and Clinical Burkholderia pseudomallei Using Whole-Cell Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption/Ionization Time-of-Flight Mass Spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) – Suthamat Niyompanich – PLOS ONE

“In this present study, we employed a whole-cell MALDI-TOF MS approach for assessing its potency in clustering a total of 11 different B. pseudomallei isolates (consisting of 5 environmental and 6 clinical isolates) with respect to their origins and to further investigate the source-identifying biomarker ions belonging to each bacterial group.”

Phages and viruses

Effectiveness of bacteriophages in the sputum of cystic fibrosis patients – Emilie Saussereau – Clinical Microbiology and Infection

“The demonstration that bacteriophages infect their bacterial hosts in the sputum environment, regardless of the clinical characteristics of the patients, represents a major step towards the development of bacteriophage therapy to treat chronic lung infections.”

Standards for Sequencing Viral Genomes in the Era of High-Throughput Sequencing
Jason T. Ladner – mBio

“Here, we propose five “standard” categories that encompass all stages of viral genome finishing, and we define them using simple criteria that are agnostic to the technology used for sequencing.”

Dengue

Dengue Serosurvey in Sint Eustatius – Teresa Leslie – PLOS ONE

“ Few studies have investigated dengue on Sint Eustatius. Blood samples were collected to determine the prevalence of antibodies against dengue in the Sint Eustatius population.”

General microbiology

Invited Editorial: Bioterrorism: myth or reality? – Gilbert Greub and Martin P. Grobusch – Clinical Microbiology and Infection

“Interestingly, while there are no doubt many features which tell those topics apart from each other, bioterrorism, in its broad sense, in its perception by the public, strikingly shares some features with the human interest in viral hemorrhagic fevers as witnessed during the recent Zaire ebolavirus disease outbreak “

Invited Editorial: New epidemiology of Staphylococcus aureus infections – Jean-Philippe Rasigade – Clinical Microbiology and Infection

“The clinical and molecular epidemiology of S. aureus infections has changed dramatically over the past two decades with the emergence of community-associated methicillin-resistant S. aureus (CA-MRSA).”

Sequencing and data analysis

Summarizing Specific Profiles in Illumina Sequencing from Whole-Genome Amplified DNA – Isheng J. Tsai – DNA Research

“To utilize the full potential of WGA to reveal the real biological interest, this article highlights the importance of recognizing additional sources of errors from amplified sequence reads and discusses the potential implications in downstream analyses.”

The Bias Associated with Amplicon Sequencing Does Not Affect the Quantitative Assessment of Bacterial Community Dynamics – Federico M. Ibarbalz – PLOS ONE

“The performance of two sets of primers targeting variable regions of the 16S rRNA gene V1–V3 and V4 was compared in their ability to describe changes of bacterial diversity and temporal turnover in full-scale activated sludge.”

HIVE-Hexagon: High-Performance, Parallelized Sequence Alignment for Next-Generation Sequencing Data Analysis – Luis Santana-Quintero – PLOS ONE

“High-performance Integrated Virtual Environment (HIVE), a cloud-based environment optimized for storage and analysis of extra-large data, presents an algorithmic solution: the HIVE-hexagon DNA sequence aligner. “

Sample preparation, primers, PCR

Optimized Cryopreservation of Mixed Microbial Communities for Conserved Functionality and Diversity – Frederiek-Maarten Kerckhof – PLOS ONE

“ In summary, we have evaluated a cryopreservation protocol that succeeded in preserving both community structure and functionality of value-added microbiomes. ”

Comparison and Validation of Some ITS Primer Pairs Useful for Fungal Metabarcoding Studies – Michiel Op De Beeck – PLOS ONE

“In the current study, three selected primer pairs were tested for their suitability as fungal metabarcoding primers.”

Chromosome organization

Assessing Diversity of DNA Structure-Related Sequence Features in Prokaryotic Genomes – Yongjie Huang and Jan Mrázek – DNA Research

“Our results show that simple sequence repeats and Z-DNA-promoting patterns are generally suppressed in prokaryotic genomes, whereas palindromes and inverted repeats are over-represented.”

Dr. Bik’s Picks

Tongue adhesion in the horned frog Ceratophrys sp. – Thomas Kleinteich & Stanislav N. Gorb- Scientific Reports

“Here we measured for the first time adhesive forces and tongue contact areas in living individuals of a horned frog (Ceratophrys sp.) against glass. We found that Ceratophrys sp. generates adhesive forces well beyond its own body weight.”

Good news: Espresso machine in SPAAAACE. Bad news: Fuelled by URINE – Simon Sharwood – The Register

“A critical issue standing between humanity and long-term residence in space has been solved after boffins invented an espresso machine they plan to send up to the International Space Station (ISS), groan-inducingly dubbed the ISSpresso.”

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Non-human microbiome, June 17

You waited for it: the Cannabis microbiome! But also microbiotas of salmon, a quail, coral, sponges, water, and ice.

Bird microbiome

Cultivable Bacterial Microbiota of Northern Bobwhite (Colinus virginianus): A New Reservoir of Antimicrobial Resistance? – Hongwen Su – PLOS ONE

“Firmicutes was the most commonly encountered phylum (57%) followed by Actinobacteria (24%), Proteobacteria (17%) and Bacteroidetes (0.02%). Extensive diversity in the species composition of quail microbiota was observed among individual birds and anatomical locations.”

Fish microbiome

Pyrosequencing-based characterization of gastrointestinal bacteria of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.) within a commercial mariculture system – K.Z. Zarkasi – Journal of Applied Microbiology

“Salmon GI tract bacterial communities commercially farmed in south-eastern Tasmania were analysed, over a 13-month period across a standard commercial production farm cycle, using 454 16S rRNA-based pyrosequencing. “

Coral and sponge microbiome

Community Shifts in the Surface Microbiomes of the Coral Porites astreoides with Unusual Lesions – Julie L. Meyer – PLOS ONE

“The presence of lesions in P. astreoides coincided with a decrease in the relative abundance of Endozoicomonas, rather than the appearance of specific pathogenic taxa.”

Bacterial suspects identified in Caribbean coral deaths – NewScientist

“Three bacteria seem to be responsible for a disease that has killed most of the Caribbean’s reef-building corals.”

Effects of salinity on antibiotic production in sponge-derived Salinispora actinobacteria – Y.K. Ng – Journal of Applied Microbiology

Fingerprint data were generated from extracts of S. arenicola broth cultures grown in media of varying salt (NaCl) concentrations.”

Plants microbiome

Understanding Cultivar-Specificity and Soil Determinants of the Cannabis Microbiome – Max E. Winston – PLOS ONE

“Here we present the first description of the endorhiza-, rhizosphere-, and bulk soil-associated microbiome of five distinct Cannabis cultivars. Bacterial communities of the endorhiza showed significant cultivar-specificity.”

The Role of Abiotic Environmental Conditions and Herbivory in Shaping Bacterial Community Composition in Floral Nectar – Michal Samuni-Blank – PLOS ONE

“ We studied culturable bacterial communities in Asphodelus aestivus floral nectar and in its typical herbivorous bug Capsodes infuscatus, along an aridity gradient.”

Microbial community structure during fluoranthene degradation in the presence of plants – S. Storey – Journal of Applied Microbiology

“Bacterial and fungal community composition in the rhizosphere was significantly different from that in nonrhizospheric and unplanted samples.”

Soil microbiome

Omics-based interpretation of synergism in a soil-derived cellulose-degrading microbial community – Yizhuang Zhou – Scientific Reports

“Analyses of reconstructed bacterial draft genomes from all seven uncultured phylotypes in F1RT indicate that its constituent microbes cooperate in both cellulose-degrading and other important metabolic processes.”

Structure, Composition and Metagenomic Profile of Soil Microbiomes Associated to Agricultural Land Use and Tillage Systems in Argentine Pampas – Belén Carbonetto – PLOS ONE

“The aim of our study was to investigate the effects of agricultural land use on community structure, composition and metabolic profiles on soil microbiomes of Argentine Pampas.”

 

Dust microbiome

Richness and Diversity in Dust Stormborne Biomes at the Southeast Mediterranean – Itzhak Katra – Scientific Reports

“In addition to the physico-chemical compositions, organismal diversities of dust from two storm events in southern Israel, December 2012 (Ev12) and January 2013 (Ev13), were determined by pyro-sequencing using primers universal to 16S and 18S rRNA genes and compared.”

Bioreactors

The maximum specific hydrogen-producing activity of anaerobic mixed cultures: definition and determination – Yang Mu – Scientific Reports

“ Our results demonstrate that this novel SHAm assay was a rapid, accurate and simple methodology for determining the hydrogen-producing activity of anaerobic mixed cultures.”

Methanogenic community changes, and emissions of methane and other gases, during storage of acidified and untreated pig slurry – S.O. Petersen – Journal of Applied Microbiology

“Pig slurry from two farms, acidified by different techniques or untreated, was stored for 83 days in a pilot-scale facility. Methanogens were characterized before and after storage by T-RFLP and qPCR targeting mcrA.”

Water and ice

The Characterization of RNA Viruses in Tropical Seawater Using Targeted PCR and Metagenomics – Alexander I. Culley – mBio

“In this study, we investigated the diversity of the RNA virus assemblages in tropical coastal seawater samples using targeted PCR and metagenomics.”

Variations of algal communities cause darkening of a Greenland glacier – Stefanie Lutz – FEMS Microbiology Ecology

“We have assessed the microbial ecology on the surface of Mittivakkat glacier in SE-Greenland during the exceptional high melting season in July 2012 when the so far most extreme melting rate for the Greenland Ice Sheet has been recorded.”

Pyrosequencing reveals correlations between extremely acidophilic bacterial communities with hydrogen sulphide concentrations, pH and inert polymer coatings at concrete sewer crown surfaces – E. Pagaling – Journal of Applied Microbiology

“Pyrosequencing and cloning showed that Mycobacterium and Acidithiobacillus dominated the acidophilic microbial communities. Methylacidiphilum was also dominant in samples where methane was detected.”

Bacterial community dynamics during the early stages of biofilm formation in a chlorinated experimental drinking water distribution system: implications for drinking water discolouration – I. Douterelo – Journal of Applied Microbiology

“Selected samples were analysed by cloning and sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene. Fingerprinting analysis revealed significant changes in the bacterial community structure over time (P < 0·05). “

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Human microbiome, June 17

Gut bacteria swapping DNA segments, what happens after a fecal transplant, intestinal archaea, and more.

Gut microbiome

Evidence of Extensive DNA Transfer between Bacteroidales Species within the Human Gut – Michael J. Coyne – mBio

“Using seven coresident Bacteroidales species from one individual and eight from another, we identified five large chromosomal regions, each present in a minimum of three of the coresident strains at near 100% DNA identity.”

Recovery of the Gut Microbiome following Fecal Microbiota Transplantation – Anna M. Seekatz – mBio

“Here we investigated changes in the fecal microbiota structure following FMT in patients with recurrent C. difficile infection, and imputed a hypothetical functional profile based on the 16S rRNA profile using a predictive metagenomic tool.”

The Intestinal Archaea Methanosphaera stadtmanae and Methanobrevibacter smithii Activate Human Dendritic Cells – Corinna Bang – PLOS ONE

“Taken together, our findings strongly argue that the archaeal gut inhabitants M. stadtmanae and M. smithii are specifically recognized by the human innate immune system. “

Microbiota and Metabolome Associated with Immunoglobulin A Nephropathy (IgAN) –
Maria De Angelis – PLOS ONE

“This study aimed at investigating the fecal microbiota, and the fecal and urinary metabolome of non progressor (NP) and progressor (P) patients with immunoglobulin A nephropathy (IgAN). “

Respiratory microbiome

Impact of Experimental Human Pneumococcal Carriage on Nasopharyngeal Bacterial Densities in Healthy Adults – Joshua R. Shak – PLOS ONE

“These data on bacterial associations are the first to be reported surrounding experimental human pneumococcal colonization and show that co-colonizing effects are likely subtle rather than absolute.”

Vaginal microbiome

Diversity and stability of cultured vaginal lactobacilli in pregnant women from a multi-ethnic urban UK population – S.M. Husain – Journal of Applied Microbiology

“Self-collected vaginal swabs at 13 and 20 weeks gestation were obtained from women attending for routine antenatal care and cultured for lactobacilli.”

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General microbiology and science, June 16

It’s late and I got lots for you, so no pictures today. Dengue, phages, ecology, techniques, and lots more.

Antibiotic resistance

Review: Microbiological effects of sublethal levels of antibiotics – Dan I. Andersson & Diarmaid Hughes – Nature Reviews Microbiology

“In this Review, we discuss the ecology of antibiotics and the ability of subinhibitory concentrations to select for bacterial resistance. “

A Bacterial Battle  – Lisa M. Jarvis – Chemical and Engineering News

“The regulatory path to approving new antibiotics has been cleared, but work still remains to rebuild a healthy drug pipeline”

Bacteria are everywhere
How safe is your kitchen? – Lyxan Toledanes – The Daily News Online

Despite a spacious kitchen, Parker sat on the counter next to Masters’ prep area, where she was chopping vegetables and chicken on separate cutting mats. 

Adventures in the microbiome (part 2) – Mike Edmund

“There’s an intriguing case report that was just published in Clinical Microbiology and Infection”

Stafford students find bacteria on tainted tablets – Amanda Oglesby

“Four sixth-graders huddled over a table inside All Saints Regional Catholic School as they took turns swabbing bacteria from the surfaces of an iPhone and iPad.”

Bioslime: new sensor to detect harmful bacteria on food industry surfaces – BarfBlog

“The Biolisme project is using research from the University to develop a sensor capable of collecting and detecting Listeria monocytogenes on food industry surfaces, thereby preventing contaminated products from entering the market.”

Viruses and phages

Functional long-range RNA–RNA interactions in positive-strand RNA viruses – Beth L. Nicholson & K. Andrew White – Nature Reviews Microbiology

“In this Review, we discuss recent insights into the structure and function of these intriguing genomic features and highlight their diverse roles in the gene expression and genome replication of positive-strand RNA viruses.”

Unravelling the structural and mechanistic basis of CRISPR–Cas systems – John van der Oost – Nature Reviews Microbiology

“In this Review, we summarize the recent structural and biochemical insights that have been gained for the three major types of CRISPR–Cas systems, which together provide a detailed molecular understanding of the unique and conserved mechanisms of RNA-guided adaptive immunity in bacteria and archaea.”

The elemental composition of virus particles: implications for marine biogeochemical cycles – Luis F. Jover – Nature Reviews Microbiology

“In this Analysis article, we use a biophysical scaling model of intact virus particles that has been validated using sequence and structural information to quantify differences in the elemental stoichiometry of marine viruses compared with their microbial hosts. “

Phage therapies for plants and people – Michael Gross – Current Biology

Dengue

NEA to explore biological control methods to tackle dengue

“One of the techniques involves the use of Aedes aegypti mosquitoes, which are infected with a certain bacteria, to control their population.”

Techniques general

Storage of Human Biospecimens: Selection of the Optimal Storage Temperature – Allison Hubel – Biopreservation and Biobanking

“The overall objective of this article is to describe the scientific basis for selecting a storage temperature for a biospecimen based on current scientific understanding. To that end, this article reviews some physical basics of the temperature, nucleation, and ice crystal growth present in biological samples stored at low temperatures (−20°C to −196°C), and our current understanding of the role of temperature on the activity of degradative molecules present in biospecimens.”

DNA polymerase hybrids derived from the family-B enzymes of Pyrococcus furiosus and Thermococcus kodakarensis: improving performance in the polymerase chain reaction – Ashraf M. Elshawadfy – Frontiers Microbiology

“The significance of this work is the observation that improvements in PCR performance are easily attainable by blending elements from closely related archaeal polymerases, an approach that may, in future, be extended by using more polymerases from these organisms.”

Metabolomics, Proteomics, Mass spectrometry

Bruker Announces Powerful New Mass Spectrometry Systems and Solutions for Life-Science Research, Clinical Research, Biopharma and Applied Markets – Wall Street Journal

“At the 62(nd) ASMS Conference on Mass Spectrometry and Allied Topics today, Bruker Corporation (NASDAQ:BRKR) today announced mass spectrometry-based product introductions for life-science research and proteomics, for clinical research, for pharma/biopharma/CRO customers, as well as for applied and industrial markets. “

Medically, Proteomics Advances Will Rival the Genetics Advances of the Last Ten Years – Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News

“..in explaining why proteomics is likely to have such a major impact, Dr. Anderson starts with a major difference between the genetic testing common today, and the proteomic testing that is fast coming on the scene. “

Metagenomics and informatics

Detecting concerted demographic response across community assemblages using hierarchical approximate Bayesian computation – Yvonne L. Chan – Molecular Biology and Evolution

“Here we present a statistical framework for such an analysis based on hierarchical approximate Bayesian computation (hABC) with the goal of detecting concerted demographic histories across an ecological assemblage.”

An Experimentally Determined Evolutionary Model Dramatically Improves Phylogenetic Fit – Jesse D. Bloom – Molecular Biology and Evolution

“Experimental determination of a parameter-free evolutionary model via mutagenesis, functional selection, and deep sequencing.”

Ecology

Trait-based approaches for understanding microbial biodiversity and ecosystem functioning – Sascha Krause – Frontiers in Microbiology

“We argue that combining eco-physiological studies with contemporary molecular tools in a trait-based framework can reinforce our ability to link microbial diversity to ecosystem processes. “

The importance of the viable but non-culturable state in human bacterial pathogens – Laam Li – Frontiers in Microbiology

“The conditions that trigger the induction of the VBNC state and resuscitation from it are summarized and the mechanisms underlying these two processes are discussed. “

Deciphering microbial interactions and detecting keystone species with co-occurrence networks – David Berry – Frontiers in Microbiology

“Here, we simulate multi-species microbial communities with known interaction patterns using generalized Lotka-Volterra dynamics. We then construct co-occurrence networks and evaluate how well networks reveal the underlying interactions and how experimental and ecological parameters can affect network inference and interpretation.”

Scientific writing and publishing

Sources of error in the retracted scientific literature – Arturo Casadevall, R. Grant Steen and Ferric C. Fang – The FASEB Journal

“Analysis of the retraction notices for 423 articles indexed in PubMed revealed that the most common causes of error-related retraction are laboratory errors, analytical errors, and irreproducible results.”

Dr. Bik’s Picks

Magnets: Artificial Magnetic Bacteria: Living Magnets at Room Temperature – Miguel Martín – Adv. Funct. Mater

After grafting the magnetic nanoparticles, the artificial magnetic bacteria remain alive. In fact they are converted into living magnets at room temperature.”

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Non-human microbiomes, June 16

Microbiomes of tse-tse flies, fish, lettuce, spruce. And also some salty sisters!

Insect microbiome

Identification of overexpressed genes in Sodalis glossinidius inhabiting trypanosome-infected self-cured tsetse flies – Illiassou Hamidou Soumana – Frontiers in Microbiology

“The aim of the work was to investigate whether fly refractoriness could be associated with specific Sodalis gene expression. The transcriptome of S. glossinidius harbored by flies that were fed either with a non-infected blood meal (control) or with a trypanosome-infected meal but that did not develop infection were analyzed, using microarray technology, and compared. “

Fish microbiome

Teleost microbiomes: the state of the art in their characterization, manipulation and importance in aquaculture and fisheries – Martin S. Llewellyn – Frontiers in Microbiology

“We discuss teleost microbiomes in health and disease, microbiome ontogeny, prospects for successful microbiome manipulation (especially in an aquaculture setting) and attempt to identify important future research themes. “

Plant microbiomes

Effect of the strain Bacillus amyloliquefaciens FZB42 on the microbial community in the rhizosphere of lettuce under field conditions analyzed by whole metagenome sequencing – Magdalena Kröber – Frontiers in Microbiology

“Rhizosphere microbial communities of lettuce treated with B. amyloliquefaciens FZB42 and non-treated plants were profiled by high-throughput metagenome sequencing of whole community DNA. “

Loss of diversity in wood-inhabiting fungal communities affects decomposition activity in Norway spruce wood – Lara Valentín – Frontiers in Microbiology

“ The number of observed OTUs in DGGE was used as a measure of fungal diversity. Respiration rate increased between early- and late-decay stages. “

Specificity of plant-microbe interactions in the tree mycorrhizosphere biome and consequences for soil C cycling – Carolyn Churchland – Frontiers in Microbiology

“In this review we examine evidence for tree species- mycorrhizal specificity, and the mechanisms involved (e.g., signal compounds)”

Sludge and bioreactors

Pyrosequencing Analysis Yields Comprehensive Assessment of Microbial Communities in Pilot-Scale Two-Stage Membrane Biofilm Reactors – Aura Ontiveros-Valencia – Environmental Science & Technology

“UniFrac, principal coordinate analysis (PCoA), and diversity analyses documented that the microbial community of biofilms sampled when the MBfRs had a high acceptor loading were phylogenetically distant from and less diverse than the microbial community of biofilm samples with lower acceptor loadings. “

Sludge As a Potential Important Source of Antibiotic Resistance Genes in Both the Bacterial and Bacteriophage Fractions – William Calero-Cáceres – Environmental Science & Technology

“This study evaluates the prevalence of ARGs in the bacterial and phage fractions of anaerobic digested sludge; five ARGs (blaTEM, blaCTX-M, qnrA, qnrS, and sul1) are quantified by qPCR.”

Water and salt microbiology

Salty sisters: the women of halophiles – Bonnie K. Baxter – Frontiers in Microbiology

“This essay emphasizes the “her story” (not “history”) of halophile discovery.”

The feasibility of automated online flow cytometry for in-situ monitoring of microbial dynamics in aquatic ecosystems – Michael D. Besmer – Frontiers in Microbiology

“As proof-of-concept we demonstrate examples of microbial dynamics in (i) flowing tap water from a municipal drinking water supply network and (ii) river water from a small creek subject to two rainfall events.”

Cytometric fingerprints: evaluation of new tools for analyzing microbial community dynamics – Christin Koch – Frontiers in Microbiology

“The source of inoculum (four different types of wastewater samples) showed the strongest influence on the microbial community structure and biofilm performance while the choice of substrate (acetate or lactate) had no significant effect in the present study.”

Subseafloor bacteria survive by over-activating DNA-repair and antibiotic target genes – Phys.org

“A group of researchers at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute and University of Delaware* developed techniques to analyse the messenger RNA (mRNA) molecules produced by subseafloor microbes.”

Unexplored hypersaline habitats are sources of novel actinomycetes – Polpass Arul Jose – Frontiers in Microbiology

“….diverse actinomycetes from poorly studied unusual environments promises a raise in the prospect of discovering novel compounds with potential activities that can be developed as a resource for drug discovery “

From Twitter, thanks to @DeepMicrobe: Eight plenary speakers, all of them male.
Ninth International Symposium on Subsurface Microbiology – ISSM 2014

Vibrio ecology, pathogenesis, and evolution – Daniela Ceccarelli and Rita R. Colwell – Frontiers in Microbiology

“This Research Topic brings together 24 articles that highlight the most recent research findings concerning the biology of the genus Vibrio and covers pathogenicity and host interaction, genome plasticity and evolution, and the dynamics of factors influencing the ecology of vibrios.”

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Human microbiome, June 16

A guide to your poop and more serious papers about oral, vaginal microbiomes and bacteria detection in joint fluids.

Oral microbiome

Screen Shot 2014-06-16 at 11.19.50 PMBacteria choose to fight and flee (commentary on a recent PNAS paper by Stacy et al. )- Christina Tobin Kåhrström – Nature Reviews Microbiology

“Together, these data suggest an elegant mechanism by which A. actinomycetemcomitans uses catalase to enzymatically ‘fight’ H2O2 and dispersin B to ‘flee’ from the close vicinity of S. gordonii, where H2O2 levels are highest, to a location where access to L-lactate is still possible. “

Oral challengesFornitersChallenges in the culture-independent analysis of oral and respiratory samples from intubated patients – Vladimir Lazarevic – Front. Cell. Infect. Microbiol.

“We explored the bacterial community diversity of the microbiota from oral and respiratory samples of intubated patients hospitalized in the intensive care unit and we discuss the technical challenges that may arise while using culture-independent approaches to study these types of samples.”

Vaginal microbiome

Ashok VagInfluence of the tryptophan-indole-IFNγ axis on human genital Chlamydia trachomatis infection: role of vaginal co-infections – Ashok Aiyar – Front. Cell. Infect. Microbiol.

“In this review, we discuss the natural history of genital chlamydial infections, morphological and molecular changes imposed by IFNγ on Chlamydia, and finally, the microenvironmental conditions associated with vaginal co-infections that can ameliorate the effects of IFNγ on C. trachomatis.”

Gut microbiome

ToiletThe Not-So-Gross Guide to Your Poop – Laura Barcella – Refinery29

“So, what is your excrement trying to tell you? Read on for clues about how to decipher your bowel movements.”

Bacteria detection in otherwise sterile sites

Screen Shot 2014-06-16 at 11.24.38 PMRapid isolation and diagnosis of live bacteria from human joint fluids by using an integrated microfluidic system – Wen-Hsin Chang – Lab on a Chip

 

“…an integrated microfluidic system capable of detecting live bacteria from clinical PJI samples within 55 minutes is developed in this study. This system employs an ethidium monoazide (EMA)-based assay and a PCR with universal bacterial primers and probes to isolate and detect only the live bacteria that commonly cause PJI. “

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