General microbiology and science digest, October 7, 2014

Transmission of Staph aureus in the hospital, a new assembler tool, metabolomics of the human gut microbiome, and a polio virus spill in Belgium.

More Microbes

Absence of Patient-to-Patient Intrahospital Transmission of Staphylococcus aureus as Determined by Whole-Genome Sequencing – S. Wesley Long – mBio

“To identify patient-to-patient intrahospital transmission using high-resolution genetic analysis, we sequenced the genomes of a consecutive set of 398 S. aureus isolates from sterile-site infections. “

Bioinformatics

Improved Assemblies Using a Source-Agnostic Pipeline for MetaGenomic Assembly by Merging (MeGAMerge) of Contigs – Matthew Scholz, Chien-Chi Lo & Patrick S. G. Chain – Nature Scientific Reports

“MeGAMerge consistently outperforms individual assembly methods, producing larger contigs with an increased number of predicted genes, without replication of data. “

Inferring phylogenies of evolving sequences without multiple sequence alignment – Cheong Xin Chan – Nature Scientific Reports

“Here, using simulated sequence sets of various sizes in both nucleotides and amino acids, we systematically assess the accuracy of phylogenetic inference using an alignment-free approach, based on D2 statistics, under different evolutionary scenarios. “

Gut Check: Exploring Your Microbiome – Coursera / University of Colorado Boulder

“Join us on a guided tour of the human gut and its microscopic inhabitants.”

Metabolomics

Modelling the emergent dynamics and major metabolites of the human colonic microbiota – Helen Kettle – Environmental Microbiology

“To reduce the complexity of the system, we divide the bacterial community into 10 bacterial functional groups (BFGs) each distinguished by its substrate preferences, metabolic pathways and its preferred pH range. “

Microbes in the news

* Petri Dish: The third branch of life – David Woodland – Summit Daily

“In addition to being an interesting branch on the tree of life, archaebacteria have turned out to be an incredibly valuable source of new products for science and industry. “

Pharmaceutical Giant GlaxoSmithKline “Accidentally” Released 45 Liters of Concentrated Live Polio Virus in the Environment – Global Research

“As reported to ECDC by Belgian authorities, on 2 September 2014, following a human error, 45 litres of concentrated live polio virus solution were released into the environment by the pharmaceutical company, GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), in Rixensart city, Belgium.”

Science, publishing and career

* Science is innate! (behind a paywall, even at Stanford) – Jack A Gilbert – Genome Biology

“….when I am asked, as I often am, about how my research findings have influenced my day-to-day activities, I like to take a step back and think about what it means to be a scientist.”

Why I have taken a leave of absence from Science: to protest the abrupt firing of 4 colleagues – Michael Balter – Letter to Science

“Thus it is particularly painful and sad for me to tell you that I will be taking a three-month leave of absence in protest of recent events at Science and within its publishing organization, the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS).

Bik’s Picks

Killer whales learn to communicate like dolphins – Science Daily

“…killer whales can engage in cross-species vocal learning: when socialized with bottlenose dolphins, they shifted the sounds they made to more closely match their social partners.”

NASA selects astrobiologists to study life origins and extraterrestrial possibilities – Jim Algar – Tech Times

“NASA announced 5-year grants adding up to nearly $50 million for seven research groups across the U .S. to study life in the universe and its origins, distribution, evolution and future.”

The most passive aggressive acknowledgement ever – BioDataGanache – SciEasterEggs

“The authors in this paper put some serious time in on this sucker, and they wanted to make a statement about it.”

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General microbiology and science digest, October 6, 2014

Phages to reduce biofilms or monitor virus outbreaks, binning metagenomic reads, lots of microbes in the news. In Bik’s Picks, we have the 2014 Nobel Prize for Medicine and a giant ant nest.

 

More Microbes

Combined Use of Bacteriophage K and a Novel Bacteriophage To Reduce Staphylococcus aureus Biofilm Formation – D. R. Alves – Applied and Environmental Microbiology

“DRA88 was mixed with phage K to produce a high-titer mixture that showed strong lytic activity against a wide range of S. aureus isolates, including representatives of the major international MRSA clones and coagulase-negative Staphylococcus. “

Detection of Pathogenic Viruses in Sewage Provided Early Warnings of Hepatitis A Virus and Norovirus Outbreaks – Maria Hellmér – Applied and Environmental Microbiology

“ In this study, the presence of eight pathogenic viruses (norovirus, astrovirus, rotavirus, adenovirus, Aichi virus, parechovirus, hepatitis A virus [HAV], and hepatitis E virus) was investigated in sewage to explore whether their identification could be used as an early warning of outbreaks. “

Bioinformatics

New software aims to improve sorting the microbiome – The Cherry Creek News

“MaxBin automates the binning of assembled metagenomic scaffolds using an expectation-maximization algorithm after the assembly of metagenomic sequencing reads,” says Singer, a chemist who also holds an appointment with Berkeley Lab’s Earth Sciences Division. “

Microbes in the news

* King’s launches British Gut – King’s College London

“British Gut – the UK’s largest open-source science project to understand the microbial diversity of the human gut – has been launched today by the Department of Twin Research at King’s College London, in collaboration with American Gut.”

Pay attention to your gut bacteria – Charles Wallace – Financial Times

“A number of organisations, such as Mr Leach’s own American Gut project and the commercial venture uBiome, offer an analysis of the bacteria in your gut for about $100. “

Home sweet microbiome – By Scott LaFee – UT San Diego

“The University of Chicago recently published findings from its Home Microbiome Project, which surveyed the domiciles of seven families: 18 people, three dogs and one cat.”

Medical superbugs: Antibiotic-resistant bacteria carried by more than a third of nursing home residents, study – ABC Australia

“Scientists from Monash University swabbed more than a 100 residents from four high-care facilities across the city.”

Special bacteria, 13000 cleaners to clean Dhaka – Rezaul Hoque – BDNews

“This special kind of microorganism will be sprayed on waste dumps. The spray has been developed in Thailand. We have introduced it here in Bangladesh with the aid of a Malaysian company.””

Yogurt bacteria could replace colonoscopies for cancer detection – Billy Steele – EnGadget

“MIT professor Sangeeta Bhatia is working on engineered bacteria that detects colorectal cancer. After the nanoparticles pass through the digestive system, a urine sample shows results on a reactive paper — similar to that of a pregnancy test.”

Science and Publishing

Adjudicating “misbehavior”: how can scientists respond when they don’t get fair credit? –  Janet D. Stemwedel – Scientific American

“Denying someone of fair credit for the contribution they made to a piece of research is not a good thing. But who can you turn to if someone does it to you? “

Twitter’s science stars, the sequel – John Travis – Science

“We listed. You tweeted (often in outrage). We listened (mostly). And now we’re doubling down on our recent list of Twitter’s 50 most popular researchers with a revision that names 100 of the most followed scientists on the social media platform. “

Bik’s Picks

2014 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine: Cells that constitute a positioning system in the brain – Science Daily

“The 2014 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine has been awarded to John O´Keefe, May-Britt Moser and Edvard I. Moser for their discoveries of cells that constitute a positioning system in the brain.”

Concrete Cast of Ant Nest Reveals Huge Underground Metropolis – Lisa Winter – IFL Science

“Through a process that took a few months, researchers made a cast of an anthill by pumping it full of concrete, allowing it to cure and dry, then excavating it out to explore the intricacies of the ant civilization. “

Tall tale: scientists unravel the genetics of human height – Will Dunham – Daily Mail

“Researchers on Sunday unveiled what they called the biggest such study to date, analyzing genome data from more than a quarter million people to identify nearly 700 genetic variants and more than 400 genome regions relating to height.”

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Microbiome digest, September 18, 2014

It’s an exciting day at MicrobiomeDigest, with an Ig Nobel Prize awarded to the baby poop sausages paper, the Breaking Bad of gut microbiota, the microbiome of salami, and how bacteria can help in agriculture. Here we go:

Respiratory microbiome

Persistence of livestock-associated antibiotic-resistant Staphylococcus aureus among industrial hog operation workers in North Carolina over 14 days – Maya Nadimpalli – Occupational & Environmental Medicine (see also below)

“Nasal carriage of livestock-associated S. aureus, multidrug-resistant S. aureus and methicillin-resistant S. aureus can persist among industrial hog operation workers over a 14-day period, which included up to 96 h away from work.”

Human gut microbiome

Breaking Bad – the two sides of gut microbiota in portal hypertension – Gautam Mehta and Rajeshwar P Mookerjee – Liver International

“In this issue of Liver International, Rincon and colleagues bring these threads together by exploring the effects of modulating gut flora on portal hypertension in the context of decompensated cirrhosis.”

Pregnancy and birth

Winners of the 2014 Ig Nobel Prize in Nutrition – ABC News

2014 IgNobel Prize in Nutrition: “Raquel Rubio, Anna Jofra, Belen Martin, Teresa Aymerich and Margarita Garriga, for their study of using infant fecal bacteria as potential probiotic starter cultures for fermented sausages.”

Plant microbiome

Why Tiny Microbes Mean Big Things for Farming – Peter Andrey Smith – National Geographic

“The soil-dwelling bacteria that we walk on every day are working their way into technologies that could help feed the world.”

Plant interactions with other organisms: molecules, ecology and evolution – Amy T. Austin and Carlos L. Ballaré – New Phytologist

“There are still many open questions regarding how plant interactions with other organisms are shaped by evolutionary forces over time. “

Food microbiology

Bacterial diversity in typical Italian salami at different ripening stages as revealed by high-throughput sequencing of 16S rRNA amplicons – Justyna Połka – Food Microbiology

“Salame Piacentino PDO was analysed by HTS (Illumina) of 16S rRNA amplicons.”

Techniques

1-day bowel preparation with polyethylene glycol 3350 is as effective and safe as a 3-day preparation for colonoscopy in children – Serge A Sorser – BMC Research Notes

“There were no differences between the groups in efficacy of bowel preparation based on colonoscopic grading or the safety of the preparation.”

Viruses and phages

Metagenomic Analysis of Double-stranded DNA viruses in Healthy Adults – Kristine M. Wylie – BMC Biology

“We analyzed eukaryotic double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) viruses, together with dsDNA replicative intermediates of single-stranded DNA viruses, in metagenomic sequence data generated by the HMP. “

see also: Your own personal virome – Biome – BioMedCentral

“If life gives you lemons, you make lemonade. And if your bacterial DNA datasets give you viral DNA contaminants, you use them to study the virome. “

Bioinformatics

Estimating overannotation across prokaryotic genomes using BLAST+, UBLAST, LAST and BLAT – Gabriel Moreno-Hagelsieb and Brigitte Hudy-Yuffa – BMC Research Notes

“Despite faster programs miss sequence matches otherwise found by NCBI?s BLAST, the overannotation estimates are very similar and thus these programs can be used with confidence for this task.”

Antibiotic and resistance

Single-molecule sequencing to track plasmid diversity of hospital-associated carbapenemase-producing Enterobacteriaceae – Sean Conlan – Science Translational Medicine

“we performed comprehensive surveillance and genomic sequencing of carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae in the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Clinical Center patient population and hospital environment. “

U.S. Lays Out Strategy to Combat Crisis of Antibiotic Resistance – Sabrina Tavernise – NY Times

“The Obama administration on Thursday announced measures to tackle the growing threat of antibiotic resistance”

Factory-Farm Workers Found to Carry High Levels of Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria – Willy Blackmore – TakePart (see also above)

“While only one worker was found to be carrying MRSA after nostril swabs were tested, 86 percent carried staph bacteria associated with livestock—far higher than the general population. “

Microbes in the News

Microbirth: The Extra Question Every Expectant Mother Needs To Ask – Toni Harman – Huffington Post

“The doctor or midwife looks at the expectant mother blankly. “I’m sorry. I have never heard of the microbiome. And I’ve never heard of Microbirth.”

Science, publishing, and career

Rhubarb pie and science – Sandy Becker – Science Working Life

“When I am asked how I became a developmental biologist, I say, “Jim hired me for my rhubarb pie and my Phi Beta Kappa key, and the rest is history.””

Can Post-Publication Peer-Reviews Increase Research Transparency? – Liz Allen – Berkeley Bitts

“When Peer Review is done in the open by named individuals, we believe it should be more constructive and issues will surface more quickly.”

 

Bik’s Picks

Winners of the 2014 Ig Nobel Awards – ABC News

“The 2014 Ig Nobel winners, awarded Thursday at Harvard University by the Annals of Improbable Research magazine”

Europeans drawn from three ancient ‘tribes’ – Paul Rincon – BBC News

“The modern European gene pool was formed when three ancient populations mixed within the last 7,000 years, Nature journal reports.”

Bowl Half Empty: Dogs Can Be Pessimists – Richard Farrell – Discovery

“New PhD research out of the University of Sydney by Dr. Melissa Starling, from the school’s Faculty of Veterinary Science, sought to find out if dogs had underlying personalities that tended toward either optimism of pessimism.”

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Microbiome digest, September 17, 2014

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Human gut microbiome and artificial sweeteners, cholera recovery, or ancient coprolites, protbiotics and the brain, coastal soil, diversity and science, metabolomics, and Bik’s Picks.
Human gut microbiome

Artificial sweeteners induce glucose intolerance by altering the gut microbiota – Jotham Suez – Nature

“We identify NAS-altered microbial metabolic pathways that are linked to host susceptibility to metabolic disease, and demonstrate similar NAS-induced dysbiosis and glucose intolerance in healthy human subjects.”

Members of the human gut microbiota involved in recovery from Vibrio cholerae infection – Ansel Hsiao – Nature

“We find that recovery is characterized by a pattern of accumulation of bacterial taxa that shows similarities to the pattern of assembly/maturation of the gut microbiota in healthy Bangladeshi children”

Paleomicrobiology: Revealing Fecal Microbiomes of Ancient Indigenous Cultures – Raul J. Cano – PLOS ONE

“We analyzed human coprolites from the Huecoid and Saladoid cultures from a settlement on Vieques Island, Puerto Rico.”

Animal models of microbiome research

Modulation of Intestinal Microbiota by the Probiotic VSL#3 Resets Brain Gene Expression and Ameliorates the Age-Related Deficit in LTP – Eleonora Distrutti – PLOS ONE

“Here, we report that treatment of aged rats with VSL#3 induced a robust change in the composition of intestinal microbiota with an increase in the abundance of Actinobacteria and Bacterioidetes, which was reduced in control-treated aged rats.”

Soil microbiome

Unravelling the Carbon and Sulphur Metabolism in Coastal Soil Ecosystems Using Comparative Cultivation-Independent Genome-Level Characterisation of Microbial Communities – Basit Yousuf – PLOS ONE

“Distinct compositional differences were observed among the clone libraries, which revealed a dominance of phylotypes associated with carbon and sulphur cycling”

Techniques

Partition Enrichment of Nucleotide Sequences (PINS) – A Generally Applicable, Sequence Based Method for Enrichment of Complex DNA Samples – Thomas Kvist, Line Sondt-Marcussen, Marie Just Mikkelsen – PLOS ONE

“The present paper describes a new method, Probability directed Isolation of Nucleic acid Sequences (PINS), for enrichment of DNA, enabling the sequencing of a large DNA region surrounding a small known sequence. “

Metabolomics

Of Monkeys and Men: A Metabolomic Analysis of Static and Dynamic Urinary Metabolic Phenotypes in Two Species – Edoardo Saccenti – PLOS ONE

“we show that despite the standardization of diet as the most relevant extrinsic factor, a clear individual and discriminative metabolic fingerprint also exists for monkeys.”

Science and Career

Diversity: Pride in science – M Mitchell Waldrop – Nature

“The sciences can be a sanctuary for gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender individuals, but biases may still discourage many from coming out.”

Bik’s Picks

Only 4 of them are women…. – The top 50 science stars of Twitter – Jia You – Science

“Though Hall says he meant his K-index lightheartedly, his article in Genome Biology sparked a Twitter storm of criticism. So just who are the Kardashians of science, and is Hall’s criticism justified?”

Breast milk reveals a correlation between dietary fats and academic success – Science Daily

“You are what you eat, the saying goes, and now a study conducted by researchers at UC Santa Barbara and the University of Pittsburgh suggests that the oft-repeated adage applies not just to physical health but to brain power as well.”

Forensic science solves mystery of Richard III’s death (the parking-lot king) –  Agata Blaszczak-Boxe – CBS News

“More than 500 years after Richard III became the last king of England to die in battle, researchers using modern forensic science have figured out which injuries likely caused his death.”

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General microbiology and science digest, September 16, 2014

Detection of microbes in tissues, a magnet to pull out bacteria from blood, temperature stability of samples, enriching for rare microbial community members, bioinformatics tools for microbiome research, and Bik’s Picks.
Microbial detection

Metagenomic Assay for Identification of Microbial Pathogens in Tumor Tissues – Don A. Baldwin – mBio

“the PathoChip platform was developed by targeting viral, prokaryotic, and eukaryotic genomes with multiple DNA probes in a microarray format that can be combined with a variety of upstream sample preparation protocols and downstream data analysis. “

More microbes

Review: Physical stress and bacterial colonization – Michael Otto – FEMS Microbiology Reviews

“This review will give an overview over the mechanisms human bacterial colonizers have to withstand physical stresses with a focus on bacterial adhesion.”

Techniques

16S rRNA gene pyrosequencing of reference and clinical samples and investigation of the temperature stability of microbiome profiles – Jun Hang – Microbiome

“Three readily available mock bacterial community materials and two commercial extraction techniques, Qiagen DNeasy and MO BIO PowerSoil DNA purification methods, were used to assess procedures for 16S ribosomal DNA amplification and pyrosequencing-based analysis.”

Improving the genetic representation of rare taxa within complex microbial communities using DNA normalisation methods – Dragana Gagic – Molecular Ecology Resources

“The synthetic metagenome was fractionated and thermally re-natured, allowing the most abundant sequences to hybridise. Double-stranded DNA was removed either by hydroxyapatite chromatography, or by a duplex-specific nuclease (DSN).”

Bioinformatics

A better sequence-read simulator program for metagenomics – Stephen Johnson – BMC Bioinformatics

“We present BEAR (Better Emulation for Artificial Reads), a program that uses a machine-learning approach to generate reads with lengths and quality values that closely match empirically-derived distributions.”

Gene finding in metatranscriptomic sequences – Wazim Mohammed Ismail, Yuzhen Ye and Haixu Tang – BMC Bioinformatics

“In this paper, we present TransGeneScan, a software tool for finding genes in assembled transcripts from metatranscriptomic sequences.”

Data analysis for 16S microbial profiling from different benchtop sequencing platforms
Victor S. Pylro – Journal of Microbiological Methods

“Satisfactory results were obtained in those pipelines that applied a chimera-filtering step.”

Metagenome fragment classification based on multiple motif-occurrence profiles – Naoki Matsushita – PeerJ

“we have updated the Naïve Bayes Classifier method using multiple sets of occurrence profiles for each reference genome by normalizing the genome sizes, dividing each genome sequence into a set of subsequences of similar length and generating profiles for each subsequence.”

Revolutionizing prokaryotic systematics through next-generation sequencing – Vartul Sangal – Methods in Microbiology

“In this chapter, we have provided a brief summary of recent advances in sequencing technologies and easy to use bioinformatic tools to analyse sequence data, with a focus on prokaryotic biology. “

Microbes in the news

A Lesson in Language – McAlarnen, Lindsey A. – Academic Medicine

“while I expected a challenge working with human microbiome expert Dr. Rob Knight, I never expected to be as lost as I was that first morning.”

An extracorporeal blood-cleansing device for sepsis therapy – Joo H Kang – Nature Medicine

“Magnets pull the opsonin-bound pathogens and toxins from the blood; the cleansed blood is then returned back to the individual. “

Science and career

Too Few University Jobs For America’s Young Scientists – Richard Harris – NPR Morning Edition

“Imagine a job where about half of all the work is being done by people who are in training. That’s, in fact, what happens in the world of biological and medical research.”

Diversity in Science: Where Are the Data? – Fred Guterl – Scientific American

“Global figures on diversity in the science and engineering workforce are hard to come by, but what we know is not flattering”

 

Bik’s Picks

Jack the Ripper, more poison at NIH, Rosetta & the comet – Tabitha M. Powledge – PLOS Blogs

“Scientists have greeted with hoots and catcalls the claim that Jack the Ripper, the near-mythical late-19th Century London serial killer, has been identified from DNA as an immigrant Polish baker named Aaron Kosminski.”

Human faces are so variable because we evolved to look unique – ScienceDaily

“The amazing variety of human faces — far greater than that of most other animals — is the result of evolutionary pressure to make each of us unique and easily recognizable”

Joanne Chang Brings the Sweet Science of Sugar to Harvard – Leah Blumenthal – Eater.com

“Harvard University’s annual Science & Cooking public lecture series brings chefs from around the world to lecture on the intersection of science and cooking.”

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General microbiology and science, September 15, 2014

Biodiversity and evolution in microbial communities, metabolomics, swabbing, DNA extraction, ITS approaches, marine viruses, and Bik’s Picks.

Microbial Ecology

The cryptic role of biodiversity in the emergence of host–microbial mutualisms – Pradeep Pillai – Ecology Letters

“Using a metacommunity model, we show that competition between multiple cheaters within the host’s microbiome, when combined with the spatial structure of host–microbial interactions, can have a constructive rather than a disruptive effect by allowing the emergence and maintenance of mutualistic microorganisms within the host.”

Microbial communities evolve faster in extreme environments – Sheng-Jin Li – Nature Scientific Reports

“Here we report a relative evolutionary rates (rERs) analysis of microbial communities from six diverse natural environments based on 40 metagenomic samples. “

Metabolomics

Mapping the Inner Workings of the Microbiome: Genomic- and Metagenomic-Based Study of Metabolism and Metabolic Interactions in the Human Microbiome – Ohad Manor, Roie Levy, Elhanan Borenstein – Cell Metabolism

“Here, we discuss recent efforts to study the metabolic inner workings of this complex ecosystem. “

Techniques

Comparison of seven methods for extraction of bacterial DNA from fecal and cecal samples of mice – Janina Ferrand – Journal of Microbiological Methods

“DNA quantity and quality were assessed by fluorometry, spectrophotometry, gel electrophoresis and qPCR….For both feces and intestinal contents, the most efficient extraction method was the FastDNA® SPIN Kit for Soil.”

Swab Sample Transfer for Point-Of-Care Diagnostics: Characterization of Swab Types and Manual Agitation Methods – Nuttada Panpradist – PLOS ONE

“In this study, we compared bacterial release efficiency of seven swab types using manual-agitation methods typical of POC devices.”

Improved resolution of bacteria by high throughput sequence analysis of the rRNA internal transcribed spacer – Paul M. Ruegger – Journal of Microbiological Methods

“Comparisons of the ITS region and two SSU regions using annotated bacterial genomes in GenBank showed much greater resolving power is possible with the ITS region. “

Pyroprinting: A rapid and flexible genotypic fingerprinting method for typing bacterial strains – Michael W. Black – Journal of Microbiological Methods

“Pyroprinting relies on the simultaneous pyrosequencing of polymorphic multicopy loci, such as the intergenic transcribed spacer regions of rRNA operons in bacterial genomes.”

Bioinformatics

OrthoClust: an orthology-based network framework for clustering data across multiple species – Koon-Kiu Yan – Genome Biology

“We demonstrate the application of OrthoClust using the RNA-Seq expression profiles of Caenorhabditis elegans and Drosophila melanogaster from the modENCODE consortium.”

Viruses and Phages

Review: Factors affecting virus dynamics and microbial host–virus interactions in marine environments – Kristina D.A. Mojica and Corina P.D. Brussaard – FEMS Microbiology Ecology

“The goal of the present minireview was to contribute to the evolution of marine viral ecology, through the assimilation of available data regarding the manner and degree to which environmental factors affect viral decay and infectivity as well as influence latent period and production.”

More Microbes

Dead or Alive: Molecular Assessment of Microbial Viability – Gerard A. Cangelosi and John S. Meschke – Applied and Environmental Microbiology

“This article reviews molecular viability analysis in that context and discusses future opportunities for these strategies in genetic, metagenomic, and single-cell microbiology.”

Bacteria in the news

Is your body mostly microbes? Actually, we have no idea – Peter Andrey Smith – The Boston Globe

“There’s only one problem: The oft-cited 10-to-1 figure is almost certainly inaccurate.”

The Death Microbiome Could Inform Forensic Science And Medicine – Randall Mayes – Design & Trend

“For pathologists working out the time of death, research has focused on the way that insects and microbes from a corpse’ environment take up residence in the flesh.”

Tiny hitchhikers, big health impact: Studying the microbiome to learn about disease – Krista Conger – ScopeBlog Stanford

Got microbes? Meet some of the tiny life forms that call you home and may make antibiotics for you (with annoying 5 questions if you want to read the whole article) – Susannah Bodman – Oregon Live

Fighting Poisons With Bacteria – Going Inside the Rice Microbiome – Carina Storrs – NY Times

“Dr. Bais is working to develop rice plants that take up less arsenic, a common contaminant in the fields of his native India and other Asian countries.”

Possum faeces may cause flesh-eating ulcers in humans, Victorian researchers say – ABC Australia

“Infectious disease researchers at Victoria’s Barwon Health have found that possums can carry the buruli bacteria, which can cause major skin ulcers in humans.”

Scientific publishing

Ten Simple Rules for Better Figures – Nicolas P. Rougier – PLOS Computational Biology

“we aim to provide a basic set of rules to improve figure design and to explain some of the common pitfalls.”

The digital toolbox – Nature Editorial

“A new section of Nature examines the software and websites that make research easier.”

Scientific career

There is life after academia – Nature Editorial

“With high numbers of postdocs emerging from universities, prospective PhD students must be prepared for the fact that they will probably not end up with a career in research.”

Bik’s Picks

PBS: Video on the science behind brewing beer hops to it – CNET

“PBS series “It’s Okay To Be Smart” takes a look at how beer is made, and what external factors influence the final product.”

The coffee genome provides insight into the convergent evolution of caffeine biosynthesis -France Denoeud – Science

“We generated a high-quality draft genome of the species Coffea canephora, which displays a conserved chromosomal gene order among asterid angiosperms. “

On the Other Hand – Bob Grant – The Scientist

“Handedness, a conspicuous but enigmatic human trait, may be shared by other animals. What does it mean for evolution and brain function?”

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Microbiome Digest, August 29, 2014

@MicrobiomDigest will be enjoying vacation for the next two weeks, so I won’t be able to post as much as usual. I might occasionally have some time and internet access at the same time, and post something, but don’t rely on this blog during that time for your daily Microbiome fix. But I will be back! Enjoy this last (short) one for now:
Human oral microbiome

Bacterial community composition of chronic periodontitis and novel oral sampling sites for detecting disease indicators – Vaia Galimanas – Microbiome

Human gut microbiome

Immunoglobulin A Coating Identifies Colitogenic Bacteria in Inflammatory Bowel Disease – Noah W Palm – Cell

Modulation of immune development and function by intestinal microbiota – Agnieszka M. Kabat – Trends in Immunology

 

Worms, bacteria, and micronutrients: an elegant model of our diet – Lutfu Safak Yilmaz, Albertha J.M. Walhout – Trends in Genetics

 

Mammal microbiome

Spatial heterogeneity of gut microbiota reveals multiple bacterial communities with distinct characteristics (in flying squirrels) – Hsiao-Pei Lu – Scientific Reports

Social influences on the gut microbiome of developing monkeys – W.Z. Amaral – Brain, Behavior, and Immunity

 

Do Rumen Bacteroidetes Utilize an Alternative Mechanism for Cellulose Degradation? – AE Naas – mBio

 

Characterization of the Fecal Microbiota of Pigs before and after Inoculation with “Brachyspira hampsonii” – Matheus O. Costa – PLOS ONE

 

Sponges and corals

The versatile nature of coral-associated viruses – Bettarel Yvan – Environmental Microbiology

Onset and establishment of diazotrophs and other bacterial associates in the early life history stages of the coral Acropora millepora – Kimberley A. Lema – Molecular Ecology

Rocks and Water Microbiome

Microbial Colonization of Bare Rocks: Laboratory Biofilm Enhances Mineral Weathering – F. Seiffert – Procedia Earth and Planetary Science

Microbial diversity and biogeochemical cycling in soda lakes – Dimitry Y. Sorokin – Extremophiles

Food microbiome

Switzerland Puts Secret Bacteria In Cheese To Catch Knockoffs – Sarah Zhang – Gizmodo

Bioinformatics

A Scalable and Accurate Targeted Gene Assembly Tool (SAT-Assembler) for Next-Generation Sequencing Data – Yuan Zhang – PLOS Computational Biology

Metabolomics

Taking your breath away: metabolomics breathes life in to personalized medicine
Nicholas J.W. Rattray – Trends in Biotechnology

Phages and Viruses

Identifying and analyzing bacteriophages in human fecal samples: what could we discover? – Maite Muniesa1 & Juan Jofre – Future Medicine

Microbes in the news

Hotel rooms aren’t yucky – you colonize them with your own personal bacteria within hours — Rachel Feltman – Washington Post

A touching story: The ancient conversation between plants, fungi and bacteria – David Tenenbaum – News UW Madison

Bik’s Picks

The universal ‘anger face’: Each element makes you look physically stronger and more formidable – Science Daily

Zombie Bacteria Invasion? Nothing To Worry About – Science 2.0

Report: Ice Bucket Challenge Causing Ecological Mayhem in California – The Allium (Satire)

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General microbiology and science, August 25, 2014

Microbial networks, proteomics of Fusobacterium, ants carrying pathogens into hospitals, and what’s in your lab freezer?

Bioinformatics

Sparse and compositionally robust inference of microbial ecological networks – Zachary D. Kurtz – arXiv at Cornel University Library

“Here, we present SPIEC-EASI (SParse InversE Covariance Estimation for Ecological Association Inference), a statistical method for the inference of microbial ecological interactions from metagenomic datasets that addresses both of these issues. “

Metabolomics / proteomics

Modelling the Emergent Dynamics and Major Metabolites of the Human Colonic Microbiota – Helen Kettle – Environmental Microbiology

“We present here a first attempt at modelling microbial dynamics in the human colon incorporating both uncertainty and adaptation. “

Proteomics of Fusobacterium nucleatum within a model developing oral microbial community  – Erik L. Hendrickson – MicrobiologyOpen

“About 1210 F. nucleatum proteins were detected in single species F. nucleatum control samples, 1192 in communities with P. gingivalis, 1224 with S. gordonii, and 1135 with all three species.”

Techniques

* (Preprint) Sources of PCR-induced distortions in high-throughput sequencing datasets – Justus M Kebschull, Anthony M Zador – bioRXiv

We examined the effects of bias, stochasticity, template switches and polymerase errors introduced during PCR on sequence representation in next-generation sequencing libraries. “

More microbes

* Ants as vectors of pathogenic microorganisms in a hospital in Sao Paulo county, Brazil – Heros J Máximo – BMC Research Notes

“Ants in hospitals may carry both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, and methods of controlling urban ants should be adopted and strictly adhered to, to minimize the risk of infection in hospital patients.”

Microbes in the news

What’s in your laboratory freezer? – Timothy J. Donahue – American Society of Microbiology

“I ask all microbiologists to make sure that you and your colleagues know what they have in the lab (freezer, refrigerator, store room, etc).”

* Hot Spring Bacteria Can Live Off Invisible Light Alone – Brian Stallard – Nature World News

“Researcher(sic) studying cyanobacteria in hot springs have discovered that the potentially harmful algae can live in near-darkness, absorbing far-red light and converting it into energy while releasing oxygen. “

Insect-borne bacteria destroy ancient Italian olive groves – Tom Kington – GulfNews

“The ancient olive groves of southern Italy, which provide much of the oil the country exports, are being destroyed by deadly, insect-borne bacterium that has already infected nearly half a million trees and has no known cure.”

Uncultured Bacteria (with video) – Serious Science

“Northeastern University Prof. Kim Lewis on great plate count anomaly, siderophores, and human microbiome”

#BacteriaHysteria

* How to Keep Bacteria Out of Your Child’s Lunchbox – FoodSafetyNews

“If possible, a child’s lunch should be stored in a refrigerator during school, but the lid should be left open so that cold air can better circulate and keep the food cold.”

* Chick-fil-A incorporates bacteria-killing copper into restrooms – The News Herald

“Seidel said that Chick-fil-A Owner and Operator Dallas Stoudenmire has realized his responsibility to keep customers bacteria free and is taking the right steps to do so.”

Science and publishing

Concerns Raised Online Linger – Kate Yandell – The Scientist

“The great majority of comments point out some kind of problem,” PubPeer moderators wrote in an e-mail to The Scientist.

Bik’s Picks

Eye implant developed at Stanford could lead to better glaucoma treatments – Bjorn Carey – Stanford News

“A tiny eye implant developed by Stephen Quake’s lab could pair with a smartphone to improve the way doctors measure and lower a patient’s eye pressure.”

Scientists grow an organ in an animal from cells created in lab – Science Daily

“The researchers have created a thymus — an organ next to the heart that produces immune cells known as T cells that are vital for guarding against disease.”

Mozzarella and cheddar are the perfect pizza toppers, according to science – Jenn Harris – LA Times

“Understanding the value of a pie spotted with perfectly crisp cheese, a group of scientists in New Zealand set out to find which cheeses create the perfect topping.”

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Microbiome Digest, August 22, 2014

The microbiome of the human eye,  chronic lung diseases, ticks, trout, the air in wineries, and Bik’s Picks. Have a good weekend!
Pregnancy and birth

The human microbiome and the great obstetrical syndromes, a new frontier in maternal fetal medicine – Ido Solt – Best Practice & Research Clinical Obstetrics & Gynaecology

“The transmission of maternal microbiomes to the neonate, according to vaginal delivery or cesarean section, is shown to affect health from birth to adulthood.”

Human skin microbiome

Considerations in Understanding the Ocular Surface Microbiome – Michael E. Zegans – American Journal of Ophthalmology

“In ophthalmology, the question naturally arises as to whether or not the ocular surface, like other mucous membrane surfaces, has a resident microbiota, and, if so, what role it plays in ocular surface physiology. This question has provoked much debate over many years. “

Human respiratory microbiome
* The role of the microbiome in exacerbations of chronic lung diseases – Robert P Dickson – The Lancet

“We propose that exacerbations are occasions of respiratory tract dysbiosis—a disorder of the respiratory tract microbial ecosystem with negative effects on host biology.”

Human gut microbiome

* Starving our Microbial Self: The Deleterious Consequences of a Diet Deficient in Microbiota-Accessible Carbohydrates – Erica D. Sonnenburg, Justin L. Sonnenburg – Cell Metabolism

“The low-MAC Western diet results in poor production of gut microbiota-generated short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), which attenuate inflammation through a variety of mechanisms in mouse models. “

Human vaginal microbiome

Rectal Lactobacillus Species and Their Influence on the Vaginal Microflora: A Model of Male-to-Female Transsexual Women – Ljubomir Petricevic – The Journal of Sexual Medicine

“We undertook this observational study to characterize the Lactobacillus species present in the neovagina and rectum of male-to-female transsexual women and to determine the degree of neovaginal-rectal co-colonization in order to gain a better understanding of the potential role of the gut as a reservoir for genital lactobacilli.”

Animal models of microbiome research

Perinatal antibiotic-induced shifts in gut microbiota have differential effects on inflammatory lung diseases – Shannon L. Russell – Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology

“Disease severity was assessed by measuring lung inflammation, pathology, cytokine responses, and serum antibodies. Microbial community analyses were performed on stool samples via 16S ribosomal RNA pyrosequencing and correlations between disease severity and specific bacterial taxa were identified.”

Animal microbiome

The composition and transmission of microbiome in hard tick, Ixodes persulcatus, during blood meal – Xue-Chao Zhang – Ticks and Tick-borne Diseases

“By 16S rRNA Illumina sequencing, we investigated the microbiome of I. persulcatus and assessed the variation of the microbiome before and after blood feeding.”

Diet type dictates the gut microbiota and the immune response against Yersinia ruckeri in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) – Hans-Christian Ingerslev – Fish & Shellfish Immunology

“This study investigated the influence of the rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) commensal intestinal microbiota in connection to an experimental Yersina ruckeri infection, the causative agent of enteric redmouth disease.”

Food microbiology

* Microbial communities in air and wine of a winery at two consecutive vintages – Fátima Pérez-Martín – International Journal of Food Microbiology

“The microbial composition was determined by using both a culture-dependent method and a culture-independent method, PCR-denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (PCR-DGGE).”

Metabolomics

* Microbial catabolism of procyanidins by human gut microbiota – Keqin Ou – Molecular Nutrition & Food Research

“The objective of this study was to identify and quantify the microbial metabolites of procyanidins after anaerobic fermentation with human microbiota.”

Bioinformatics

* Defining the Estimated Core Genome of Bacterial Populations Using a Bayesian Decision Model – Andries J. van Tonder – PLOS Computational Biology

“The aim of our study was to develop a model to estimate the bacterial core genome from next-generation whole genome sequencing data and use this model to identify novel genes associated with important biological functions. “

* Comparative Analysis of Functional Metagenomic Annotation and the Mappability of Short Reads – Rogan Carr, Elhanan Borenstein – PLOS ONE

“Overall, our findings provide a first comprehensive evaluation of the capabilities and limitations of functional metagenomic annotation, providing crucial goal-specific best-practice guidelines to inform future metagenomic research.”

ExaBayes: Massively Parallel Bayesian Tree Inference for the Whole-Genome Era
Andre J. Aberer – Molecular Biology and Evolution

“We introduce a novel, user-friendly software package engineered for conducting state-of-the-art Bayesian tree inferences on datasets of arbitrary size.”

Microbes in the news

Behold 50 shades of Gross: A guide to Germaphobia! – Katherine Dahlhausen – MicroBEnet

“So logically, I began researching germaphobic practices. Some of them are just too good not to share! “

California Trees Nailed As The Source Of Mystery Infections – Nancy Shute – NPR

“”We had a good idea that the fungus was going to be associated with trees,” says Deborah Springer, a postdoctoral fellow at Duke University who studies C. gatti. “

Bik’s Picks

Pulling teeth from history: DNA from ancient teeth can help to yield information about our ancestors’ health, diet and diseases – Philip Hunter – EMBO Reports

“Teeth have proven to be an excellence source of ancient DNA. New analytical tools are helping to exploit this treasure trove to address questions about the link between diet and health, and the impact of historical epidemics with clear relevance for human health today.”

Ten Simple Rules of Live Tweeting at Scientific Conferences – Sean Ekins, Ethan O. Perlstein – PLOS Computational Biology

“Increasingly, some scientists are using Twitter as a vehicle to summarize presentations and posters at conferences in real time, which is defined as “live tweeting.””

Why the World Smells Different After It Rains – Behold, the wonders of petrichor.
Megan Garber – The Atlantic

In the video above, PBS’s Joe Hanson describes the biology that leads to petrichor.”

Scientist Mistakenly Does “Dry-Ice Bucket Challenge” – The Allium

Sad news has come to us today at The Allium, when we learned that scientist Dr. Liv Good, has mistakenly carried out a Dry-Ice Bucket challenge.”

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Microbiome digest, August 20, 2014

Ocular microbiome, life under ice, and gut microbiome and behavior.

Human ocular microbiome

Assessment of ocular surface microbiota in keratoconus patients – a pilot study – M Gajecka – Acta Ophthalmologica

“Culture-based microbiology methods are used in the investigation to preliminary examine the OS microbiota. Simultaneously, microbial genetic material is extracted from the eye swabs for further qualitative and quantitative analyzes using molecular biology methods (real-time PCR, NGS).”

Microbial detection in clinical samples

Elevated Levels of Circulating DNA in Cardiovascular Disease Patients: Metagenomic Profiling of Microbiome in the Circulation – Vasudevan Dinakaran – PLOS ONE

“This work was aimed to study the circulating human microbiome in CVD patients and healthy subjects.”

Animal models of microbiome

A Possible Link between Food and Mood: Dietary Impact on Gut Microbiota and Behavior in BALB/c Mice – Bettina Pyndt Jørgensen – PLOS ONE

“Behavioral changes were accompanied by a significant change in GM composition of mice fed a high-fat diet” “Denaturation gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) was used to investigate differences in the composition of the GM.”

Mammalian microbiome

Metagenomic identification of novel enteric viruses in urban wild rats and genome characterization of a group A rotavirus – Jana Sachsenröder – Journal of General Virology

“Here, intestinal contents from 20 wild Norway rats (Rattus norvegicus) collected in the city of Berlin, Germany, were subjected to metagenomic analysis of viral nucleic acids.”

Water microbiome

A microbial ecosystem beneath the West Antarctic ice sheet – Brent C. Christner – Nature

“Heterotrophic and autotrophic production data together with small subunit ribosomal RNA gene sequencing and biogeochemical data indicate that SLW is a chemosynthetically driven ecosystem inhabited by a diverse assemblage of bacteria and archaea. “

See also: Lakes under the ice: Antarctica’s secret garden – Douglas Fox – Nature

“Samples from a lake hidden under 800 metres of ice contain thousands of microbes and hint at vast ecosystems yet to be discovered.”

Bioinformatics

A Rank-Based Sequence Aligner with Applications in Phylogenetic Analysis – Liviu P. Dinu – PLOS ONE

“This paper introduces a method for assigning a set of short DNA reads to a reference genome, under Local Rank Distance (LRD). The rank-based aligner proposed in this work aims to improve correctness over speed. “

Viruses and phages (see also the rat/rotavirus paper above)

Unveiling viral–host interactions within the ‘microbial dark matter’ – Manuel Martínez-García – Nature Communications

“Using this method, we pinpoint viruses infecting the ubiquitous hyperhalophilic Nanohaloarchaeota, included in the so-called ‘microbial dark matter’ (the uncultured fraction of the microbial world).”

Microbes in the news

Archiving: Don’t let microbial samples perish – Noah Fierer and Craig Cary – Nature

“Microbial ecologists must coordinate to archive sample collections and genetic material.”

Microbiology: Microbiome science needs a healthy dose of scepticism – William P. Hanage – Nature

“To guard against hype, those interpreting research on the body’s microscopic communities should ask five questions”

Science, publishing and career

Editorial: Finding the root – The NIH is right to investigate whether bias makes grant awards unfair – Nature

“The idea that scientists who volunteer time and energy to review NIH grants could be biased against qualified minority researchers is a tough pill to swallow. “

Today’s YAMMM (Yet another mostly male meeting): pharma-nutrition #PN2015 – Jonathan Eisen – The Tree of Life

Yay.  All men.  How wonderful.  Because, you know, there are no women working on the microbiome and nutrition right?  Ugg. “

 

Equally productive women are tenured less -Beryl Lieff Benderly – Science

“Women received tenure less often than men with equal productivity in three disciplines studied by Kate Weisshaar, a Ph.D. student in sociology at Stanford University.”

Bik’s Picks

Solar energy that doesn’t block the view – Science Daily

“Researchers have developed a new type of solar concentrator that when placed over a window creates solar energy while allowing people to actually see through the window. “

If Seals Hadn’t Introduced Tuberculosis To The New World, Europeans Would Have – Science 2.0

A new study documents that again, finding isolated Mycobacterium pinnipedii from skeletons found in Peru which are at least 1000 years old. The pathogen is a relative of the TB bacterium that affects seals, so it likely that seals carried the pathogens from Africa to the Peruvian coast.”

Which Hot New Lab Coat Should You Buy This Season? – Fake Science

“We’ve found the hottest coats from Paris, Milan, and Batavia, Illinois and put them into our patented quiz. Take it and find out which lab coat will have you steaming up the beakers!”

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