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 21, 2014

Ground squirrels, scallops, hypersaline water, and dead bodies.

Postmortem human microbiome

* Microbial communities associated with human decomposition and their potential use as postmortem clocks – Sheree J. Finley – International Journal of Legal Medicine

“the scope of this review is to provide a concise summary of the current progress in the newly emerging field of microbial diversity and the next-generation metagenomic sequencing approaches for assessing these communities in humans and in the soil beneath decomposing human.”

* Effects of Season and Host Physiological State on the Diversity, Density, and Activity of the Arctic Ground Squirrel Cecal Microbiota – Timothy J Stevenson – Applied and Environmental Microbiology

“We examined the seasonal changes of the cecal microbiota of captive arctic ground squirrels (Urocitellus parryii) by measuring microbial diversity and composition, total bacterial density and viability, and short-chain fatty acid concentrations at four sample periods (summer, torpor, interbout arousal, and posthibernation).”

Invertebrate microbiome

* IMMR abstract: Analysis of the scallop microbiota by means of 16S rRNA gene pyrosequencing – Aide Lasa – Frontiers in Microbiology

“In this study, we present the analysis of the microbiota associated to reared scallop gonads before and after spawning by pyrosequencing of the 16S rRNA gene. “

Soil microbiome

Bacterial diversity assessment in soil of an active Brazilian copper mine using high-throughput sequencing of 16S rDNA amplicons – Viviane D. Rodrigues – Antonie van Leeuwenhoek

“In this work, pyrosequencing of the V3 region of the 16S rDNA was used to analyze the bacterial communities in soil samples from a Brazilian copper mine. “

* Impact of long-term N, P, K, and NPK fertilization on the composition and potential functions of the bacterial community in grassland soil – Yao Pan – FEMS Microbiology Ecology

“Here, we applied DNA shotgun metagenomic techniques to investigate the effect of inorganic fertilizers N, P, K, and NPK on the bacterial community composition and potential functions in grassland soils in a 54-year experiment. “

Water microbiome

The Santa Pola saltern as a model for studying the microbiota of hypersaline environments – Antonio Ventosa – Extremophiles

“Multi-pond salterns constitute an excellent model for the study of the microbial diversity and ecology of hypersaline environments, showing a wide range of salt concentrations, from seawater to salt saturation. “

Food microbiology

Book: Microorganisms and Fermentation of Traditional Foods – Ramesh C. Ray, Montet Didier – CRC Press

Fungi

Reconstruction of the original mycoflora in pelleted feed by PCR-SSCP and qPCR – Samart Dorn-In – FEMS Microbiology Letters

“A fungal-specific primer pair ITS1/ITS5.8R was used to amplify fungal DNA; PCR products were processed for the PCR-SSCP method. In the resulting acrylamide gel, more than 85% of DNA bands of ground feeds were preserved after pelleting. “

 

From Dandruff to Deep-Sea Vents: Malassezia-like Fungi Are Ecologically Hyper-diverse – Anthony Amend – PLOS Pathogens

“As the dominant component of the mycobiota on human skin —both healthy and diseased [2] —the genus Malassezia has received a fair amount of attention. “

Microbes in the news

The Birth of Pathogens: How Bacteria Become Deadly – Brian Stallard – Nature World News

“Two new studies have revealed two very different ways bothersome bacteria strains can suddenly become deadly, evolving into difficult-to-rid pathogens that can threaten entire populations.” – belongs to a PNAS paper on Salmonella enterica, and a Nature Communications paper on Group B Streptococcus.

Bacteria colonies removed from Savannah River Site using special vacuum – Meg Mirshak – The Augusta Chronicle

“Scientists studied samples and determined the white, stringy “cobwebs” were made up of a broad variety of bacteria and a few types of microbes.”

ASU experts follow gut reaction in autism treatment study – Arizona State University

“A new study approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and led by Arizona State University will examine a novel treatment – called fecal microbiota transplant (FMT) – for GI problems in children with autism.”

Science and career

Ailing academia needs culture change – Viviane Callier, Nathan L. Vanderford – Science

“The research enterprise has become unsustainable in its current form. Research funding levels/mechanisms, the peer-review process, and the methods of training Ph.D.’s are flawed, and these issues are crippling the pipeline of future, successful academic researchers”

Science Media Beset with Gender Gaps – By Curtis Brainard – Scientific American

“One antidote, summit participants suggested, would be having more reporters abide by the seven-part Finkbeiner Test”

Bik’s Picks

* Why does asparagus make our urine smell? – Claudia Hammond – BBC Future

“After eating asparagus, some people can detect a strange smell, while others claim not to notice a thing. What’s going on?”

Chemically mediated behavior of recruiting corals and fishes: A tipping point that may limit reef recovery – Danielle L. Dixson – Science

“We show that juveniles of both corals and fishes are repelled by chemical cues from fished, seaweed-dominated reefs but attracted to cues from coral-dominated areas where fishing is prohibited. “

Scientists discover how lizards regrow tails – John von Radowitz – The Independent

“Researchers have identified a genetic programme that triggers new tissue growth after a lizard sacrifices its tail to escape a predator.”

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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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General microbiology and science, August 14

A metabolic map of Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, bacteria injections to cure cancer, a researcher smuggling live bacteria in a lunchbox,  and a scientist in trouble for posting a PhD thesis.

Metabolomics

Functional Metabolic Map of Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, a Beneficial Human Gut Microbe – Almut Heinken – Journal of Bacteriology

“In this study, we present an integrated, iterative approach of computational modeling, in vitro experiments, metabolomics, and genomic analysis to accelerate the identification of metabolic capabilities for poorly characterized (anaerobic) microorganisms.”

Transcriptomics

Pervasive transcription: illuminating the dark matter of bacterial transcriptomes – Joseph T. Wade & David C. Grainger – Nature Reviews Microbiology

“In this Opinion article, we discuss our current understanding of pervasive transcription, its genetic origin and its regulation. “

More microbiology

Intratumoral injection of Clostridium novyi-NT spores induces antitumor responses
Nicholas J. Roberts – Science Translational Medicine

“On the basis of these encouraging results, we treated a human patient who had an advanced leiomyosarcoma with an intratumoral injection of C. novyi-NT spores. This treatment reduced the tumor within and surrounding the bone. “

Canadian ex-researcher pleads guilty in attempted bacteria-smuggling case – Lee-Anne Goodman

“With his wife in the passenger seat, they discovered in his suitcase 17 vials of live Brucella — contained in a block of ice and swathed in bubble wrap in a children’s lunch bag — and a substantial quantity of goat’s blood.”

Techniques

Preprint: Swabs to Genomes: A Comprehensive Workflow – David A Coil – PeerJ

“The objective of the present study was to design, test, troubleshoot, and publish a simple, comprehensive workflow from the collection of an environmental sample (a swab) to a published microbial genome”

Accuracy of Next Generation Sequencing Platforms – Edward J Fox – Next Generation: Sequencing & Applications

“The ability of these technologies to disentangle sequence heterogeneity, however, is limited by their relatively high error rates”

Uniting the classification of cultured and uncultured bacteria and archaea using 16S rRNA gene sequences — Pablo Yarza – Nature Reviews Microbiology

“Our analyses show that only nearly complete 16S rRNA sequences give accurate measures of taxonomic diversity. In addition, our analyses suggest that most of the 16S rRNA sequences of the high taxa will be discovered in environmental surveys by the end of the current decade.”

Science, Publishing, Career

Financial costs and personal consequences of research misconduct resulting in retracted publications – Andrew M Stern, Arturo Casadevall, R Grant Steen, Ferric C Fang – eLife

“We found that papers retracted due to misconduct accounted for approximately $58 million in direct funding by the NIH between 1992 and 2012, less than 1% of the NIH budget over this period. ”

Student may be jailed for posting scientist’s thesis on web – David Reay – Nature News Blog

“Colombian biology student is facing up to 8 years in jail and a fine for sharing a thesis by another scientist on a social network. Diego Gómez Hoyos posted the 2006 work, about amphibian taxonomy, on Scribd in 2011.

Study: Uncivil work environment pushing women out of the engineering field – Brigid Schulte – Washington Post

“a new National Science Foundation report released on Saturday about why so few women go into engineering, or stay in the field, highlights a key reason: a workplace culture of incivility toward women.”

Science of inclusion – Holly McDede – SFBG.com

“As Big Tech struggles with diversity, women find support and fellowship in the biotech industry.”

Bik’s Picks

Pour on the Salt? New Research Suggests More Is OK – Judy Silverman and Lisa Tolin – NBC News

“New research suggests that healthy people can eat about twice the amount of salt that’s currently recommended — or about as much as most people consume anyway. “

At Harvard, tiny robots ‘swarm’ into shape – Carolyn Y. Johnson – Boston Globe

When Harvard scientist Michael Rubenstein walks into the laboratory in the morning, he is greeted with a scene somewhere between a disco and the opening of a science fiction movie about a robot apocalypse. A constellation of LED lights blinks in the darkness — the electronic heartbeat of his 1,024-robot horde. They are ready to do his bidding.”

Newborns’ genetic code sends infection distress signal – Science Daily

“Babies suffering from life-threatening bacterial infections such as sepsis could benefit from improved treatment, thanks to a ground-breaking study. “

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General microbiology and science, August 12, 2014

Prokaryotic Essential Genes, 10 years of next-generation sequencing, a short podcast on the Hadza microbiome, and Ebola.

 

Metagenomics

Protein Localization Analysis of Essential Genes in Prokaryotes – Chong Peng & Feng Gao – Nature Scientific Reports

“Here, a comprehensive protein localization analysis of essential genes in 27 prokaryotes including 24 bacteria, 2 mycoplasmas and 1 archaeon has been performed. “

Techniques

Review: Ten years of next-generation sequencing technology – Erwin L. van Dijk – Trends in Genetics

“Here we provide an overview of the evolution of NGS and discuss the most significant improvements in sequencing technologies and library preparation protocols.”

More Microbiology

CISAC experts tackle public health & policy questions on Ebola – Beth Duff-Brown – Stanford University

“We ask CISAC biosecurity experts to answer several questions about Ebola and the public health concerns and policy implications. “

Rapid and reagentless detection of microbial contamination within meat utilizing a smartphone-based biosensor – Pei-Shih Liang – Nature Scientific Reports

“An 880 nm near infrared LED was irradiated perpendicular to the surface of ground beef, and the scatter signals at various angles were evaluated utilizing the gyro sensor and the digital camera of a smartphone.”

Academic Minute Podcast: Microbiota of the Hadza Tribe – Alyssa Crittenden, UNLV

“My colleagues and I have, for the first time, characterized the hunter-gatherer gut microbiome– working with a population of foragers in East Africa, the Hadza of Tanzania.”

Women in Science

Why are the media so obsessed with female scientists’ appearance? –  Alice Bell – The Guardian

“Yet another profile of Susan Greenfield feels the need to dwell on her ‘long, youthfully blond hair’. Why are the media so rubbish at covering women in science?”

Bik’s Picks

Under- and over-water halves of Gyrinidae beetle eyes harbor different corneal nanocoatings providing adaptation to the water and air environments – Artem Blagodatski – Nature Scientific Reports

“In this study we analyze the micro- and nanostructure of the split eyes of two Gyrinidae beetles genera, Gyrinus and Orectochilus. “

Antarctic midge’s genome is smallest in insects to date: Bare-bones genome is adaptation to deep freeze – Science Daily

“Scientists who sequenced the genome of the Antarctic midge suspect the genome’s small size — the smallest in insects described to date — can probably be explained by the midge’s adaptation to its extreme living environment.”

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General microbiology and science, August 11, 2014

Single cell genomics, metagenomics and bioinformatics, primers for protozoa detection, and Bik’s Picks.
Microbial detection

Clinical PathoScope: rapid alignment and filtration for accurate pathogen identification in clinical samples using unassembled sequencing data – Allyson L Byrd – BMC Bioinformatics

“Clinical PathoScope is the only pathogen identification method currently available that can identify multiple pathogens from mixed samples and distinguish between very closely related species and strains in samples with very few reads per pathogen. “

Metagenomics

Recent advances in genomic DNA sequencing of microbial species from single cells – Roger S. Lasken & Jeffrey S. McLean – Nature Review Genetics

“With the advent of single-cell sequencing, genomes of uncultivated species are rapidly filling in unsequenced branches of the microbial phylogenetic tree.”

Employing whole genome mapping for optimal de novo assembly of bacterial genomes
Basil Britto Xavier – BMC Research Notes

“Utilising several assembly tools based on de Bruijn graphs like Velvet, SPAdes and IDBA, we demonstrate that at the optimal N50, mis-assemblies do occur, even when using the multi-k-mer approaches of SPAdes and IDBA. “

Protozoal components of microbiome

Design and Validation of Four New Primers for Next-Generation Sequencing To Target the 18S rRNA Genes of Gastrointestinal Ciliate Protozoa – Suzanne L. Ishaq and André-Denis G. Wright – Applied and Environmental Microbiology

“PCR amplicons of 394 to 498 bases were generated from three primer sets, sequenced using Roche 454 pyrosequencing with Titanium, and analyzed using the BLAST database (NCBI) and MOTHUR version 1.29.”

Microbes in the news

What Causes Antibiotic Resistance? Video Answers This In Awesome Animation – Kevin Wu – Inquisitr.com

“Kevin Wu details the evolution of this problem that present a big challenge for the future of medicine in this amazing animated video uploaded on YouTube.”

Women in Science

Harassment in Science, Replicated – Christie Aschwanden – The New York Times

“The findings are depressingly similar to the data some colleagues and I collected this year from an online questionnaire sent to science writers. “

Bik’s Picks

Comparative population genomics reveals the domestication history of the peach (Prunus persica) and human influences on perennial fruit crops – Ke Cao – Genome Biology

“We perform large-scale resequencing of 10 wild and 74 cultivated peach varieties, including 9 ornamental, 23 breeding, and 42 landrace lines. We identify 4.6 million SNPs, a large number of which could explain the phenotypic variation in cultivated peach.”

Grizzly bears master healthy obesity – Meghan Rosen – Science News

“Though the animals beef up before hibernating, they may avoid diabetes by tweaking signals in fat cells, researchers report in the Aug. 5 Cell Metabolism.”

Natural light in office boosts health – Science Daily

“Office workers with more natural light exposure at the office had longer sleep duration, better sleep quality, more physical activity and better quality of life compared to office workers with less light exposure in the workplace, a study shows.”

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Microbiome digest, August 7, 2014

Microbiome and caries, colorectal cancer, and inflammatory bowel diseases. Microbiomes of fish, dogs, and mosses, microscopic life in an asphalt lake, and the Picks.

Human mouth microbiome

Identification of the Microbiota in Carious Dentin Lesions Using 16S rRNA Gene Sequencing – Junko Obata – PLOS ONE

“In the present study, the bacterial communities in the carious dentin of Japanese subjects were analyzed comprehensively with molecular approaches using the 16S rRNA gene.”

Human gut microbiome

The Human Gut Microbiome as a Screening Tool for Colorectal Cancer – Joseph P. Zackular, Mary A.M. Rogers, Mack T. Ruffin IV, and Patrick D. Schloss – Cancer Prevention Research

“Analysis of the gut microbiome from stool samples revealed both an enrichment and depletion of several bacterial populations associated with adenomas and carcinomas.”

Manipulation of Microbiome, a Promising Therapy for Inflammatory Bowel Diseases – Dapeng Jin, Hongyu Zhang, and Jun Sun – Clinical & Cellular Immunology

“In this review, we summarize the current knowledge of how changes in microbiota may affect the pathogenesis of IBD. “

A perspective on the complexity of dietary fiber structures and their potential effect on the gut microbiota – Bruce R. Hamaker, Yunus E. Tuncil – Journal of Molecular Biology

“the article encourages the building of a framework of information to manipulate the colon microbiota in a predicted way for improved health”

 

Human microbiome after death

Distinctive thanatomicrobiome signatures found in the blood and internal organs of humans – Ismail Can – Journal of Microbiological Methods

“We compared the effectiveness of two methods by amplifying the 16S rRNA genes and sequencing the amplicons from four cadavers”

Animal models of human microbiome

Disturbance of the gut microbiota in early-life selectively affects visceral pain in adulthood without impacting cognitive or anxiety-related behaviors in male rats
S.M. O’Mahony – Neuroscience

“Neonatal antibiotic treatment leads to an increase in visceral sensitivity in adulthood in rats.”

Dog microbiome

The Unculturables: targeted isolation of bacterial species associated with canine periodontal health or disease from dental plaque – Ian J Davis, Christopher Bull, Alexander Horsfall, Ian Morley and Stephen Harris – BMC Microbiology

“Using a quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) directed approach a range of microbiological media were screened and optimized to enrich for previously uncultivated target species. A systematic screening methodology was then employed to isolate the species of interest. ‘

Fish microbiome

Characterization of Microbiota Composition and Presence of Selected Antibiotic Resistance Genes in Carriage Water of Ornamental Fish – Lenka Gerzova – PLOS ONE

“In this study we therefore characterized the prevalence of selected antibiotic resistance genes in the microbiota found in the carriage water of ornamental fish originating from 3 different continents.”

Insect microbiome

The mosquito microbiota influences vector competence for human pathogens – Nathan J Dennison, Natapong Jupatanakul, George Dimopoulos – Current Opinion in Insect Science

“Understanding the interaction between the vector, its microbiota and transmitted pathogens will provide novel opportunities to limit disease transmission.”

Plant microbiome

Bacterial-biota dynamics of eight bryophyte species from different ecosystems
Faisal Hammad Mekky Koua – Saudi Journal of Biological Sciences

“..we utilized the 16S rRNA gene PCR-DGGE and subsequent phylogenetic analyses to investigate the bacterial community of eight bryophyte species collected from three distinct ecosystems from western Japan.”

Soil and water microbiome

Two Neumann U students discover new types of viruses – CatholicPhilly.com

“They collected arthrobacter (a bacteria present in soil) from under trees and near lakes, found and filtered out the phages that were present, and then studied phage anatomy and life cycles.”

Water droplets in oil are microhabitats for microbial life – Rainer U. Meckenstock – Science

“In Pitch Lake, Trinidad and Tobago—the world’s largest asphalt lake—we found that microorganisms are metabolically active in minuscule water droplets (1 to 3 microliters) entrapped in oil. “

Microbiome of the built environment

Halophilic Microorganisms Are Responsible for the Rosy Discolouration of Saline Environments in Three Historical Buildings with Mural Paintings – Jörg D. Ettenauer – PLOS ONE

“In order to get a complete overview of this biodeterioration process, we investigated the microbial communities in saline environments causing the rosy discolouration of mural paintings in three Austrian historical buildings using a combination of culture-dependent and -independent techniques as well as microscopic techniques.”

Metagenomics

High-resolution metagenomics – Eran Mick & Rotem Sorek – Nature Biotechnology

In this issue, Nielsen et al. present a powerful method for interpreting metagenomic data at the level of individual genomes without relying on reference sequences of cultured isolates, which can be generated for only a small fraction of microbial life.

Microbes in the News

The Quantified Microbiome Self – Carl Zimmer – National Geographic

“But as I read the journal Genome Biology today, I decided that someday I might surrender to the Quantified Self movement. I’ll just have to wait till I can track my trillions of microbes from one day to the next.”

Science and Career

Ph.D.’s, come out of the closet! – Lina Nilsson – Science

“If you promise not to tell Fisher’s Ph.D. adviser (or mine), I’ll let you in on this well-hidden truth: Fisher isn’t planning to pursue an academic career.”

Bik’s Picks

Stress during pregnancy can be passed down through generations, rat study shows – Science Daily

Scientists investigating pregnancies in four generations of rats show that inherited epigenetic effects of stress could affect pregnancies for generations.”

This Is Your Brain on Fish – James Hamblin – The Atlantic

Thicker, stronger, and more resilient. Once a week is all it takes, new research says.”

10 Great Novels That Will Make You More Passionate About Science – Charlie Jane Anders – io9

A lot of the best science fiction features scientists who solve problems and make breakthroughs.”

Scientist looking forward to weekend of binge-experimenting – The Allium

Imperial college Scientist Dr. Lou Pole announced earlier today that he was going to spend the entirety of this weekend binge-experimenting.”

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General microbiology and science, August 5, 2014

Antibiotic resistance, phages, bioinformatics tools, and how to present your research in 3 minutes.

Antibiotic resistance

The Natural Environment May Be the Most Important Source of Antibiotic Resistance Genes – Desmond Keith O’Toole – mBio

“I found the recent paper by Wichmann et al. (1) of great interest, and it illustrates an aspect of antibiotic resistance that has concerned me for a long time, namely, the origin of that resistance.”

Phages and viruses

Pervasive domestication of defective prophages by bacteria – Louis-Marie Bobay, Marie Touchon, and Eduardo P. C. Rocha – PNAS USA

“We identified over 300 vertically inherited prophages within enterobacterial genomes. Some of these elements are very old and might predate the split between Escherichia coli and Salmonella enterica. “

Bioinformatics tools

MaxBin: an automated binning method to recover individual genomes from metagenomes using an expectation-maximization algorithm – Yu-Wei Wu, Yung-Hsu Tang, Susannah G Tringe, Blake A Simmons and Steven W Singer – Microbiome

“We have developed a binning algorithm, MaxBin, which automates the binning of assembled metagenomic scaffolds using an expectation-maximization algorithm after the assembly of metagenomic sequencing reads.”

Fast and Sensitive Alignment of Microbial Whole Genome Sequencing Reads to Large Sequence Datasets on a Desktop PC: Application to Metagenomic Datasets and Pathogen Identification – Lőrinc S. Pongor – PLOS ONE

“We have developed Taxoner, an open source, taxon assignment pipeline that includes a fast aligner (e.g. Bowtie2) and a comprehensive DNA sequence database. “

More microbes

Transient Darwinian selection in Salmonella enterica serovar Paratyphi A during 450 years of global spread of enteric fever – Zhemin Zhou, Angela McCann, François-Xavier Weill, Camille Blin, Satheesh Nair, John Wain, Gordon Dougan, and Mark Achtman – PNAS

“We identified seven modern lineages among 149 genomes on the basis of 4,584 SNPs in the core genome and estimated that Paratyphi A originated 450 y ago. “

Bacillus subtilis chromosome organization oscillates between two distinct patterns – Xindan Wang, Paula Montero Llopis, and David Z. Rudner – PNAS USA

“We propose that the distinct organization patterns observed for bacterial chromosomes reflect a common organization–segregation mechanism, and that simple modifications to it underlie the unique patterns observed in different species.”

Microbes in the news

Researchers Find Surprises in Human Microbiome – Carol Potera – BioScience

But “some forms of autism may have an etiology that lies in the gut, not the brain,” says Sarkis Mazmanian of the California Institute of Technology.

Science and publishing

Science Speak – Rina Shaikh-Lesko – The Scientist

“Contests that challenge young scientists to explain their research without jargon are turning science communication into a competitive sport.”

Researcher’s death shocks Japan – David Cyranoski – Nature Newsblog

“Yoshiki Sasai, one of Japan’s top stem-cell researchers, died this morning (5 August) in an apparent suicide. “

Bik’s Picks

The color red distorts time perception for men, but not for women – Masahiro Shibasaki & Nobuo Masataka – Nature Scientific Reports

“The results showed that the perceived duration of a red screen was longer than was that of a blue screen. However, the results reflected sex differences; men, but not women, overestimated the duration of the red screen. “

Gray’s paradox: A fluid mechanical perspective – Rahul Bale, Max Hao, Amneet Pal Singh Bhalla, Namrata Patel & Neelesh A. Patankar – Nature Scientific Reports

“Nearly eighty years ago, Gray reported that the drag power experienced by a dolphin was larger than the estimated muscle power – this is termed as Gray’s paradox. We provide a fluid mechanical perspective of this paradox.”

 

Total darkness at night key to success of breast cancer therapy, study shows – Science Daily

“Exposure to light at night, which shuts off nighttime production of the hormone melatonin, renders breast cancer completely resistant to tamoxifen, a widely used breast cancer drug, says a new study. “

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Microbiome Digest, August 1, 2014

Microbiome composition and vaccine response or chemotherapy, cassava beer, two nice articles about metagenomics tools and contamination, and the weekend picks.

Human gut microbiome

Stool Microbiota and Vaccine Responses of Infants – M. Nazmul Huda – Pediatrics

“Actinobacteria abundance was positively associated with T-cell responses to BCG, OPV, and TT; with the delayed-type hypersensitivity response; with immunoglobulin G responses; and with TI. B longum subspecies infantis correlated positively with TI and several vaccine responses. “

Systematic review: the role of the gut microbiota in chemotherapy- or radiation-induced gastrointestinal mucositis – current evidence and potential clinical applications – Y. Touchefeu – Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics

“Search of the literature published in English using Medline, Scopus and the Cochrane Library, with main search terms ‘intestinal microbiota’, ‘bacteremia’, ‘mucositis’, ‘chemotherapy-induced diarrhoea’, ‘chemotherapy-induced mucositis’, ‘radiotherapy-induced mucositis’.”

Food microbiology

Local domestication of lactic acid bacteria via cassava beer fermentation – Alese M. Colehour – PeerJ

“Bacteria responsible for chicha fermentation could be a source of microbes for the human microbiome, but little is known regarding the microbiology of chicha. “

Microbes in the News

It’s a bit – eh – graphic, but a nice overview of science and the people working in this field. I wish it would have contained a couple of pictures of non-pregnant women though. It feels as if we are only a vessel:  The Body’s Ecosystem – The Scientist

“Research on the human microbiome is booming, and scientists have moved from simply taking stock of gut flora to understanding the influence of microbes throughout the body.”

‘I’m not fat, it’s viral’ – Phage found in gut bacteria may aid obesity – Dan Stanton 0 Biopharma Reporter

“A newly discovered virus which infects intestinal bacteria might be a cause of obesity, but could increasing interest in bacteriophages drive new personalised medicines and alternatives to antibiotics?”

Diet Must be Different for Men and Women: Study – Soumo Ghosh – International Business Times

“The researchers found that the microscopic bacteria, or other such organism housed inside the human stomach are different in the case of men and women. Hence, they believe that the same diet for both may not have the same effect in them.”

Metabolomics

Emergent Biosynthetic Capacity in Simple Microbial Communities – Hsuan-Chao Chiu – PLOS Computational Biology

“Here we present a comprehensive computational framework, integrating high-quality metabolic models of multiple species, temporal dynamics, and flux variability analysis, to study the metabolic capacity and dynamics of simple two-species microbial ecosystems.”

Metagenomics

Metagenomics Mash-Up – Kelly Rae Chi – The Scientist

“The Scientist spoke with developers of tools for parsing genomic data from diverse communities of microorganisms. Here are some of the newest strategies and programs for taxonomic, functional, and comparative analyses.”

Microbial detection

Who are the contaminants in your sequencing project? – Jonathan Eisen – MicrobeNet

“Such amplification is alas pretty common – due to contamination occurring in some other material added to the PCR reaction. “

Science and publishing

The Self-Edited Woman – Paige Brown – SciLogs International

“Un-prompted, several young female science bloggers I’ve interviewed mention having blogged anonymously in the past, being self-conscious about expressing their expertise on a topic, or avoiding certain topics because of the nasty comments they might receive. “

Bik’s Picks

We have the science to build an Ebola vaccine. So why hasn’t it happened? – Sarah Kliff – Vox

“This isn’t how an Ebola outbreak has to work. Researchers have devoted lots of time to building a vaccine that could stop the disease altogether — and according to Daniel Bausch, a Tulane professor who researches Ebola and other infectious diseases, they’re making really significant progress.”

Littering and Following the Crowd – Vivian Wagner – The Atlantic

“Why it’s so tempting to throw trash on the ground, and how environmentalists are using psychology to change that”

F.D.A. Acts on Lab Tests Developed In-House – Andrew Pollack – The New York Times

“The Food and Drug Administration announced on Thursday that it would start regulating medical laboratory testing, saying that tests used to make important treatment decisions must be vetted and validated before they go into use.”

Grad Student Freed By Police After Three Years Trapped In The Same Experiment – The Allium

“He is thought to have survived by eating printouts of PloS One papers and drinking his own tears.”

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Microbiome digest, July 31

A snapshot of the human microbiome, a robot helping the Knight lab process samples (I want one!), and finally something that does NOT involve the microbiome.

Human microbiome general

SnapShot: The Human Microbiome – Antonio González – Cell

“This SnapShot presents several aspects of the human microbiome, including the characterization of the microbial species populating different body sites, the distribution of microbes across different geographic locations, and how the microbiome can be altered by a physiological process, exemplified by pregnancy.”

 

Animal models of microbiome

Symbiotic Bacterial Metabolites Regulate Gastrointestinal Barrier Function via the Xenobiotic Sensor PXR and Toll-like Receptor 4 – Madhukumar Venkatesh – Immunity

“Here we showed that microbial-specific indoles regulated intestinal barrier function through the xenobiotic sensor, pregnane X receptor (PXR).”

Bacterial Sensor Nod2 Prevents Inflammation of the Small Intestine by Restricting the Expansion of the Commensal Bacteroides vulgatus – Deepshika Ramanan – Immunity

“Here, we identified several abnormalities in the small-intestinal epithelium of Nod2−/− mice including inflammatory gene expression and goblet cell dysfunction, which were associated with excess interferon-γ production by intraepithelial lymphocytes and Myd88 activity.”

Effect of virgin and refined olive oil consumption on gut microbiota. Comparison to butter – M. Hidalgo – Food Research International

“Evolution of symbiont population in feces was studied using culture-dependent and culture-independent methods. In the latter, the V3 region of 16S rDNA was amplified and separated by Denaturing Gradient Gel Electrophoresis; followed by sequencing of the most representative bands. “

Animal gut microbiome

Longitudinal shifts in bacterial diversity and fermentation pattern in the rumen of steers grazing wheat pasture – D.W. Pitta – Anaerobe

“Rumen samples were collected on days 14, 28, 56 and 76, separated into solid and liquid fractions and analyzed for bacterial diversity using 16S pyrotag technology. “

Metabolomics

The cross talk between microbiota and the immune system: metabolites take center stage – Hagit Shapiro – Current Opinion in Immunology

“While most attention has focused on the innate recognition of immune-stimulatory bacterial molecules, such as cell wall components and nucleic acids, we emphasize here the impact of diet-dependent microbial metabolites on the development and function of the immune system.”

Bioinformatics tools

eSNaPD: A Versatile, Web-Based Bioinformatics Platform for Surveying and Mining Natural Product Biosynthetic Diversity from Metagenomes – Boojala Vijay B. Reddy – Chemistry & Biology

“Environmental Surveyor of Natural Product Diversity (eSNaPD) is a web-based bioinformatics and data aggregation platform that aids in the discovery of gene clusters encoding both novel natural products and new congeners of medicinally relevant natural products using (meta)genomic sequence data. “

RAMICS: trainable, high-speed and biologically relevant alignment of high-throughput sequencing reads to coding DNA – Imogen A. Wright and Simon A. Travers

“To facilitate such analyses, we have developed a novel tool, RAMICS, that is tailored to mapping large numbers of sequence reads to short lengths (<10 000 bp) of coding DNA”

Computational integration of genomic traits into 16S rDNA microbiota sequencing studies – Alexander Keller – Gene

“Here, we show in a proof-of-concept that computational approaches are able to retain functional information about microbial communities assessed through 16S rDNA (meta)barcoding by referring to reference genomes.”

Viruses and helminths

How helminths go viral – Rick M Maizels1, William C Gause

“On pages 573 and 578 of this issue, Reese et al. (3) and Osborne et al. (4), respectively, provide fine detail on how helminth worms can substantially enhance and reactivate viral infection, with major health implications for tropical medicine.”

Helminth infection reactivates latent γ-herpesvirus via cytokine competition at a viral promoter – T. A. Reese – Science

“We found that helminth infection, characterized by the induction of the cytokine interleukin-4 (IL-4) and the activation of the transcription factor Stat6, reactivated murine γ-herpesvirus infection in vivo.”

Virus-helminth coinfection reveals a microbiota-independent mechanism of immunomodulation – Lisa C. Osborne – Science

“Helminth coinfection resulted in impaired antiviral immunity and was associated with changes in the microbiota and STAT6-dependent helminth-induced alternative activation of macrophages. “

More Microbiology

Larger Mammalian Body Size Leads to Lower Retroviral Activity – Aris Katzourakis – PLOS Pathogens

“Body size explains 37% of the variance in ERV integration rate over the last 10 million years, controlling for the effect of confounding due to other life history traits. “

Microbes in the news

Researcher: Bacteria Ate Some Gulf Spill Toxins, but Worst Remain – Sandy Smith – EHS Today

“In two new studies conducted in a deep sea plume, Assistant Professor Olivia Mason found a species of bacteria called Colwellia likely consumed gaseous hydrocarbons and perhaps benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene and xylene compounds that were released as part of the oil spill. “

Baxter breaks out – Hal Hodson – New Scientist
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0262407914614342

“Baxter is even turning its grippers to lab work. Correll is working with UCB’s Rob Knight to teach Baxter the job of preparing faeces samples for research.”

Science and Career

The stressed-out postdoc – Carrie Arnold – Science

“After he defended his dissertation and moved to a new lab for his postdoc, Ian Street hoped his battles with anxiety and depression were over.”

Bik’s Picks

Africa Needs Science, Not Aid – Nkem Khumbah and Melvin P. Foote –  The New York Times

Scientific and technological advancement will help eradicate poverty and promote homegrown economic development by providing Africa with the tools to address its own challenges and expand its industrial productivity. “

DDT Linked To Obesity In Female Mice Long After Exposure – Hank Campbell – Science 2.0

A new epidemiology paper in PLOS One doesn’t try to prove that, the authors instead correlate DDT use from generations ago with increased waistlines of today.  DDT exposure may have made you fat, they conclude.”

 

A Lick Of The Tongue Changes This Ice Cream’s Color – Loren Grush – Popular Science

“The result was Xamaleón, which is Spanish for “chameleon.” With a patent pending, Linares is staying tight-lipped on the recipe, but apparently there’s a special ingredient dubbed the “love elixir,” which must be spritzed on the ice cream before it’s eaten. “

 

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Scientists explain mystery of our ‘lemon Moon’ – James Vincent – The Independent

“A new accurate map of the Moon has shown that it bulges slightly at one side and is flattened at the top and bottom – but how did it get this way?”