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 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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Non-human microbiomes, June 11

Microbes in mosquitos, beetles and cocoa.

Insect microbiome

Francesco BaldiniEvidence of natural Wolbachia infections in field populations of Anopheles gambiae – Francesco Baldini – Nature Communications

“Here we show evidence of Wolbachia infections in Anopheles gambiae in Burkina Faso, West Africa. Sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene identified Wolbachia sequences in both female and male germlines across two seasons, and determined that these sequences are vertically transmitted from mother to offspring. “

Screen Shot 2014-06-11 at 10.33.17 PMInterspecific communication between pinewood nematode, its insect vector, and associated microbes – Lilin Zhao – Trends in Parasitology

“The causative agent of PWD, the pinewood nematode (PWN), engages in a symbiotic partnership with its insect vector, the Monochamus beetle, as well as associated bacteria and ophiostomatoid fungi, in order to successfully infect and kill its host pine tree.”

Food microbiome

Philpp Adler cocoaThe key to acetate: Metabolic fluxes of acetic acid bacteria under cocoa pulp fermentation simulating conditions – Philipp Adler – Applied and Environmental Microbiology

“Acetic acid bacteria (AAB) play an important role during cocoa fermentation, as their main product acetate is a major driver for development of desired cocoa flavors. Here, we investigated the specialized metabolism of these bacteria under cocoa pulp fermentation simulating conditions.”

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