Microbiome digest, November 11, 2014

Human oral microbiome

Physiological Adaptations of Key Oral Bacteria – C. W. Ian Douglas – Advances in Microbial Physiology

Human gut microbiome

Development and Survival of Th17 Cells within the Intestines: The Influence of Microbiome- and Diet-Derived Signals – Joseph H. Chewning – The Journal of Immunology

Gut Inflammation and Immunity: What Is the Role of the Human Gut Virome? – Alfredo Focà – Mediators of Inflammation

Animal microbiome

Faecal Microbiota of Forage-Fed Horses in New Zealand and the Population Dynamics of Microbial Communities following Dietary Change – Karlette A. Fernandes – PLOS ONE

The Effect of Phytochemical Tannins-Containing Diet on Rumen Fermentation Characteristics and Microbial Diversity Dynamics in Goats Using 16S rDNA Amplicon Pyrosequencing – B. R. Min – Agriculture, Food & Analytical Bacteriology

Microbial diversity in forestomach and caecum contents of the greater long-tailed hamster Tscherskia triton (Rodentia: Cricetidae) – Akio Shinohara – Mammalian Biology – Zeitschrift für Säugetierkunde

The pathogen Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis disturbs the frog skin microbiome during a natural epidemic and experimental infection – Andrea J. Jani – PNAS USA

Gill bacteria enable a novel digestive strategy in a wood-feeding mollusk – Roberta M. O’Connor – PNAS USA

Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi communities in a coral cay system (Morrocoy, Venezuela) and their relationships with environmental variables – M.M. Alguacil – Science of the Total Environment

Soil microbiome

Short-term parasite-infection alters already the biomass, activity and functional diversity of soil microbial communities – Jun-Min Li – Scientific Reports

Impact of short-term storage temperature on determination of microbial community composition and abundance in aerated forest soil and anoxic pond sediment samples – Franziska B. Brandt – Systematic and Applied Microbiology

Seasonal influence of climate manipulation on microbial community structure and function in mountain soils – Jérémy Puissant – Soil Biology and Biochemistry

Effect of organic and conventional practices on carbon-substrate utilisation by the soil microbial community in a ‘Cripps Pink’/M7 apple orchard – Andre H Meyer – South African Journal of Plant and Soil

* The Soil Biota Composition along a Progressive Succession of Secondary Vegetation in a Karst Area – Jie Zhao – PLOS ONE

Effects of salinization and crude oil contamination on soil bacterial community structure in the Yellow River Delta region, China – Yong-chao Gao – Applied Soil Ecology

Water microbiome

Community dynamics of prokaryotic and eukaryotic microbes in an estuary reservoir – Zhen Sun – Scientific Reports

Microbial diversity and community structure across environmental gradients in Bransfield Strait, Western Antarctic Peninsula – Camila N. Signori – Frontiers in Microbiology

Metagenomics

Assessment of quality control approaches for metagenomic data analysis – Qian Zhou – Scientific Reports

PaperClip: rapid multi-part DNA assembly from existing libraries – Maryia Trubitsyna – Nucleic Acids Research

Microbial phylogeny

* Assessing the global phylum level diversity within the bacterial domain: A review – Noha H. Youssef – Journal of Advanced Research

Science, publishing, career

Crosspost: Using Google Scholar in Scholarly Workflows – Jonathan Eisen – microBEnet

Hilarious: Overly honest references: “Should we cite the crappy Gabor paper here?” – RetractionWatch – (Note: paper has been removed – see a screenshot here)

Microbes in the news

* Bacteria Hysteria? Deadly bacteria normally found in toilets was discovered in the microwave of these students – The Journal.ie

Bik’s Picks

Comparative analysis of the domestic cat genome reveals genetic signatures underlying feline biology and domestication – Michael J. Montague – PNAS USA

UCSF develops site to make sense out of sugar science – Erin Allday – SFGate

Found: The Ideal Fatness for Elephant Seals – Elizabeth Preston – Discover

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Microbiome digest, November 5, 2014

Bioinformatic tools for tree building and metagenomics, microbiome of iPads in hospitals, and stool samples from indigenous cultures.
Human clinical microbiome

MetaGeniE: Characterizing Human Clinical Samples Using Deep Metagenomic Sequencing – Arun Rawat – PLOS ONE

“We have developed an efficient strategy that identifies “all against all” relationships between sequencing reads and reference genomes.”

Human gut microbiome

Human Fecal Microbiome–Based Biomarkers for Colorectal Cancer – Vilvapathy Narayanan – Cancer Prevention Research

“A recent study by Zackular and colleagues… provides an important way forward here in showing that specific analysis of multiple aspects of the microbiome composition in toto provides reliable detection of both precancerous and cancerous lesions. “

Plant microbiome

Covalently linked hopanoid-lipid A improves outer-membrane resistance of a Bradyrhizobium symbiont of legumes – Alba Silipo – Nature Communications

“Here we demonstrate that a photosynthetic Bradyrhizobium strain, symbiont of Aeschynomene legumes, synthesizes a unique LPS bearing a hopanoid covalently attached to lipid A.”

Microbiome of the built environment

* Surface Microbiology of the iPad Tablet Computer and the Potential to Serve as a Fomite in Both Inpatient Practice Settings as Well as Outside of the Hospital Environment – Elizabeth B. Hirsch – PLOS ONE

“Thirty iPads belonging to faculty with a variety of practice settings were sampled to determine the presence and quantity of clinically-relevant organisms.”

Bioinformatic tools

A Phylogeny-Based Benchmarking Test for Orthology Inference Reveals the Limitations of Function-Based Validation – Kalliopi Trachana – PLOS ONE

“Therefore, we constructed high quality “gold standard” orthologous groups that can serve as a benchmark set for orthology inference in bacterial species.”

Towards more accurate ancestral protein genotype–phenotype reconstructions with the use of species tree-aware gene trees – Mathieu Groussin – Molecular Biology and Evolution

“Here, we show with simulations that utilizing information on species history using a model that accounts for the duplication, horizontal transfer and loss (DTL) of genes statistically increases ASR accuracy.”

IQ-TREE: A fast and effective stochastic algorithm for estimating maximum likelihood phylogenies – Lam-Tung Nguyen – Molecular Biology and Evolution

“We show that a combination of hill-climbing approaches and a stochastic perturbation method can be time-efficiently implemented.”

Sampling and DNA extraction techniques

Nasal Screening for MRSA: Different Swabs – Different Results! – Philipp Warnke – PLOS ONE

“This study investigates the performance of different swab-types in nasal MRSA-screening by utilizing a unique artificial nose model to provide realistic and standardized screening conditions.”

Microbes in the news

Les Dethlefsen from our lab did an excellent “AMA” (ask me anything) on Reddit/Science today, on the human gut microbiota. Read the questions and Les’ answers here.

* Fecal Matters: A Stepping Stool to Understanding Indigenous Cultures – Daniella Lowenberg – PLOS Blogs

“Suspecting that this excrement is rich in biological clues, a group of researchers conducted experiments to investigate fecal microbiomes and published a study in PLOS ONE detailing insights into the diets and lifestyles of two ancient indigenous cultures of Puerto Rico”

Quantifying the Microbiome and the State of Crowd Science with Jessica Richman (1h Podcast) – The Quantified Body

“…we have an excellent guest today to bring us up to date on all this. Jessica Richman, is CEO and co-founder of uBiome.”

* If you think your city subway only consists of smelly disgruntled commuters, think again… – Marcus Leung – MicroBEnet

“Have you ever wondered what microbes are around you when you take public transport? Personally, I think about it every day during my two-hour subway commute to and from our lab here in Hong Kong.”

Science, publishing, and career

Metascience could rescue the ‘replication crisis’ – Jonathan W. Schooler – Nature

“Metascience, the science of science, uses rigorous methods to examine how scientific practices influence the validity of scientific conclusions. “

Interactive notebooks: Sharing the code – Helen Shen – Nature

“The free IPython notebook makes data analysis easier to record, understand and reproduce.”

Column: It takes time and a team to win grants – Ingrid Eisenstadter – Nature

“All our applicants are people who were bright enough to get PhDs and MDs, but the proposals we receive tend to share the same flaws, whether they come from recent graduates or from researchers with years of experience.”

Elsevier bad for your h-index? – Ferniglab

“The negotiations between the Dutch universities and Elsevier have foundered…., which means that from 1 January 2015, Dutch researchers will no longer have access to Elsevier journals.”

Sexy molecules! Comedian Megan Amram talks ‘Science… for Her!’ (Q&A) – Amanda Kooser -CNET

“”Parks and Recreation” writer Megan Amram offers up a “raunchy, crazy” textbook full of carbon dating, physics as nail art and kale.”

Bik’s Picks

YouTube video: Brian Cox visits the world’s biggest vacuum chamber – Human Universe: Episode 4 Preview – BBC Two

“…what happens when a bowling ball and a feather are dropped together under the conditions of outer space (vacuum – EB).”

Study in paradise: Stanford professors turn Hawaii into a living science classroom – Bjorn Carey – Stanford News

“Students in the School of Earth Science’s Wrigley Field Program in Hawaii spend the quarter measuring vegetation, coral reefs and volcanoes to understand the dynamics of one of the planet’s most interesting ecosystems.”

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General microbiome and science, June 30

Monday is always a busy day, so lots of papers today. Phages, CRISPRs, antibiotic resistance, probiotics, archaea, biofilms and a Goldilocks planet.

Antibiotics and resistance

Horizontal gene transfer in the human gastrointestinal tract: potential spread of antibiotic resistance genes – JR Huddleston – Infection and Drug Resistance

“This review aims to give an overview of the major horizontal transfer mechanisms and their evolution and then demonstrate the human lower gastrointestinal tract as an environment in which horizontal gene transfer of resistance determinants occurs.”

Screen shot 2014-06-30 at 06.47PM, Jun 30Bacterial persisters: formation, eradication, and experimental systems
Sophie Helaine, Elisabeth Kugelberg – Trends in Microbiology

“Toxin–antitoxin (TA) modules have an important role in the formation of persisters and several studies show that they can form in response to different triggers.”

Screen shot 2014-06-30 at 06.48PM, Jun 30Antibiotic Treatment Suppresses Rotavirus Infection and Enhances Specific Humoral Immunity – Robin Uchiyama – Journal of Infectious Diseases

“Microbiota ablation resulted in reduced rotavirus infection/diarrhea and a more durable rotavirus antibody response, suggesting that antibiotic administration before rotavirus vaccination could raise low seroconversion rates that correlate with the vaccine’s inefficacy in developing regions.”

And:  Antibiotics Help Control Rotavirus Infections and Enhance Antirotaviral Immunity: Are You Serious? – Luther A. Bartelt and Richard L. Guerrant – Journal of Infectious Diseases

“Yes, we must understand intriguing new findings; but no, we are far from serious about widespread use of antimicrobials with routine immunizations.”

Screen shot 2014-06-30 at 06.44PM, Jun 30Transferrin Iron Starvation Therapy for Lethal Bacterial and Fungal Infections – Lin Lin – Journal of Infectious Diseases

“These results provide proof of principle that bacterial infections can be treated in vivo by attacking host targets (ie, trace metal availability) rather than microbial targets.”

Bacterial detection in blood and other sites

Screen shot 2014-06-30 at 06.45PM, Jun 30Identification of pathogens from blood culture bottles in spiked and clinical samples using matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass-spectrometry analysis – Simone Konnerth – BMC Research Notes

“MALDI-TOF MS using the SARAMIS database was applied to 37 spiked blood culture samples. Identification rates of spiked samples were as follows: The species level was determined in 16 of 21 (76.2%) Gram negative bacteria and in 11 of 13 (84.6%) Gram positive bacteria. “

Infection and host response

Type I and III Interferon Production in Response to RNA Viruses – Elizabeth Reid and Bryan Charleston – Journal of Interferon & Cytokine Research

“There are now many examples of RNA viruses inducing type I and type III IFNs, and although these IFNs act through different receptors, in many systems studied, they induce a similar spectrum of genes. “

CRISPRs

Screen shot 2014-06-30 at 06.50PM, Jun 30Review: Adapting to new threats: the generation of memory by CRISPR-Cas immune systems – Robert Heler – Molecular Microbiology

“Recent studies have begun to elucidate the genetic requirements for adaptation and have demonstrated that rather than being a stochastic process, the selection of new spacers is influenced by several factors. We review here our current knowledge of the CRISPR adaptation mechanism”

Screen shot 2014-06-30 at 06.53PM, Jun 30The three major types of CRISPR-Cas systems function independently in CRISPR RNA biogenesis in Streptococcus thermophilus – Jason Carte – Molecular Microbiology

“Our findings indicate that multiple CRISPR-Cas systems can function independently in crRNA biogenesis within a given organism – an important consideration in engineering coexisting CRISPR-Cas pathways”

Viruses and phages

Screen shot 2014-06-30 at 06.53PM, Jun 30Exploiting gut bacteriophages for human health – Marion Dalmasso – Trends in Microbiology

“We emphasise the complexity and individuality of the phageome, and the link to the health state of the host. We highlight the practical applications of bacteriophages in medicine and in the food chain.”

Screen shot 2014-06-30 at 06.52PM, Jun 30Environmental bacteriophages : viruses of microbes in aquatic ecosystems – Télesphore Sime – Ngando – Frontiers in Microbiology

“The present chapter sought to review the literature on the diversity and functional roles of viruses of microbes in environmental microbiology, focusing primarily on prokaryotic viruses (i.e. phages) in aquatic ecosystems, which form the bulk of our knowledge in modern environmental viral ecology.”

Archaea

Screen shot 2014-06-30 at 06.55PM, Jun 30Taxonomic database and cut-off value for processing mcrA gene 454 pyrosequencing data by MOTHUR – Sizhong Yang – Journal of Microbiological Methods

“The functional mcrA gene of methanogens can generate phylogeny as congruent as the 16S rRNA gene phylogeny. “

Screen shot 2014-06-30 at 06.59PM, Jun 30Biofilm formation of mucosa-associated methanoarchaeal strains
Corinna Bang – Frontiers in Microbiology

“Here, the ability of three methanoarchaeal strains, Methanobrevibacter smithii and Methanosphaera stadtmanae, which form part of the human gut microbiota, and the Methanosarcina mazei strain Gö1 to grow on different surfaces and form biofilms was investigated.”

Biofilms (see also Archaea above and Probiotics below)

Screen shot 2014-06-30 at 07.02PM, Jun 30Development of an in vitro periodontal biofilm model for assessing antimicrobial and host modulatory effects of bioactive molecules
Emma Millhouse – BMC Oral Health

Multi-species biofilms were either treated with either molecule, or alternatively epithelial cells were treated with these prior to biofilm co-culture. Biofilm composition was evaluated and inflammatory responses quantified at a transcriptional and protein level.

Probiotics

Screen shot 2014-06-30 at 06.43PM, Jun 30Review: Enumeration of probiotic strains: Review of culture-dependent and alternative techniques to quantify viable bacteria – Catherine Davis – Journal of Microbiological Methods

“Consensus on an operational definition of viability and systematic efforts to validate these alternative techniques ultimately will strengthen the accuracy and reliability of probiotic strain enumeration.”

Inhibitory effect of Lactobacillus salivarius on Streptococcus mutans biofilm formation
Chien-Chen Wu – Molecular Oral Microbiology

“We analyzed 64 L. salivarius strains and found that two, K35 and K43, significantly inhibited S. mutans biofilm formation with inhibitory activities more pronounced than those of Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG (LGG), a prototypical probiotic that shows anti-caries activity.

General taxonomy and phylogeny

Screen shot 2014-06-30 at 07.04PM, Jun 30Considering external information to improve the phylogenetic comparison of microbial communities: a new approach based on constrained Double Principal Coordinates Analysis (cDPCoA) – S Dray – Molecular Ecology Resources

“In this work, we extend DPCoA to integrate the information of external variables measured on communities. The constrained Double Principal Coordinates Analysis (cDPCoA) is able to enforce a priori classifications to retrieve subtle differences and(or) remove the effect of confounding factors. “

Screen shot 2014-06-30 at 06.43PM, Jun 30Understanding molecular identification and polyphasic taxonomic approaches for genetic relatedness and phylogenetic relationships of microorganisms – Surajit Das – Journal of Microbiological Methods

“In this regard, a polyphasic taxonomic approach is advantageous because it exploits simultaneously both conventional as well as molecular identification techniques.”

Metabolomics

Screen shot 2014-06-30 at 07.01PM, Jun 30Nutrient sharing in the microbial world – Erica C. Seth and Michiko E. Taga – Frontiers in Microbiology

“Cofactor cross-feeding can contribute to both the health and nutrition of a host organism, the virulence and persistence of pathogens, and the composition and function of environmental communities. “

Metagenomics

Combination of Metagenomics and Culture Based Methods to Study the Interaction Between Ochratoxin A and Gut Microbiota – Mingzhang Guo – Toxicological Sciences

“Changes in functional genes of gut microbiota including signal transduction, carbohydrate transport, transposase, amino acid transport system and mismatch repair were observed.”

Chromosomal organization

NuChart-II: a graph-based approach for the analysis and interpretation of Hi-C data (PDF) – Fabio Tordini – Proceedings of the CIBB 2014

“NuChart-II is a highly optimized implementation of a previous prototype package developed in R, in which the graph-based representation of Hi-C data was tested, but that also showed inevitable problems of scalability while working genome-wide on large datasets.”

Science and education

Screen shot 2014-06-30 at 06.58PM, Jun 30Starting small: using microbiology to foster scientific literacy
Amy F. Savage, Brooke A. Jude – Trends in Microbiology

“In order to achieve scientific literacy for all students, Bard College recently implemented Citizen Science, a common January course for all first-year students. Structured around the question ‘how do we reduce the global burden of disease?’, this course uses microbiological tools to develop an understanding of potential answers.”

 

Dr. Bik’s Picks

Screen Shot 2014-07-01 at 12.06.17 AMBird brains: Public asked to look out for clever rooks – Victoria Gill – BBC News

“The British Trust for Ornithology (BTO) is asking the public to take part in a national survey of bird intelligence. From 1 July, the charity is asking people to submit video clips or descriptions of the behaviour or rooks – some of our cleverest garden birds.”

Screen Shot 2014-07-01 at 12.06.52 AMPotentially habitable Earth-like planet discovered; May have similar temperatures to our planet – Science Daily

“A potentially habitable Earth-like planet that is only 16 light years away has been discovered. The “super-Earth” planet, GJ 832 c, takes 16 days to orbit its red-dwarf star, GJ 832, and has a mass at least five times that of Earth.”

Screen Shot 2014-07-01 at 12.07.35 AMStudy Implicates Smog In Autism And Schizophrenia – Science 2.0

“A recent paper found that exposure to air pollution early in life produces harmful changes in the brains of mice, including an enlargement of part of the brain that is seen in humans who have autism and schizophrenia, and that led them to conclude that smog causes autism.”

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