Microbiome Digest, October 23, 2014

Not much microbiome news today – which was good because I got time to watch the solar eclipse and a huge solar storm at the same time.  Enjoy the read!

Animal models of microbiome research

Lyn Deficiency Leads to Increased Microbiota-Dependent Intestinal Inflammation and Susceptibility to Enteric Pathogens – Morgan E. Roberts – Journal of Immunology

“Lyn2/2 mice exhibited profound cecal inflammation, bacterial dissemination, and morbidity following S. Typhimurium challenge and greater colonic inflammation throughout the course of C. rodentium infection.”

Rock microbiome

* Halophilic Archaea Cultivated from Surface Sterilized Middle-Late Eocene Rock Salt Are Polyploid – Salla T. Jaakkola – PLOS ONE

“We used real-time PCR to show that our isolates are polyploid, with genome copy numbers of 11–14 genomes per cell in exponential growth phase.”

More Microbiology

Zooming in to see the bigger picture: Microfluidic and nanofabrication tools to study bacteria – Felix J. H. Hol, Cees Dekker – Science

“Here, we review the new scientific insights gained by using a diverse set of nanofabrication and microfluidic techniques to study individual bacteria and multispecies communities.”

Review: Theory and Empiricism in Virulence Evolution – James J. Bull, Adam S. Lauring – PLOS Pathogens

“Our purpose here is to offer a brief introduction to virulence theory, explain some of its strengths and weaknesses, and suggest how theory might be united with empiric data”

Techniques

Comparing the new 16S rRNA V4 and ITS primers to the old primers-RESULTS! – Embriette Hyde – MicroBEnet

“The Knight lab has been working hard testing new primers for 16S rRNA amplicon production and its time to share our progress.”

Microbes in the News

As permafrost soils thaw, soil microbes amplify global climate change – Science Daily

“Now, research by an international team of scientists from the U.S., Sweden and Australia, led by University of Arizona scientists, shows that a single species of microbe, discovered only very recently, is an unexpected key player in climate change.”

* The Scientist: Prof. Esther Angert Studies Extreme Bacteria – Siddesh Ramesh – Cornell Sun

“While the majority of bacteria cannot be seen without a microscope, there exists a group of bacterial species that is visible to the naked eye. Known as Epulopiscium, they are “an extreme on the spectrum of diversity of bacterial life in existence,” according to Prof. Esther Angert, microbiology.”

Bik’s Picks

Flare Alert: Monster Sunspot Turns Toward Earth – Ian O’Neill – Discovery

“Amateur astronomers have been wowed by a vast sunspot that has rotated to face Earth, the largest since this solar cycle began in 2008, and solar observatories (on the ground and orbiting Earth) are closely monitoring the region.“

Watch cell division with new, remarkable resolution: Nobel winner Betzig strikes again – Tech Times

“Just weeks after sharing the Nobel Prize in chemistry for his work involving high-resolution microscopes, a U.S. researcher has again stunned the scientific world with a new technique that peers deeply into living cells.

Ancient Europeans do not drink milk according to new study – BetaWired

“Almost everyone drinks milk today but a new study shows that ancient Europeans were not milk lovers back in the old days. According to a DNA analysis result, ancient Europeans are lactose intolerant.”

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General microbiology and science, October 14, 2014

A living review of multivariate techniques, spatial organizations of bacterial genomes, and metabolomics of wetlands, pigs, marine bacteria and free-living humans.

Bioinformatics

* A Guide to Statistical Analysis in Microbial Ecology: a community-focused, living review of multivariate data analyses – Pier Luigi Buttigieg – FEMS Microbiology Ecology

“we present the GUide to STatistical Analysis in Microbial Ecology (GUSTA ME): a dynamic, web-based resource providing accessible descriptions of numerous multivariate techniques relevant to microbial ecologists”

Techniques

New approaches to understanding the spatial organization of bacterial genomes – Tung BK Le, Michael T Laub – Current Opinion in Microbiology

“Here, we review the current arsenal of techniques used to query chromosome structure”

Development of Clamping Probe for Rare DNA Detection using Universal Primers – Meyong il Kim – E-FAS Journal

“In this study, we evaluated the efficiency of rare gene detection for two kinds of clamping probes which were successfully utilized for eukaryotic symbiont analysis”

Metabolomics

Microbial community metabolic function in subsurface flow constructed wetlands of different designs – Mark Button – Ecological Engineering

“Microbial community function followed a clear gradient along the flow direction. Metabolic profiles were system specific (horizontal, vertical, and aerated).”

A high fat, high choleststerol diet leads to changes in metabolite patterns in pigs – a metabolomic study – Jianghao Sun – Food Chemistry

“Extracts of plasma, fecal and urine samples from pigs fed high fat or basal regular diets for 11 weeks were analyzed using ultra-high performance liquid chromatography with high-resolution mass spectrometry “

Free-living individuals – as in “not in prison”?
An NMR metabolomics approach reveals a combined-biomarkers model in a wine interventional trial with validation in free-living individuals of the PREDIMED study – Rosa Vázquez-Fresno – Metabolomics

A High-Resolution LC-MS-Based Secondary Metabolite Fingerprint Database of Marine Bacteria – Liang Lu – Nature Scientific Reports

“Till now, 1,430 bacterial strains spanning 168 known species collected from different marine environments were cultured and profiled. “

Viruses and phages

Ribonucleotide reductases reveal novel viral diversity and predict biological and ecological features of unknown marine viruses – Eric G. Sakowski – PNAS USA

“We identify ribonucleotide reductase (RNR) genes as superior markers of viral diversity. RNR genes are distributed over a broad range of viruses”

More microbiology

Strength in Diversity – Daniel J. Wolter, Lucas R. Hoffman – Cell Host & Microbe

“In this issue of Cell Host & Microbe, Hammer et al. (2014) show that distinct, slow-growing bacteria have better in vitro and in vivo growth and virulence when cocultured than in isolation. “

The Journal of Infectious Diseases has a special Issue on Polio: The Final Phase of Polio Eradication and Endgame Strategies for the Post-Eradication Era – Journal of Infectious Diseases

Science, publishing, career

Correcting the scientific record: An introduction to retractions – Bonnie Swoger – Scientific American

“Although the system is far from perfect, the retraction process is one of the ways in which the scientific literature corrects itself over time.”

 

Bik’s Picks

When Racism Was a Science – ‘Haunted Files: The Eugenics Record Office’ Recreates a Dark Time in a Laboratory’s Past – Joshua A. Krisch – New York Times

“In its heyday, the office was the premier scientific enterprise at Cold Spring Harbor. There, bigoted scientists applied rudimentary genetics to singling out supposedly superior races and degrading minorities. “

Paul Ryan: Science doesn’t get climate change – Jane C. Timm – MSNBC

“A full 97% of researchers taking a stance on climate change say it’s man-made, as do 97-98% of the most frequently-published climate scientists. But according to Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan, they’re all wrong.”

Get fish fry with a side of science at ‘Science of the Supper Club’ this Friday – Lindsay Christians – The Capital Times

“Science is everywhere, even at a Friday night fish fry. That’s the message of a new event this Friday called “Science of Supper Clubs,” part of the four-day Wisconsin Science Festival held at various venues around the state.”

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General microbiology and science, August 26, 2014

Here, we have CRISPRs, phages, marine metagenomics, a universal bacterial/archaeal primer (The One?), single-cell genomics, light and bacteria, and Bik’s Picks.

Phages and CRISPRs

Abundant and Diverse Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeat Spacers in Clostridium difficile Strains and Prophages Target Multiple Phage Types within This Pathogen – Katherine R. Hargreaves – mBio

“We detected multiple matches between spacers and regions in 31 C. difficile phage and prophage genomes”

Evolutionary consequences of intra-patient phage predation on microbial populations
Kimberley D Seed – eLife

“Here, we show that predatory interactions of a phage with an important environmentally transmitted pathogen, Vibrio cholerae, can modulate the evolutionary trajectory of this pathogen during the natural course of infection within individual patients.”

Metagenomics

* Marine metagenomics, a valuable tool for enzymes and bioactive compounds discovery
Rosalba Barone – Frontiers in Marine Science

“We report examples of several hydrolytic enzymes and natural products isolated by functional sequenced-based and function- screening strategies assisted by new high-throughput DNA sequencing technology and recent bioinformatics tools.”

Bioinformatics

Profile Hidden Markov Models for the Detection of Viruses within Metagenomic Sequence Data – Peter Skewes-Cox – PLOS ONE

“Here, we constructed HMMER3-compatible profile hidden Markov models (profile HMMs) from all the virally annotated proteins in RefSeq in an automated fashion using a custom-built bioinformatic pipeline. “

 

Techniques

I hope they developed two primers, not just one! Development of a Prokaryotic Universal Primer for Simultaneous Analysis of Bacteria and Archaea Using Next-Generation Sequencing – Shunsuke Takahashi – PLOS ONE

“Here, we designed a universal primer based on the V3-V4 hypervariable region of prokaryotic 16S rDNA for the simultaneous detection of Bacteria and Archaea in fecal samples from crossbred pigs (Landrace×Large white×Duroc) using an Illumina MiSeq next-generation sequencer.”

A Quantitative Comparison of Single-Cell Whole Genome Amplification Methods – Charles F. A. de Bourcy – PLOS ONE

“Here, we compare three state-of-the-art methods on both bulk and single-cell samples of E. coli DNA: Multiple Displacement Amplification (MDA), Multiple Annealing and Looping Based Amplification Cycles (MALBAC), and the PicoPLEX single-cell WGA kit (NEB-WGA). “

This abstract is so vague, I am not sure where to file this under – A Robust and Adaptable High Throughput Screening Method to Study Host-Microbiota Interactions in the Human Intestine – Tomas de Wouters – PLOS ONE

“In this study, we developed a robust and reproducible methodology to combine these two biological systems for high throughput application”

LC Sciences and Norgen Biotek will be conducting a free informational webinar describing 16S rRNA Sequencing and presenting a few application examples.

“If you are interested in attending the webinar, simply reply to news@lcsciences.com and we would be happy to send the webinar details.”

More microbiology

The Immune System in Children with Malnutrition — A Systematic Review
Maren Johanne Heilskov Rytter – PLOS ONE

“A systematic literature search was done in PubMed, and additional articles identified in reference lists and by correspondence with experts in the field. “

Photodynamic Therapy Using Systemic Administration of 5-Aminolevulinic Acid and a 410-nm Wavelength Light-Emitting Diode for Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus-Infected Ulcers in Mice – Kuniyuki Morimoto – PLOS ONE

“5-aminolevulinic acid photodynamic therapy accelerated wound healing and decreased bacterial counts on ulcer surfaces; in contrast, vancomycin treatment did not accelerate wound healing.”

Light Scattering Sensor for Direct Identification of Colonies of Escherichia coli Serogroups O26, O45, O103, O111, O121, O145 and O157 – Yanjie Tang- PLOS ONE

“SMAC was chosen for exhaustive scatter image library development, and 36 additional strains of O157:H7 and 11 non-O157 serovars were examined, with each serogroup producing unique differential scatter patterns.”

Science and publishing

Protecting human research participants in the age of big data – Susan T. Fiskea, and Robert M. Hauser – PNAS USA

“IRB review does not apply to Facebook and other private enterprises, yet they generate data that can benefit humanity”

Bik’s Picks

Magpies don’t like shiny things – Sarah Zielinski – Science News

“Magpies deserve our apology. Apparently humans have been unnecessarily maligning the birds for centuries. “

Richard III ate like a king before biting the dust – Bruce Bower – Science News

“Well-known royal’s brief reign included a sudden shift to fancy food and drink”

What type of researcher are you? Take the Quiz – Roche Life Science

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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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General microbiology and science, July 22

Amplifying long PCR products, primer design, metagenomic analysis and ecology, network analysis and the Picks.

Techniques

Long-range PCR in next-generation sequencing: comparison of six enzymes and evaluation on the MiSeq sequencer – Haiying Jia – Nature Scientific Reports

“We evaluated six long-range DNA polymerases to amplify three amplicons, with sizes of 12.9 kb, 9.7 kb, and 5.8 kb, respectively. “

DegePrime, a Program for Degenerate Primer Design for Broad-Taxonomic-Range PCR in Microbial Ecology Studies – Luisa W. Hugerth – Applied and Environmental Microbiology

“Here, we present the computer program DegePrime that, for each position of a multiple sequence alignment, finds a degenerate oligomer of as high coverage as possible and outputs its coverage among taxonomic divisions.”

Metagenomic analysis and ecology

Implications of streamlining theory for microbial ecology – Stephen J Giovannoni – ISME Journal

“The small genomes of obligate insect endosymbionts have been attributed to genetic drift caused by small effective population sizes (Ne). In contrast, streamlining theory attributes small cells and genomes to selection for efficient use of nutrients in populations where Ne is large and nutrients limit growth.”

Parallel Evolution of Streptococcus pneumoniae and Streptococcus mitis to Pathogenic and Mutualistic Lifestyles – Mogens Kilian – mBio

“In a comparative analysis of 35 genomes, including phylogenetic analyses of all predicted genes, we have shown that the pathogenic pneumococcus has evolved into a master of genomic flexibility while lineages that evolved into the nonpathogenic S. mitis secured harmonious coexistence with their host by stabilizing an approximately 15%-reduced genome devoid of many virulence genes.”

Proteomics

Elevated temperature alters proteomic responses of individual organisms within a biofilm community – Annika C Mosier – ISME Journal

“The study is the first application of tandem mass tag (TMT)-based proteomics to a microbial community. We accurately, precisely and reproducibly quantified thousands of proteins in biofilms growing at 40, 43 and 46 °C. “

Bioinformatics

Detecting Communities Based on Network Topology – Wei Liu – Nature Scientific Reports

“We analyzed 16 different types of networks, and compared our partitions with Infomap, LPA, Fastgreedy and Walktrap, which are popular algorithms for community detection. Most of the partitions generated using our approach compare favorably to those generated by these other algorithms. “

Dr. Bik’s Picks

FGF5 is a crucial regulator of hair length in humans – Claire A. Higgins – PNAS

“In this study, we obtained DNA from families segregating excessively long eyelashes consistent with an autosomal recessive trait.”

Science and Culture: Hunting fractals in the music of J. S. Bach – Stephen Ornes – PNAS

“Bach has similarly attracted the attention of other fractal hunters, including Harlan Brothers, a jazz guitarist, composer, and mathematician in Branford, Connecticut. For more than a decade, Brothers has been mapping fractals in music.”

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General microbiology and science, July 15

Dengue virus replication, poliovirus transmission, marine viral communities, primer choice, and CRISPRs systems and antibiotic resistance.

Dengue virus

Letter: Are viral small RNA regulating Dengue virus replication beyond serotype 2? – Esteban Finol – PNAS

Letter: Reply to Finol: Viral small RNA from Dengue virus and its egulatory role in different serotypes – Mazhar Hussain and Sassan Asgari – PNAS

Poliovirus

Screen shot 2014-07-15 at 06.00PM, Jul 15The role of older children and adults in wild poliovirus transmission – Isobel M. Blake – PNAS

“We fit a mathematical model of poliovirus transmission to time series data from two large outbreaks that affected adults (Tajikistan 2010, Republic of Congo 2010) using maximum-likelihood estimation based on iterated particle-filtering methods. “

Phages and viruses

Screen shot 2014-07-15 at 06.01PM, Jul 15Modeling ecological drivers in marine viral communities using comparative metagenomics and network analyses – Bonnie L. Hurwitz – PNAS

“Here we combine advances in bioinformatics (shared k-mer analyses) and social networking (regression modeling) to develop an annotation- and assembly-free visualization and analytical strategy for comparative metagenomics that uses all the data in a unified statistical framework. “

Screen shot 2014-07-15 at 06.02PM, Jul 15Contrasted coevolutionary dynamics between a bacterial pathogen and its bacteriophages – Alex Betts – PNAS

“We used experimental evolution between Pseudomonas aeruginosa and a panel of its lytic phages and found the full known range of coevolutionary dynamics.”

CRISPRs and antibiotic resistance

Screen shot 2014-07-15 at 06.03PM, Jul 15A CRISPR-Cas system enhances envelope integrity mediating antibiotic resistance and inflammasome evasion – Timothy R. Sampson – PNAS

“We demonstrate that components of a clustered, regularly interspaced, short palindromic repeats–CRISPR associated (CRISPR-Cas) system, a prokaryotic defense against viruses and foreign nucleic acid, act to regulate the permeability of the bacterial envelope, ultimately providing these cells with the capability to resist membrane damage caused by antibiotics. “

Extraction and amplification techniques

The Influence of DNA Extraction Procedure and Primer Set on the Bacterial Community Analysis by Pyrosequencing of Barcoded 16S rRNA Gene Amplicons – Ingo C. Starke – Molecular Biology International

“In this study, the effect of different DNA extraction procedures and primer sets on pyrosequencing results regarding the composition of bacterial communities in the ileum of piglets was investigated. “

Metagenomics general

Interpreting 16S metagenomic data without clustering to achieve sub-OTU resolution – Mikhail Tikhonov – ISME Journal

“We present a clustering-free approach to multi-sample Illumina data sets that can identify independent bacterial subpopulations regardless of the similarity of their 16S tag sequences. “

 

General Microbiology

Screen shot 2014-07-15 at 06.04PM, Jul 15Recovery of a Medieval Brucella melitensis Genome Using Shotgun Metagenomics – Gemma L. Kay – mBio

“We sequenced the metagenome of a calcified nodule from the skeleton of a 14th-century middle-aged male excavated from the medieval Sardinian settlement of Geridu. We obtained 6.5-fold coverage of a Brucella melitensis genome”

Screen shot 2014-07-15 at 06.05PM, Jul 15Review: The Ins and Outs of Bacterial Iron Metabolism – Elaine R. Frawley and Ferric C. Fang – Molecular Microbiology

“The recent discovery of putative iron efflux transporters in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium is discussed in the context of cellular iron homeostasis.”

Screen shot 2014-07-15 at 06.05PM, Jul 15 1Genetic information transfer promotes cooperation in bacteria – Tatiana Dimitriu – PNAS

“Our experiments and models converge to show that when both cheating and cooperative genes are transferred, cooperators win against cheaters because transfer increases assortment among alleles, favoring cooperation.”

Challenges and Opportunities of Integrative Taxonomy for Research and Society – Taxonomic Research in the Era of OMICS Technologies (PDF)  (Herausforderungen und Chancen der integrativen Taxonomie für Forschung und Gesellschaft) – Deutsche Akademie der Naturforscher Leopoldina e.V.

Microbiomes and metagenomes in need of professional classification – Rudolf Amann
The intestinal microbiome and human health: a new challenge for taxonomy of metagenomic data – Bärbel Stecher
Characterizing species boundaries and species histories in closely related fungi using comparative population genomic approaches – Eva H. Stukenbrock

Coming of ageThe coming of age of microbial ecology – Ana E. Escalante and Silvia Pajares – Chapter in Open Access book: Frontiers in Ecology, Evolution and Complexity

“Despite major challenges, new technological advances in genomic sciences have prompted microbial ecology into a revolution in data generation that has allowed us to move beyond studies of single isolates to the study of entire microbial communities without reliance on culture-dependent methods.”

Review: The Dynamic Interactions between Salmonella and the Microbiota, within the Challenging Niche of the Gastrointestinal Tract – C. M. Anjam Khan – International Scholarly Research Notices

“This gastrointestinal pathogen not only faces the hostile defenses of the host’s immune system, but also faces fierce competition from the large and diverse community of microbiota for space and nutrients.”

 

Science and publishing

Screen shot 2014-07-15 at 05.59PM, Jul 15Is Social Media Saving Science? – Michael White – Pacific Standard

“Why do editors and expert reviewers, whose primary job is to vet manuscripts, miss major flaws that are so obvious to readers after the papers are published?”

Dr. Bik’s Picks

Screen shot 2014-07-15 at 06.07PM, Jul 15Effect of sleep deprivation on the human metabolome – Sarah K. Davies – PNAS

“Clear daily rhythms were observed in most metabolites, with 24 h wakefulness mainly reducing the amplitude of these rhythms.”

Screen shot 2014-07-15 at 06.06PM, Jul 15Comparison of five different RNA sources to examine the lactating bovine mammary gland transcriptome using RNA-Sequencing – Angela Cánovas – Nature Scientific Reports

“Our results provide a comparison between different sampling methods (invasive and non-invasive) to define the transcriptome of mammary gland tissue and milk cells.’

Screen shot 2014-07-15 at 06.07PM, Jul 15 1Superior time perception for lower musical pitch explains why bass-ranged instruments lay down musical rhythms – Michael J. Hove – PNAS

“Here, we show that, when two streams of tones are presented simultaneously, the brain better detects timing deviations in the lower-pitched than in the higher-pitched stream and that tapping synchronization to the tones is more influenced by the lower-pitched stream. “

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General microbiology and science, June 17

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

Infection and host response

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

MS spectrometry and microbiology

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

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

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

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

Phages and viruses

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

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

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

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

Dengue

Dengue Serosurvey in Sint Eustatius – Teresa Leslie – PLOS ONE

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

General microbiology

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

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

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

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

Sequencing and data analysis

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

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

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

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

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

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

Sample preparation, primers, PCR

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

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

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

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

Chromosome organization

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

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

Dr. Bik’s Picks

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

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

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

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

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