Microbiome digest, August 17, 2014

Childhood undernutrition and the gut microbiome, hibernating ground squirrels, Sphagnum, nematodes, and forensic discrimination of soils.

Human gut microbiome

An evolving perspective about the origins of childhood undernutrition and nutritional interventions that includes the gut microbiome – Tahmeed Ahmed – Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences

“This paper summarizes work on mechanisms underlying the varied manifestations of childhood undernutrition and discusses current gaps in knowledge and challenges to our understanding of undernutrition and infection/immunity throughout the human life cycle, focusing on early childhood growth. ”

Animal microbiome

Hibernation alters the diversity and composition of mucosa-associated bacteria while enhancing antimicrobial defense in the gut of 13-lined ground squirrels – Kimberly A. Dill-McFarland – Molecular Ecology

“We used 16S rRNA pyrosequencing and cecal tissue protein analysis to investigate the effects of hibernation on the mucosa-associated bacterial microbiota and host responses in 13-lined ground squirrels.”

Diversity of Bacteria Carried by Pinewood Nematode in USA and Phylogenetic Comparison with Isolates from Other Countries – Diogo Neves Proença – PLOS ONE

“The objective of this study was to evaluate the diversity of the bacterial community carried by B. xylophilus, isolated from different Pinus spp. with PWD in Nebraska, United States. “

Plant microbiome

The Sphagnum microbiome supports bog ecosystem functioning under extreme conditions – Anastasia Bragina – Molecular Ecology

“We identified a high functional diversity within the Sphagnum microbiome applying an Illumina-based metagenomic approach followed by de novo assembly and MG-RAST annotation.”

Soil microbiome

Random Whole Metagenomic Sequencing for Forensic Discrimination of Soils – Anastasia S. Khodakova – PLOS ONE

“Shotgun, whole genome amplification (WGA) and single arbitrarily primed DNA amplification (AP-PCR) based sequencing techniques were then used to generate soil metagenomic profiles”

Microbial Community Structure of Relict Niter-Beds Previously Used for Saltpeter Production – Takashi Narihiro – PLOS ONE

“In this study, the microbial community structures within nine relict niter-bed soils were investigated using 454 pyrotag analysis targeting the 16S rRNA gene and the bacterial and archaeal ammonia monooxygenase gene (amoA). “

How Does Conversion of Natural Tropical Rainforest Ecosystems Affect Soil Bacterial and Fungal Communities in the Nile River Watershed of Uganda? – Peter O Alele – PLOS ONE

“Overall, our results suggest that soil microbial communities are relatively resilient to forest conversion and despite a substantial and consistent change in the soil environment, the effects of conversion differed widely among sites. “

Soil-Borne Microbial Functional Structure across Different Land Uses – Eiko E. Kuramae – The Scientific World Journal

“In a multivariate regression tree analysis of soil physicochemical properties and genes detected by functional microarrays, the main factor that explained the different microbial community functional structures was C : N ratio.”

Water microbiome

Temperature response of denitrification and anammox rates and microbial community structure in Arctic fjord sediments – Andy Canion – Environmental Microbiology

“Community structure in intact sediments and slurry incubations was determined using Illumina MiSeq SSU rRNA gene sequencing.”

Complex communities of small protists and unexpected occurrence of typical marine lineages in shallow freshwater systems – Marianne Simon – Environmental Microbiology

“We carried out a comparative study based on massive pyrosequencing of amplified 18S rRNA gene fragments of protists in the 0.2-5 μm-size range in one brook and four shallow ponds located in the Natural Regional Park of the Chevreuse Valley, France.”

Metagenomics

Impact of single-cell genomics and metagenomics on the emerging view of extremophile “microbial dark matter” – Brian P. Hedlund- Extremophiles

“Unraveling the mysteries of these candidate phyla is a grand challenge in microbiology and is especially important in habitats where they are abundant, including some extreme environments and low-energy ecosystems.”

Metabolomics

Metabolic Modelling of Spatial Heterogeneity of Biofilms in Microbial Fuel Cells Reveals Substrate Limitations in Electrical Current Generation – Nadeera Jayasinghe – Biotechnology Journal

“The goal of this work is to develop a model that integrates genome-scale metabolic models with the model of biofilm environment. “

Bioinformatics

Rarefaction and extrapolation of phylogenetic diversity – Anne Chao – Methods in Ecology and Evolution

“We develop in this paper the “PD accumulation curve” (an extension of the species accumulation curve) to depict how PD increases with sampling size and sample completeness.”

Microbes in the news

Can’t Stick to That Diet? Blame Your Gut Bacteria – Nolan Feeney – Time

“The gut microbiome, the collection of all the microbes in our digestive tracts, may influence our food choices and behavior, suggests a new study that recently appeared in the journal BioEssays.”

How Clean Is Your Produce? Testing Fruit For Bacteria – WFMyNews2.com

“Ellis took samples of the fruits one by one and placed the samples on a petri dish. She then washed some of the lettuce and repeated the testing procedure on both the head of lettuce and the pre-washed bag of lettuce, in 72-hours the results were in.”

Bik’s Picks

9/11 dust cloud may have caused widespread pregnancy issues – ScienceDaily

“Pregnant women living near the World Trade Center during the 9/11 attacks experienced negative birth outcomes, according to a new paper.”

Volunteers on the scent of science with whale carcass – Peter Fimrite – SF Gate

“If there’s anything as enjoyable to Dan Sudran as sawing through the stinking blubber of a whale carcass and extracting bones from the gooey tissues, it would be showing the results to children.”

Alaska’s Shrinking Glaciers Seen from Space – Kelly Dickerson – LiveScience

“Compared with a vintage satellite photo of the region, an image taken from space last year reveals just how much the glaciers have shrunk over the past 26 years.”

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General microbiology and science, June 12

A whale with graffiti and morbillivirus, polio eradication, it’s fun to be a grad student, and Dr. Bik’s Picks.

Marine Mammals

grafwhaleGraffiti tagged A.C. whale died of dolphin-killer morbillivirus – Amy S. Rosenberg – The Inquirer

“Schoelkopf said the virus last summer was primarily found in bottle-nosed dolphins but that there was some inter-species crossover, including two humpback whales, a pygmy sperm whale and striped dolphins.”

austsealionPinnipednesday – Neophoca cinerea Edition – Mythbri – ObservationDeck

“It’s believed that the feces of Australian Sea Lions provide valuable nutrients to the local ecosystem. The bacteria found in the feces is very efficient in breaking down the waste into forms that are easily absorbed by coastal ecosystems.”

Phages and viruses

SciencePolio eradicators struggle to prevent the next outbreak – Leslie Roberts – Science

“But in 2013, the virus jumped borders and set off outbreaks in eight countries that had already eliminated it, sending cases soaring to 407. Now, by creating a “Red List,” the Global Polio Eradication Initiative is trying to predict where future outbreaks will occur—and prevent them.”

Science careers

fungradThe fun of science – Cathy Walker – Science

“Recently, I was reminded that my job as a graduate student in a science lab is actually “really cool.” I was in need of a reminder. “

Dr. Bik’s Picks

dinosEvidence for mesothermy in dinosaurs – John M. Grady – Science

“Moreover, when the effects of size and temperature are considered, dinosaur metabolic rates were intermediate to those of endotherms and ectotherms and closest to those of extant mesotherms. Our results suggest that the modern dichotomy of endothermic versus ectothermic is overly simplistic.”

bromineChemical element bromine is essential to life in humans and other animals, researchers discover – ScienceDaily

“The researchers, led by co-first authors Scott McCall, Christopher Cummings, Ph.D., and Gautam (Jay) Bhave, M.D., Ph.D., showed that fruit flies died when bromine was removed from their diet but survived when bromine was restored.”

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More Microbiology and Science, June 6

Natural peptides against dengue, visualizing your QIIME .biom OTU table, and exposure to cockroaches and dust to babies. And Da Picks!

 
Dengue

Screen Shot 2014-06-07 at 2.05.52 AMIdentification of natural antimicrobial agents to treat dengue infection: In vitro analysis of latarcin peptide activity against dengue virus – Rothan HA – BMC Microbiology

“The Ltc 1 peptide exhibited significant inhibitory effects against dengue NS2B-NS3pro and virus replication in the infected cells. “

Bioinformatics

Screen Shot 2014-06-07 at 1.16.46 AMVisualizing millions of DNA sequences – in your web browser! – Featuring Phinch, developed by Holly Bik in the Eisen Lab

“The idea is to take your QIIME outputs – .biom OTU table files with taxonomy and embedded metadata – directly into a data visualization framework for assessment.”

Infection, immunity, host response

Screen Shot 2014-06-07 at 2.06.31 AMA novel, nested, multiplex, real-time PCR for detection of bacteria and fungi in blood – Gosiewski, T – BMC Microbiology

“ The designed primers correctly typed the studied species as belonging to the groups of Gram-positive bacteria, Gram-negative bacteria, yeast fungi, or filamentous fungi.”

Screen Shot 2014-06-07 at 2.00.39 AMEffects of early-life exposure to allergens and bacteria on recurrent wheeze and atopy in urban children – Susan V. Lynch – The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology

“….first-year exposure to cockroach, mouse, and cat allergens was negatively associated with recurrent wheeze…. House dust microbiome composition is associated with clinical outcomes. 

Screen Shot 2014-06-07 at 1.58.39 AMImplementation and impact of ultraviolet environmental disinfection in an acute care setting – Janet P. Haas – AJIC: American Journal of Infection Control

During the time period UVD was in use, there was a significant decrease in overall hospital-acquired MDRO plus CD in spite of missing 24% of opportunities to disinfect contact precautions rooms. This technology was feasible to use in our acute care setting and appeared to have a beneficial effect.”

Dr. Bik’s Picks

Screen Shot 2014-06-07 at 2.39.26 AMCool video of a scientist uncovering a whale in an old painting: Whale tale: a Dutch seascape and its lost Leviathan – University of Cambridge

“When art conservators peeled back a layer of varnish on a 17th-century Dutch painting, they uncovered an image of a beached whale that had been hidden for at least 150 years. “

Screen Shot 2014-06-07 at 2.40.17 AMLooking for the best strategy? Ask a chimp – Science Daily

“If you’re trying to outwit the competition, it might be better to have been born a chimpanzee, according to a study by researchers at Caltech, which found that chimps at the Kyoto University Primate Research Institute consistently outperform humans in simple contests drawn from game theory.”

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General microbiology and science digest, June 3, 2014

Dengue, immunology, arsenic, and The Picks.


Immunology

Review: Ontogeny of early life immunity – David J. Dowling, Ofer Levy – Trends in Immunology

“Here, we review novel mechanistic insights into early life immunity, with an emphasis on emerging models of human immune ontogeny”

Dengue

Time-varying, serotype-specific force of infection of dengue virus – Robert C. Reiner, Jr. – PNAS

“Using a bespoke method for a 12-y longitudinal dataset of serotype-specific dengue virus (DENV) infections, we estimated time-varying, serotype-specific FoIs for all four DENV serotypes. “

Correspondence: A “microRNA-like” small RNA expressed by Dengue virus? – Rebecca L. Skalsky – PNAS

Reply to Skalsky et al.: A microRNA-like small RNA from Dengue virus – Mazhar Hussain and Sassan Asgari – PNAS


More Microbiology

Review: Tropheryma whipplei and Whipple’s disease – Florence Fenollar, Jean-Christophe Lagier, Didier Raoult – Journal of Infection

“T. whipplei seems to be an opportunistic bacterium that causes chronic infections in susceptible patients with as yet unknown predisposing factors.”

Genesis and pathogenesis of the 1918 pandemic H1N1 influenza A virus
Michael Worobey – PNAS

“We infer that the virus arose via reassortment between a preexisting human H1 IAV lineage and an avian virus”

Shotgun glycomics of pig lung identifies natural endogenous receptors for influenza viruses – Lauren Byrd-Leotis – PNAS

“Studies using novel “shotgun glycan microarray” technology identify, for the first time to our knowledge, the endogenous receptors for influenza viruses from a natural host, the pig.”

Counties Deploying Bacteria-Sniffing Dogs To Find Failing Septic Systems – Bellamy Pailthorp – PKLU.org

“Molly, a border collie trained by Environmental Canine Services, can sniff out human fecal coliform bacteria in water samples.”

Arsenic metabolism

Arsenic in the Multi-aquifer System of the Mekong Delta, Vietnam: Analysis of Large-Scale Spatial Trends and Controlling Factors – Laura E. Erban – Environmental Science & Technology

“We relate strong trends in the distribution of contamination among well samples to explanatory variables derived from 3D ancillary physicochemical data sets using logistic regression models.”

Monitoring Arsenic Contamination in Agricultural Soils with Reflectance Spectroscopy of Rice Plants – Tiezhu Shi – Environmental Science & Technology

“The prediction of soil As contents was achieved by partial least-squares regression (PLSR) using laboratory and field spectra of rice plants, as well as linear regression employing normalized difference spectral index (NDSI) calculated from fild spectra. “

Marine Mammals

Fossil record shows whales evolved from land to sea – Steve Luckstead – UnionBulletin

“Other mammals such as seals, sea lions and walrusess spend a good part of their lives in the ocean, but they are clearly tetrapods (four-legged). But whales don’t have any leg-like appendages. So what gives?”


Science and Art

Sculpting the apples of science – Helen Fields – PNAS

“Rath’s work is based on a visit to the US Department of Agriculture’s Plant Genetic Resources Unit (PGRU) in Geneva, New York. The PGRU grows thousands of apple varieties that might otherwise disappear from orchards.”

Dr. Bik’s Picks

Evidence of bird dropping masquerading by a spider to avoid predators – Min-Hui Liu – Nature Scientific Reports

” The orb-web spider Cyclosa ginnaga has a silver body and adds a white discoid-shaped silk decoration to its web. The size, shape and colour of C. ginnaga’s body resemble, when viewed by the human eye against its decoration, a bird dropping. “

Why Have Female Hurricanes Killed More People Than Male Ones? – Ed Yong – National Geographic

“Here’s a simple fact with an uncertain explanation: historically, hurricanes with female names have, on average, killed more people than those with male ones.”

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