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Bibliography on: Metagenomics

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Robert J. Robbins is a biologist, an educator, a science administrator, a publisher, an information technologist, and an IT leader and manager who specializes in advancing biomedical knowledge and supporting education through the application of information technology. More About:  RJR | OUR TEAM | OUR SERVICES | THIS WEBSITE

RJR: Recommended Bibliography 07 Dec 2025 at 01:31 Created: 

Metagenomics

While genomics is the study of DNA extracted from individuals — individual cells, tissues, or organisms — metagenomics is a more recent refinement that analyzes samples of pooled DNA taken from the environment, not from an individual. Like genomics, metagenomic methods have great potential in many areas of biology, but none so much as in providing access to the hitherto invisible world of unculturable microbes, often estimated to comprise 90% or more of bacterial species and, in some ecosystems, the bulk of the biomass. A recent describes how this new science of metagenomics is beginning to reveal the secrets of our microbial world: The opportunity that stands before microbiologists today is akin to a reinvention of the microscope in the expanse of research questions it opens to investigation. Metagenomics provides a new way of examining the microbial world that not only will transform modern microbiology but has the potential to revolutionize understanding of the entire living world. In metagenomics, the power of genomic analysis is applied to entire communities of microbes, bypassing the need to isolate and culture individual bacterial community members.

Created with PubMed® Query: ( metagenomic OR metagenomics OR metagenome ) NOT pmcbook NOT ispreviousversion

Citations The Papers (from PubMed®)

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RevDate: 2025-12-06

McCone N, M Hosokawa (2025)

Recovering genomes from uncultured fungi with single-cell genomics.

Journal of bioscience and bioengineering pii:S1389-1723(25)00302-0 [Epub ahead of print].

Single-cell genomics (SCG) complements culture-independent metagenomics for accessing fungal genomes, particularly from lineages that remain uncultured. We contrast metagenomics, which excels when profiling community composition and metabolic potential but often underrepresents low-abundance fungi, with SCG, which first isolates individual cells or nuclei to generate single-amplified genomes (SAGs) and can recover rare or microdiverse taxa. We then organize existing fungal SCG applications into three subgroups: spore-level sequencing from host-enriched or environmental material; single-nucleus genomics for multinucleate fungi; and single-spore sequencing of haploid progeny for diploid linkage and chromosome phasing. Across studies, pooling and co-assembly of cognate cells improves completeness; key hurdles persist in wall lysis, whole-genome amplification bias, and contamination control. Practical advances include shallow sequencing for QC triage, nuclei pooling with normalized co-assembly, and hybrid long- and short-read assembly. SCG adds unique value where strain resolution and genotypic context matter, including host-to-mobile-element linkage, recovery of large biosynthetic gene clusters, and karyotype validation against telomere-to-telomere references. Used alongside metagenomics, SCG enables a strain-resolved view of fungal biodiversity and function, with incremental improvements across the SCG pipeline promising routine access to genomes from early-diverging and other environmentally embedded fungi.

RevDate: 2025-12-06
CmpDate: 2025-12-06

Chen X, Tie Y, Yang Q, et al (2026)

Temporal metabolomic dynamics and microbial functional mechanisms unravel biomarkers for distinguishing maturation stages and types in medium- and high-temperature daqu.

Food research international (Ottawa, Ont.), 223(Pt 1):117916.

Daqu maturation is essential for developing the characteristic flavor profiles of Chinese Baijiu, yet the underlying microbial metabolic mechanisms remain incompletely understood. This study employed an integrated multi-omics approach to investigate metabolic heterogeneity and identify differential biomarkers during the aging of medium-temperature (MD) and high-temperature (HD) Daqu. Physicochemical analysis revealed MD exhibited higher saccharifying power, whereas HD showed increased esterifying power and dynamic acidity changes. Microbial succession and metagenomic analysis uncovered distinct succession patterns: MD was dominated by Saccharopolyspora and Bacillus, while HD featured thermophilic genera including Kroppenstedtia and Virgibacillus. Co-occurrence network analysis demonstrated higher connectivity and reduced modularity in HD, indicating functional adaptation to high temperatures. Combined VIP and OAV analysis identified key aroma biomarkers that distinctly define both Daqu type and maturation stage. Tetramethylpyrazine and acetic acid characterized MD, while benzaldehyde and methyl hexadecanoate marked HD. Non-targeted metabolomics further indicated MD was enriched in phenylpropanoids and branched-chain amino acid derivatives, whereas HD accumulated peptides and steroid-related compounds. Crucially, integrated analysis demonstrated that these metabolic shifts were directly driven by microbial enzymatic activities (e.g., EC 4.1.1.5, EC 3.1.1.3). These findings establish a causal link between temperature-driven microbial functional specialization and metabolic output, and provide a biomarker framework for precise quality assessment of Daqu.

RevDate: 2025-12-06

Fishman JA (2025)

Assuring Microbiological Safety in Clinical Xenotransplantation.

RevDate: 2025-12-06

Su J, Zhao K, Zhou X, et al (2025)

Early-life exposure to linezolid caused gut microbiota dysbiosis can be inherited from parents to offspring.

Chemico-biological interactions pii:S0009-2797(25)00493-4 [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Linezolid is a broad-spectrum antibiotic against Gram-positive bacterial infections. Widespread use of linezolid has brought about significant adverse effects and potential reproductive toxicity, but there is not yet any study regarding to the transgenerational impact.

METHODS: Gut microbiota and metabolites from the 12-weeks old male mice who were treated with one-week linezolid at 4 weeks of age, as well as those from their offsprings, were analyzed by metagenomics and metabolomics, respectively. Reproductivity of the male parents were monitored, including fertility, litter size, survival and weight gain of offsprings.

RESULTS: Offsprings survival from the linezolid-treated male parents was obviously decreased, although fertilities, litter size, or weight gain was not affected. The linezolid-induced gut microbiota perturbation in male parents was manifested as lower alpha diversity, distinguishing beta diversity, and the dramatically altered profiles of function genes and metabolites. Especially, linezolid exposure reversed the relationship between Dysosmobacter and butyrogenic species, and that between Dysosmobacter and inflammation-associated species. Interestingly, gut microbiota dysbiosis also existed in both female and male offsprings from the treated male parents. Moreover, it was found that the differential metabolites enriched in ABC transporter pathway were found male parents and offsprings, while those enriched in sphingolipid signaling pathway were only found in offsprings of both sexes CONCLUSIONS: The early-life short-term exposure to linezolid make long-term gut microbiota dysregulation, which was even inherited from parents to offsprings. These findings raised critical concern about the ecological consequences of early-life antibiotic exposure and clinical safety evaluations.

RevDate: 2025-12-06

Nalladiyil A, Khuntia HK, Chanakya HN, et al (2025)

Treatment of ultra-high-strength compost leachate using an anaerobic biomass biofilm reactor.

Bioresource technology pii:S0960-8524(25)01741-9 [Epub ahead of print].

Leachate produced during the composting of the organic fraction of municipal solid waste (OFMSW) is highly concentrated and acidic (chemical oxygen demand (COD) -125 g/L, pH 3-5). Its recalcitrant nature necessitates long hydraulic retention times for effective digestion, which, in turn, leads to high organic loads and, consequently, large reactor footprints. This study evaluated the treatment performance, bioenergy potential, and microbial ecology of the Anaerobic Biomass Biofilm Reactor (ABBR) for ultra-high strength leachate treatment. The reactor employed lignocellulosic wastes such as coir, ridge gourd, and dried acacia leaves as natural biofilm supports. Operated over 180 days with a gradually increasing organic loading rate from 1.1 to 11.2 kg COD/m[3]/d, the reactor achieved 92.9 % COD removal and a methane yield of 0.357 NL/g COD removed at the maximum loading rate. Moreover, the reactor also exhibited exceptionally high space utilization efficiency (3.5-4 L CH4/L/d), highlighting its enhanced volumetric productivity and effectiveness in treating high-strength leachate. Metagenomic analysis revealed a diverse microbial community, with Methanospirillum (3 %) and Methanosaeta (2.6 %) identified as dominant archaea contributing to methanogenesis. The high moisture content of OFMSW, coupled with tropical climatic conditions, leads to rapid fermentation and the generation of large volumes of leachate. Therefore, the ABBR represents a sustainable and high-rate alternative to conventional anaerobic systems, enabling efficient leachate treatment and enhanced bioenergy recovery in windrow composting facilities.

RevDate: 2025-12-06

Liu Z, Gao Y, Wang J, et al (2025)

Perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) inhibits methane production during sludge anaerobic digestion by breaking the carbon-transfer bridge between methanogenesis and acidogenesis.

Bioresource technology pii:S0960-8524(25)01742-0 [Epub ahead of print].

Per- or polyfluoroalkyl compounds (PFASs) are recognized as emerging contaminant, with perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) being one of the most extensively utilized PFASs due to its great chemical stability. However, knowledge of the bio-chemical behavior, the toxicity of PFOS and its mechanisms of interfacial binding to microorganisms remain inadequately validated. In this study, the biotoxicity of PFOS and its molecular interfacial adsorption mechanism in anaerobic digestion were investigated. The results showed that the tightly bound EPS (TB-EPS) of anaerobic microorganisms could defend against the biotoxicity of PFOS to some extent by physical adsorption and chemical binding, the exposure to PFOS might produce a greater disturbance to methanogenic archaea. With the increase of PFOS, acid-producing bacteria (APB) and methanogenic archaea showed different resistance to PFOS, suppressing cumulative methane production by up to 91.64 %. On the contrary, APBs were more tolerant, and fatty acids accumulated up to 2194.27 mg/L. Metagenomics analysis further confirmed that functional genes associated with fatty acid biosynthesis (fas, FAS2, fabK, etc.) were significantly enriched (approximately 85.29 %) whereas the relative abundance of genes associated with methanogenesis (acs, comA, mcrB, etc.) were decreased (up to 65.96 %). Molecular docking results suggested a potential route for PFOS cellular entry, as it was observed to bind to the substrate-binding protein of the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter and interact with key functional enzymes, which led to the inhibition of methanogens. This study provides novel insights into the molecular blocking mechanism by which PFOS disrupts carbon metabolic flux through the selective inhibition of methanogenic archaea, rather than through a general suppression of acidogenic bacteria.

RevDate: 2025-12-06

Zeng Z, Lei T, Zhou M, et al (2025)

Ciprofloxacin removal and antibiotic resistance genes response in the EGSB-AnMBR system treating swine wastewater: Performance, mechanism, and metagenomics.

Journal of environmental management, 397:128233 pii:S0301-4797(25)04209-4 [Epub ahead of print].

Ciprofloxacin (CIP), a veterinary antibiotic in swine wastewater is an emerging contaminant with low concentration but significant environmental risk. Its inhibitory effects on biological treatment systems and the proliferation of antibiotic resistance genes have raised widespread public concern. An expanded granular sludge bed reactor was coupled with an anaerobic membrane bioreactor (EGSB-AnMBR) to treat swine wastewater containing CIP. During 320 days operation, the EGSB-AnMBR system achieved over 98.6 % chemical oxygen demand (COD) removal efficiency and 61.4 %-100 % CIP removal efficiency. During the initial operation phase, sludge adsorption served as the primary mechanism for CIP removal, whereas biodegradation became dominant in the last operational phase. 16S rRNA gene high-throughput sequencing analysis revealed that under CIP stress, the abundance of CIP-resistant Spirochaetota increased from 4.7 % to 9.5 %, whereas Patescibacteria abundance progressively decreased from 72.7 % to 15.7 %. Metagenomic analysis demonstrated microbes in anaerobic granular sludge (AnGS) achieved "defense-efflux" by activating macB/evgS efflux pumps while suppressing tetA, whereas membrane biofilm (MB) developed a "storage-retention" strategy through synergistic effects of tetA and evgS. This EGSB-AnMBR system exhibits promising application potential for swine wastewater treatment and antibiotic control, providing significant support for livestock pollution management.

RevDate: 2025-12-06

Yang K, Zhang L, Zhao K, et al (2025)

Metabolism regulates spatial distribution patterns of different microbial taxonomic groups in chlorinated aliphatic hydrocarbons contaminated soil.

Journal of hazardous materials, 501:140640 pii:S0304-3894(25)03560-5 [Epub ahead of print].

A mechanistic understanding of the distribution and role of subsurface microbial communities is crucial for sustainable environmental management. Bioremediation of chlorinated solvents relies on the bioactivity of organohalide-respiring bacteria and their interaction with syntrophic members. However, the spatial distribution pattern and its influencing factors of these members remain poorly understood. In this study, Distance-decay relationship (DDR) models and Sloan's neutral community models (NCM) were employed to quantify spatial turnover rates and stochastic processes of different taxa in chlorinated aliphatic hydrocarbon-contaminated soil. Incorporating metagenomic analysis and machine learning, this study highlights the contribution of genomic information and reveals how genetic potential for functional mechanisms may relate to distinct spatial distribution patterns. Findings indicate that metabolic potential, rather than environmental preference, primarily governs the heterogeneous distribution of different taxa. Archaeal syntrophic members, Bathyarchaeia, was identified as a potential reliable target for improving bioremediation efficiency. Correlation between parameters of different models suggests that dispersal ability plays an important role in the variation of spatial turnover rate. This was further supported by LASSO regression models in which genomic features relevant to biofilm formation, dormancy, and DNA repair pathways were identified as key predictors of spatial turnover. These findings not only offer actionable insights for enhancing bioremediation strategies at chlorinated solvent-contaminated sites but also demonstrate the potential of incorporating genomic features to understand microbial biogeography.

RevDate: 2025-12-06

Li A, Ju Z, Zhang X, et al (2025)

Fangji Huangqi Tang alleviated chronic kidney disease by regulating intestinal bacteria to inhibit the AHR/ROS pathway.

Phytomedicine : international journal of phytotherapy and phytopharmacology, 150:157610 pii:S0944-7113(25)01245-0 [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: Fangji Huangqi Tang (FHT) is a traditional Chinese herbal formula that is clinically effective and safe for chronic kidney disease (CKD). However, the mechanism of action of FHT remains unclear.

PURPOSE: In this study, we investigated the mechanism of the targeted regulation of intestinal flora by Fangji Huangqi Tang to delay CKD.

METHOD: A CKD model was established in rats and mice by tail vein injection of doxorubicin, and the rats and mice were administered FHT orally. Metagenomic sequencing analysis was employed to screen and identify FHT-regulated key gut bacteria in CKD model rats and mice. In vitro bacterial co-cultures of these taxa were analyzed for metabolite discovery. Oral supplementation of key bacteria in CKD mice was evaluated the therapeutic effects and validated the metabolic changes observed in vitro. Cellular Aryl Hydrocarbon Receptor (AHR) overexpression was conducted to clarify the mechanistic of the metabolite derived from microbiota.

RESULTS: FHT significantly enriched Corynebacterium stationis (C. stationis) in both CKD rat and mice models. In vitro, C. stationis metabolized tryptophan into Indole-3-Carbinol (I3C) while reducing indole levels. Oral administration of C. stationis in CKD mice attenuated renal dysfunction and elevated systemic I3C. Additionally, it downregulated AHR expression and diminished the expression of ROS-related inflammatory factors, thereby ameliorating CKD. Crucially, AHR overexpression reversed I3C's cytoprotective effects in MPC5 injury models.

CONCLUSIONS: This study reveals that FHT targets the enrichment of the gut bacterium C. stationis, driving tryptophan metabolism toward I3C conversion. This process suppresses AHR expression, reduces ROS levels and inflammatory injury, and ultimately retards the progression of CKD.

RevDate: 2025-12-06

Mukherjee I, Bulzu PA, Boukheloua R, et al (2025)

Cultivation, genomics, and giant viruses of a ubiquitous and heterotrophic freshwater cryptomonad.

The ISME journal pii:8373286 [Epub ahead of print].

Heterotrophic nanoflagellates are the chief agents of bacterivory in the aquatic microbial loop but remain underrepresented in culture collections and in genomic databases. We isolated and characterised a representative of the previously uncultured freshwater Cryptomonad Group 1 (CRY1a) lineage using a genome-streamlined, ultrasmall and abundant microbe Planktophila versatilis as a prey and CARD-FISH probe-based screening. This isolate, Tyrannomonas regina, is one of the most dominant ubiquitous heterotrophic cryptomonads in freshwaters. It is a small heterotrophic nanoflagellate (ca. 3-5 μm) and has the smallest genome of any cryptomonad sequenced thus far. The compact genome (ca. 69 Mb) revealed no traces of a photosynthetic lifestyle, consistent with its phylogenomic placement as a sister-clade to cryptophytes that are characterised by the acquisition of a red-algal symbiont. Moreover, in comparison to its photosynthetic counterparts, its genome presents substantially lower repeat content and endogenous viral elements. Genomes of two giant viruses, Tyrannovirus reginensis GV1 and GV2, were also recovered from the same culture and represent a viral genus that has been described so far solely by metagenome-recovered genomes. Collectively, these findings provide insights into genomic ancestry and evolution, widespread ecological impact and interactions of an elusive protist lineage and illustrate the advantages of culture-centric approaches towards unfolding complex tapestries of life in the microbial world.

RevDate: 2025-12-06
CmpDate: 2025-12-06

Hussain B, Javed K, Ali M, et al (2025)

Impact of nanoparticles on biogeochemical processes in soil-plant system under heavy metals stress; exploring remediation mechanism and plant health status.

Environmental geochemistry and health, 48(1):31.

Although, NPs have potential to improved plant resistance against abiotic stress, increased nutrient usage efficiency, and sustenance of agricultural production. However, reactions of NPs in soil matrices, particularly their movement, perseverance, and biogeochemical reactions in soil-plant system under heavy metals (HMs) were not well understood. Therefore, this review presents the latest research in order to clarify the molecular interactions, beneficial transformations, and detoxification processes of NPs in plants and evaluates their roles in these processes. It further aims to quantify the benefits and risks, and give future directions for NPs design and applications in environmental remediation and agriculture. NPs significantly enhanced agricultural outcomes through mechanisms such as regulating HMs uptake, boosting antioxidant enzyme activity (up to a 60% increase), altering soil properties, and optimizing physiological metabolism. NPs amendments raised crop output by 20-55% while reducing disease and nutrient leaching to 50% and 30%, respectively, and improving the soil's carbon sink by 15%. Meanwhile, green-synthesized nanomaterials offer eco-friendly alternatives in remediation through processes like adsorption, oxidation, coprecipitation, ion-exchange, photocatalysis, and nanophytoremediation, achieving 100% pollutant removal efficiency for elements like hexavalent chromium using iron NPs. However, challenges such as NPs accumulation in food chains, potential toxicity to non-target species, and physiological disruptions necessitate solutions like microbiome co-delivery and stimuli-responsive systems to balance safety and effectiveness. In order to increase the available resources and address the worldwide food safety issue, the use of NPs in agroecosystems might be a crucial step towards sustainable farming. Therefore, the influence of NPs on soil, and plant antioxidant defense systems and oxidative stress activation under HMs should be studied using molecular, physiological, and biochemical techniques. For this purpose, real-time polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analysis, illumina MiSeq sequencing, pyrosequencing analysis, metagenomics, metabolomics, proteomics, and functional assays etc. could be most useful for NPs risk/benefit evaluation.

RevDate: 2025-12-06

Campbell KL, Armitage AR, JM Labonté (2025)

Microbial Communities Display Key Functional Differences between Reference and Restored Salt Marshes.

Microbial ecology pii:10.1007/s00248-025-02661-7 [Epub ahead of print].

Salt marshes, despite their ecological importance (i.e., carbon sequestration) and rapid decline due to climate change and sea-level rise. Salt marsh ecosystems provide essential services such as removal of pollutants, carbon sequestration, and protection of coastal lands from storm surges. These services are strongly influenced by plant productivity, which is closely linked to microbial processes such as biogeochemical cycling of carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur. To retain carbon sequestration and other ecological functions, substantial efforts are currently directed towards coastal marsh restoration. Restoration efforts often lack comprehensive assessments of ecosystem functioning. Here, in an effort to assess ecosystem functions, we compared the microbial and viral community composition, as well as the genetic potential between reference and 10-year-old restored marshes in Galveston Bay, TX, USA. Duplicate bulk surface sediment in stands of Spartina alterniflora were sampled for metagenomic analysis. Metagenome assembled genomes analysis showed that while the microbial community composition was largely similar among sites, the overall metabolic potential was dissimilar. Restored sites displayed a higher abundance of carbon and nitrogen cycling functions compared to reference sites, which mainly consisted of sulfur cycling. Although the restored sites developed sediment microbial communities that approached reference microbial composition, the differences in the metabolic functions suggest that even after 10 years, the restored sites were still in a transitional stage of development. The differences between the reference and restored sites were even more differentiated in the viral community's predicted host composition. Additionally, viruses potentially play a variety of roles within the sediment community, including population control and biogeochemical cycles participation through auxiliary metabolic genes. These results highlight the prolonged timeline of functional development in restored salt marshes and highlight the need to develop approaches to boost the development of soil microbial communities in newly created habitats.

RevDate: 2025-12-06

Liu S, Liu P, Deng J, et al (2025)

C-arm-guided percutaneous biopsy combined with mNGS: a dual-modality strategy for op timizing diagnosis and targeted management of spinal infections.

European spine journal : official publication of the European Spine Society, the European Spinal Deformity Society, and the European Section of the Cervical Spine Research Society [Epub ahead of print].

RevDate: 2025-12-06

Sharko F, Busova V, Boulygina E, et al (2025)

Ancient DNA sheds light on the historical distribution of the rare and ephemeral plant Coleanthus subtilis in Southern Siberia.

BMC genomics pii:10.1186/s12864-025-12365-4 [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: Ancient DNA is a valuable source of information about the distant past of our planet. Reconstructing the past ecosystems is essential for understanding many aspects of life in the steppes of southern Siberia and Central Asia, where numerous human societies representing different archaeological cultures have lived. The remains of their activities, revealed by archaeological excavations, provide a wide range of sources for the cultural and natural/biological history of the region. One of the most enigmatic Iron Age archaeological cultures in southern Siberia is the Tashtyk culture, which dates back to the 1st - 7th centuries AD. The people of this culture inhabited the Minusinsk Basin and practiced different burial rites, including cremation. Thanks to the exceptional preservation of organic remains in individual Tashtyk burials we know of quite an unusual phenomenon: the placement of cremains into the human-like mannequins made from animal skin and filled with herbaceous plants. This study analyses ancient DNA extracted from the grass stuffing of a mannequin found in 2023 at the Oglakhty cemetery, which dates back to 250-300 AD. Our aim is to identify the plant species that were used to stuff the mannequin approximately 1,700 years ago, and to compare their diversity with that of modern-day plant species. This is particularly significant given that the Oglakhty region is part of the Khakassky State Nature Reserve, which was added to the UNESCO Tentative List in 2016 due to its biodiversity and concentration of archaeological sites.

RESULTS: We sequenced the ancient DNA of a dried historical grass mixture in order to reconstruct the nearly complete chloroplast genomes of several apparent Poaceae species. Our analysis showed that, 1,700 years ago, the diversity of plant species in the Oglakhty area was similar to the modern meadow flora of the Minusinsk Basin. These included typical steppe and forest-steppe zone plant genera of Siberia, such as Holcus, Phleum, Poa, and Stipa. Interestingly, alongside the species commonly found in modern southern Siberian steppes and meadows, we discovered the rare, ephemeral, and protected moss grass, Coleanthus subtilis (Tratt.) Seidel ex Roem. et Schult. whose current distribution range spans highly fragmented areas of northern Eurasia and North America but not the Minusinsk Basin.

CONCLUSION: The herbaceous plant C. subtilis, whose DNA fragments were obtained through the metagenomic profiling of the human-like mannequin's stuffing at the Oglakhty cemetery, provides new insights into the cultural and natural history of Siberia. Firstly, we identified several grass taxa in the mannequin's stuffing. Most of them are characteristic for the steppe zone; the only exception is C. subtilis, which usually inhabits riverbanks. Therefore, we assume that, despite being primarily stuffed with the steppe plants, the Oglakhty mannequin was crafted on a riverbank, where C. subtilis might have got inside likely by chance. It is important to note that the stuffing process apparently took place after the vegetation season of C. subtilis in second half of summer and the beginning of autumn. Secondly, our research suggests that a population of C. subtilis, which is currently absent from the documented flora of southern Siberia, previously grew in the Minusinsk Basin wetlands. Our study highlights the need for field expeditions aimed to identify endemic populations of C. subtilis in the Yenisei River valley.

RevDate: 2025-12-06

Stach TL, Starke J, Bouderka F, et al (2025)

Conserved environmental adaptations of stream microbiomes in the hyporheic zone across North America.

Microbiome pii:10.1186/s40168-025-02236-1 [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: Stream hyporheic zones represent a unique ecosystem at the interface of stream water and surrounding sediments, characterized by high heterogeneity and accelerated biogeochemical activity. These zones-represented by the top sediment layer in this study-are increasingly impacted by anthropogenic stressors and environmental changes at a global scale, directly altering their microbiomes. Despite their importance, the current body of literature lacks a systematic understanding of active nitrogen and sulfur cycling across stream sediment and surface water microbiomes, particularly across geographic locations and in response to environmental factors.

RESULTS: Based on previously published and unpublished datasets, 363 stream metagenomes were combined to build a comprehensive MAG and gene database from stream sediments and surface water including a full-factorial mesocosm experiment which had been deployed to unravel microbial stress response. Metatranscriptomic data from 23 hyporheic sediment samples collected across North America revealed that microbial activity in sediments was distinct from the activity in surface water, contrasting similarly encoded metabolic potential across the two compartments. The expressed energy metabolism of the hyporheic zone was characterized by increased cycling of sulfur and nitrogen compounds, governed by Nitrospirota and Desulfobacterota lineages. While core metabolic functions like energy conservation were conserved across sediments, temperature and stream order change resulted in differential expression of stress response genes previously observed in mesocosm studies.

CONCLUSIONS: The hyporheic zone is a microbial hotspot in stream ecosystems, surpassing the activity of overlaying riverine surface waters. Metabolic activity in the form of sulfur and nitrogen cycling in hyporheic sediments is governed by multiple taxa interacting through metabolic handoffs. Despite the spatial heterogeneity of streams, the hyporheic sediment microbiome encodes and expresses conserved stress responses to anthropogenic stressors, e.g., temperature, in streams of separate continents. The high number of uncharacterized differentially expressed genes as a response to tested stressors is a call-to-action to deepen the study of stream systems. Video Abstract.

RevDate: 2025-12-05
CmpDate: 2025-12-06

De Sanctis B, Mirchandani C, Dong H, et al (2025)

Bamdam: a post-mapping authentication toolkit for ancient metagenomics.

Genome biology, 26(1):413.

Ancient metagenomic studies using capture or shotgun sequencing often perform pairwise alignment of individual reads against large reference databases followed by lowest common ancestor assignment for taxonomic identification. Here, we present bamdam, a lightweight post-mapping, post lowest common ancestor toolkit for eukaryotic or microbial metagenomics. Bamdam can shrink large metagenomics bam files, often by a factor of 10x or more, while retaining all informative reads and alignments, compute a suite of authentication metrics for each taxonomic node including k-mer duplicity, postmortem damage, and mean read complexity, and generate various visualizations including multi-sample deamination plots and damage-colored interactive Krona plots.

RevDate: 2025-12-05

Tarracchini C, Longhi G, Gennaioli E, et al (2025)

Compiling an early life human gut microbiome atlas and identification of key microbial drivers.

NPJ biofilms and microbiomes pii:10.1038/s41522-025-00868-7 [Epub ahead of print].

During the first year after birth, the infant gut microbiome undergoes a rapid and profound compositional and functional transformation, impelled by an intricate network of intrinsic and extrinsic factors. This process results in increased taxonomic and functional diversification, alongside greater interindividual variability. To better understand this early-life ecosystem, this study assessed the interindividual variability of the infant gut microbiome using a comprehensive infant gut microbiome database of 5288 fecal metagenomic data from healthy, full-term infants across various geographical locations. Our study identified six reference microbial communities, termed Early-Life Community State Types (ELi-CSTs), which not only capture specific compositional profiles and heterogeneity of the infant gut microbiome, but also record the extensive transformation experienced by this developing microbial community during the first year of human life. Indicative Species analysis and Random Forest modeling assisted the precise identification of unique, key taxonomic signatures that are critical to the structure of each ELi-CST, highlighting microbial taxa with pivotal roles in shaping the infant gut microbiota. To complement these findings, we established a bacterial biobank through dedicated cultivation efforts of the infant microbiota, comprising 182 genome-sequenced isolates corresponding to key taxa involved in early life gut microbiota assembly. This biobank provided the basis for co-cultivation experiments combined with transcriptome analyses, thereby enabling in vitro investigations into microbial cross-talk among key modulators, and yielding novel insights into the molecular interactions and cooperative dynamics behind early microbiome development.

RevDate: 2025-12-05
CmpDate: 2025-12-05

Nickodem CA, Tran PQ, Neeno-Eckwall E, et al (2025)

Soil management strategies drive divergent impacts on pathogens and environmental resistomes.

Scientific reports, 15(1):43215.

Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a growing global health threat, and the genes that confer drug resistance are increasingly recognized as widespread environmental contaminants. Livestock manure, widely used as a non-synthetic fertilizer, is a potential source of AMR contamination in the environment. Manure fertilizers are well-documented reservoirs of AMR genes (ARGs) and drug-resistant pathogens. However, the role of soil management practices in shaping the persistence and spread of these genes after manure application remains poorly understood. We conducted a large-scale field experiment to evaluate how soil management practices influence the resistome (the genomic content involved in resistance to antimicrobial agents) and the overall microbiome of agricultural soils. Specifically, we ask: Does the use of composted poultry manure in organic soil management practices increase the risk of transmitting ARGs and drug-resistant pathogens? We integrated metagenomic sequencing with risk score analyses to assess the abundance, diversity, and mobility of resistance genes. Contrary to expectations, our results indicate that non-organic practices, despite not applying poultry manure, posed greater risks for transmitting AMR genes and human pathogens - due to significantly higher co-occurrence of ARGs with mobile genetic elements (MGEs), which facilitate horizontal gene transfer. In contrast, organic practices, that applied composted poultry manure, increased overall ARG and metal resistance gene (MRG) abundance, but the genes were less diverse and less mobile. These findings show that focusing solely on ARG and MRG abundance can misrepresent AMR risks and underscore the importance of evaluating gene mobility and management context when assessing AMR hazards. Our study highlights how soil management can be strategically leveraged to mitigate AMR transmission, offering actionable insights for sustainable agriculture, environmental stewardship, and public health protection.

RevDate: 2025-12-05
CmpDate: 2025-12-05

Sato Y, Kumagai H, Hirooka H, et al (2025)

Differences in prokaryotic and viral community between rumen and feces.

Scientific reports, 15(1):43232.

Ruminants harbor diverse microbial communities, including prokaryotes and viruses, across their digestive tract. Rumen viruses contribute to carbohydrate metabolism; however, their persistence and host interactions in the lower gastrointestinal tract remain unclear. In this study, we investigated the prokaryotic and viral communities in the rumen and feces of the same wethers using whole-metagenomic and virus-like particle metagenomic sequencing. For prokaryotic community analysis, we reconstructed over 300 metagenome-assembled genomes, most of which were novel. These revealed strong site specificity, with distinct prokaryotic community compositions between the rumen and feces. Virome analysis recovered more than 6,000 viral genomes, including many novel viruses. Unlike prokaryotes, several viruses were found to be shared between the rumen and feces. Auxiliary metabolic genes encoding glycoside hydrolases were identified in several rumen-associated viral genomes, whereas fecal-associated viral genomes did not harbor such genes. Host-virus interaction analysis predicted that viruses predominantly infect dominant bacterial taxa and methanogens within each gastrointestinal site, although some viruses may interact with hosts across different sites. These findings highlight the strong site specificity of the prokaryotic communities and the comparatively broader distribution of viruses within the ruminant gastrointestinal tract. These insights advance understanding of virus-prokaryote-host interactions with implications for animal productivity.

RevDate: 2025-12-06
CmpDate: 2025-12-06

Roux S, C Coclet (2026)

Viromics approaches for the study of viral diversity and ecology in microbiomes.

Nature reviews. Genetics, 27(1):32-46.

Viruses are found across all ecosystems and infect every type of organism on Earth. Traditional culture-based methods have proven insufficient to explore this viral diversity at scale, driving the development of viromics, the sequence-based analysis of uncultivated viruses. Viromics approaches have been particularly useful for studying viruses of microorganisms, which can act as crucial regulators of microbiomes across ecosystems. They have already revealed the broad geographic distribution of viral communities and are progressively uncovering the expansive genetic and functional diversity of the global virome. Moving forward, large-scale viral ecogenomics studies combined with new experimental and computational approaches to identify virus activity and host interactions will enable a more complete characterization of global viral diversity and its effects.

RevDate: 2025-12-05
CmpDate: 2025-12-05

Tang H, Liu H, Yuan L, et al (2025)

Bronchoalveolar lavage fluid metagenomic datasets: a multidimensional clinical biomolecular resource.

Scientific data, 12(1):1919.

Metagenomic Next-Generation Sequencing (mNGS) enables simultaneous sequencing of both microbial and host nucleic acids in clinical samples. However, analytical approaches for interpreting complex mNGS datasets are seldom disclosed, limiting advancements in multimodal analysis and omics-driven research models built upon mNGS results. We present 402 high-quality bronchoalveolar lavage fluid mNGS DNA and RNA sequencing datasets for developing combined microbial-host metagenomic diagnostic approaches. Only the microbial (non-host) sequence reads have been deposited. We provide comprehensive descriptions of methods, tools, and pipelines used for mining microbial features (DNA/RNA microbial composition and bacteriophage abundances) and host response features (differential expression genes, transposable elements, cell-type composition, and copy number variation). These data processing pipelines set a standard for future multimodal omics diagnostic research, promoting the adoption of standardized practices in omics-based studies that integrate clinical data.

RevDate: 2025-12-05

Fukase S, Kouketsu A, Tamahara T, et al (2025)

Differences in the Oral Microbiome Between Patients With and Without Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma.

Journal of oral pathology & medicine : official publication of the International Association of Oral Pathologists and the American Academy of Oral Pathology [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: Although studies have demonstrated a relationship between pathogenic microorganisms and oral cancer, no study has demonstrated a relationship between changes in bacterial flora and oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC). Therefore, we investigated the association between oral microbiota and oral squamous cell carcinoma using metagenomic analysis.

METHODS: Saliva samples from 64 patients with OSCC and 50 healthy controls who visited the Department of Oral Surgery, Tohoku University Hospital, were collected, and bacterial genomic DNA was extracted using polymerase chain reaction amplification. Single-end sequencing was performed using the Illumina MiSeq platform, and sequence data were analyzed using the Quantitative Insights Into Microbial Ecology 2 platform. The Steel-Dwass test was used for between-group comparisons, and Analysis of Compositions of Microbiomes with Bias Correction was used to detect significant differences in microbiome composition.

RESULTS: Significant differences were observed in alpha-diversity indices of bacterial flora (richness, Faith- phylogenetic diversity, Shannon index) in the OSCC group compared to those in the control group. Among the OSCC group, patients with larger tumor diameters and lymph node metastases (T3/T4, N1 or greater) formed independent clusters in the beta diversity analysis of the bacterial flora. Bacteria of the Actinomycetia phylum, such as Actinomyces and Rothia, were significantly reduced in patients with higher stage and pathological grade. Conversely, bacteria of the phylum Spirochaetia and Proteobacteria, particularly those of the genus Treponema, were significantly elevated in advanced cancer cases.

CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that changes in the oral microbiota may play a role in OSCC development and progression.

RevDate: 2025-12-05
CmpDate: 2025-12-05

Zepernick BN, Niknejad DJ, Chase EE, et al (2026)

The ornithine-arginine cycle supported a toxic, metalimnic Planktothrix rubescens bloom.

Harmful algae, 151:103008.

Planktothrix rubescens is distinct from other cyanobacterial harmful algal bloom (cHAB) genera: the crimson-red cHAB thrives in the cold, low-light, nutrient-limited metalimnion. Studies have attributed this ecological success to buoyancy regulation, low-light adaptations, and the uptake of nitrogen-rich amino acids. Yet, it remains to be mechanistically determined how this cHAB maintains physiological nutrient quotas in the metalimnion due to limited in situ molecular studies. We employed metagenomics and metabolomics to generate hypotheses concerning a toxigenic P. rubescens bloom in Mead's Quarry (Knoxville, TN, USA) observed in two separate years. Our results suggest a perennial, metalimnic P. rubescens population may exist, with spring turnover facilitating seasonal migration to the epilimnion. Although P. rubescens dominated the epilimnion and metalimnion, intracellular metabolite pools grouped by depth and suggested depth-discrete partitioning of the arginine deiminase-mediated ornithine-arginine cycle (OAC, i.e., urea cycle) - while further indicating the presence of the arginine catabolic pathway. Though the arginine influx driving the OAC is unclear, we hypothesize this input is provided via the uptake of urea or nitrogen-rich amino acids. Further, we demonstrate arginine deiminase (agrE/argZ) is broadly distributed in Planktothrix genera and known microcystin producers, suggesting agrE/argZ-mediated arginine metabolism and the OAC may influence the fitness of toxigenic cHAB genera which require ample nitrogen to synthesize microcystins. Cumulatively, our results serve as a case study to provide insight on the metabolic pathways driving the ecological success of metalimnic P. rubescens blooms. On a broader scale, this work strengthens the case that alternative nitrogen metabolism - including urea utilization, amino acid catabolism, and the OAC - is a driver of toxigenic cHABs in fresh waters.

RevDate: 2025-12-05

Manfreda C, Ghidini S, Fuschi A, et al (2025)

In-depth characterization of microbiome and resistome of carcasses and processing environments in a swine slaughterhouse.

Veterinary microbiology, 312:110820 pii:S0378-1135(25)00456-0 [Epub ahead of print].

Antimicrobial resistance represents a critical global health challenge. Within the swine production chain, all stages have been identified as potential reservoirs for antimicrobial resistance genes. In the present study whole metagenomic sequencing technology was applied in a swine slaughterhouse and pig carcasses to investigate microbial communities and their associated antimicrobial resistance genes. Actinomycetota and Pseudomonadota were the dominant phyla across all samples, while Bacillota, Bacteroidota, and Campylobacteriota were more prevalent in the dirty zone and carcass samples than in the clean zone. Key antimicrobial-resistant bacteria included genera such as Acinetobacter, Aeromonas, and Streptococcus, with Acinetobacter spp., Streptococcus suis, and Aliarcobacter cryaerophilus identified as high-priority species for food safety due to their persistence and antimicrobial resistance genes associations. Several genera showed strong correlations with resistance to macrolides, lincosamides, and beta-lactams. Moreover, the plasmid-borne and lateral gene transfer events were associated with dirty zone and carcass samples in comparison to clean zone samples, suggesting the potential dissemination of antimicrobial resistance genes, especially for macrolides and sulphonamides resistance genes. Tetracycline, beta-lactam, and aminoglycoside resistance genes were the most abundant antimicrobial resistance genes across all samples, consistent with a pig slaughterhouse environment. This study highlights distinct microbiome profiles across environmental zones of a pig slaughterhouse, reflecting the adaptation of bacterial taxa to specific processing conditions. The findings have significant implications for food business operators who have to apply appropriate hygienic measures to reduce the dissemination of bacterial food-borne pathogens and to mitigate the risk of antimicrobial resistance transfer along the food chain.

RevDate: 2025-12-05
CmpDate: 2025-12-05

Cervantes-Echeverría M, Jimenez-Rico MA, Manzo R, et al (2025)

Human-derived fecal virome transplantation (FVT) reshapes the murine gut microbiota and virome, enhancing glucose regulation.

PloS one, 20(12):e0337760 pii:PONE-D-25-25236.

The gut microbiome, comprising bacteria, viruses, archaea, fungi, and protists, plays a crucial role in regulating host metabolism and health. This study explored the effects of fecal virome transplantation (FVT) from healthy human donors on metabolic syndrome (MetS) in a diet-induced obesity (DIO) mouse model, without diet change. Mice received a single oral dose of human-derived virus-like particles (VLPs) and continued on a high-fat diet (HFD) for 17 weeks. Despite persistent dietary stress, FVT significantly improved glucose tolerance. Longitudinal profiling by virome shotgun metagenomics and bacterial 16S rRNA sequencing revealed marked, durable shifts in both viral and bacterial community composition. Notable bacterial changes included a decrease in Akkermansia muciniphila and Peptococcaceae and increases in Allobaculum and Coprococcus; A. muciniphila positively correlated with glucose levels and negatively correlated with body weight. Together, these results suggests that human-derived virome can durably reshape gut microbial ecology and improve glucose metabolism in mice with obesity, even without dietary modification, offering a novel avenue for developing phage-based therapies. This proof-of-concept study provides foundational observations for using human-derived VLPs for FVT in standard laboratory mouse models, and provides a foundation for elucidating bacteria-phage interactions and their role in host metabolic health.

RevDate: 2025-12-05
CmpDate: 2025-12-05

Hernández-Velázquez R, Ziemski M, NA Bokulich (2025)

ViromeXplore: integrative workflows for complete and reproducible virome characterization.

Briefings in bioinformatics, 26(6):.

Viruses play a crucial role in shaping microbial communities and global biogeochemical cycles, yet their vast genetic diversity remains underexplored. Next-generation sequencing technologies allow untargeted profiling of metagenomes from viral communities (viromes). However, existing workflows often lack modularity, flexibility, and seamless integration with other microbiome analysis platforms. Here, we introduce "ViromeXplore," a set of modular Nextflow workflows designed for efficient virome analysis. ViromeXplore incorporates state-of-the-art tools for contamination estimation, viral sequence identification, taxonomic assignment, functional annotation, and host prediction while optimizing computational resources. The workflows are containerized using Docker and Singularity, ensuring reproducibility and ease of deployment. Additionally, ViromeXplore offers optional integration with QIIME 2 and MOSHPIT, facilitating provenance tracking and interoperability with microbiome bioinformatics pipelines. By providing a scalable, user-friendly, and computationally efficient framework, ViromeXplore enhances viral metagenomic analysis and contributes to a deeper understanding of viral ecology. ViromeXplore is freely available at https://github.com/rhernandvel/ViromeXplore.

RevDate: 2025-12-05
CmpDate: 2025-12-05

Li C, Ge H, Huang W, et al (2025)

Vertically stratified microbial diversity and keystone species driving element cycling in the Magellan seamount sediments.

Microbial genomics, 11(12):.

Deep-sea polymetallic nodules, rich in cobalt, nickel and titanium, are valuable for electronics, aerospace and energy industries. However, the vertical distribution and ecological functions of prokaryotic communities in sediments beneath nodules from the Magellan seamounts, a unique microbial habitat characterized by ultra-slow sedimentation rates (0.4-4 mm ky[-1]) and heterogeneous metal gradients, remain poorly characterized. In our research, 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing and metagenomic analyses of sediment cores (0-20 cm) from the western Pacific polymetallic nodule province revealed statistically significant decreases in prokaryotic diversity (Shannon index: 9.446 to 2.288; P<0.001). Proteobacteria, Crenarchaeota, Chloroflexi and Bacteroidota were the dominant taxa. The microbial co-occurrence network in the surface layer had a longer mean path length (2.11 vs 1 in the bottom layer) and a larger network diameter (11 vs 1), indicating a loose community structure and greater resistance to disturbance, while the bottom microbial network had a higher density (0.037 vs 0.01) and clustering coefficient (0.32 vs 1), suggesting tight microbial interactions. The concentrations of MnO (6.96-9.41 µg g[-1]) and P2O5 (2.55-3.89 µg g[-1]) gradually decreased with increasing depth. The concentrations of Co and Pb were relatively high in the surface sediments (0-8 cm) but decreased significantly below 8 cm. In contrast, the concentrations of Fe2O3 and As increased with depth. The environmental factors depth, MnO, Fe2O3 and heavy metals (Cr, Zn and Cu) were found to be the main drivers of the microbial community structure. We assembled 122 metagenome-assembled genomes from the metagenomic data. Gene abundance analysis revealed that sox genes (soxB/C/D/X/Y/Z) and assimilatory sulphate reduction genes (cysC and cysH) were highly abundant in the surface sediment, whereas the abundance of dissimilatory sulphate reduction genes (dsrA and dsrB) was enhanced in the bottom layer, reflecting a hierarchical adaptive strategy for sulphur metabolism. Our study expands current knowledge on the vertical variations of microbial diversity and microbially driven biogeochemical cycling in deep-sea settings underneath polymetallic nodules. Characterizing the microbial community underneath those nodules may provide insights into microbial resilience in extreme oligotrophic environments and valuable insights for future deep-sea mining activities.

RevDate: 2025-12-05
CmpDate: 2025-12-05

Luu LDW, Bryant C, Brown J, et al (2025)

Cervicovaginal microbiome composition and absolute quantity are associated with pelvic inflammatory disease.

Microbial genomics, 11(12):.

Pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), which involves infection and inflammation of the female reproductive tract, can lead to sequelae including chronic pelvic pain, ectopic pregnancy and tubal factor infertility. A causative pathogen is not identified in many PID cases (idiopathic PID) and does not develop in all women with a sexually transmitted infection or bacterial vaginosis. Therefore, there is a need to better understand the pathogenesis of PID. A case-control study was conducted to explore microbiome, antibiotic resistance and immune gene expression in PID. Microbial profiling using both 16S rRNA gene amplicon and metagenomic approaches revealed that bacterial vaginosis-associated bacteria such as Gardnerella vaginalis, Fannyhessea vaginae, Ureaplasma parvum and members of the Prevotella spp. were significantly enriched in PID cases, while healthy controls were associated with Lactobacillus (L.) crispatus. Quantitative analysis with species-specific quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) indicated that a high copy number of L. crispatus (measured using calibrated copy estimates by qPCR) was strongly associated with cervical samples from women in the control group, whereas PID cases with this organism had low copies when measured using qPCR. Antibiotic resistance to tetracyclines was more frequently predicted in metagenome-assembled genomes from PID cases, and corresponding isolates cultured from cases were less susceptible to doxycycline (L. iners). Overall, this study supports that PID is associated with cervicovaginal dysbiosis and an absence or low quantity of L. crispatus.

RevDate: 2025-12-05

Malina N, Tollerson R, Monami SJ, et al (2025)

Microbial community diversity and geochemistry inform bioremediation of molybdenum-contaminated groundwater.

Applied and environmental microbiology [Epub ahead of print].

In situ remediation of groundwater at coal combustion product (CCP) sites can be challenging for elements such as molybdenum (Mo), which do not respond well to commonly used treatment. This research was initiated to improve the understanding of geochemistry and microbial diversity associated with a Mo plume at a CCP site toward the development of an in situ treatment scheme. Diffusive microbial samplers were designed and deployed at the study site for 9 weeks. Afterward, geochemical and community analyses were used as the basis to understand how microbial communities respond to elevated Mo concentrations within a plume. Our results show that the Mo and other constituents within the plume do not reduce the diversity of the community, in contrast to trends observed at other industrial sites with metals and metalloids in groundwater. Interestingly, bacteria of the order Burkholderiales were higher in abundance in wells where Mo >0.3 mg/L, and several sulfate-reducing bacteria were less abundant but not absent. Molybdenum sequestration experiments were also performed with sulfate-reducing bacteria enriched from groundwater samples collected at the site. The results show that Desulfomicrobium escambiense played a major role in Mo sequestration and activated a detoxification mechanism. This process involved the sequential activation of periplasmic heavy metal sensors, followed by the activation of atpE ATP synthase, which may function as an exporter of Mo to form Mo-S species in the periplasm of the cell. The results provide important considerations for bioremediation potential in groundwater settings impacted by Mo, especially those who seek to stimulate sulfate-reducing bacteria for Mo sequestration in biogenic sulfide solids.IMPORTANCEBioremediation of contaminated sites has become popular for chlorinated hydrocarbons, but it has not been widely applied to inorganic constituents outside of arsenic. Here, we show the potential for the development of geochemistry-informed bioremediation technologies of Mo-contaminated groundwater by leveraging Mo-tolerant communities despite the suppression of sulfate reduction by Mo.

RevDate: 2025-12-05
CmpDate: 2025-12-05

McCaughan KJ, KE Kniel (2026)

Current Knowledge and Future Directions for Cyclospora cayetanensis Research and Its Surrogates.

Comprehensive reviews in food science and food safety, 25(1):e70327.

Cyclospora cayetanensis is a foodborne protozoan parasite that causes cyclosporiasis, a disease transmitted by the consumption of sporulated oocysts, often via contaminated produce. Since 2018, outbreaks traced back to domestically grown produce in the United States have raised growing concern. Despite its public health significance, research is hindered by methodological challenges, including inability to culture in vitro/in vivo and limited genomic characterization. This review examines current knowledge on its occurrence and transmission, detection methods, host-parasite interactions, genetics, and remediation strategies, while also evaluating use of surrogate organisms (Eimeria spp. and Cryptosporidium parvum) to address research gaps. Detection remains challenging due to low oocyst concentrations in environmental and food matrices, requiring highly sensitive molecular assays. Additionally, the lack of standardized sampling methods that are representative of an entire batch of produces further complicates reliable detection and surveillance efforts. The recently implemented Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Bacteriological Analytical Manual (BAM) Chapter 19c method has improved sensitivity but still requires refinement. Although Eimeria spp. offer insight into sporulation and environmental behaviors and C. parvum has supported methodological development, neither fully replicates C. cayetanensis biology; limiting the translatability of surrogate-based research. Remediation strategies are underexplored, though research on related coccidia suggests significant resistances to conventional sanitizers. Genomic advancements, including the identification of distinct C. cayetanensis lineages, provide useful insights, though gaps in genome assemblies limit phylogenetic and functional analyses. Emerging tools, such as metagenomics, single-cell sequencing, and AI-driven bioinformatics, may overcome persistent barriers. Addressing these challenges is essential for improving detection, risk assessment, and guiding policy, all of which will mitigate the public health burden of cyclosporiasis.

RevDate: 2025-12-05
CmpDate: 2025-12-05

Orsud H, Zoughbor S, AlDhaheri F, et al (2025)

Multi-marker comparative analysis of 18S, ITS1, and ITS2 primers for human gut mycobiome profiling.

Frontiers in bioinformatics, 5:1690766.

BACKGROUND: Gut fungi play crucial roles in human health. The profiling of the human gut mycobiome continues to progress. However, adjustments in the selection of ribosomal DNA marker regions can substantially affect the taxonomic resolution of a population. In particular, the impact of using primers' combinations is insufficiently defined. In this study, we investigated the performance of three targeted sequencing regions, ITS1, ITS2 and 18S rRNA, separately and in combination.

METHODS: Eight fecal samples from healthy individuals (n = 4) and cancer patients (n = 4) were selected as proof of principle for amplicon-based sequencing conducted with the DNBSEQ™ sequencing system. Quality-filtered reads were grouped into operational taxonomic units (OTUs) via USEARCH and categorized using the SILVA (18S) and UNITE (ITS) databases. Downstream bioinformatics encompassed diversity analyses, principal component analysis (PCA), and biomarker detection via linear discriminant analysis effect size (LEfSe). To improve taxonomic coverage and compositional understanding, data were examined using ALDEx2 with centered log-ratio (CLR) transformation, facilitating reliable differential abundance and effect size assessment in small sample metagenomic contexts.

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: Among primers, ITS2 and ITS1 enhanced the coverage of identified taxa, with operational taxonomic unit quantities of 183 and 158, respectively, compared to 58 OTUs of 18S. Accordingly, among primer combinations tested, the triple integration of ITS1-ITS2-18S produced the highest fungal richness, while the dual ITS1-ITS2 combined datasets enhanced group discrimination analysis, showing enrichment of Candida albicans and scarcity of Penicillium sp. in cancer patients. Our findings based on ITS sequencing and the combination of ITS1 and ITS2 provide instructive information on the composition and dynamics of gut fungi in our initial test subjects, enhancing our understanding of their roles in gut homeostasis and the microbial shifts associated with cancer. Despite our approach being conducted with a limited cohort to establish methodological feasibility, it brings attention to multi-marker strategies, demonstrating that integrated primer datasets surpass traditional single-marker methods in both taxonomic coverage and biomarker detection sensitivity in low-biomass fecal samples. Our research provides a reliable starting point for future studies on gut mycobiome in both healthy and diseased individuals, which could lead to better diagnostics and treatments based on microbiome profiles.

RevDate: 2025-12-05
CmpDate: 2025-12-05

Ren M, Q Liao (2025)

Diagnosis of Salmonella enterica-induced septic arthritis in a healthy child using metagenomic next-generation sequencing: a case report.

Frontiers in pediatrics, 13:1704234.

Salmonella enterica-induced arthritis frequently manifests in children with malignancies, sickle cell disease, immunodeficiency, or undergoing immunosuppressive therapy; however, its incidence in healthy children is rare. Here, we present a case of septic arthritis resulting from S. enterica infection in a previously healthy child, diagnosed utilizing metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS). This case underscores the utility of mNGS in the clinical identification of S. enterica arthritis. Particularly in scenarios where the causative pathogen remains unidentified, mNGS emerges as a pivotal adjunctive diagnostic modality for uncommon pathogens.

RevDate: 2025-12-05
CmpDate: 2025-12-05

Huang J, Li S, Jiang C, et al (2025)

Targeted next-generation sequencing for respiratory infections in patients with haematological malignancies.

Frontiers in cellular and infection microbiology, 15:1678858.

BACKGROUND: Patients with haematological malignancies are immunocompromised and prone to respiratory infections, but identification of causative pathogens is challenging. The aim of this study was to analyse the ability of targeted next-generation sequencing (tNGS) to detect pathogens in immunocompromised patients.

METHODS: tNGS and conventional microbiological tests (CMT) were performed on samples from the respiratory tract of 99 patients with suspected respiratory infections. Metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS) was conducted in parallel in 43 patients. Comparative analysis was conducted using the Pearson χ2 test and Fisher's exact test, as appropriate.

RESULTS: The overall microbial detection rates for tNGS were 100% (23/23) in the upper respiratory tract and 96.1% (99/103) in the lower respiratory tract. Microorganism colonization was detected by tNGS in 80.8% (97/120) of cases. The sensitivity of tNGS was approximately 30% higher than that of CMT (87.7% vs. 52.5%; P < 0.001), but tNGS had a lower specificity (33.3% vs. 83.3%; P = 0.242). tNGS improved the overall treatment success rate by 69.7% (69/99 cases) in CMT true-negative or CMT-partially matched cases. In the paired respiratory tNGS and mNGS cases, tNGS verified 73.3% (11/15) cases of infection, while mNGS only verified 40% (P = 0.139).

CONCLUSIONS: Most immunosuppressed patients are colonized by microorganisms, and require prompt identification of the cause of any infections. tNGS has promising diagnostic potential and offers valuable information for optimizing antibiotic therapy, especially when compared to CMT.

RevDate: 2025-12-05
CmpDate: 2025-12-05

Preenanka R, Sivam V, Sasikala R, et al (2025)

Muscle Microbiome Analysis of Indian Mackerel (Rastrelliger kanagurta) Delineated Classical and Novel Spoilage Bacteria.

Journal of food science, 90(12):e70751.

Metagenomics allows a comprehensive insight into the spoilage-associated muscle microbiome shifts in the air-packed and vacuum-packed Indian mackerel. This study explored the microbial composition and diversity of spoilage flora in air-packed (T1M, T2M, and T3M) and vacuum-packed (T4M, T5M, and T6M) Indian mackerel (Rastrelliger kanagurta) stored at 0 ± 2°C (iced), 5 ± 2°C (chilled), and 30 ± 2°C (abused) temperatures through metagenomics, targeting the V1-V9 region of 16s rRNA. Total Volatile Base Nitrogen and Thiobarbituric Acid were analyzed to confirm the spoilage threshold limit, and accordingly, the fish muscle tissue on the spoilage day was selected for microbiome analysis. Metagenomic analysis revealed distinct variation in the relative abundance and spoilage microbiome between the air-packed and vacuum-packed Indian mackerel stored at iced, chilled, and abused temperatures. The predominant bacterial species responsible for spoilage were Cetobacterium ceti, Clostridium polyendosporum, and Gilliamella apicola in vacuum-packed mackerel, whereas Shewanella arctica, S. aquimarina, S. baltica, Staphylococcus xylosus, and Burkholderia cepacia played a major role in the spoilage of air-packed samples. The observed bacterial population dynamics across different temperatures and packaging significantly influenced the microbiome diversity in Indian mackerel. Summing up, this study emphasizes the unique and diverse microbes contributing to spoilage and provides a valuable guide for the flora that need to be controlled for extending the shelf life of Indian mackerel.

RevDate: 2025-12-05

Zhang C, Zhao Z, Zhou F, et al (2025)

Conventional and Biodegradable Microplastics Both Impair Soil Phosphorus Cycling and Availability via Microbial Suppression.

Environmental science & technology [Epub ahead of print].

Microplastics (MPs) are emerging soil pollutants that can disrupt essential biogeochemical processes, yet their effects on phosphorus (P) cycling remain underexplored. Here, we conducted a 150-day incubation experiment using agricultural soil amended with either polyethylene (PE, conventional) or polylactic acid (PLA, biodegradable) MPs to investigate their impact on microbially mediated P cycling. MPs altered soil P cycling and decreased available phosphorus (AP) by ∼15% after 90 days. Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy revealed weakened AP-associated functional groups (P-O-P, P-O, and P═O), most pronounced under PLA treatment. These shifts were accompanied by reduced abundances of key P-cycling taxa (Bacillus, Paenibacillus, and Sphingomonas) and downregulation of phosphatase gene abundance (phoA/D/X: -65.4% in PE, -59.8% in PLA). Correspondingly, the activities of acid, neutral, and alkaline phosphatases were all suppressed, with alkaline phosphatase in PE-treated soil reduced by 34.1%. Together, these results demonstrate that MPs disturb biotic transformation pathways, leading to subsequent alterations in the chemical speciation of soil P and decreased AP content. Notably, significant disruption was observed for both conventional and biodegradable types. Our findings challenge the prevailing assumption of environmental benignity for biodegradable plastics and underscore the urgent need for mechanistic assessments of their byproducts. Such disruption may hinder microbial P mobilization and decrease fertilizer use efficiency, ultimately threatening soil health and agricultural sustainability.

RevDate: 2025-12-05

Jiang Y, Che L, SC Li (2025)

Deciphering the personalized functional redundancy hierarchy in the gut microbiome.

Microbiome pii:10.1186/s40168-025-02273-w [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: Functional redundancy (FR) in the human gut microbiome is crucial for maintaining stability and resilience, exhibiting a hierarchical structure. However, the precise configuration and functional implications of this hierarchy remain elusive and limited by single-metric measurements. We aimed to develop a method that comprehensively characterizes the hierarchical organization of functional redundancy in personalized microbiomes.

RESULTS: We represented functional redundancy as a network and developed a structural entropy (SE)-based approach to elucidate FR hierarchy, revealing functional redundancy clusters (FRCs)-groups of species capable of independently executing specific metabolic pathways. Through controlled simulations and cross-cohort analyses spanning 4912 gut metagenomes across 28 disease cohorts, we established that our approach offers higher resolution, more comprehensive measurement, and greater robustness in detecting disease-associated functional patterns than traditional FR methods. In healthy individuals, we observed FR network polycentric structure, which shifted to monocentric structure in non-alcoholic steatohepatitis patients. Vitamin biosynthesis FRCs correlated with microbiota transplantation efficiency, while FRCs specialized in short-chain fatty acid production predicted immunotherapy response and patient survival. Permutation tests validated the causal relationship between SE differences and disease phenotypes, while perturbation experiments revealed that FR keystone species exert disproportionate influence on the system's resilience.

CONCLUSIONS: Our SE-based approach to functional redundancy analysis provides superior sensitivity compared to conventional metrics by integrating multiple hierarchical levels of functional organization. This methodology establishes a novel perspective for understanding microbiome stability through personalized FR networks, positioning FRCs as promising diagnostic markers and therapeutic targets for microbiome-associated diseases. Video Abstract.

RevDate: 2025-12-05

Sakanaka A, Furuno M, Ishikawa A, et al (2025)

Diabetes alters the supragingival microbiome through plasma-to-saliva migration of glucose and fructose.

Microbiome pii:10.1186/s40168-025-02256-x [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: Dental caries, a dysbiotic biofilm disease driven by polymicrobial acidogenesis, often coexists with type 2 diabetes (T2D). Previous studies suggest covarying relationships between circulating and salivary metabolites in patients with T2D. However, the role of hyperglycemia-induced saccharide migration from plasma to saliva in caries pathogenesis remains unclear. Here, we developed a novel method for untargeted metabolomics profiling of trace saliva from sublingual and submandibular glands, comparing this profile with those of plasma and whole saliva in participants with T2D (n = 31) and those with normoglycemia (n = 30). This comparison aimed to determine how circulating saccharide migration into the oral cavity and its subsequent microbial consumption are linked to dental caries. Additionally, shotgun metagenomic sequencing was combined with this analysis to investigate the cariogenic impact of circulating saccharide migration on the composition and function of supragingival biofilm using MetaPhlAn4 and HUMAnN3 pipelines.

RESULTS: The metabolomics profiles of glandular saliva showed intermediate dissimilarity between plasma and whole saliva, reflecting cardiometabolic traits more sensitively than whole saliva. Glucose and fructose showed a decreasing positive correlation with glycemic parameters in the order of plasma, glandular saliva, and whole saliva, suggesting systemic-to-oral migration and subsequent microbial consumption. Saccharide migration was more pronounced in participants with dental caries and plaque accumulation, coinciding with shifts in supragingival microbiota, including depletion of Streptococcus sanguinis, Corynebacterium durum, and Rothia aeria, and enrichment of Streptococcus mutans, Veillonella parvula, and Actinomyces sp. oral taxon 448. Glycolytic potential increased at the community level. Improved glycemic control reduced fructose migration and mitigated dysbiosis, decreasing fructose phosphotransferase abundance and shifting the S. mutans-S. sanguinis balance. Experimental validation demonstrated that fructose promotes S. mutans dominance over S. sanguinis in dual-species biofilms.

CONCLUSIONS: This study establishes saccharide migration as a metabolic driver of supragingival dysbiosis in T2D. The findings highlight the role of both glucose and fructose in caries pathogenesis and suggest that glycemic control could serve as an effective strategy as part of caries control. Video Abstract.

RevDate: 2025-12-05

Saati-Santamaría Z, González-Dominici LI, Jiménez-Gómez A, et al (2025)

Transcriptome-guided discovery of novel plant-associated genes in a rhizosphere Pseudomonas.

Microbiome pii:10.1186/s40168-025-02277-6 [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: Microorganisms play important ecological roles during interactions with plants, with some strains promoting plant performance. However, the molecular basis of bacterial adaptation to the plant environment remains poorly understood. Microbial plant growth promotion is a complex process that likely involves numerous bacterial genes, many of which remain uncharacterized. In this study, we aimed to identify genes tightly associated with the bacterial adaptation to plant hosts by integrating transcriptomic data from bacteria colonizing roots with comparative genomic and metagenomic analyses.

RESULTS: Here, we identified a set of bacterial genes that were significantly upregulated during root colonization and are more abundant in rhizosphere communities than in bulk soils. Many of these genes had not been previously linked to plant-bacteria interactions. Comparative genomic analyses revealed some of these genes as more prevalent in plant-associated Pseudomonas genomes than in genomes from other environments. We argue that these genes may play relevant biological roles in this host, although only a few have been previously associated with plant colonization. Among them, we focused on a gene homologous to yafL, which encodes a cysteine peptidase of the NlpC/P60 family, known for its role in peptidoglycan remodelling. This gene is more abundant in rhizosphere microbiomes than in bulk soils, and it showed induced expression on the root surface, supporting its ecological relevance in root-associated environments. Functional validation using a knockout mutant confirmed its contribution to plant-bacteria interactions by affecting root architecture and plant growth.

CONCLUSIONS: This study provides new insights into the genetic basis of bacterial adaptation to the plant root environment. By integrating transcriptomic and comparative genomic analyses, we identified numerous genes upregulated during root colonization that are enriched in plant-associated Pseudomonas genomes. Our findings highlight previously overlooked bacterial functions with potential roles in plant-microbe interactions. The functional validation of a protein of the NlpC/P60 family supports its involvement in plant-bacteria interactions and underscores the importance of uncharacterized genes in shaping beneficial associations in the rhizosphere. Video Abstract.

RevDate: 2025-12-05

Bessière P, Hayes B, Fusade-Boyer M, et al (2025)

Seroprevalence and genetic diversity of feline immunodeficiency virus in outdoor cats in France.

Veterinary research pii:10.1186/s13567-025-01672-z [Epub ahead of print].

Feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) is a retrovirus that causes lifelong infections in cats and may lead to immune dysfunction. Despite its importance for feline health, there is limited FIV data from France. This study investigated samples collected from stray and owned cats with outdoor access across France between December 2023 and January 2025 to estimate FIV seroprevalence, identify seropositivity predictors and analyse the genetic diversity of circulating strains. Serological screening was performed using a commercial ELISA. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was conducted on ELISA-positive sera, with selected samples analysed by Sanger sequencing for phylogenetic inference. One sample underwent metagenomic shotgun sequencing using Oxford Nanopore technology. The national seroprevalence, estimated using a Bayesian hierarchical model, was 16% (95% credible interval: 8.4-20%) overall, then 31% (21-42%) among intact male cats, 18% (CrI: 10.6-25.2%) among neutered male cats and 8.4% (CrI: 1.8-14%) among female cats. Outdoor exposure, sex and neuter status were strong predictors of seropositivity. Among strays, predicted probability of seropositivity exceeded 50% by 5 years of age. All sequenced viruses were classified as subtype A. However, the phylogenetic analysis revealed notable genetic variability, indicating at least two independent introductions of FIV into France. While related to other European strains, several isolates appeared to share distinct ancestral lineages. The metagenomic dataset yielded approximately 100,000 FIV reads among 2 million total reads, enabling full genome recovery. These findings highlight the ongoing circulation of FIV in France and provide valuable data for veterinary practitioners and future surveillance efforts in Europe.

RevDate: 2025-12-04

Bu Y, Sun F, Liu L, et al (2025)

Comparative study on the rumen microbial communities and functions between Wagyu and Holstein calves.

BMC genomics pii:10.1186/s12864-025-12392-1 [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: Understanding the rumen microbiota's development in calves is essential for optimizing breed-specific feeding strategies. This study aimed to comparatively investigate the dynamic changes in the rumen microbial community structure and function in Wagyu and Holstein calves.

METHODS: Five 3-month-old Wagyu calves and five age-matched Holstein calves were selected. All animals received the same diet consisting of concentrate and hay, with free access to feed and water. Rumen fluid samples were collected monthly from 3 to 6 months of age. Metagenomic sequencing was performed to assess microbial composition (phylum and genus levels), alpha diversity (Shannon, Simpson, ACE, and Chao1 indices), and functional pathway (KEGG-based).

RESULTS: The cumulative relative abundance of dominant taxa at both phylum and genus levels declined with age in both breeds, more markedly in Wagyu calves than in Holsteins. From 3 to 6 months of age, the top five phyla combined dropped by 3.25% in Wagyu and 0.87% in Holstein calves, whereas the top ten genera combined decreased by 1.63% and 0.63%, respectively. Alpha diversity in Wagyu calves increased significantly with age. At 5 and 6 months, the Shannon, ACE, and Chao1 indices were significantly higher than those at 3 months (P < 0.05). Moreover, from 4 to 6 months, Wagyu calves consistently exhibited significantly higher diversity indices than Holsteins (P < 0.05). At 6 months, Wagyu calves showed a significant reduction in metabolism-related microbial genes and an increase in genes related to cellular processes and genetic information processing compared to earlier ages and Holstein calves (P < 0.05).

CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest potential breed-specific differences in the succession and functional maturation of rumen microbiota. Holstein calves developed earlier and more stable metabolic functions, while Wagyu calves underwent a more dynamic microbial selection process.

CLINICAL TRIAL NUMBER: Not applicable.

RevDate: 2025-12-04

Li F, Yan M, Su D, et al (2025)

Integrated meta-omics reveals AFB1 dose-dependent remodeling of the rumen microbiome-virome-metabolome axis driving metabolic impairment in goats.

Microbiome pii:10.1186/s40168-025-02291-8 [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: Aflatoxin B1 (AFB1), a highly carcinogenic and hepatotoxic mycotoxin frequently contaminating animal feed, presents serious health risks to both humans and livestock. Although AFB1's hepatotoxicity and other organ damage are extensively characterized, how this mycotoxin influences ruminal microbiota dynamics and functional activities in ruminants remains underexplored. Although some studies suggest that AFB1 reduces nutrient digestibility and performance in ruminants, the underlying mechanisms are unclear. To aid in developing effective mitigation strategies for aflatoxicosis in ruminants, this study randomly divided Saanen goats into three groups. The CON group received the standard ration without additives, whereas LD and HD groups were provided identical basal diets fortified with 50 or 500 μg/kg AFB1. Throughout the study, alterations in ruminal fermentation parameters, microbiome, and metabolome profiles were analyzed.

RESULTS: With increasing AFB1 levels, ruminal pH, the concentration of total volatile fatty acids (VFA), acetate, and propionate decreased quadratically, while butyrate decreased linearly. Metagenomic profiling indicated suppressed populations of Pelagibacter and Flavobacterium following AFB1 exposure, contrasting with promoted growth of Cryptobacteroides. Additionally, seven carbohydrate-active enzymes (CAZymes), specifically GT92, GT20, CE7, GT32, GT35, GT57, and GT50, were found to be more prevalent in the rumen of the CON group. Statistically higher viral loads characterized the HD group when benchmarked against CON group. Metabolomics analysis identified 1197 differential metabolites among the CON, LD, and HD groups, including cytochalasin Ppho and chrysophanol, both known for their teratogenic properties and their ability to induce cell death.

CONCLUSIONS: This study indicates that dietary AFB1 exposure can alter the ruminal microbial and metabolomic profiles, induce prophage activation, and impact carbohydrate degradation and microbial protein turnover. These alterations may contribute to reductions in ruminal pH and volatile fatty acid concentrations, thereby impairing feed digestibility and animal performance. The findings provide valuable insights into AFB1's effects on rumen health, and further investigations of these metabolic pathways may help develop precision interventions to mitigate AFB1-induced rumen dysfunction and productivity losses. Video Abstract.

RevDate: 2025-12-04

Franco-Duarte R, Saati-Santamaría Z, Choowong P, et al (2025)

Oral-associated bacteria in the gut microbiome of individuals with type 2 diabetes: a secondary analysis of metagenomic data.

BMC oral health pii:10.1186/s12903-025-07285-4 [Epub ahead of print].

RevDate: 2025-12-04

Karnachuk OV, Panova IA, Rusanov II, et al (2025)

Thermophilic and mesophilic sulfate reduction by rare biosphere bacteria in acidic metal-bearing mine wastes from the temperate climate zone.

Scientific reports pii:10.1038/s41598-025-28271-4 [Epub ahead of print].

Dissimilatory sulfate reduction is the main microbial process that detoxifies metals and increases pH in acid mine drainage. Acidophilic, copper-resistant Desulfosporosinus sp. BG and Desulfosporosinus sp. OT were previously isolated from acidic metalliferous tailings of the Bom-Gorkhon mine in Transbaikalia and Norilsk, respectively. To understand the role of sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) in mine tailings, we returned to the Bom-Gorkhon site to measure sulfate-reduction rate (SRR) with radioactive tracer and to estimate the proportion of SRB in the microbial community using 16 SrRNA gene profiling and metagenomic analysis. The SRR measured under ambient temperature conditions was high, reaching 9.86 ± 0.89 µmol SO4 cm[- 3] day[- 1]. Unexpectedly for a temperate biotope, SRR values of the same order of magnitude were recorded at 60 °C. Thermophilic spore-forming Desulfotomaculum and Desulfofundulus are likely involved in the thermophilic process. The spores of thermophilic Desulfofundulus germinating at 20 °C may input into sulfate reduction at in-situ temperature conditions. Metagenomic analysis by dsr gene mapping and 16 S rRNA gene profiling revealed low abundance of Desulfosporosinus and other SRBs, indicating that geochemically important active sulfate reduction in acidic wetland sediments is carried out by a "rare biosphere" consortium. The cultivated BG[T] and OT strains are described as Desulfosporosinus cupriresistens sp. nov.

RevDate: 2025-12-04

Ma J, Kim N, Cha JH, et al (2025)

A human gut metagenome-assembled genome catalogue spanning 41 countries supports genome-scale metabolic models.

Nature microbiology [Epub ahead of print].

Understanding the human gut microbiome requires comprehensive genomic catalogues, yet many lack geographic diversity and contain medium-quality metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) missing up to 50% of genomic regions, potentially distorting functional insights. Here we describe an enhanced Human Reference Gut Microbiome (HRGM2) resource, a catalogue of near-complete MAGs (≥90% completeness, ≤5% contamination) and isolate genomes. HRGM2 comprises 155,211 non-redundant near-complete genomes from 4,824 prokaryotic species across 41 countries, representing a 66% increase in genome count and a 50% boost in species diversity compared to the Unified Human Gastrointestinal Genome catalogue. It enabled improved DNA-based species profiling, resolution of strain heterogeneity and survey of the human gut resistome. The exclusive use of these genomes improved metabolic capacity assessment, enabling high-confidence, automated genome-scale metabolic models of the entire microbiota and revealing disease-associated microbial metabolic interactions. This resource will facilitate reliable functional insights into gut microbiomes.

RevDate: 2025-12-04
CmpDate: 2025-12-04

Ste Marie J, Mays C, Guo B, et al (2025)

Longitudinal replicated metagenomic analysis of biosolids-amended soils reveals enrichment of ARGs, virulence factors, and ESKAPE pathogens.

npj antimicrobials and resistance, 3(1):96.

Biosolids land application introduces antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) and clinically relevant pathogens into agricultural soils, raising concerns about long-term environmental and public health impacts. Despite growing interest in biosolids reuse, there remains a critical need for replicated, longitudinal studies to assess how biosolids amendments shape soil microbiomes and resistomes during crop cultivation. In this replicated longitudinal greenhouse study, we used shotgun metagenomics to characterize the impact of biosolids amendment on the soil microbiome, resistome, virulence factors, and ESKAPE pathogens during carrot cultivation. Biosolids-amended soils exhibited increased richness of microbial genera (e.g., Rhodanobacter, Dyella, and Thermomonas), ARG subtypes (resistance to sulfonamide, tetracycline, fosmidomycin, and macrolides), and virulence factors compared to pristine controls. Notably, all six ESKAPE pathogens, including Enterococcus faecium, Staphylococcus aureus, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Acinetobacter baumannii, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Enterobacter spp., were detected at elevated relative abundances (1.4- and 3.4-fold) in biosolids-amended soils and remained detectable throughout the 11-week cultivation period. Network analysis revealed statistically supported co-occurrences between microbial taxa and ARGs (with resistance to tetracyclines, beta-lactams, chloramphenicol, and multidrugs), suggesting possible host associations. These findings underscore the ecological and clinical relevance of biosolids amendment and highlight the need for integrated surveillance frameworks to mitigate antimicrobial resistance dissemination in agricultural environments.

RevDate: 2025-12-04

Kar S, Reddy MK, Asthana R, et al (2025)

Synergistic effects of syzygium cumini sawdust biochar and poultry manure on soil quality enhancement, nitrogen, organic carbon dynamics, and Amaranthus cruentus growth.

Scientific reports pii:10.1038/s41598-025-25003-6 [Epub ahead of print].

The study aimed to evaluate the potential of incorporating biochar with poultry manure to address the constant challenges of sandy, loam soils due to poor water retention and low soil fertility, and their influence on the growth and yield of Amaranthus cruentus during the Rabi and Kharif seasons. The combined effect of manures on soil health over different seasons was unexplored, so the current research has been taken up to understand the impact of different treatments on physical, chemical, and microbial dynamics in the Rabi and Kharif seasons. Advanced statistical analysis was used to measure the soil and plant factor variations across seasons. Pre- and post-harvest results showed substantial progress in the soil bulk density, water-holding capacity (WHC), and nutrient retention in KR5 (biochar + poultry manure) treatment, where WHC displayed a strong positive correlation with organic matter (r > 0.82). Even chemical analysis indicated increased soil nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, and carbon levels. Metagenomic analysis implied microbial diversity and abundance promoting nitrogen fixation and decomposition of organic matter. FTIR and SEM also revealed structural improvements that are beneficial for microbial colonization and nutrient retention. The combination of biochar and poultry manure showed higher growth, increasing plant height by 40 cm and yielding over 550 g/m[2] during the Kharif season. The results have revealed that the combination of biochar and poultry manure has improved soil fertility, microbial diversity, and yield of Amaranthus cruentus grown in sandy loam soils.

RevDate: 2025-12-04
CmpDate: 2025-12-04

Tucker SJ, Füssel J, Freel KC, et al (2025)

A high-resolution diel survey of surface ocean metagenomes, metatranscriptomes, and transfer RNA transcripts.

Scientific data, 12(1):1913.

The roles of marine microbes in ecosystem processes are inherently linked to their ability to sense, respond, and ultimately adapt to environmental change. Capturing the nuances of this perpetual dialogue and its long-term implications requires insight into the subtle drivers of microbial responses to environmental change that are most accessible at the shortest scales of time. Here, we present a multi-omics dataset comprising surface ocean metagenomes, metatranscriptomes, tRNA transcripts, and biogeochemical measurements, collected every 1.5 hours for 48 hours at two stations within coastal and adjacent offshore waters of the tropical Pacific Ocean. We expect that this integrated dataset of multiple sequence types and environmental parameters will facilitate novel insights into microbial ecology, microbial physiology, and ocean biogeochemistry and help investigate the different mechanisms of adaptation that drive microbial responses to environmental change.

RevDate: 2025-12-04
CmpDate: 2025-12-04

Abad-Recio IL, Rubel V, Filker S, et al (2025)

The Basque Coast Estuarine Sediment Gene Catalogue.

Scientific data, 12(1):1909.

Estuaries are critical transition zones that link marine, riverine, and terrestrial ecosystems, including habitats like intertidal mudflats and tidal marshes. These ecosystems are biodiversity hotspots providing essential ecological functions such as nutrient cycling and pollutant removal. Despite their importance, there is a significant knowledge gap regarding the ecological functioning of these habitats and how they are impacted by anthropogenic pressures. From intertidal estuarine benthos along the Basque Coast 92 microbial metagenomic assemblies were retrieved that allowed us to reconstruct 390 medium plus 81 high quality MAGs, along with 108 million putative genes from bacteria, archaea, eukaryotes, and viruses. This unique dataset will enhance our understanding of ecosystem functioning, biodiversity, and be useful to reveal biogeochemical processes and the role of unculturable biomass.

RevDate: 2025-12-04
CmpDate: 2025-12-04

Pope R, Visconti A, Zhang X, et al (2025)

Faecal metabolites as a readout of habitual diet capture dietary interactions with the gut microbiome.

Nature communications, 16(1):10051.

The interplay between diet and gut microbiome composition is complex. Faecal metabolites, the end products of human and microbial metabolism, provide insights into these interactions. Here, we integrate faecal metabolomics, metagenomics, and habitual dietary data from 1810 individuals from the TwinsUK and 837 from the ZOE PREDICT1 cohorts. Using machine learning models, we find that faecal metabolites accurately predict reported intakes of 20 food groups (area under the curve (AUC) > 0.80 for meat, nuts and seeds, wholegrains, tea and coffee, and alcohol) and adherence to seven dietary patterns (AUC from 0.71 for the Plant-based Diet Index to 0.83 for the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension score). Notably, the faecal metabolome is a stronger predictor of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease risk (AUC = 0.86) than the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension score (AUC = 0.66). We identify 414 associations between 19 food groups and 211 metabolites, that significantly correlate with microbial α-diversity and 217 species. Our findings reveal that faecal metabolites capture mediations between diet and the gut microbiome, advancing our understanding of diet-related disease risk and informing metabolite-based interventions.

RevDate: 2025-12-04
CmpDate: 2025-12-04

Li Z, Zhao C, Mao Z, et al (2026)

Metagenomics insights into bacterial community, viral diversity and community-scale functions in fermented red pepper.

Food microbiology, 135:104986.

Fermented red peppers (FRPs) provide distinct flavor and possible health benefits, but understanding of their microbial functions, viral diversity, pathogenicity, and horizontal gene transfer (HGT) patterns remains limited. Integrated multi-method analysis revealed FRP's bacterial community was dominated by Bacillus (21.52 %), Lactobacillus sensu lato (14.27 %), and Pantoea (13.60 %). Bacillus drove core fermentation with an over 40 % contribution to carbon degradation and iron reduction. The virome was dominated by Caudoviricetes phages, yet 25.5 % of the functions of viral genes remained unknown. Critically, multidrug resistance genes were the most abundant ARGs, and beneficial bacteria served as major reservoirs for ARGs, co-occurring with potential opportunistic pathogens. Despite inhibitory conditions, these last dominated key metabolic nodes hydrogen generation and acetate oxidation. Counterintuitively, ARG profiles correlated with bacterial composition but not with mobile genetic elements or detected HGT events, challenging HGT as the primary ARG driver. These findings necessitate dual strategies: leveraging key microbes for fermentation efficiency while implementing stringent monitoring to mitigate pathogen and ARG related risks.

RevDate: 2025-12-04
CmpDate: 2025-12-04

Okoye CO, Ezenwanne BC, Olalowo OO, et al (2026)

Microbial-mycotoxin interactions in food: A review of ecotoxicological implications and omics approaches for understanding detoxification mechanisms.

Food microbiology, 135:104955.

Mycotoxins, toxic secondary metabolites produced by fungi such as Aspergillus, Fusarium, and Penicillium, frequently contaminate food supplies, posing risks to human health, animal welfare, and ecosystem stability. Mycotoxins like aflatoxins, ochratoxin A, fumonisins, trichothecenes, and zearalenone disrupt microbial communities, food chains, and environmental matrices, with synergistic interactions amplifying their toxicity. This review explores microbial-mycotoxin interactions in food systems, focusing on ecotoxicological implications and omics approaches for elucidating detoxification mechanisms. Microbial detoxification, through adsorption by cell wall components (e.g., β-glucans) or enzymatic biodegradation (e.g., lactonases, oxidoreductases), offers a sustainable alternative to physical and chemical methods. However, challenges include variable detoxification efficiency, mechanistic uncertainties, regulatory hurdles, and the detection of masked mycotoxins in complex food matrices. Omics technologies such as metagenomics, genomics, transcriptomics, and their integration provide comprehensive insights into microbial diversity, gene expression, enzyme activity, and metabolite transformations. In addition, omics integration enhances understanding of microbial-mycotoxin dynamics, supporting targeted biocontrol strategies. Future prospects include leveraging synthetic biology, CRISPR-based gene editing, and machine learning-assisted bioinformatics to optimize microbial strains and predict detoxification outcomes. By addressing these challenges, omics-driven approaches can mitigate mycotoxin contamination, ensure food safety, and reduce ecotoxicological impacts across global food systems.

RevDate: 2025-12-04

Cao Y, Bowker MA, Feng Y, et al (2025)

The Great Wall of China harbors a diverse and protective biocrust microbiome.

Current biology : CB pii:S0960-9822(25)01468-X [Epub ahead of print].

The Great Wall of China, one of the most emblematic human heritage sites ever built, is largely covered by a living skin that has a potentially distinct microbiome compared with bare wall surfaces. However, the structure and function of this microbiome remain virtually unknown, which hampers any effort to understand the impacts of this microbiome on the long-term conservation of the Great Wall. Here, we investigated the microbiome of the Great Wall at six sampling sites along a 600-km section, which stretches across arid and semiarid climates and is covered by a mosaic of biological soil crusts (biocrusts) and exposed wall surfaces. We hypothesized that these biocrusts could establish a unique microhabitat and support a microbiome with a community structure and function potentially distinct from those on bare walls, thereby modulating the biodeterioration processes affecting the Great Wall. Our findings revealed that biocrust-covered sections exhibited a 12%-62% increase in abundance, diversity, and co-occurrence network complexity for bacterial and fungal communities compared with bare walls. Further metagenomic analyses indicated that the biocrust cover enhanced the abundance of overall functional genes and stress-resistance pathways within the microbiome by 4%-15%, while decreasing the metabolic pathways linked to heritage biodeterioration. Aridity was an additional determinant of the microbiome. Our work serves as a critical step toward understanding the microbiome of the Great Wall, which contributes to conserving this unparalleled human monument for future generations.

RevDate: 2025-12-04

Chen X, Wu Y, Xue B, et al (2025)

Mechanism of flavor formation in Suansun fermented by Lactiplantibacillus plantarum during a three-stage flavor formation model.

Food chemistry, 499:147316 pii:S0308-8146(25)04568-6 [Epub ahead of print].

This study employed an integrated multi-omics approach-metagenomics, metatranscriptomics, and metabolomics-to elucidate the flavor formation mechanism in Suansun, leading to the proposal of a three-stage flavor formation model. In the initial stage, Lactiplantibacillus plantarum dominates pyruvate metabolism, rapidly producing lactic acid and creating an acidic environment that drives microbial succession. This pH shift initiates the key flavor-forming stage, during which peak levels of Weissella cibaria align with linalool biosynthesis, suggesting strong temporal coordination. During the mid-to-late stages, the abundance of Clostridium species was strongly correlated with p-cresol generation via tyrosine catabolism, while Lactococcus and related taxa produce nonanal and ketones through fatty acid β-oxidation. Overall, the starter culture actively restructures the fermentation niche, sequentially activating metabolic pathways in successive microbial communities to shape a stable flavor profile. This staged model of flavor evolution provides a scientific foundation for optimizing and controlling Suansun fermentation quality.

RevDate: 2025-12-04

Liu T, Li L, Chen J, et al (2025)

Real-world aged microplastics exacerbate antibiotic resistance genes dissemination in anaerobic sludge digestion via enhancing microbial metabolite communication-driven pilus conjugative transfer.

Water research, 290:125056 pii:S0043-1354(25)01959-1 [Epub ahead of print].

The dissemination of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) facilitated by coexisting microplastics (MPs) in the "source-sink" hotspots of waste activated sludge (WAS) raises great concern. Despite real-world MPs undergoing aging, whether and how naturally aged microplastics (AMPs) affect ARG dissemination during sludge treatment remains largely unknown. Herein, we systematically explored the evolved effects and underlying mechanisms of environmentally relevant MPs (0, 3, and 30 mg/kg TS) aging on ARG propagation in anaerobic sludge digestion via multi-omics analyses. Specifically, microplastic exposure increased total ARG abundance by 2.59-15.31 % with enriched mobile genetic elements (MGEs, 0.22-16.71 %). These effects were escalated at higher microplastic dosages and aging degrees. Mechanistically, metagenomic and metaproteomic analyses revealed the drivers for ARG amplification in the sludge digester evolved from the pristine microplastics (PMPs)-induced higher oxidative stress and membrane permeability to AMPs-induced higher multidrug efflux coupled with pilus-mediated conjugation. Subsequently, metagenomic binning identified key multidrug-resistant hosts of Sedimentibacter, Alicycliphilus, and Sulfuricurvum genera. Moreover, high-resolution metabolomics and reactomics network analysis uncovered that AMPs stimulated microbial metabolite turnover, particularly of nitrogenous and sulfurous compounds, and enhanced the complexity and communication frequency of molecular transformation networks centered on lignin and protein nodes, thereby promoting ARG exchange. Finally, Mantel tests reconfirmed that reactive oxygen species level (Mantel's r = 0.93, p = 0.04) and metabolite network connectivity (Mantel's r = 0.82, p = 0.04) are paramount drivers of ARG spread. These findings offer novel insights into the ARG amplification risk driven by MPs aging, guiding targeted strategies to mitigate ARG spread and improve resource recovery in sludge bioengineering systems.

RevDate: 2025-12-04

Xie X, Li E, Jiang H, et al (2025)

Methane biogeochemical turnover constrains arsenic transformation in groundwater systems: Organic molecular signatures and microbial functional networks.

Water research, 290:125083 pii:S0043-1354(25)01986-4 [Epub ahead of print].

Arsenic (As) contamination of groundwater is primarily driven by microbially mediated redox processes and the dynamic evolution of dissolved organic matter (DOM). The influence of cycled methanogenesis and methane oxidation processes on As species transformation in geogenic As-contaminated groundwater, however, remain mechanistically elusive. In this study, quantitative relationships among DOM molecular characteristics, microbial functional networks, and As speciation were established using sediment microcosm experiments, Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (FT-ICR MS), and metagenomic sequencing. The results indicate that rates of methanogenesis and methane oxidation are regulated by thermodynamic properties of DOM. Labile DOM promoted As(III) mobilization at a rate of 1.04 μg kg[-1] d[-1] through methyl-related metabolism. Remarkably, enhanced methane oxidation further elevated the As(III) generation rate to 3.30 μg kg[-1] d[-1], underscoring the accelerating effect of methane cycling on As release. In contrast, humified DOM decoupled the geochemical linkage between iron and As. Microbial succession governed the redox transitions, as the proliferation of methanogens substantially increased methane production (up to 7.23 mg kg[-1] d[-1]), while methanotrophs enhanced oxidation rates from 94.99 to 190.76 mg kg[-1] d[-1]. This microbial progression coupled sulfate and As(V) reduction through the up-regulation of key functional genes (dsrAB, arsC). Energy conversion during DOM biodegradation governs As migration stages. These findings highlight the interactive constraints on As speciation dynamics by molecular characteristics of DOM and microbial functional networks during methane biotransformation processes in groundwater systems. This research provides new mechanistic insights into As biogeochemical cycling in geogenic contaminated groundwater.

RevDate: 2025-12-04

Bauchinger F, D Berry (2025)

Metatranscriptomic-driven insights into mucosal glycan degradation by the human gut microbiota.

FEMS microbiology ecology pii:8365572 [Epub ahead of print].

The secreted mucus layer in the human gastrointestinal tract constitutes both a protective boundary between gut lumen and epithelium as well as an important nutrient source for members of the gut microbiota. While many gut microbes possess the genetic potential to degrade mucin it is still unclear which species transcribe the respective genes. Here, we systematically analyzed publicly available metagenome and metatranscriptome datasets to characterize the gut microbial community involved in mucosal glycan degradation. We utilized co-occurrence network analysis and linear regression to elucidate the ecological strategies of, and relationship between, mucus degraders. We found that although approximately 60% of species carrying genes encoding for mucosal-glycan-degrading enzymes have detectable transcription of these genes, only 21 species prevalently transcribe more than 1 gene. Furthermore, the transcription of individual genes was frequently dominated by single species in individual samples. Transcription patterns suggested the presence of competitive mucosal glycan degraders characterized by abundance-driven transcription that were negative predictors for the transcription of other degraders as well as opportunistic species with decoupled abundance and transcription profiles. These findings provide insights into the ecology of the mucosal glycan degradation niche in the human gut microbiota.

RevDate: 2025-12-04
CmpDate: 2025-12-04

Yao J, Zhang J, Zheng L, et al (2025)

Coxiella burnetii Should Not Be Ignored: Two Cases of Q Fever Pneumonia Diagnosed by Metagenomic Next-Generation Sequencing.

Infection and drug resistance, 18:6227-6239.

BACKGROUND: Q fever is a globally distributed zoonotic disease caused by Coxiella burnetii (C. burnetii). As an obligate intracellular bacterium, C. burnetii is primarily transmitted from domestic animals to humans, with ticks also serving as potential vectors. The clinical manifestations of Q fever are often nonspecific and highly variable, making its diagnosis particularly challenging.

CASE PRESENTATION: Two male pneumonia patients were hospitalized in Deqing People's Hospital, one was 73 years old, and the other one was 30 years old, both of them presented with hyperpyrexia without a clear epidemiological history. However, initial empirical treatment was ineffective and microbiological cultures were all negative, then bronchoscopy was conducted for them and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) was sent for metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS) test. Ultimately, two patients were diagnosed with Q fever pneumonia, and the symptoms of patients were significantly improved after timely treatment with the special drug doxycycline and moxifloxacin, and lung inflammation in both patients were effectively absorbed in the subsequent follow-up examination.

CONCLUSION: Two cases of Q fever pneumonia were diagnosed through mNGS. As a new detection method, mNGS has advantages in the diagnosis of unknown infectious pathogens. As a zoonotic pathogen, C. burnetii should not be ignored. The One Health approach may be suitable for Q fever prevention and control.

RevDate: 2025-12-04
CmpDate: 2025-12-04

Chaves M, Hashish A, Goraichuk IV, et al (2025)

Nanopore sequencing in veterinary medicine: from concepts to clinical applications.

Frontiers in cellular and infection microbiology, 15:1701570.

Oxford Nanopore Technologies (ONT) stands at the forefront of third-generation sequencing, utilizing a nanopore sequencing approach to achieve high-throughput DNA and RNA sequencing. This technology offers several key advantages, including real-time data generation, portability, and long-read capabilities, making it an increasingly valuable tool for a wide range of applications. This review will focus on the use of ONT in veterinary diagnostics exploring the evolving applications of ONT in veterinary medicine and its use in detecting viral and bacterial pathogens, antimicrobial resistance profiling, foodborne disease surveillance, and metagenomic analysis. We provide an overview of the diverse sequencing workflows available, from sample preparation to bioinformatics analysis, and highlight their advantages over traditional sequencing methods. While powerful, nanopore sequencing does present challenges such as error rates, barcode crosstalk, and workflow complexities. This review will address these issues and discuss potential future developments, as well as the long-term impact of ONT on the field of genomics. As nanopore sequencing technology continues to advance, its role in veterinary diagnostics is expected to expand significantly, leading to improvements in disease surveillance, outbreak response, and contributions to crucial One Health initiatives.

RevDate: 2025-12-04
CmpDate: 2025-12-04

Fang XZ, Liu ZH, Duan LM, et al (2025)

Clinical features, pathogens, and prognosis of immunocompromised host pneumonia in patients with malignancies.

Frontiers in cellular and infection microbiology, 15:1646513.

BACKGROUND: Cancer patients face elevated risks of severe pulmonary infections due to malignancy-related immunosuppression and anti-neoplastic therapy. Comprehensive data on the etiology and prognostic factors remain limited.

METHODS: This prospective cohort study enrolled 115 patients with malignancies and immunocompromised host pneumonia (ICHP) from July 2023 to July 2024. Pathogens were identified using clinical metagenomics of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF), supported by CT imaging and clinical evaluation.

RESULTS: Pathogens were detected in 92 patients (80.0%), with 158 potential pathogens detected. Etiologic diagnoses were established by BALF mNGS alone in 68 (73.9%), by combined mNGS plus standard microbiologic testing (SMT) in 24 (26.1%), and by SMT alone in 1 (1.1%). Pneumocystis jirovecii (32, 20.3%), SARS-CoV-2 (14, 8.9%), Aspergillus fumigatus (13, 8.2%), Klebsiella pneumoniae (12, 7.6%) and Haemophilus influenzae (10, 6.3%) were the five most common pathogens. Coinfections occurred in 36.5% of all enrolled patients. Death at 28 days, ICU admission, Death at ICU was more frequent among patients with polymicrobial infections than single pathogen infection, though this difference was not statistically significant. Use rate of vasoactive drugs was significantly higher in patients with coinfection than in patients with single-pathogen infection (39.1% vs. 16.0%). invasive mechanical ventilation (IMV) (OR = 22.86, p=0.047), vasopressor use (OR = 72.69, p=0.039), and higher Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II (APACHE II) scores (OR = 1.46, p=0.016) were associated with increased 28-day all-cause mortality.

CONCLUSION: Patients with malignancies and evaluated for pulmonary infection were found to have unique microbiological profiles detected by BAL metagenomic sequencing. Co-detection of potential pathogens was high, and associated with high 28-day all-cause mortality.

RevDate: 2025-12-04
CmpDate: 2025-12-04

Huang W, Lai HP, Yu L, et al (2025)

Case Report: Chronic Q fever mimicking malignancy and tuberculosis in a hemodialysis patient: multidisciplinary diagnosis guided by metagenomic next-generation sequencing.

Frontiers in medicine, 12:1656891.

BACKGROUND: Q fever, caused by Coxiella burnetii, is a rare zoonosis whose clinical presentation is highly heterogeneous. Chronic Q fever can present with atypical systemic masses, creating significant diagnostic challenges as it lacks distinctive imaging features, often leading to misdiagnosis.

CASE PRESENTATION: We report a case of a 50-year-old woman on maintenance hemodialysis who presented with a one-month history of generalized myalgia and abdominal discomfort. Initial PET-CT imaging revealed multiple hypermetabolic abdominal lesions (SUV∼max∼ 7.1), mimicking metastatic malignancy. Histopathology of abdominal biopsies showed granulomatous inflammation with necrosis but lacked definitive microbiological evidence. Empirical anti-tuberculosis therapy was initiated based on clinical suspicion. Despite initial clinical improvement, the patient experienced recurrence of symptoms and radiological progression after 1 year. Re-evaluation with transesophageal echocardiography suggested the possibility of infective endocarditis. Crucially, metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS) of a repeat biopsy identified Coxiella burnetii, confirming chronic Q fever. Targeted doxycycline therapy resulted in sustained clinical and radiological improvement, with lesion resolution confirmed at the 14-month follow-up.

CONCLUSION: This case underscores the diagnostic difficulty of chronic Q fever due to its non-specific presentation and imaging characteristics. PET-CT may suggest malignancy, but incorporating advanced molecular diagnostics such as mNGS is critical for accurate pathogen identification. Recognizing atypical manifestations and utilizing integrative diagnostic approaches can facilitate timely, targeted therapy, improving clinical outcomes in rare infectious diseases like Q fever.

RevDate: 2025-12-04
CmpDate: 2025-12-04

Kong M, J Sun (2025)

Case Report: A case of Nocardia otitidiscaviarum pneumonia diagnosed by application of metagenome next-generation sequencing and a narrow literature review.

Frontiers in medicine, 12:1646940.

Nocardia is an opportunistic pathogen with relatively low incidence but high mortality. Recently, reports of Nocardia infections have increased; however, infections caused by Nocardia otitidiscaviarum (N. otitidiscaviarum) remain relatively rare. Due to its non-specific clinical manifestations and imaging features, N. ototidiscaviarum infections are frequently misdiagnosed or underdiagnosed, and no standardized guidelines currently exist for their diagnosis and treatment. In this study, we report a case of pulmonary infection caused by N. otitidiscaviarum, which was diagnosed using a combination of traditional microbial morphology and second-generation sequencing, and subsequently showed improvement following treatment with trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMZ) and linezolid. Additionally, we conducted a comprehensive literature review using PubMed to provide insights for improving the diagnosis and treatment of N. otitidiscaviarum infections.

RevDate: 2025-12-04
CmpDate: 2025-12-04

Leutert A, Zeckanovic A, Huber M, et al (2025)

Recurrent vaccine-strain varicella zoster virus reactivation in a child with acute lymphatic leukemia.

IDCases, 42:e02422.

This case illustrates recurrent herpes zoster (HZ) in a child with acute lymphatic leukemia. Interestingly, vaccine-strain HZ was confirmed by identifying the live-attenuated Oka vaccine strain (vOka) using metagenomic sequencing and sequence comparison at three loci that distinguish vOka from wild-type varicella zoster virus (VZV). Although vaccine-strain HZ is generally milder than HZ caused by wild-type VZV, prompt recognition and initiation of antiviral treatment is essential in immunocompromised patients, as fatal varicella due to disseminated vaccine-strain VZV has been reported in this high risk group.

RevDate: 2025-12-04
CmpDate: 2025-12-04

Kriem LS, King N, Niemann S, et al (2025)

Molecular Identification of Human and Plant Pathogens in Municipal Domestic Wastewater for Hydroponic System Applications.

International journal of microbiology, 2025:6958575.

Water is essential for human survival and socioeconomic development, yet its overconsumption threatens global food security and ecosystem integrity. This necessitates a 60% increase in food production, further straining water resources. Hydroponic systems represent a promising solution, utilizing up to 90% less water than traditional methods while providing optimal growing conditions for crops. This study was aimed at developing a PCR-based detection system for main human and plant pathogens in hydroponic systems using treated domestic wastewater. Metagenomic analysis of wastewater samples revealed significant microbial diversity, identifying human pathogens such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Yersinia enterocolitica, alongside plant pathogens including Rhodococcus fascians. Specific primer pairs for the most abundant species found in a domestic municipal wastewater sample of target pathogens (Streptococcus mutans, P. aeruginosa, Acinetobacter baumannii, Y. enterocolitica, Enterococcus faecalis, Pseudomonas viridiflava, R. fascians, Xanthomonas vesicatoria, and Pseudomonas syringae) were designed and validated, ensuring high specificity and efficiency. Future research should focus on enhancing detection methods and optimizing DNA extraction techniques to improve pathogen quantification and management in hydroponic systems. This approach is crucial for sustainable agricultural practices that minimize water usage while ensuring food safety and environmental health.

RevDate: 2025-12-04
CmpDate: 2025-12-04

Rana TS, Bansode RR, Rana JP, et al (2025)

A systematic review: polyphenol's effect on food allergy via microbiome modulation.

Frontiers in microbiology, 16:1673472.

INTRODUCTION: Food allergy is an increasing health concern worldwide. Microbes, food allergies, and polyphenols are found to be interrelated. However, studies relating polyphenols' effect on food allergy via microbiome modulation are scarce, and there is a lack of common signature microbiome modulation patterns. Thus, this review aims to summarize the effect of polyphenols on food allergy via microbiome modulation.

METHODS: Research articles were searched from Scopus, PubMed, ScienceDirect, and Web of Science database. The in vivo and in vitro studies were assessed via SYRCLE risk of bias and modified CONSORT checklist, respectively. The population characteristics and experimental details were extracted, and the data were synthesized narratively.

RESULTS: The included studies were free of selective reporting of results. The allergy of egg (ovalbumin), milk (𝛽-lactoglobulin), soybean (𝛽-conglycinin), and shrimp allergy contributed to 54%, 23%, 15%, and 8% of the total included studies, respectively. The used compounds were a different source or types of polyphenols such as cocoa, cyanidin-3-O-glucoside (C3G), avenanthramide's (AVA), rosmarinic acid (RA), neohesperidin, and fermented apple juice for egg allergy, luteolin, and green tea polyphenol (GTP) for soybean allergy, and flavonoids (Luteolin, myricetin and hyperoside), ferulic acid, and luteolin for milk allergy. Allergies of milk, egg, wheat, and shrimp occurred with the reduction of Lactobacillus, Alistipes, Odaribactor, Akkermansia, Bacteroides, and Lachnospiraceae_NK4A136_group and an increase of Prevotella, Alloprevotella, Faecalibaculum, Helicobactor, Blautia, Clostridium, and Staphylococcus. The polyphenols modulated these microbes in order to attenuate the food allergies.

DISCUSSION: The types of polyphenols, food allergies, animal model used, and taxonomic resolution of the microbiome studies lead to variation in the results. Thus, by increasing the studies on effect of polyphenols on individual food allergies, and combining with higher taxonomic resolution techniques such as shotgun metagenomics along with metabolomics would increase reliability of the results of the future studies.

RevDate: 2025-12-04
CmpDate: 2025-12-04

Khan N, Nasir MM, Mushtaq A, et al (2025)

SNPraefentia: a toolkit to prioritize microbial genome variants linked to health and disease.

Bioinformatics advances, 5(1):vbaf297.

MOTIVATION: Analysis of genomic variation in microbial genomes is crucial for understanding how microbes adapt, interact with their hosts, and influence health and disease. In metagenomic studies, where genetic material from entire microbial communities is sequenced, thousands of single-nucleotide polymorphisms can be detected across species and samples. However, identifying which of these variations has biologically or functionally relevant impacts remains a significant challenge.

RESULTS: To address this, we present SNPraefentia, a Python-based toolkit for prioritizing microbial SNPs based on their predicted functional relevance. The tool integrates multiple biologically meaningful parameters, including sequencing depth, physicochemical impact of amino acid substitutions, and the structural and functional context of mutations within annotated protein domains. SNPraefentia extracts variation depth and amino acid changes, annotates protein domains using UniProt, and computes individual impact scores. These are then integrated into a composite prioritization score that reflects the potential biological importance of each variant. Overall, SNPraefentia provides researchers with a systematic and reproducible approach to filter and rank microbial variants for downstream functional analysis or experimental validation.

The toolkit and test data are freely available at https://github.com/muneebdev7/SNPraefentia.

RevDate: 2025-12-04
CmpDate: 2025-12-04

Ouradova A, Ferrero G, Bratova M, et al (2025)

A vegan diet signature from a multi-omics study on different European populations is related to favorable metabolic outcomes.

Gut microbes, 17(1):2593050.

Vegan and omnivorous diets differ markedly in composition, but their effects on the gut microbiome, metabolome, and lipidome across populations remain insufficiently characterized. While both diet and country of origin influence these molecular layers, the relative contribution of diet versus country-specific factors has not yet been systematically evaluated within a multi-omics framework.In this cross-sectional, bicentric, observational study, we profiled healthy vegans (n = 100) and omnivores (n = 73) from the Czech Republic and Italy using integrated microbiome, metabolome, and lipidome analyses. Findings were subsequently validated in an independent cohort (n = 142).Significant differences across all omics layers were observed for both country and diet. The predictive models confirmed diet-associated separation, with validation cohort AUCs of 0.99 (lipidome), 0.89 (metabolome), and 0.87 (microbiome). Functional metagenome analysis revealed enrichment of amino acid biosynthesis, inositol degradation, and the pentose phosphate pathway in vegans, while omnivores presented greater potential for amino acid fermentation, fatty acid biosynthesis, and propanoate metabolism. Linear models identified a robust, country-independent "vegan signature" consisting of 27 lipid metabolites, five non-lipid metabolites, and 11 bacterial species. Several lipid features associated with an omnivorous diet were inversely related to the duration of vegan diet adherence. Some of the vegan-associated metabolites and bacteria have been previously linked to favorable cardiometabolic profiles, although causality remains to be established.These findings demonstrate that vegan diets are associated with reproducible, country-independent molecular and microbial signatures. Our results highlight diet-driven shifts in host-microbiota interactions and provide a framework for understanding how dietary patterns relate to host-microbiota interactions.

RevDate: 2025-12-04

Gluvić Z, Zafirović S, Sudar-Milovanović E, et al (2025)

Molecular insights into the gut-thyroid Axis: microbiota-driven biomarkers and diagnostic applications.

Expert review of molecular diagnostics [Epub ahead of print].

INTRODUCTION: New research has shown an intriguing link between the gut bacteria and the thyroid. A gut-thyroid relationship affects energy production, immunological function, and inflammation. As a result, disrupted gut flora harmony is associated with an increased/altered risk of thyroid dysfunction, autoimmune disorders, and metabolic imbalance. In addition to current diagnostic technology, understanding the gut flora-thyroid relationship could assist in the detection of thyroid-related conditions and modify patient treatment.

AREAS COVERED: This review explores state-of-the-art molecular techniques, e.g. metagenomics profiling and metabolomics, to uncover clinically relevant microbiota-driven biomarkers related to thyroid disorders.

EXPERT OPINION: Revealing potential microbiota-driven biomarker candidates is pivotal in enhancing our understanding of the mechanisms of thyroid disorders more precisely and identifying diagnostic and prognostic markers with clinical potential. Precisely, the individualization in the approach to patients with thyroid disorder, inevitably considering the harmonization of the gut microbiota-thyroid hormone relationship, is the basis of rational pharmacotherapy.

RevDate: 2025-12-04

Kropp DR, Glover ME, Samanta R, et al (2025)

Perinatal citalopram exposure alters the gut composition and microbial metabolic profiles of Sprague-Dawley rat dams and female offspring but not male offspring.

Biology of sex differences pii:10.1186/s13293-025-00794-5 [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors are widely prescribed during pregnancy. Their main route of administration is through the gut. However, their impact on the maternal and offspring gut microbiome and microbial metabolic pathways remains poorly understood. This study used metagenomic shotgun sequencing to examine the effects of perinatal citalopram exposure in rat dams and their offspring on gut composition and downstream metabolic pathways.

METHODS: We treated pregnant and nursing rat dams with either citalopram or vehicle (water). Their feces were collected, DNA from these samples was extracted and then sequenced using shotgun metagenomic sequencing. The BioBakery suite of microbiome analysis tools was utilized in tandem with RStudio to analyze the gut composition and microbial metabolic pathways of the rat dams and their offspring.

RESULTS: Pregnant and nursing dams treated with citalopram exhibited marked shifts in microbial community structure, including phylum-level alterations in Proteobacteria and Defferibacteria. Citalopram treated dams displayed significantly altered beta diversity. Species level alterations due to treatment were composed of five significantly altered microbes, two of which belong to the Proteobacteria phylum. These changes were highly diverse and were not congruent with microbe-level alterations observed in offspring. Alpha diversity of microbial metabolic pathways was compared using the Gini-Simpson index, which was significantly increased in dams suggesting greater metabolic functional diversity with age. Female offspring perinatally exposed to citalopram showed significant changes in gut beta diversity, with seven significant alterations at the microbe level. These microbial shifts were accompanied by twenty-one significantly altered microbial metabolic pathways. In contrast, male offspring showed no significant differences in microbial composition or beta diversity and only minor metabolic changes.

CONCLUSIONS: These findings demonstrate that maternal citalopram exposure during pregnancy and lactation has lasting, sex-specific impacts on the offspring's gut microbiome and microbial metabolic pathways. The pronounced alterations in female, but not male offspring, suggest that host sex may be a critical determinant in the developmental response to citalopram exposure. This work underscores the value of metagenomic approaches in uncovering complex host-microbiome interactions and highlights the need to consider offspring sex in evaluating the safety and long-term effects of antidepressant use during pregnancy.

RevDate: 2025-12-04

Peng J, Liu X, Wang J, et al (2025)

Diverse quorum sensing systems regulate microbial communication and biogeochemical processes in deep-sea cold seeps.

Microbiome pii:10.1186/s40168-025-02280-x [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: Quorum sensing is a fundamental chemical communication mechanism that enables microorganisms to coordinate behavior and adapt to environmental conditions. However, its contribution in deep-sea cold seep ecosystems, where diverse microbial communities and frequent communication occur, remains poorly understood. In this study, we aimed to elucidate the occurrence and potential ecological roles of quorum sensing in cold seeps.

RESULTS: We analyzed 170 metagenomes and 33 metatranscriptomes from 17 global cold seep sites, identifying 299,355 quorum sensing genes from the cold seep non-redundant gene catalog. These genes represent 34 types across six quorum sensing systems, with distribution patterns influenced by sediment depth and seep type. A total of 32,500 quorum sensing genes were identified in 3576 metagenome-assembled genomes from 12 archaeal and 108 bacterial phyla, revealing a complex network of intraspecies and interspecies communication. Microbial groups involved in key metabolic processes, such as sulfate-reducing bacteria, anaerobic methanotrophic archaea, diazotrophs, and organohalide reducers, were extensively regulated by quorum sensing, influencing biogeochemical cycles in cold seeps. Phylogenetic analysis and protein domain identification highlighted the involvement of key quorum sensing-related proteins (e.g., PDE, RpfC/G, CahR, and LuxR) in modulating microbial behaviors, such as motility and chemotaxis. Heterologous expression further confirmed the activity of representative LuxI-R pairs, and metabolomic profiling suggested the presence of putative quorum sensing inhibitors in cold seep sediments.

CONCLUSIONS: Overall, these findings highlight the complexity and significance of quorum sensing in microbial interactions, ecological adaptation, and biogeochemical cycling within cold seep ecosystems, advancing our understanding of microbial communication in the deep biosphere. Video Abstract.

RevDate: 2025-12-04
CmpDate: 2025-12-04

Jeilu O, Sumner JT, Moghadam AA, et al (2025)

Metagenomic profiling of airborne microbial communities from aircraft filters and face masks.

Microbiome, 13(1):249.

BACKGROUND: Airborne microbial communities, although often challenging to study due to low biomass, play crucial roles in public health and pathogen transmission. Through shotgun metagenomics, this study utilizes non-invasive air sampling of face masks and aircraft cabin filters to investigate microbial diversity in environments with frequent human interactions, including hospitals and airplanes. A comprehensive sampling and analysis workflow was developed, incorporating environmental and enrichment protocols to enhance microbial DNA recovery and diversity profiling.

RESULTS: Despite limitations in biomass, optimized extraction methods allowed for the successful identification of 407 species, with dominant taxa including Cutibacterium acnes, Staphylococcus epidermidis, Sphingomonas hankookensis, and Methylobacterium radiotolerans. Enrichment processing resulted in greater metagenome-assembled genome (MAG) recovery and higher antimicrobial resistance gene (ARG) identification.

CONCLUSIONS: The findings highlight the presence of ARGs in high-occupancy public spaces, suggesting the importance of monitoring and the potential for mitigating airborne transmission risks in such environments. This study demonstrates the utility of combining environmental and enrichment sampling to capture comprehensive microbial and ARG profiles in confined spaces, providing a framework for enhanced pathogen monitoring in public health contexts. Video Abstract.

RevDate: 2025-12-03
CmpDate: 2025-12-04

McAdams ZL, Campbell EJ, Dorfmeyer RA, et al (2025)

A novel dataset of 2,362 equine fecal microbiomes from veterinary teaching hospitals across three countries reveals effects of geography and disease.

Animal microbiome, 7(1):124.

BACKGROUND: Horses and other equids are reliant on the gut microbiome for health, and studies have reported associations between certain clinical conditions and features of the fecal microbiome. However, research to date on the equine fecal microbiome has often relied on small sample sizes collected from single and relatively localized geographic regions. Previous work also largely employs single timepoint analyses, or horses selected based on limited health criteria.

RESULTS: To address these limitations and expand our understanding of the core microbiome in health, and the changes associated with adverse outcomes, the Equine Gut Group (EGG) has collected and performed 16S rRNA sequencing on 2,362 fecal samples from 1,190 healthy and affected horses. This resource of 16S rRNA sequencing data with accompanying demographic and clinical metadata represent a diverse equine population in health and disease. We identified features making up the core microbiome of healthy equids and metadata factors influencing the relative abundance of those features. We then identified microbial markers of acute gastrointestinal disease at the community and taxonomic levels.

CONCLUSIONS: Here we present the EGG database and demonstrate its utility in characterizing the equine microbiome in health and acute gastrointestinal disease. The EGG 16S rRNA database is a valuable resource to study the equine microbiome and its role in equine health.

RevDate: 2025-12-03

Parwin N, Dixit S, Das S, et al (2025)

Metagenomic analysis of microbiome spatial dynamics in urban river confluence affected by city wastewater.

Genomics & informatics pii:10.1186/s44342-025-00054-3 [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: Environmental pollutants have a profound impact on microbial dynamics. This study highlights the influence of anthropogenic activity on the shift in bacterial diversity in the catchment area compared to upstream and downstream at Kathajodi, using a metagenomic approach for the first time in River Kathajodi.

METHODS: Water samples were collected from upstream, catchment, and downstream locations and transported at 4°C to the laboratory for DNA extraction, library preparation, sequencing, and physicochemical analysis employing inductively coupled plasma. The extracted DNA was sequenced via the Illumina HiSeq platform and analyzed through MG-RAST for taxonomic and functional classification using KEGG and COG annotations. Statistical diversity analysis, including rarefaction curves, alpha- and beta-diversity indices, and Venn diagrams, provided insights into microbial composition and community variations across sites.

RESULTS: A significant abundance of pollution indicator members of phylum Bacteroidetes (29.82%) in the catchment (CM), highly contaminated with metals, fecal, and other organic pollutants, could be attributed to their high metabolic capabilities to degrade them. The pristine upstream (US) exhibited an abundance of Shewanella (25.04%), Pseudomonas (17.35%), and Synechococcus (5.62%). The CM, influenced by high anthropogenic activity, showed higher abundances of Flavobacterium (5.20%), Arcobacter (4.05%), and Bacteroides (3.88%). In contrast, downstream (DS), with fewer anthropogenic activities, displayed higher abundances of Aeromonas (4.40%), Acidovorax (0.52%), and Acidimicrobium (0.32%). The highest bacterial diversity of CM could be due to the influence of the physicochemical properties of city waste effluent. From the Venn diagram, 73 common OTUs at the genera level were observed in all three sites, which indicates that the native microflora of the river water niche remains unaffected irrespective of the temporary changes in the vicinity. The functional profiling through KEGG and COG revealed that CM was enriched in carbohydrate metabolism (12.11%), while DS exhibited higher contributions to amino acid metabolism, along with the highest relative abundance of general function prediction (R) (12.89%), all indicative of stress adaptation and metabolic flexibility under polluted conditions. The clean upstream is home to oxygen-loving helpful bacteria, the catchment supports nutrient-hungry and sewage-linked microbes, while the downstream is dominated by metal-tolerant and possibly harmful bacteria, showing the clear impact of human activities along the river.

CONCLUSIONS: The marked shift in bacterial diversity between US, CM, and DS regions highlights the ecological consequences of anthropogenic impact. These findings emphasize the need for effective environmental management to safeguard water quality and prevent undesirable health issues.

RevDate: 2025-12-03

Yang T, Wang Y, Zhang Y, et al (2025)

Haemophilus influenzae dominance in fungal ball microbiome revealed through multi-niche metagenomic sequencing.

BMC microbiology pii:10.1186/s12866-025-04546-8 [Epub ahead of print].

OBJECTIVE: This study employed metagenomic sequencing to characterize the sinonasal microbiome in patients with unilateral maxillary sinus fungal ball (MSFB), with specific emphasis on bacterial-fungal interactions and functional pathways implicated in fungal ball pathogenesis.

METHODS: The study enrolled 30 MSFB patients and 30 healthy controls. Nasal secretion samples were obtained from three anatomical sites in MSFB cases: fungal ball cavity (FC), affected middle nasal meatus (AM), and contralateral unaffected middle nasal meatus (UM). And in the control group, samples were obtained from the healthy middle nasal meatus (HM). Metagenomic sequencing of microbial DNA was performed using the Illumina Novaseq platform. Taxonomic and functional analyses were conducted using Kraken2, Bracken, and HUMAnN2.

RESULTS: Bacteria dominated the microbiome in the FC group (98.53%), with Haemophilus influenzae identified as a key biomarker (LDA score > 5). A negative correlation between H. influenzae and Aspergillus flavus was observed in the FC group (r = -0.46, P = 0.013). Functional pathways enriched in the FC group included amino acid biosynthesis (map00290), lipopolysaccharide biosynthesis (map00540), and fatty acid biosynthesis (map00061), supporting H. influenzae survival and immune modulation. FC microbiota showed reduced diversity and distinct composition compared to other groups (PERMANOVA, P < 0.001). No significant differences were found in the composition of the microbiota between the bilateral middle nasal meatus groups of MSFB.

CONCLUSION: This study highlights H. influenzae as a critical bacterial biomarker in MSFB. The inverse relationship between H. influenzae and A. flavus may suggest competitive or immune-mediated interactions. These findings advance understanding of non-invasive fungal sinusitis. Future validation in larger fungal ball cohorts or invasive fungal sinusitis is warranted.

RevDate: 2025-12-03

Singleton CM, Jensen TBN, Delogu F, et al (2025)

The Microflora Danica atlas of Danish environmental microbiomes.

Nature [Epub ahead of print].

Over the past 20 years, there have been considerable advances in revealing the microbiomes that underpin processes in natural and human-associated environments. Recent large-scale metagenome surveys have recorded the variety of microbial life in the oceans[1], in the human gut[2] and on Earth[3], with compilations encompassing thousands of public datasets[4,5]. However, despite their broad scope, these studies often lack functional information, and their sample locations are frequently sparsely distributed, limited in resolution or lacking metadata. Here we present Microflora Danica-an atlas of Danish environmental microbiomes encompassing 10,683 shotgun metagenomes and 450 nearly full-length 16S and 18S rRNA datasets, linked to a five-level habitat classification scheme. We show that although human-disturbed habitats have high alpha diversity, species reoccur, revealing hidden homogeneity. This underlines the role of natural systems in maintaining total species (gamma) diversity and emphasizes the need for national baselines for tracking microbial responses to land-use and climate change. Consequently, we focused our dataset exploration on nitrifiers, a functional group closely linked to climate change and of major importance for Denmark's primary land use: agriculture. We identify several lineages encoding nitrifier key genes and reveal the effects of land disturbance on the abundance of well-studied, as well as uncharacterized, nitrifier groups, with potential implications for N2O emissions. Microflora Danica offers an unparalleled resource for addressing fundamental questions in microbial ecology about what drives microbial diversity, distribution and function.

RevDate: 2025-12-03
CmpDate: 2025-12-03

Muratore E, Conti G, Fabbrini M, et al (2025)

Distinct functional and compositional properties in the gut microbiome of children with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia identified by shotgun metagenomics.

Scientific reports, 15(1):43082.

Acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) represents the most common childhood malignancy, and emerging evidence underscores the impact of the gut microbiome (GM) on its pathogenesis. In this study, we used shotgun metagenomics to investigate the GM of 30 ALL patients at diagnosis-19 with B-ALL and 11 with T-ALL-and compared them to 176 healthy controls (HCs). When considered as a single ALL group versus HCs, clear compositional differences emerged: ALL patients exhibited higher relative abundances of Enterococcus faecium, oral commensals such as Rothia dentocariosa, and multiple opportunistic species, whereas HCs were enriched in short-chain fatty acid producers like Anaerostipes hadrus and Intestinibacter bartlettii. Functionally, the ALL GM relied more on protein and amino acid catabolism, while HCs possessed enhanced pathways for carbohydrate and folate metabolism. These findings broadly align with 16S rRNA-based analyses from previous publications, though some discrepancies highlight differences in technique-driven resolution. In contrast, comparing the two major molecular phenotypes-B-ALL and T-ALL-revealed only minimal taxonomic and functional differences, primarily confined to BAs metabolism pathways. Overall, our results indicate that children with ALL at the time of diagnosis already display a dysbiotic signature, bolstering the notion that a disturbance in GM development during childhood may be linked to the multistep pathogenesis model of ALL.

RevDate: 2025-12-03
CmpDate: 2025-12-03

Li H, Cao Y, Liu X, et al (2025)

Reconstruction of 1,979 prokaryotic metagenome-assembled genomes from 37 global cave environments.

Scientific data, 12(1):1896.

Cave microorganisms represent unique extremophiles that have evolved in isolated, nutrient-limited environments and harbor exceptional metabolic capabilities. However, knowledge of cave microbial diversity at genomic level remains limited. Previous studies have focused on individual caves and do not give a global picture. Here, we present the first prokaryotic cave metagenomic catalog from 37 geographical diverse cave environments. We employed an optimized genome reconstruction pipeline to recover 3,837 medium-to-high quality cave metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs). These MAGs were dereplicated into 1,979 species-level representative clusters that spanned 67 phyla of Bacteria (n = 1,858) and Archaea (n = 121) domains. Classification of representative species showed that 98.7% did not match any existing genome taxonomy classification of named species at ≥ 95% average nucleotide identity (ANI). Most representative genomes harbored putative biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) (98.0%) and enzymatic antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) (95.0%). This comprehensive MAGs catalog provides a foundational resource for exploring cave microbial diversity, secondary metabolism, and the evolutionary origins of antibiotic resistance in subterranean ecosystems.

RevDate: 2025-12-03
CmpDate: 2025-12-03

Coe A, Mullet JI, Vo NN, et al (2025)

A curated protein dataset for taxonomic classification of Prochlorococcus and Synechococcus in metagenomes.

Scientific data, 12(1):1895.

Prochlorococcus and Synechococcus are abundant marine picocyanobacteria that contribute significantly to ocean primary production. Recent genome sequencing efforts, including those presented here, have yielded a large number of high-quality reference genomes, enabling the classification of these picocyanobacteria in marine metagenomic sequence data at high phylogenetic resolution. When combined with environmental data, these classifications can guide cluster/clade/grade assignments and offer insights into niche differentiation within these populations. Here we present ProSynTax, a curated protein sequence dataset and accompanying classification workflow aimed at enhancing the taxonomic resolution of Prochlorococcus and Synechococcus classification. ProSynTax includes proteins from 1,260 genomes of Prochlorococcus and Synechococcus, including single-amplified genomes, high-quality draft genomes, and newly closed genomes. Additionally, ProSynTax incorporates proteins from 41,753 genomes of marine heterotrophic bacteria, archaea, and viruses to assess microbial and viral communities surrounding Prochlorococcus and Synechococcus. This resource enables accurate classification of picocyanobacterial clusters/clades/grades in metagenomic data - even when present at 0.15% of reads for Prochlorococcus or 0.03% of reads for Synechococcus.

RevDate: 2025-12-03

Bellankimath AB, Branders S, Kegel I, et al (2025)

Metagenomic sequencing enables accurate pathogen and antimicrobial susceptibility profiling in complicated UTIs in approximately four hours.

Nature communications pii:10.1038/s41467-025-66865-8 [Epub ahead of print].

Urinary tract infections (UTIs) affect 405 million people worldwide. Current diagnostics rely on cultures, which can take 2 to 4 days. This study evaluates eleven culture-independent methods for sample preparation from 78 complicated UTI patients, followed by real-time nanopore sequencing and data analysis. The metagenomic results are highly consistent with culture-based clinical routines (MALDI-TOF/VITEK-2). The optimized method demonstrated an accuracy score of 99% (100/101) for pathogen identification and 90% (589/653) for antimicrobial susceptibility profiling with 95% specificity. The method's robustness is highlighted by its ability to accurately identify pathogens with as few as 32 bacterial cells/µL and a low bacterial-to-host cell ratio limit of 0.5. Additionally, mNGS identified 13 pathogens that routine diagnostics missed, which were subsequently confirmed by Vivalytic or PCR. This method is up to 30% more economical than published studies and commercial kits. DNA yield and flow cytometry can be used for pre-screening to reduce costs, which is crucial for clinical adoption. This research highlights the rapid diagnosis of clinical UTIs using a cost-effective and scalable method that requires around four hours from sample collection to informed decision-making. Furthermore, it aims to improve antimicrobial and diagnostic stewardship by reducing empirical treatment and ensuring more judicious antibiotic use.

RevDate: 2025-12-03
CmpDate: 2025-12-03

Harrison LC, Allnutt TR, Hanieh S, et al (2025)

Indigenous infants in remote Australia retain an ancestral gut microbiome despite encroaching Westernization.

Nature communications, 16(1):9904.

Studies of traditional Indigenous compared to 'Western' gut microbiomes are underrepresented, and lacking in young children, limiting knowledge of early-life microbiomes in different cultural contexts. Here we analyze the gut metagenomes of 50 Indigenous Australian infants (median age

RevDate: 2025-12-03
CmpDate: 2025-12-03

Chinese Association Hematologists, Chinese Invasive Fungal Infection Working Group (2025)

[The Chinese guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of invasive fungal disease in patients with hematological disorders and cancers (the seventh revision)].

Zhonghua nei ke za zhi, 64(12):1155-1168.

In 2005, the Chinese Invasive Fungal Infection Working Group published the first guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of invasive fungal disease (IFD) in patients with hematological disorders and cancers, with the sixth revision released in 2020. Numerous advances in the fields of hematological oncology treatment and the diagnosis and management of IFD have significantly influenced the corresponding strategies. Therefore, the Chinese Invasive Fungal Infection Working Group has reviewed key research advances from 2020 to 2024 and released the seventh revision of the Chinese guidelines. Major revisions include: changes in the epidemiology of IFD; evaluation of novel diagnostic methods (especially PCR and metagenomic next-generation sequencing); updated recommendations on therapeutic drug monitoring and in vitro drug sensitivity test; management of breakthrough IFD; targeted therapy of Pneumocystis jiroveci pneumonia and cryptococcosis; and updated recommendation on the duration of antifungal therapy.

RevDate: 2025-12-03

Huang S, Yang P, Wang X, et al (2025)

Integrated metagenome and metabolome analysis reveals a disease signature of gut microbiota and the key gut microbiota-associated metabolite proline in schizophrenia.

Journal of psychiatric research, 193:223-235 pii:S0022-3956(25)00731-9 [Epub ahead of print].

Schizophrenia (SCZ) is a multifaceted psychiatric condition with a complex set of etiological factors. Recent studies have revealed that gut microbiota play a significant role in the neurobiology associated with SCZ. Utilizing metagenomic sequencing and analysis techniques, we obtained composition and functional information of the gut microbiota from 68 SCZ patients and 61 healthy control (HC) subjects. We identified 72 inter-group differential species, 49 differential metabolic pathways, and 1987 differential functional genes. A. odontolyticus and F. prausnitzii were the core species enriched in the SCZ group and the HC group, respectively. Arginine and proline metabolism were the most significant differential metabolic pathways, with K00286 being the differential functional gene catalyzing the synthesis of L-proline in this pathway. Notably, a strong disease classification model was developed based on the gut microbiota data, achieving an outstanding AUC of 0.94, outperforming earlier models, the model achieved AUC values of 0.745 and 0.845 in two separate external datasets, respectively. Furthermore, insights into mechanisms were investigated by analyzing the relationships between microbial species and their associated metabolic pathways. Future research is essential to clarify causal connections, detail specific molecular pathways-particularly those involving functional proteins such as K00286-and to explore the communication processes between the gut microbiota and the brain. Our results underscore the potential for microbiota-based biomarkers and therapeutic targets in SCZ, emphasizing the essential role of gut microbiota in this intricate disorder.

RevDate: 2025-12-03

Zhang L, Marfil-Sánchez A, Kuo TH, et al (2025)

Gut microbiome-mediated transformation of dietary phytonutrients is associated with health outcomes.

Nature microbiology [Epub ahead of print].

Food, especially plant-based diet, has complex chemical diversity. However, large-scale phytonutrient-metabolizing activities of gut bacteria are largely unknown. Here we integrated and systematically analysed multiple databases containing information on enzymatic reactions and food health benefits, and 3,068 global public human microbiomes. Transformation of 775 phytonutrients from edible plants was associated with enzymes encoded by diverse gut microbes. In vitro assays validated the biotransformation activity of gut species, for example, Eubacterium ramulus. The biotransformation of phytonutrients demonstrated high interpersonal and geographical variability. Machine learning models based on 2,486 public case-control microbiomes, using the abundances of enzymes associated with modification of phytonutrients present in health-associated foods, discriminated the health status of individuals in multiple disease contexts, suggesting altered biotransformation potential in disease. We validated the association of microbiome-encoded enzymes with the anti-inflammatory activity of common edible plants by combining metagenomics and metatranscriptomics analysis in specific-pathogen-free and germ-free mice. These findings have implications for designing precise, personalized diets to guide an individual towards a healthy state.

RevDate: 2025-12-03

Pacheco-Valenciana A, Tausch A, Veseli I, et al (2025)

Microbial model communities exhibit widespread metabolic interdependencies.

Communications biology pii:10.1038/s42003-025-09306-y [Epub ahead of print].

Microorganisms thrive in complex communities shaped by intricate interactions, yet the extent and ecological implications of biosynthetic dependencies in natural communities remain underexplored. Here, we used a dilution approach to cultivate 204 microbial model communities from the Baltic Sea and recovered 527 metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) that dereplicated into 72 species-clusters (>95% average nucleotide identity, ANI). Of these species, at least 70% represent previously uncultivated lineages. Combined with 1073 MAGs from Baltic Sea metagenomes, we generated a genomic catalog of 701 species-clusters. Our results show that cultures with more than three species included microorganisms with smaller genome sizes, lower biosynthetic potential for amino acids and B vitamins, and higher prevalence and abundance in the environment. Moreover, the taxa found together in the same model communities had complementary biosynthetic gene repertoires. Our results demonstrate that cultivating bacteria in dilution model communities facilitates access to previously uncultivated but abundant species that likely depend on metabolic partners for survival. Together, our findings highlight the value of community-based cultivation for unraveling ecological strategies. Finally, we confirm that metabolic interdependencies and genome streamlining are widespread features of successful environmental microorganisms.

RevDate: 2025-12-03

Yan L, Su Y, Xie X, et al (2025)

Decoding Microbial-Mediated Sulfur Transformation Pathways in Mangrove Wetland: Metagenomic and Hydrogeochemical Insights.

Environmental research pii:S0013-9351(25)02725-2 [Epub ahead of print].

Sulfur (S) cycling is essential to the ecological function of mangrove wetlands, but how microbial processes and gene-level patterns respond to environmental gradients remains poorly understood. Here, we integrated high-resolution hydrogeochemical profiling with metagenomic sequencing to characterize depth-resolved microbial communities and S-cycling genes in the mangrove wetlands of Dongzhai Harbor, Hainan, China. The results revealed pronounced differences in microbial community composition between zones, with Escherichia dominating mangrove sediments (4.22-20.07%) and Salmonella prevailing in mudflat sediments (23.87-60.98%). The abundance of S-cycling genes (e.g., tusA, soeA, aprA, dsrAB, sat) declined markedly with depth. Spatial variation in biogeochemical conditions shaped functional gene distributions: oxidative genes (aprA, soeA) were more abundant in mudflat profiles, whereas sat dominated reductive pathways in mangrove sediments. Environmental gradients structured microbial communities, with salinity, pH, total nitrogen (TN), and total organic carbon (TOC) showing negative correlations, and total sulfur (TS), total phosphorus (TP), SO4[2-] acting as positive drivers. Co-occurrence network analysis indicated tighter microbial associations in surface layers compared to deeper strata. The thiosulfate oxidation pathway was confined to the 5-10 cm interval in mudflat sediments and appeared at both 5-10 cm and 15-20 cm in mangrove sediments, while direct sulfite oxidation occurred in both zones. Moreover, methanogenesis, nitrification, and denitrification were more prominent in mudflat sediments, whereas methane oxidation prevailed in mangrove profiles. These findings advance our understanding of how microbial functional stratification and S metabolic pathways respond to environmental gradients, with implications for biogeochemical coupling in coastal wetland ecosystems.

RevDate: 2025-12-03

Jose S, Lohith Kumar DH, Malla MA, et al (2025)

Insights into microbial community, nitrogen‑phosphorus metabolism from metagenomic and metabolomic analysis of microalgal-cyanobacterial consortium-based bioinoculants.

The Science of the total environment, 1009:181092 pii:S0048-9697(25)02732-9 [Epub ahead of print].

The intensification of agriculture through chemical fertilizers has led to severe environmental consequences. This study provides a comprehensive investigation on chemical fertilizer, vermiculite and on microalgal-cyanobacterial consortia (bioinoculants) influencing soil microbial community. Chemical fertilizer application significantly altered the microbial community, suppressing the dominant phylum Proteobacteria to 48.3 % abundance from 60.9 % in the control soil. The bioinoculant treatments maintained a high Proteobacteria abundance (58.9 %-59.7 %) and fostered a growth-oriented, anabolic strategy. The 50:50 mix treatment uniquely promoted the fungal phylum Basidiomycota to 18.2 % abundance and showed the highest investment in the Glycolysis/Gluconeogenesis pathway (23.0 %). Chemical fertilizer treatment upregulated genes for rapid nitrogen assimilation (glnA, Log2FC = 0.60) and phosphorus starvation response (phoB, Log2FC = 0.65; pstS, Log2FC = 0.83). The enhanced energy production and conversion (11.83 %), amino acid transport and metabolism (11.20 %), and fatty acid biosynthesis (45.3 %) was observed in bioinoculant treatment. Unlike chemical fertilizer treatment, bioinoculant treatment led to the accumulation of the osmoprotectant trehalose and structural membrane lipids, while the 50:50 mix was uniquely characterized by a higher abundance of xylose. These findings demonstrate that the microalgal-cyanobacterial consortium can enhance nutrient recycling, and potentially boost soil health by reshaping the soil microbiome and metabolic functions, offering a promising strategy for sustainable agriculture.

RevDate: 2025-12-03
CmpDate: 2025-12-03

Riskumäki M, Ruuskanen MO, Mäenpää K, et al (2025)

Shotgun metagenomics reveals distinct skin microbial species in allergen-sensitized individuals.

Microbial genomics, 11(12):.

The Karelian region, which spans the border between Finland and Russia, presents distinct environmental exposures and lifestyles on either side of the governmental border. In the more urbanized Finnish Karelia, allergic diseases are markedly more prevalent than in the more rural Russian Karelia. Prior studies, based on amplicon sequencing, have demonstrated major differences in skin microbiotas between the two populations. However, compositional differences in microbiota between sensitized and non-sensitized (NS) individuals have not been characterized. Here, in a selected population of 112 allergen-sensitized and NS adolescents, we used shotgun metagenomics to characterize the prokaryotic, eukaryotic and viral species in the skin potentially involved in allergic sensitization via distinct environmental exposures. In the more urban Finnish Karelia, the microbiome species composition was associated with IgE-mediated allergen sensitization status, while in the more rural Russian Karelia, the composition was associated with exposure to furry pets. Finnish participants showing high IgE-mediated sensitization to common allergens (allergen-specific IgE >7.5 kU/L) had less Cutibacterium acnes and Malassezia in their skin and displayed weaker interconnectedness of the microbial co-occurrence network compared with NS participants. Moreover, Malassezia restricta strain-level differences were related to allergen sensitization in both Finnish and Russian participants. In summary, we found distinct skin microbiomes between allergen-sensitized and NS participants and tracked the bacterial and fungal species associated with the degree of allergic sensitization in the more urbanized part of the Karelian region. These findings provide new insights into the factors that shape the human skin microbiome and influence allergic diseases.

RevDate: 2025-12-03

Docter J, C Mansfeldt (2025)

Environmental Census: Modeling Synthetic Biology Ecological Risk with Metagenomic Enzymatic Data and High-Performance Computing.

ACS synthetic biology [Epub ahead of print].

Engineered microorganisms in biotechnology present biosafety and environmental management challenges. As the synthetic biology market develops and deploys new technologies, these engineered organisms may escape into unintended environments. Improved predictive computational tools are necessary to assess the potential establishment risk and environmental location of these escaped engineered microorganisms, assisting their design and management. Here, we present EnCen, a risk assessment Python software package that predicts the environmental range of engineered microorganisms through annotated functional one-hot-encoded similarity between the engineered microorganism and resident microorganisms of a given environment. EnCen utilizes publicly available composite metagenomes as representatives of microbial environments that occur along an agriculture-water cycle and can be customized for any additional target environment. This tool was deployed against case studies reported in the literature and to reassess commercially available bacterial biopesticides, highlighting both the successful recapture of previously reported dynamics and the identification of select commercial products that pose a wider establishment risk in multiple environments. When further utilizing EnCen to investigate the receiving environments comprising the central database, key enzyme classes are mapped as characteristics to select environments, prioritizing certain modifications likely leading to a greater risk (or effectiveness) of establishment. The results demonstrate that EnCen meaningfully summarizes publicly available metagenomic data, prioritizes environments to monitor for adverse effects, and analyzes potential impacts on microbial community composition and functioning. Overall, this study demonstrates a computational approach to managing engineered microorganisms, aiding in the safe deployment and benefit of industrial synthetic biology.

RevDate: 2025-12-03
CmpDate: 2025-12-03

Jia Y, Shi Y, Wang J, et al (2025)

Astragalin attenuates caerulein-induced acute pancreatitis by targeting the NLRP3 signaling pathway and gut microbiota.

Bioresources and bioprocessing, 12(1):139.

BACKGROUND: Acute pancreatitis (AP) has caused great concern worldwide due to its serious threat to human health. Astragalin is a bioactive natural flavonoid compound with several pharmacological activities, but it remains unclear about its effect on AP. The objective of this experiment was to explore the mitigating efficacy of astragalin on caerulein-induced AP model and examine the underlying mechanisms.

METHODS: Following the assessment of astragalin's direct effects on pancreatic acinar cells using an in vitro AP model, an in vivo mouse model was established to further validate its efficacy and elucidate the underlying mechanisms. Pancreatic histopathology, amylase, and lipase levels of mice were observed to determine the optimal therapeutic dose of astragalin. The network pharmacology and RNA sequencing technology were used to reveal the possible targets and pathways. Subsequent molecular docking and western blot were conducted to validate the association between astragalin and key target molecules, as well as the NLRP3 signaling pathway. Combined with metagenomics and metabolomics analysis, the astragalin effective gut microbiota-metabolite-gene network was constructed. Moreover, fecal microbiota transplantation experiments were performed to clarify the importance of gut microbiota in astragalin-mediated alleviation of AP.

RESULTS: The results showed that astragalin attenuated caerulein-induced injury in AR42J cells in vitro. Consistent with these findings, in vivo experiments revealed that astragalin treatment significantly improved pancreatic pathological injury, cell apoptosis, and systemic inflammatory response in AP mice, particularly at high doses. The integrated analysis of network pharmacology and transcriptomics revealed that the NLRP3 signaling pathway was a key molecular pathway, which was further validated using western blot. Docking analysis showed that 12 target genes had good docking activity with astragalin. More intriguingly, it was found that astragalin could reverse gut microbiota dysbiosis by restoring microbial diversity, altering bacterial community composition, and modulating key metabolic pathways. Specifically, astragalin-effective correlation networks were constructed with Lachnoclostridium sp. YL32, Roseburia intestinalis, Ruminococcus gnavus, Lachnospiraceae bacterium Choco86, Anaerobutyricum hallii, etc. as the core strains, 22 metabolites, including 5-Methoxytryptophan, D-Serine, L-Tryptophan, L-Methionine, etc. as core metabolites, and NLRP3 pathway-related genes as the main regulatory targets. Furthermore, fecal microbiota transplantation experiments confirmed the involvement of gut microbiota in AP remission.

CONCLUSION: Collectively, these findings identify astragalin as a promising therapeutic agent for AP, targeting both the NLRP3 signaling cascade and gut microbial homeostasis.

RevDate: 2025-12-03

Shulman HB, Pyle JAM, Classen AT, et al (2025)

Nutrient limitation shapes functional traits of mycorrhizal fungi and phosphorus-cycling bacteria across an elevation gradient.

mSystems [Epub ahead of print].

In nutrient-limited high-elevation ecosystems, plants rely on arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi to provide mineral phosphorus (P) in the form of phosphate (PO4[3-]). AM fungi gather these nutrients from phosphorus-cycling bacteria (PCBs) that can mineralize PO4[3-] from organic matter and solubilize mineral-bound P. How climate, soil factors, and nutrient limitation influence AM fungi and PCB assembly remains unclear. We collected soil from montane meadows across a 1,000-m elevation gradient on three replicate mountainsides and analyzed AM fungal marker genes, P-cycling genes from shotgun metagenomes, and edaphic measurements. High-elevation soils had nearly 50-fold less soil PO4[3-] and 60% more AM fungal hyphae than low-elevation soils. AM fungal turnover was linked to changes in pH, organic carbon, and PO4[3][-]. The composition of 198 P-cycling genes was influenced by the AM fungal community structure. Drivers of individual PCB functional genes, including pH and organic carbon, varied with gene phylogeny. We found a trade-off in P-cycling strategies across elevation: P-rich, low-elevation soils supported root-colonizing AM fungi and organic P-mineralizing bacteria. P-poor, high-elevation soils were dominated by stress-tolerant AM fungi and mineral P-solubilizing bacteria. Our results suggest that AM fungi and PCB community turnover across elevation are both shaped by pH, organic carbon, and P availability. With continued climate warming, the structure and function of mountaintop ecosystems might shift to resemble lower elevations, disrupting long-established and specialized microbial assemblages, with consequences for P-cycling dynamics and the total P available to plant communities.IMPORTANCEPhosphorus (P) limits plant productivity in high-elevation ecosystems, yet the microbial networks that mobilize P, including arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi and phosphorus-cycling bacteria (PCBs), remain under-characterized in these nutrient-poor soils. We show that across a 10,00-m elevation gradient, AM fungi and P-cycling gene assemblages shift predictably with pH, organic carbon, and phosphate availability. Higher elevations, with less available P, select for stress-tolerant AM fungal taxa and PCB strategies geared toward mineral solubilization, while low-elevation sites favor root colonization by AM fungi and organic P mineralization. These results suggest that nutrient limitation can constrain microbial community assembly in consistent ways across landscapes. High mountain soils are low in P and rely on a network of underground AM fungi and PCB to deliver nutrients to plants. This study shows how those underground relationships reorganize with elevation and how climate change could collapse long-standing microbial strategies by pushing high-elevation ecosystems toward lowland conditions. As soils warm and dry, the microbial scaffolding that supports alpine plant life may become increasingly unstable.

RevDate: 2025-12-03

Kandathil AJ, Clipman SJ, Anantharam R, et al (2025)

Antibody-mediated control of anellovirus infection: evidence from people who inject drugs.

Journal of virology [Epub ahead of print].

Infections with viruses belonging to the family Anelloviridae are widespread among humans. Although generally considered a commensal, there is evidence to suggest that these infections may be controlled by host immune responses. However, the mechanism of immune control remains unclear. Previous research has also suggested a possible role of anellovirus capsid spikes in immune evasion. To investigate the role of antibodies in controlling infection, we used AnelloScan to profile plasma collected every 6 months over 2 years from 10 persons who inject drugs (PWID). Participants were selected based on viremia patterns: persistent (n = 6) versus intermittent (n = 4). Long-read metagenomic sequencing revealed a higher median number of alphatorquevirus (TTV) species in participants with persistent viremia compared to those with intermittent viremia (P < 0.0001). AnelloScan detected TTV-specific antibodies among all study participants. No significant differences were observed between the two groups when all antibody-reactive peptides located in the capsid were included. However, among participants with intermittent viremia, antibodies were more frequently reactive to peptides located in the amino acid variable region of the capsid spike domain (P = 0.0429). These findings suggest that among PWID, antibodies targeting the sequence variable region of the spike domain appear to be associated with control of anellovirus infection. Additionally, anelloviruses might be susceptible to pre-existing immunity, and the amino acid variable region of the spike protein may play a role in viral infectivity.IMPORTANCEAnelloviruses are highly diverse and are recognized as the major component of the blood virome in healthy humans. Despite this, little is known about their interactions with their hosts. In this study, we found that anelloviruses can elicit antibody responses. Notably, antibodies that targeted a sequence variable region on spikes present on viral capsids were associated with truncation of plasma viremia. These data suggest a possible mechanism of immune control of anellovirus infections while also indicating a role of the capsid spikes in viral infectivity.

RevDate: 2025-12-03
CmpDate: 2025-12-03

Li J, Xu Y, Wang M, et al (2025)

Dual-source DPP4 drives intestinal fibrosis in Crohn's disease: synergistic therapeutic targeting of host and microbiota pathways.

Gut microbes, 17(1):2593119.

Crohn's disease (CD), a chronic inflammatory bowel disorder, often progresses to intestinal fibrosis and stricture, yet no effective anti-fibrotic treatments exist. This study reveals dipeptidyl peptidase 4 (DPP4) as a pivotal driver of fibrosis through bioinformatics analysis, clinical samples, and experimental models. Elevated DPP4 expression was observed in stenotic intestinal tissues of CD patients and dextran sodium sulfate (DSS)-induced fibrotic mice. Mechanistically, both membrane-bound DPP4 and soluble DPP4 (sDPP4) activated human intestinal myofibroblasts (HIMFs) via the PI3K-AKT pathway, stimulating migration, proliferation, and extracellular matrix deposition. Importantly, metagenomic sequencing revealed enrichment of microbial Dpp4 genes in fecal samples from CD patients with stenosis, and in vivo colonization with engineered E. coli overexpressing microbial DPP4 exacerbated fibrotic remodeling, confirming microbiota-derived DPP4 (mDPP4) as a pathogenic driver. Furthermore, pharmacological inhibition of host DPP4 (sitagliptin) or selective blockade of mDPP4 (Dau-d4) attenuated fibrosis in murine models, with combined therapy showing enhanced efficacy. These findings underscore the roles of DPP4, originating from both host and microbiota, and existing in membrane-bound and soluble forms, in promoting CD-associated intestinal fibrosis. This study identifies DPP4 as a novel therapeutic target, proposing dual-source inhibition as a promising strategy to prevent stricture formation in CD patients, thereby addressing a critical unmet clinical need.

RevDate: 2025-12-03
CmpDate: 2025-12-03

Yang L, Liu Y, Guo S, et al (2025)

Mechanism of tobacco-sweet potato intercropping in suppressing Ralstonia solanacearum in flue-cured tobacco.

Frontiers in plant science, 16:1688379.

Tobacco bacterial wilt (Ralstonia solanacearum) is a fatal pathogen of tobacco, causing severe losses annually. Intercropping has been proposed as a sustainable strategy to mitigate soil-borne pathogens through rhizosphere interactions. However, the mechanisms by which tobacco-sweet potato intercropping specifically affects the microecological environment and suppresses R. solanacearum remain poorly understood. To investigate the effect of the TSP model on the soil-borne pathogen of bacterial wilt (Ralstonia solanacearum) in tobacco-growing soil, this study compared and analyzed the characteristics and differences in bacterial wilt incidence, Ralstonia solanacearum content, phenolic acid components, metabolome, and metagenome between (T) and (TSP) systems. The results showed that compared to the T treatment, the TSP treatment reduced the incidence of bacterial wilt in flue-cured tobacco and significantly decreased the abundance of R. solanacearum in the soil by 21.4%, while increasing the total phenolic acid content by 21.9%. The total phenolic content in the TSP soil was increased by 21.9% compared to T. Differentially abundant metabolites between TSP and T were primarily enriched in carbohydrate metabolic pathways, such as nucleotide sugar biosynthesis, fructose, and mannose metabolism. The content of substances such as rhamnose, D-allose, and mannitol in T-treated soil was 2.14-6.62 times higher than that in TSP-treated soil, with new tobacco alkaloids being up to 91.09 times higher. Compared to the T treatment, the TSP treatment significantly increased the relative abundances of Acidobacteriota, Chloroflexota, Bradyrhizobium, Pseudolabrys, and Sphingomonas by 64.08%, 18.86%, 23.55%, 21.80%, and 12.98%, respectively. The content of Ralstonia solanacearum in the soil was positively correlated with differential metabolites such as mannitol, rhamnose, and D-allose (r = 0.8), while negatively correlated with phenolic acids such as syringic acid, ferulic acid, caffeic acid, and gallic acid, as well as microorganisms such as Chloroflexota, Gemmatimonadota, Acidobacteriota, and Sphingomonas. In summary, TSP can regulate soil metabolites, phenolic acids, and beneficial microorganisms, forming a synergistic network to suppress the content of Ralstonia solanacearum and reduce the risk of tobacco bacterial wilt. This provides a theoretical basis for regulating soil microecology and enhancing crop disease resistance in intercropping systems.

RevDate: 2025-12-03
CmpDate: 2025-12-03

Al Bataineh MT, Dash NR, Mysara M, et al (2025)

Metagenomic analysis of gut microbiota in colorectal adenocarcinoma in the MENA region.

Frontiers in cellular and infection microbiology, 15:1634631.

BACKGROUND: Growing evidence suggests that gut microbiota plays a role in the development of colorectal cancer (CRC), and a few bacterial strains have been linked to carcinogenesis. Contrary to the Western population, the relationship between pro-cancer microorganisms and CRC among Middle Eastern individuals remains largely unexplored. Ninety-eight samples from Middle Eastern individuals with and without CRC were subjected to microbial profiling based on the 16S rRNA gene.

RESULTS: The CRC group exhibited a more complex gut microbiota with clusters that were significantly distinct from those of the control group. The taxonomic orders Caulobacterales, Rhizobiales, Sphingomonadales, and Burkholderiales, along with the genera Recibecterium and Sphingobium, were overrepresented in the CRC samples based on differential abundance testing between the CRC and control groups. Utilizing 16S-based functional prediction, we identified a significant enrichment of pathways vital for pentose and glucuronate interconversions, metabolism of terpenoids and polyketides, spliceosome, and dTMP kinase pathways within the CRC group. Moreover, we observed a link between Herbaspirillum huttiense and the pathways regulating the actin cytoskeleton; this intriguing connection may provide insights into the molecular mechanisms underlying cytoskeletal rearrangement and carcinogenesis triggered by H. huttiense.

CONCLUSIONS: The findings of this study support the connection between gut microbiota and the development of CRC and highlight region-specific microbial signatures that may serve as non-invasive diagnostic biomarkers or predictive tools for early screening in Middle Eastern populations, where CRC is increasingly diagnosed at advanced stages. These insights could inform the development of microbiome-based screening panels and personalized prevention strategies adapted to the MENA region's unique genetic, dietary, and environmental profiles.

RevDate: 2025-12-03
CmpDate: 2025-12-03

Zhang Q, Gong Q, Sun X, et al (2025)

Massive hemoptysis as the sentinel symptom: a case report of pulmonary nocardiosis in an immunocompetent patient.

Frontiers in medicine, 12:1677156.

Pulmonary nocardiosis is frequently missed or misdiagnosed due to its atypical clinical symptoms and non-specific imaging findings. Moreover, delayed diagnosis and treatment can lead to high mortality rates, underscoring the need to enhance etiological diagnosis. Here, we report a 55-year-old immunocompetent woman who developed pulmonary Nocardia cyriacigeorgica infection with massive hemoptysis as the initial symptom. The patient had no history of chronic respiratory diseases. Metagenomic next-generation sequencing of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid collected via bronchoscopy was performed, which confirmed the diagnosis. After targeted therapy with oral sulfamethoxazole-trimethoprim and linezolid, the patient achieved significant symptomatic and radiological improvement, accompanied by normalization of white blood cell count and neutrophil count. No recurrence was observed during follow-up.

RevDate: 2025-12-03
CmpDate: 2025-12-03

Li Q, Sun X, Lei W, et al (2025)

Psittacosis chlamydia pneumonia complicated with organizing pneumonia: a case report and literature review.

Frontiers in medicine, 12:1670456.

BACKGROUND: Secondary organizing pneumonia (SOP) may develop following infections. Psittacosis, caused by Chlamydia psittaci (C. psittaci), is a zoonotic disease transmitted from birds to humans. It can present with a wide spectrum of symptoms, ranging from mild flu-like illness to life-threatening severe pneumonia. Cases of C. psittaci infection complicated by organizing pneumonia (OP) are rarely reported, and delayed treatment may pose a life-threatening risk.

METHODS: We report a case of C. psittaci pneumonia complicated by OP. To identify additional cases and clarify the clinical features of this condition, a literature search was conducted using the PubMed and Embase databases for the period from January 1995 to May 2025. The search included the following keywords: "psittacosis," "Chlamydia psittaci," "chlamydia," "organizing pneumonia," and "bronchiolitis obliterans with organizing pneumonia."

RESULTS: A 66-year-old male with a history of poultry farming presented with fever, cough, sputum production, and hemoptysis. Empirical antimicrobial therapy with ceftizoxime was ineffective. To identify the etiology of the pulmonary lesions, bronchoscopy was performed, and C. psittaci infection was confirmed by metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS) of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF). Although the lesions partially resolved after moxifloxacin therapy, the patient experienced recurrent episodes. Chest CT revealed migratory lesions, which are uncommon in C. psittaci pneumonia. Further pathological examination of the specimen confirmed the diagnosis of OP. The patient's condition improved following corticosteroid therapy. A review of the literature indicated that none of the three previously reported cases were definitively diagnosed at initial admission; all presented primarily with fever and cough. One case progressed to severe pneumonia and resulted in death.

CONCLUSION: OP caused by C. psittaci pneumonia presents with non-specific symptoms and signs, making early diagnosis challenging. During treatment of C. psittaci pneumonia, if empirical anti-infective therapy shows no response after three days, or if imaging reveals features such as consolidation, migratory lesions, or a reverse halo sign, the possibility of concurrent OP should be considered. Pathological examination is recommended in such cases to avoid missed diagnosis and to ensure timely intervention.

RevDate: 2025-12-03
CmpDate: 2025-12-03

Kravchuk OI, Finoshin AD, Nikishina YO, et al (2025)

Evolutionary conservation of dopamine-mediated cellular plasticity in Arctic sponges (Porifera).

Frontiers in molecular biosciences, 12:1671771.

Dopamine is an evolutionarily ancient signaling molecule implicated in stress responses across the tree of life. The role of dopamine is well-documented in the nervous system of animals, yet in the early-branching animal lineage of sponges its utility is poorly understood. Arctic marine sponges inhabiting the tidal zone of the White Sea, with fluctuating seasonal ice cover and solute concentrations, exhibit remarkable physiological plasticity, making them ideal models for studying conserved stress-response mechanisms. We investigated the dopamine signaling in two sponge species, Sycon ciliatum (class Calcarea) and Halisarca dujardini (class Demospongiae), using metagenomics, transcriptomics, high performance liquid chromatography, mass spectrometry, molecular docking, and immunofluorescence. S. ciliatum expresses an aromatic amino acid decarboxylase-like enzyme and efficiently converts L-DOPA to dopamine, whereas H. dujardini lacks this canonical biosynthetic enzyme, but accumulates dopamine, likely via its symbionts. During morphogenetic transitions in H. dujardini, genes involved in dopamine turnover, including tyrosinase, dopamine β-hydroxylase, and G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), showed dynamic expression. Molecular docking revealed that GPCR affinity for dopamine is modulated by cellular redox status. Notably, we report the first evidence of post-translational dopaminylation of cytoskeleton proteins in a non-bilaterian animal. Fluctuations in cellular dopamine levels and actin dopaminylation correlated with structural remodeling of the aquiferous system throughout the sponge life cycle. These findings demonstrate that dopamine regulates cellular plasticity through both transcriptional and post-translational mechanisms. The discovery of dopaminylation in sponges expands the evolutionary scope of catecholamine signaling and underscores the ancient role of dopamine in the regulatory interactions of animal cells.

RevDate: 2025-12-03
CmpDate: 2025-12-03

Zhao Z, Lu L, Yi Y, et al (2025)

Gut microbiota signature in a cohort of Chinese patients with rosacea.

Biochemistry and biophysics reports, 44:102361.

BACKGROUND: Rosacea is a chronic inflammatory skin disease characterized by diverse symptoms and variable clinical progression, which can significantly impair patients' quality of life and mental health. The exact etiology of rosacea remains elusive. It has been hypothesized that specific microorganisms may trigger symptom onset and play crucial roles in the pathogenesis of the disease.

OBJECTIVE: We performed a case-control study to investigate the gut microbiome of rosacea patients compared to controls matched by age, sex in China.

METHODS: The study cohort comprised eight patients diagnosed with rosacea and eight age- and sex-matched healthy controls residing in Beijing. Metagenomic sequencing was performed using on a llumina Novaseq 6000 platform. Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale was used to evaluate the severity of anxiety and depression of rosacea patients. Skindex-16 score was used to assess dermatology-specific health-related quality of life (HrQoL) in patients with rosacea. The clinical evaluation of acne was done using the ECLA score.

RESULTS: The rosacea patients showed higher HADS and Skindex-16 score (15.375 ± 1.302 and 46 ± 9.75 respectively) vs healthy controls (3.425 ± 1.308 and 0 respectively). A clear distinction was observed between the rosacea group and the control group, characterized by a significant increase in the abundance of Turicibacter_sp._TJ11, Turicibacter_sp._H121,Turicibacter_sp._TA25,Turicibacter_sp._T129,Ruminococcus_sp._AF18-22,Ruminococcus_sp._CAG:379,Ruminococcus_sp._AM2829LB,Ruminococcus_callidus, Ruminococcus_sp._AM36-18,Ruminococcus_sp._AF43-11,Ruminococcus_sp._AM28-41,Streptococcus sp. 23.2,Streptococcus infantarius, Streptococcus vestibularis, Streptococcus salivarius, Streptococcus gordonii, Clostridium_sp._CAG:798, Clostridium_tertium, Alistipes_sp._Z76 and Lachnospiraceae_bacterium_XBB2008in the rosacea group. In contrast, reduced levels were detected in the rosacea group for Clostridium_sp._AF12-41, Clostridium_sp._CAG:299, Clostridium_sp._OM05-5BH,Clostridium_sp._AF24-2LB, Clostridium_sp._AM18-55, Clostridium_sp._CAG:43, Clostridium_sp._OM047,Clostridium_sp._TF1113AC,Clostridium_sp._OF134,Clostridium_disporicum, Butyrivibrio_sp._CB08,Butyrivibrio_sp._INlla14, Roseburia_sp._CAG:50 (p < 0.05). Pearson correlation analysis revealed that Gemmiger_sp._An120 was positively correlated with Skindex-16 and negatively correlated with ECLA score (P < 0.05). Clostridium_sp._CAG:299 was negatively correlated with HADS scores and positive correlation with ECLA score (P < 0.05). KEGG pathway analysis found KO05034, KO04024 and KO00920 pathways exhibited increased activity in the Rosacea group (P < 0.05).

CONCLUSIONS: The gut microbiota in individuals with rosacea displayed changed from that of healthy control. These microbial alterations may contribute to the pathogenesis of rosacea through multiple mechanisms, including impairment of the intestinal barrier function, induction of pro-inflammatory cytokine release, and modulation of neurotransmitter synthesis. By integrating taxonomic shifts with functional alterations, this study provides deeper insights into the gut ecosystem changes associated with systemic inflammation in rosacea.

RevDate: 2025-12-03
CmpDate: 2025-12-03

Ahmed MA, John J, BJ Campbell (2025)

Ecological distribution, environmental roles and drivers of Actinobacteriota in two Mid-Atlantic estuaries.

bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology pii:2025.11.21.689735.

Actinobacteriota, a bacterial phylum renowned for members that produce bioactive compounds (e.g., antibiotics), has key roles in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. Although soil and marine/freshwater Actinobacteriota are well studied, functions and activities of their estuarine counterparts are poorly understood. We characterized 67 metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) belonging to 12 Actinobacteriota families from Chesapeake and Delaware Bay water samples across different seasons, salinities, and size fractions. MAGs from four dominant families, Ilumatobacteraceae, Nanopelagicaceae, Microbacteriaceae, and S36-B12, were examined in depth for their abundance, functional potential, estimated growth rates, and gene expression among samples. Actinobacteriota were most abundant in low- to medium-salinity samples during spring and summer. Their abundance patterns were strongly influenced by combinations of salinity, temperature, and phosphate, nitrate and silicate concentrations. Notably, many exhibited high estimated growth rates under low and medium salinities in summer. Members of the four major families showed a range of metabolic capacities from generalist to specialist, and all encoded biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) for secondary metabolites, particularly terpenes and betalactones, that were differentially expressed across conditions. Bay, salinity and size fraction were the primary drivers of gene expression differences. Distinct secondary metabolite genes were expressed between bays, with higher expression generally observed in medium compared to low salinities. These findings underscore the metabolic versatility and environmental responsiveness of Actinobacteriota, highlighting their active role in estuarine microbial communities and their contributions to biogeochemical cycling in dynamic coastal ecosystems.

RevDate: 2025-12-03
CmpDate: 2025-12-03

Li L, Zhou N, Wang Z, et al (2025)

Intestinal microbiota contributes to the heterogeneity of fat deposition by promoting mitochondrial fatty acid β-oxidation.

Gut microbes, 17(1):2593076.

The gut microbiota plays a crucial role in lipid metabolism in both humans and animals. However, the specific contributions of gut microbiota and their associated metabolites to fat deposition, as well as the underlying mechanisms, remain largely unexplored. In this study, we demonstrated that the intestinal microbiota mediated the heterogeneity of mesenteric fat index (MFI), as evidenced by fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) experiments. Notably, analysis of the 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing of 44 samples revealed a significantly higher abundance of Cetobacterium somerae in the Low MFI group, with a positive correlation to reduced MFI. Serum metabolomics analysis confirmed that L-Carnitine emerged as the most differentially abundant metabolite in the Low MFI group and exhibited a strong positive correlation with C. somerae abundance. Metagenomic analysis showed that microbial genes related to L-Carnitine biosynthesis were significantly enriched in the Low MFI group. Further, C. somerae was isolated and cultured, and its subsequent monocolonization in germ-free zebrafish and tilapia demonstrated its lipid-lowering effects by enhancing mitochondrial fatty acid β-oxidation. Whole genome sequencing demonstrated C. somerae could encode the [EC:1.2.1.3] gene, which promotes the production of 4-trimethylammoniobutanoate, a precursor of L-Carnitine, thereby enhancing L-Carnitine biosynthesis by the host and gut microbiota, leading to the reduced fat deposition in Nile tilapia. In conclusion, C. somerae, a core gut microbe with high abundance in aquatic teleost intestines, plays an important role in host lipid metabolism. This study advances our understanding of how core gut microbes shape host phenotypes and provides novel insights into manipulating core gut colonizers to reduce fat deposition.

RevDate: 2025-12-03

Kong L, Mao Y, Zheng R, et al (2025)

Overlooked siderophore producers favor ammonium oxidation in global wastewater treatment plants.

Microbiome pii:10.1186/s40168-025-02290-9 [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: Iron is essential for biological nitrogen removal in wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs), as a significant portion of microbial nitrogen-transforming enzymes require iron. However, iron bioavailability is a global challenge for nitrogen removal microbes in WWTPs, where it often exists in insoluble forms due to its complexation with various wastewater constituents.

RESULTS: Combined laboratory experiment and metagenomic analysis of 52 global WWTPs, we found that siderophore-producing bacteria (SPB) were previously uncharacterized dominant members in activated sludge. SPB enhance the iron uptake of activated sludge microbial communities by facilitating the transport of iron ions from insoluble sources into the cells. Of the 1328 total recovered metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) from global WWTPs, 6.2% were identified as SPB, while 79.3% of MAGs could utilize siderophores, indicating widespread sharing of siderophores in WWTPs. Interestingly, nearly all ammonium-oxidizing bacteria (AOB) from WWTPs lacked siderophore-producing capacity, and exogenous siderophore (20 µM pyochelin) addition boosted ammonium oxidation rates by 28.2%. Moreover, strong indications were found for an association between AOB and the SPB in global WWTPs, suggesting their symbiotic interaction is a common and critical process to maintain ammonium oxidation performance. SPB in WWTPs were predominantly aerobic or facultative anaerobic heterotrophic bacteria, exhibiting low taxonomic diversity but high abundance.

CONCLUSIONS: This study reveals SPB as previously overlooked but crucial contributors to biological nitrogen removal in global WWTPs, providing foundational insights into iron-based microbial cooperation within engineered systems. Modulating SPB activity based on their metabolic characteristics is a promising strategy to cope with low iron bioavailability issue for biological processes in WWTPs. Video Abstract.

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RJR Experience and Expertise

Researcher

Robbins holds BS, MS, and PhD degrees in the life sciences. He served as a tenured faculty member in the Zoology and Biological Science departments at Michigan State University. He is currently exploring the intersection between genomics, microbial ecology, and biodiversity — an area that promises to transform our understanding of the biosphere.

Educator

Robbins has extensive experience in college-level education: At MSU he taught introductory biology, genetics, and population genetics. At JHU, he was an instructor for a special course on biological database design. At FHCRC, he team-taught a graduate-level course on the history of genetics. At Bellevue College he taught medical informatics.

Administrator

Robbins has been involved in science administration at both the federal and the institutional levels. At NSF he was a program officer for database activities in the life sciences, at DOE he was a program officer for information infrastructure in the human genome project. At the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, he served as a vice president for fifteen years.

Technologist

Robbins has been involved with information technology since writing his first Fortran program as a college student. At NSF he was the first program officer for database activities in the life sciences. At JHU he held an appointment in the CS department and served as director of the informatics core for the Genome Data Base. At the FHCRC he was VP for Information Technology.

Publisher

While still at Michigan State, Robbins started his first publishing venture, founding a small company that addressed the short-run publishing needs of instructors in very large undergraduate classes. For more than 20 years, Robbins has been operating The Electronic Scholarly Publishing Project, a web site dedicated to the digital publishing of critical works in science, especially classical genetics.

Speaker

Robbins is well-known for his speaking abilities and is often called upon to provide keynote or plenary addresses at international meetings. For example, in July, 2012, he gave a well-received keynote address at the Global Biodiversity Informatics Congress, sponsored by GBIF and held in Copenhagen. The slides from that talk can be seen HERE.

Facilitator

Robbins is a skilled meeting facilitator. He prefers a participatory approach, with part of the meeting involving dynamic breakout groups, created by the participants in real time: (1) individuals propose breakout groups; (2) everyone signs up for one (or more) groups; (3) the groups with the most interested parties then meet, with reports from each group presented and discussed in a subsequent plenary session.

Designer

Robbins has been engaged with photography and design since the 1960s, when he worked for a professional photography laboratory. He now prefers digital photography and tools for their precision and reproducibility. He designed his first web site more than 20 years ago and he personally designed and implemented this web site. He engages in graphic design as a hobby.

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Although we can't usually see them, microbes are essential for every part of human life—indeed all life on Earth. The emerging field of metagenomics offers a new way of exploring the microbial world that will transform modern microbiology and lead to practical applications in medicine, agriculture, alternative energy, environmental remediation, and many others areas. Metagenomics allows researchers to look at the genomes of all of the microbes in an environment at once, providing a "meta" view of the whole microbial community and the complex interactions within it. It's a quantum leap beyond traditional research techniques that rely on studying—one at a time—the few microbes that can be grown in the laboratory. At the request of the National Science Foundation, five Institutes of the National Institutes of Health, and the Department of Energy, the National Research Council organized a committee to address the current state of metagenomics and identify obstacles current researchers are facing in order to determine how to best support the field and encourage its success. The New Science of Metagenomics recommends the establishment of a "Global Metagenomics Initiative" comprising a small number of large-scale metagenomics projects as well as many medium- and small-scale projects to advance the technology and develop the standard practices needed to advance the field. The report also addresses database needs, methodological challenges, and the importance of interdisciplinary collaboration in supporting this new field.

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Collection of publications by R J Robbins

Reprints and preprints of publications, slide presentations, instructional materials, and data compilations written or prepared by Robert Robbins. Most papers deal with computational biology, genome informatics, using information technology to support biomedical research, and related matters.

Research Gate page for R J Robbins

ResearchGate is a social networking site for scientists and researchers to share papers, ask and answer questions, and find collaborators. According to a study by Nature and an article in Times Higher Education , it is the largest academic social network in terms of active users.

Curriculum Vitae for R J Robbins

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Curriculum Vitae for R J Robbins

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