The process for translating basic science discoveries into clinical applications has historically involved a linear and lengthy progression from initial discovery to preclinical testing, regulatory evaluation and approval, and, finally, use in clinical practice. The low rate of translation from basi
The Science and Applications of Microbial Genomics: Workshop Summary
โ Scribed by Forum on Microbial Threats, Board on Global Health, Institute of Medicine, Eileen R. Choffnes, LeighAnne Olsen, Theresa Wizemann
- Publisher
- National Academies Press
- Year
- 2013
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 429
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Over the past several decades, new scientific tools and approaches for detecting microbial species have dramatically enhanced our appreciation of the diversity and abundance of the microbiota and its dynamic interactions with the environments within which these microorganisms reside. The first bacterial genome was sequenced in 1995 and took more than 13 months of work to complete. Today, a microorganism's entire genome can be sequenced in a few days. Much as our view of the cosmos was forever altered in the 17th century with the invention of the telescope, these genomic technologies, and the observations derived from them, have fundamentally transformed our appreciation of the microbial world around us.
On June 12 and 13, 2012, the Institute of Medicine's (IOM's) Forum on Microbial Threats convened a public workshop in Washington, DC, to discuss the scientific tools and approaches being used for detecting and characterizing microbial species, and the roles of microbial genomics and metagenomics to better understand the culturable and unculturable microbial world around us. Through invited presentations and discussions, participants examined the use of microbial genomics to explore the diversity, evolution, and adaptation of microorganisms in a wide variety of environments; the molecular mechanisms of disease emergence and epidemiology; and the ways that genomic technologies are being applied to disease outbreak trace back and microbial surveillance. Points that were emphasized by many participants included the need to develop robust standardized sampling protocols, the importance of having the appropriate metadata, data analysis and data management challenges, and information sharing in real time. The Science and Applications of Microbial Genomics summarizes this workshop.
โฆ Table of Contents
Cover......Page 1
The Science and Applications of Microbial Genomics......Page 2
ยฉ......Page 3
Reviewers......Page 12
Acknowledgments......Page 14
Contents......Page 16
E: Speaker Biographies......Page 0
THE SCIENCE AND APPLICATIONS OF MICROBIAL GENOMICS: PREDICTING, DETECTING, AND TRACKING NOVELTY IN THE MICROBIAL WORLD......Page 26
Statement of Task......Page 27
GLIMPSES OF THE MICROBIAL WORLD......Page 28
From Animalcules to Germs......Page 30
THE CULTIVATION BOTTLENECK, GENOMICS, AND THE UNIVERSAL TREE OF LIFE......Page 33
Broad-Range PCR......Page 35
Microarrays......Page 36
Shotgun Metagenomics......Page 37
MICROBIOLOGY IN THE POST-GENOMIC ERA......Page 38
USE OF WHOLE GENOME SEQUENCING IN OUTBREAK INVESTIGATIONS......Page 40
Microbes and Human History......Page 42
Microbial Forensics......Page 48
Microbial Evolution: Studying Genomes, Pangenomes, and Metagenomes......Page 54
Pathogenomics......Page 57
Microbial Genomics: Epidemiology and the Mechanisms of Disease Emergence......Page 61
Exploring Microbial Diversity......Page 83
PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS OF GENOMIC TECHNOLOGIES......Page 105
Tools for Microbial Detection, Surveillance, and Response......Page 106
Moving Forward: Challenges and Opportunities......Page 123
Data Quality, Comparability, and Analysis......Page 124
Looking Forward......Page 131
Workshop Overview References......Page 132
1 The Microbial Forensics Pathway for Use of Massively Parallel Sequencing Technologies
......Page 142
2 Microbial Virulence as an Emergent Property: Consequences and Opportunities......Page 159
3 Microbial Genome Sequencing to Understand Pathogen Transmission......Page 166
4 Presence of Oseltamivir-Resistant Pandemic A/H1N1 Minor Variants Before Drug Therapy with Subsequent Selection and Transmission......Page 176
5 Design Considerations for Home and Hospital Microbiome Studies......Page 191
6 Sequencing Errors, Diversity Estimates, and the Rare Biosphere......Page 213
7 Phylogeography and Molecular Epidemiology of Yersinia pestis in Madagascar......Page 232
8 Big Data in Biology: Pitfalls When Using Shotgun Metagenomics to Define Hypotheses About Microbial Communities......Page 255
9 High-Throughput Bacterial Genome Sequencing: An Embarrassment of Choice, A World of Opportunity......Page 263
10 Evidence for Several Waves of Global Transmission in the Seventh Cholera Pandemic......Page 282
11 Multi-Partner Interactions in Corals in the Face of Climate Change......Page 294
12 Genomic Transition to Pathogenicity in Chytrid Fungi......Page 316
13 Natural and Experimental Infection of Caenorhabditis Nematodes by Novel Viruses Related to Nodaviruses......Page 336
14 Genomic Approaches to Studying the Human Microbiota......Page 364
15 Sequence Analysis of the Human Virome in Febrile and Afebrile Children......Page 382
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