Quick update (pics, twitter feed) on #IndoorAir2011 in Austin, TX #microBEnet

Here are some pics from my trip to the Indoor Air 2011 meeting. I am going to post more detail about the meeting later.

https://picasaweb.google.com/s/c/bin/slideshow.swf

If you want some information about what happened at the meeting, best place right now is probably twitter

http://widgets.twimg.com/j/2/widget.js
new TWTR.Widget({ version: 2, type: ‘search’, search: ‘#IndoorAir2011’, interval: 6000, title: ”, subject: ‘Indoor Air 2011’, width: 250, height: 300, theme: { shell: { background: ‘#8ec1da’, color: ‘#ffffff’ }, tweets: { background: ‘#ffffff’, color: ‘#444444’, links: ‘#1985b5’ } }, features: { scrollbar: true, loop: false, live: true, hashtags: true, timestamp: true, avatars: true, toptweets: true, behavior: ‘all’ } }).render().start();

Also see the microBEnet blog which has some recent posts on this.

Some general tips for how to keep up w/ American Society for Microbiology Mtg #ASM2011

https://picasaweb.google.com/s/c/bin/slideshow.swf

Well, I have arrived in New Orleans for the ASM General Meeting 2011.  Some quick notes here about how people might keep up with whats going on:

Watch this or other real time streams of twitter posts

http://widgets.twimg.com/j/2/widget.js
new TWTR.Widget({ version: 2, type: ‘search’, search: ‘#asm2011’, interval: 6000, title: ‘American Society for Microbiology General Meeting 2011’, subject: ‘#ASM2011 Twitter Stream’, width: 250, height: 300, theme: { shell: { background: ‘#8ec1da’, color: ‘#ffffff’ }, tweets: { background: ‘#ffffff’, color: ‘#444444’, links: ‘#1985b5’ } }, features: { scrollbar: true, loop: true, live: true, hashtags: true, timestamp: true, avatars: true, toptweets: true, behavior: ‘default’ } }).render().start();
Follow just my posts about the Meeting:

http://widgets.twimg.com/j/2/widget.js
new TWTR.Widget({ version: 2, type: ‘search’, search: ‘#asm2011 from:phylogenomics’, interval: 6000, title: ”, subject: ‘Jonathan Eisen at ASM2011’, width: 250, height: 300, theme: { shell: { background: ‘#8ec1da’, color: ‘#ffffff’ }, tweets: { background: ‘#ffffff’, color: ‘#444444’, links: ‘#1985b5’ } }, features: { scrollbar: true, loop: true, live: true, hashtags: true, timestamp: true, avatars: true, toptweets: true, behavior: ‘default’ } }).render().start();

Read up on some of my past reports from ASM meetings

My twitter wrap up of the Joint Genome Institute User Meeting #JGIUM

Off to another meeting so don’t have time to write up details of the JGI User Meeting that just ended.  But I am posting my tweets and some related tweets here.  Also, apparently videos of the talks will be available soon. Will try to clean up the style of the posts ASAP but on the road …

kucsbl CSBL at Korea Univ.
RT @phylogenomics Rob Knight discussing the rationale behind his UNIFRAC metric to comparing communities using phylogeny #JGIUM
5 hours ago Favorite Retweet Reply

CackleofRad CackleofRad
@
@Tideliar @jadebio You know who else I think is awesome? Try @phylogenomics and maybe #JGIUM Not medical per se but cool things in the werks
17 hours ago

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen

Uy vey: got home from #JGIUM & my kids had chlamydia, anthrax, E. coli, malaria, athletes foot, Helicobacter & giardia yfrog.com/gzk75auj
20 hours ago

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Next up at #JGIUM Dan Distel on Shipworm symbionts – note here is a picture of Dan (foreground) from 1992 cruise http://twitpic.com/4cvb3w
22 hours ago

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen

Apologies all – have to skip end of #JGIUM – follow this hashtag for other’s posts
23 hours ago

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Scholin hacked into unsecured wireless network while on vacation in Death Valley to communicate w/ his sensors in Newport Beach #JGIUM
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Scholin has some of these remote sensors moored off of Newport Beach pier to survey for toxic diatoms #JGIUM
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Holy ecogenomic sensor batman – this remote ESP thing is very cool mbari.org/ESP/esp_2G.htm – can do DNA analysis remotely #JGIUM
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Next up Chris Scholin on remote detection of marine microbes in coastal waters and deep sea #JGIUM
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
In the Q and A period for Dan Distel some music has now come on over the speakers #oscars? #exitmusic #JGIUM
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Distel discussing proteomics of shipworm symbionts communities – uses method that focuses on proteins in symbionts not host #JGIUM
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Oh no – Distel mentioned the CaZome when discussing carbohydrate active enzymes in shipworm symbionts #badomicsword #JGIUM
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Distel: the gill symbionts are in addition to symbionts living in the gut that are known to degrade cellulose #JGIUM
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Distel: many (~10) types of closely related bacterial symbionts live inside the cells of shipworm in the gill #JGIUM
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Note – here is a link to my #PLoSONE paper with Distel on the genome of a shipworm symbiont plosone.org/article/info:d… #JGIUM
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Distel: shipworms are very diverse and can live off all sorts of wood & wood like stuff – major wood consuming organisms in ocean #JGIUM
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Dan Distel Works at the Ocean Genome Legacy foundation #JGIUM #coolgroup oglf.org/DistelCV.htm
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Distel: shipworms (which are actually clams) cause billions of dollars of economic damage each year #JGIUM
24 Mar

doe_jgi Joint Genome Inst.
RT @phylogenomics Distel expressing thanks to JGI b/c despite claims by many that sequencing is free, nobody has told his acctg dept #JGIUM
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Distel expressing thanks to JGI b/c despite claims by many that sequencing is free, nobody has told his accounting department #JGIUM
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Next at #JGIUM Dan Distel on shipworm symbionts – note here’s a pic of Dan (foreground) from ’02 http://www.scancafe.com/p-59386415-38fa9f
24 Mar

sharmanedit Anna Sharman
Wow. MT @phylogenomics [Ed] Buckler: any two corn [maize] plants are as different from each other as humans and chimpanzees #JGIUM
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Next at #JGIUM Mary Ann Moran; Note paper I have w/ her is one Nature fails to make free despite promises nature.com/nature/journal… #opengate
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Buckler described Genotyping by sequencing method from his in press #PLoSOne paper #JGIUM maizegenetics.net/images/stories…
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Buckler suggests the genetic diversity in maize allows it to adapt to local environments better than other species #JGIUM #notbuyingit
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Buckler: genomic domestication analysis w/ Ross-Ibarra lab from #ucdavis: little loss in diversity from landraces -> improved lines #JGIUM
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Buckler: Tripsacum genome has different retrotransposons than maize but otherwise may be useful as source of genetic variants #JGIUM
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Buckler also sequencing Tripsacum – sister genus of maize #JGIUM no chromosomal duplications, very similar gene content to maize
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Buckler: doing maize HAPMAP2 to survey genetic diversity in corn #JGIUM
24 Mar

leonidkruglyak Leonid Kruglyak
So are yeast strains RT @phylogenomics: Buckler: any two corn plants as different as human and chimp #JGIUM #myspeciesisbetterthanyours
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Buckler: any two corn plants are as different from each other as humans and chimpanzees #JGIUM #myspeciesisbetterthanyours
24 Mar

leonidkruglyak Leonid Kruglyak
Ed Buckler RT @phylogenomics: Next up Ed Buckley from Cornell discussing sequencing/using maize genome #JGIUM
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Next up Ed Buckley from Cornell discussing sequencing/using maize genome #JGIUM
24 Mar

sarahcpwilliams sarahcpwilliams
@phylogenomics enjoying yr tweets from #jgium. i’m a big fan of ley and knight. covered their work last year for hhmi: http://bit.ly/g2NEug
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Ley : to study diversity of microbes associated with maize had to get primers that did not amplify chloroplast rDNA #JGIUM
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Ley: doing a QTL experiment on maize/corn treating microbes as their quantitative trait #JGIUM
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Ley now expanding human microbiome GWAS twin study to include surveying microbes all over body #JGIUM
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Ruth Ley: GWAS studies of human twins has IDd many loci that appear to affect microbial diversity – including some immune system loci #JGIUM
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Ruth Ley is now doing GWAS studies w/ human twins where the phenotype they are looking at is microbial diversity #JGIUM #verycool
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Ruth Ley discussing survey of microbes in one child over two years #JGIUM
24 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Ruth Ley now up at the JGI User Meeting discussing maize, human microbiotas #JGIUM … Note – I love her work #brilliant
24 Mar

kevinswilson66 Kevin Scott Wilson
@
@phylogenomics : Many thanks for your notes on #JGIUM . I was captivated by them
23 Mar

Symbiologica Juliana Mastronunzio
Thanks for tweets on the JGI meeting #JGIUM from @phylogenomics and @iGenomics.
23 Mar

sdaxen Seth D. Axen
RT @phylogenomics: Schuster: “I would like to finish my talk by discussing sequencing the devil” #JGIUM
23 Mar

Pathh1 Pat Heslop-Harrison
Done that – I found the devil in the detail. RT @phylogenomics: Schuster “like to finish my talk by discussing sequencing the devil” #JGIUM
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Schuster: “I would like to finish my talk by discussing sequencing the devil” #JGIUM
23 Mar

iGenomics Dawei Lin
RT @phylogenomics: Schuster: Stays away from traditional sources of ancient DNA like bone and uses hair #JGIUM
23 Mar

doe_jgi Joint Genome Inst.
RT @phylogenomics Schuster: got .1g of hair from 200 year old mammoth sample from Russia and can get mitochondrial genome #JGIUM #fb
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Schuster: got .1g of hair from 200 year old mammoth sample from Russia and can get mitochondrial genome #JGIUM
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Schuster working on thylacine (tasmanian tiger) mitochondrial genomes #JGIUM thylacine.psu.edu
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
For more on mammoth genomics see mammoth.psu.edu #JGIUM
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Schuster: when you sample extinct organisms you have to remember that different samples may come from different times #JGIUM
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Schuster: “You would not believe how much mammoth hair I have washed off myself” #JGIUM
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Schuster: Stays away from traditional sources of ancient DNA like bone and uses hair #JGIUM
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Schuster – redundancy in genome sequencing with ancient genomes helps build quality genome assemblies #JGIUM
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Schuster: one reason to focus on mitochondrial genomes is that there are lots of copies of the genome per cell #JGIUM
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Schuster : “dont forget about mitochondrial genomes” still lots of species that do not have mt genome sequences #JGIUM
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Schuster: discussing mammoths, moas, thylacines, tasmanian devils and polar bears #JGIUM #museomics #conservation #endangered
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
For more on Schusters work on extinct species see cidd.psu.edu/people/scs19 #JGIUM
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Next up Stephan Schuster discussing the Genomics of Extinct and Endangered Species #JGIUM #museomics
23 Mar

Energy_Science Energy Science News
@doe_jgi: RT @phylogenomics Why #badomics words can also be very good: a case in study with museomics #JGIUM http://ff.im/-zyA86 #fb
23 Mar

doe_jgi Joint Genome Inst.
RT @phylogenomics Why #badomics words can also be very good: a case in study with museomics #JGIUM http://ff.im/-zyA86 #fb
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Why #badomics words can also be very good: a case in study with museomics #JGIUM http://ff.im/-zyA86
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen

Eddy Rubin at the #JGIUM is soliciting input from crowd on future needs of the community
23 Mar

Energy_Science Energy Science News
@doe_jgi: #JGIUM bingo anyone? DOE JGI Director Rubin mentions @phylogenomics GEBA project in his talk on future of DOE JGI #fb
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen

The perils of giving out #badomics word awards – a prior recipient at #JGIUM just told me he’s still angry at me phylogenomics.blogspot.com/2009/01/worst-…
23 Mar

doe_jgi Joint Genome Inst.
#JGIUM bingo anyone? DOE JGI Director Rubin mentions @phylogenomics GEBA project in his talk on future of DOE JGI #fb
23 Mar

Energy_Science Energy Science News
@doe_jgi: #JGIUM Rob Knight: “There is one universal tree of life which is why projects such as @phylogenomics GEBA are so critical” #fb
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
All I can say is that when I was rejected by HHMI a few yrs ago I felt better when I heard Rob Knight got it b/c, well, he rocks #JGIUM
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Rob Knight – in human microbiome studies you actually need VERY few sequences per sample to get overall trends #JGIUM
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Rob Knight: “There is one universal tree of life” and giving props to my GEBA genomic encyclopedia project #JGIUM
23 Mar

doe_jgi Joint Genome Inst.
#JGIUM Rob Knight: “There is one universal tree of life which is why projects such as @phylogenomics GEBA are so critical” #fb
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Rob Knight discussing the rationale behind his UNIFRAC metric to comparing communities using phylogeny #JGIUM
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Rob Knight discussing how sequencing has gotten so cheap and high throughout that analysis tools are the limiting step in many cases #JGIUM
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Rob Knight now up at #JGIUM – he publishes more cool papers per month than just about anyone in microbial research
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Silver: took sugar secreting cyanobacterium and got macrophage to take them up and they survive a little bit #JGIUM
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Silver: injected sugar secreted cyanobacterium into zebrafish zygotes and get functional fish with cyanos all throughout them #jgium
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Silver: engineered a cyanobacterium secrete sugars so thought maybe they could use this to make photosynthetic animals #JGIUM
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Silver also interested in biohydrogen production #JGIUM but two problems: most hydrogenases are oxygen sensitive and electron competition
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Silver is working on engineering 3hydroxypropionate carbon fixation pathway from Chloroflexus in E. Coli #JGIUM
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Silver claimed that Cyanobacteria are responsible for 50% of photosynthesis on earth but I think that must be too high #JGIUM
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Silver working on redesigning photosynthesis via cyanobacteria #JGIUM – says they need to learn a lot of biology still
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Silver: though she tries to get $$ from basic scion agencies , they never fund her #JGIUM
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Pam Silver: uses “redesign of a system can test our understanding of it’s components” to try to get $$ from basic science agencies #JGIUM
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Pam Silver “Biology is the technology of this century” is the message she wants to gt across #JGIUM
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Jerry Tuskan getting some hard but good questions after his talk at #JGIUM – Q and A much more interesting than talks usually
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen
Next up at #JGIUM Pam Silver – not only brilliant – but also her lab is the source of a good Lady Gaga spoof youtube.com/watch?v=ZilqYp…
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen

Tuskan using Genome and RNA sequencing and high throughout phenotyping for massive poplar association study #jgium
23 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen

At #JGIUM listening to Jerry Tuscan discuss poplar genomics – the place is packed yfrog.com/h82u1nnj
23 Mar

iGenomics Dawei Lin
@
@phylogenomics Terry Hazen talked about it. It can be easily forgot how many people worked behind the scene. #jgium
22 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen

Tell me about it: “@iGenomics: It is hard to include all people working on a project into the author list these days. #jgium”
22 Mar

Energy_Science Energy Science News
@doe_jgi: RT @phylogenomics: Personal trivia re: SLAC director Perisis Drell at #JGIUM – previous director Artie Bienenstock was a st…
22 Mar

phylogenomics Jonathan Eisen

Personal trivia re: SLAC director Perisis Drell at #JGIUM – previous director Artie Bienenstock was a student of my grandfather Ben Post
22 Mar

EpiExperts Epigenetics Experts
RT @phylogenomics @doe_jgi: SLAC National Accelerator Lab Director Persis Drell kicks off DOE JGI User Mtg 5pm-use #JGIUM to follow
22 Mar Favorite Retweet Reply

J. Craig Venter Institute, UCSD, Beyond the PDF, #UCDavis leadership, all in one trip

A wee bit late but thought I would give an update on a recent trip.  In January I went on a little trip to Southern California.  The trip started with a simple plan – Susan Golden invited me to give a talk at UCSD.  After my usual complications in planning, I finally agreed to a date (1/19) after finding out the Phil Bourne, Editor in Chief of PLoS Computational Biology was helping organize a meeting starting 1/19 entitled “Beyond the PDF” to discuss the future of scientific publishing.  So this seemed like a perfect mix.  Go down to UCSD for one thing and stay for another.  Short flight and easy to change.  Seemed ideal

Of course I had to make it more complex so I contacted some friends at the J. Craig Venter Institute to see if they would be around and unfortunately my friend Jeff Hoffman was not going to be around.  But he connected me to Craig Venter and his wife Heather Kowalski and though what I really wanted was to just see if they would be around for a visit or dinner – I ended up getting roped into giving a talk there on the 18th.

https://picasaweb.google.com/s/c/bin/slideshow.swf

I note – for those not in the loop – I worked at The Institute for Genomic Research (TIGR) for eight years or so before moving to Davis.  TIGR was founded by Craig and Craig was the head when I interviewed for a job there in 1998.  But between when I interviewed and when I showed up, Craig had left to start Celera, and his then wife Claire Fraser took over.  The entire time I was there, until 2006, Claire was the president of TIGR.  However, I did work with Craig on and off on various projects over the years and also started to work with many of the people at the J. Craig Venter Institute.  When Craig left Celera there was a lot of tension between TIGR and JCVI and things got a bit nasty at times.  Someday I will write more about my thoughts on all that went on but for the purposes of this post, all that is needed is to say that I always got along well with many of the people at the JCVI, including Craig.

Day 1 (Jan 18) – Davis to San Diego to JCVI 
So after even more complexities in planning I had a plan.  I flew down on the morning on the 18th from Sacramento, and took a cab to my hotel (The Estancia).  Just staying at the Estancia was a bit of a complication.  You see, originally I has asked to get put up at the La Jolla Shores hotel because it is on the ocean and well, we don’t get much ocean in Davis, CA.  Plus my kids were going to come and they wanted to stay near the water.  Then my wife and kids bailed and so I now had a little less reason to stay at the La Jolla Shores.

So I asked the assistant who was coordinating travel to switch me to the Estancia. Alas, she told me they were not having any visitors stay at the Estancia because there was no food available there.  This seemed weird and after asking around and then even calling the hotel I found out there were two restaurants there – one open for breakfast and lunch and another open for dinner.  So I told this to the assistant.  She then told me that was not true.  I had to basically beg to get moved to the Estancia.  I wanted to be there because it was walking distance to UCSD and was where many of the people for the Beyond the PDF meeting were staying.  Anyway – I finally got a reservation there.

So to continue – I headed to the Estancia from the airport.  I dropped my stuff and I tried to mooch a ride from some of my friends/contacts at J. Craig Venter Institute but they were not answering.  So I took a cab.  I got there, had a decent chat with Bob Friedman, and then went to set up to give my talk. Got set up, Craig came in with his new dog Darwin, and I talked.

Here are the slides (with audio but not yet synched as I write this)

After my talk I met with a few people around JCVI including Andy Allen and Roger Lasken.  Got a tour of some of their toys there.  And I saw a variety of old friend.  And then I went out to dinner at Zenbu Sushi with some of the crew there.  Ham Smith gave me a ride.  As usual, he was driving a very long American car.  He is quite tall.  But he also seems to like the classic American extra long cars.  We drove through traffic in La Jolla and talked about microbes and California.  Then we got to the restaurant, where eventually Clyde Hutchinson, Craig and Craig’s wife Heather showed up and we had a very nice dinner.  I then mooched a ride back to my hotel with Ham.  I note Ham gave me some grief about my recent haircut as I noted on twitter later “Off to Salk/UCSD this AM – Tues spent PM at J. Craig Venter Inst.: gave talk, saw cool things/people & got dissed on haircut by Nobelist”

When I got back to the hotel I found that some of the people who were in town for the “Beyond the PDF” meeting were at the bar.  So, instead of working on my talk, I went to the bar and hung out with some of the publishing folks.  And finally I crashed.

Day 2 (Jan 19). UCSD.

I got up early in the AM and had breakfast at the hotel (yes, indeed, they had food there).  I thought I saw the UC Davis Chancellor Linda Katehi at breakfast but figured I must have been seeing things.  Then I walked from the hotel all the way across the street to the Salk Institute where my first meeting of the day was.  It was so close that I had 30 minutes or so to kill so I walked down towards the beach.  I believe I got close to it but it was so foggy I could only see about 30 feet in front of me and though I could hear lots of waves crashing I did not actually see the beach.

I then returned and found my way to Joe Ecker‘s office.  Had a great meeting with Joe (he does just phenomenally cool stuff on Arabidopsis and apparently on stem cells now too) and I have known him for many years since working together on sequencing and analyzing the Arabidopsis genome (I helped in analysis of the genome when I was at TIGR) (I note – the genome paper was supposed to be freely available forever at Nature’s web site but as I write this it is not free).  Then my host, Susan Golden picked me up at Joe’s office and we walked, in partial silence (she had laryngitis) from Salk to her lab.  Susan works on cyanobacteria and has done some fascinating work on circadian rhythms in these species.  I spent an hour or so with her lab in their lab meeting talking about science and then went off to lunch.  I had lunch at the UCSD Faculty Club with Larry Smarr who I have interacted with in a variety of ways for many years.  We spent most of lunch talking about personal data recording (e.g., medical tests, real time monitors, etc) (see one of his talks about his own personal data here).  We even went back to his office afterwards and I got to see some of his personal data and how he has ben trying to integrate genomic information with medical records and lab tests.  Afterwards I drifted back to Susan Golden’s office, called her up and she met to take me to my next meetings with Joseph Pogliano and then Kit Pogliano.  Both are doing very very cool experimental microbial studies that overlap a bit with some of the things my lab has studied (e.g., Joe works on bacterial actin like proteins and Kit works on sporulation).  After meeting with them Susan and I then headed over to the seminar room where I had 30 minutes or so to get my thoughts in order and then gave my talk.  It was VERY similar to the talk I gave at the Venter Institute, but cleaned up a little bit with the Venter/TIGR jokes removed.

After my talk, Susan and her husband Jim drove me to dinner where I was very pleased to find out Susan had tracked down a friend of mine from grad. school, Kristin Baldwin, who was now on the faculty at the Scripps Research Institute.  It was great to see Kristin for the first time in 15 or so years.  After dinner I went back to the hotel and bumped into Pam Ronald (a friend and colleague of mine from Davis) checking into the hotel – she was in town for the Plant and Animal Genomics meeting.  I then went to the bar and discovered the entire Beyond the PDF meeting crew there.  I lingered a bit and then finally went to sleep.

Day 3 – UC Davis leaders and Beyond the PDF. 1/20

Running out of steam here.  So this section will be a bit shorter than the other days.

The highlight of the day was just after breakfast.  I walked out of the hotel to head over to campus and this time I was certain that I saw the new UC Davis Chancellor Linda Katehi there.  So I went up and said hello, reminding her who I was (we have met a few times now, but you never know).  She introduced me to her husband and to the new UC Davis Provost, Ralph Hexter.  I asked what they were doing at UCSD and they said there was a UC Regents meeting.  Not one to miss a chance to hang out with the UC Davis leaders, I walked with them to campus.  I spent the whole walk chatting with Hexter, who I note, was very very impressive.  I must say, I am a massive fan of Katehi.  Every interaction I have had with her has left me enormously impressed.  And I really like what she is trying to do at Davis.  And one other thing that impresses me is who she has been hiring into leadership positions at Davis.  Hexter seems perfect for a provost right now at Davis.  Humanities prof.  Ex university president (Hampshire College) and ex-Dean of UC Berkeley.  I talked with him for about 25 or so minutes on the walk and was left thinking UC Davis is in good hands.  Another recent hire at Davis is the Vice Chancellor for Research Harris Lewin who I am also very impressed with.

Anyway, after walking with them to the Regents meeting I then headed off to the Beyond the PDF meeting.  Since I am running out of steam here I call your attention to this sites with more information about that meeting: Beyond the PDF.  The meeting that day was OK.  Saw / met lots of interesting people.  The best part was hanging out with people like Kay Thaney who I never get to see enough.

this one goes out to @David_Dobbs. open science friends unite... on Twitpic

And then went to dinner at the La Jolla Shores Hotel.  And went back to the Entancia and went to sleep.

Day 4 (1/21): Beyond the PDF and home

Well, completely out of steam now.  So all I am going to say is that I went to the Beyond the PDF meeting for the AM and then headed off to the airport to go home.  I think two talks/visits, plus one workshop was a bit much for my brain to handle.  Thus I am only now getting to writing up some notes.

————–

Alternative Real Time Twitter Feed for #AGBT #Experiment

http://widgets.twimg.com/j/2/widget.js
new TWTR.Widget({ version: 2, type: ‘search’, search: ‘#AGBT’, interval: 6000, title: ‘Marco Island AGBT Meeting tweets’, subject: ‘Genomics Live’, width: 250, height: 300, theme: { shell: { background: ‘#8ec1da’, color: ‘#ffffff’ }, tweets: { background: ‘#ffffff’, color: ‘#444444’, links: ‘#1985b5’ } }, features: { scrollbar: true, loop: false, live: false, hashtags: true, timestamp: true, avatars: true, toptweets: true, behavior: ‘all’ } }).render().start();

The Story behind the Meeting: Lake Arrowhead Microbial Genomes 2010 #LAMG10

Well, I really wanted to write up some thoughtful piece about the Lake Arrowhead Microbial Genomes Meeting I just got back from.  But I am in the throes of prepping for beginning teaching a 700+ person class here at UC Davis and well, I just can’t put enough effort into the meeting write up as I would like.  So perhaps my live blog page may be all that I will post directly about the meeting (and at the bottom of this post I am re-posting my feed from Friendfeed).

And if you want to see my slides here they are

And here is a little write up of sorts – more about the history of the meeting than this 2010 meeting…..

First, some background.  The Lake Arrowhead Microbial Genomes meeting was, well, in Lake Arrowhead California.  This is both a town and a lake and is in the San Bernadino Mountains East of Los Angeles.

Fortunately for all of us who were there, UCLA has a conference center in Lake Arrowhead, just off the lake itself.  And for the last at least 12 years, every two years, there is a meeting in September at this Conference Center that focuses on microbial genomes in one way or another.  The meeting has changed names, and has gone through a few different major financial supporters, but has always been organized in a large part by Jeffrey H. Miller from UCLA.  Do not confuse him, please, with Jeffrey F. Miller, another microbiologist from UCLA.  That would be a bad thing.  Sort of like confusing me with my brother Michael.

Anyway, Jeffrey H. Miller has been the major force behind organizing this meeting and he has always done a bang up job on fostering a great atmosphere for both science and interaction.  I am not sure what it is he does, but it always seems to work.  One component is that Miller clearly believe that a conference is not only about hearing talks.  Too many times recently I have been to meetings that were overscheduled with speakers and no time for relaxation or discussion or other activities (the Open Science Summit in Berkeley comes to mind – at that meeting I had to actually stage a coup of sorts to prevent the organizers from skipping lunch and all breaks just to have more talks).  At the Arrowhead meetings, Miller always leaves a few hours in the afternoons free and then has poster viewing/reception time before dinner, plus reception time after evening talks.  It works out well.

The Lake Arrowhead Microbial Genomes meeting has a bit of an unusual history.  It is in essence part of a yearly meeting that used to be go by the name “Small genomes.” And every two years, it happens in Lake Arrowhead under the direction of Jeffrey H. Miller.  And since 1998 I have gone to this meeting each time it has come around: 1998, 2000, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2008, and now 2010.

It all started for me in 1998.  I originally signed up for the meeting to give a joint talk with A. John Clark.  I was finishing up my PhD at Stanford on Evolution of DNA Repair Genes, Proteins and Processes and had a post doc lined up to work with Clark at Berkeley.  John was the person who had discovered the recA gene many years before with his graduate student Ann Murgulies. Clark, Steven Sandler and others had been working on functional studies of archaeal homologs of recA and has recently turned their attention in collaboration with Norm Pace (who was then at Berkeley) to trying to use PCR amplification of the archaeal recA homologs to study uncultured archaea, much like Pace and others had done with rRNA. This was seemingly perfect for me as I had worked on both rRNA PCR of uncultured microbes and on evolution of recA (e.g., see here, here, and here) and on DNA repair in archaea.

Anyway, John was invited to give a talk at the Lake Arrowhead meeting and he asked if I would do a tag team talk with him where I could present the results of my phylogenomic analysis of DNA repair genes across the available genome sequences.  So I said sure.  I had no idea what I was getting into, but I went to the meeting.

Alas, there was some awkwardness there because after accepting the post-doc at Berkeley with Clark, I told him I was going to have to drop it.  That was because in the meantime I had finagled my way into going to a dinner with Craig Venter when he came to Stanford to give a talk.  At the dinner I proceeded to tell Craig that I thought some of the evolution stuff he was doing was sketchy and that the genome annotation at TIGR could be improved by phylogenetic analysis.  I drew on napkins, told him about some of my recent papers and eventually he invited me to interview for a job.  The interview went well and both I and my then fiancé now wife were both offered faculty jobs at Craig’s institute “TIGR”, which we accepted.

So here I was giving a joint talk with Clark yet had just told him I was ditching him for another job.  Well, we soldiered through – but the rest of the meeting went well.  I met all sorts of interesting people, developed multiple collaborations, and had a very good time.  Shortly thereafter I moved to TIGR and began life as a genome sequencer.  For more on the 1998 meeting, alas, there is not much out there on the web.  But I did find my meeting book and some notes and I scanned them in (see below).


So when I got an email in February 2000 inviting me to give a full talk at the 2000 Arrowhead meeting, I accepted immediately.  The 2000 meeting was good and so when I was again invited to talk in 2002 I said yes too.  And so it went.  Back in 2004.  And again in 2006. And again in 2008.  And now again in 2010.  If you want to learn about these past meetings, one way is to go to the meeting web pages.  Those from 2008 and 2006 and 2004 are still up.  Those from prior years are not, but I found two of them by going to the wonderful Internet Archive/Wayback Machine by entering the web address from the other years and changing the year in the http.  See 2002, 2000.  Still trying to track down the 1998 one.

But of course, meeting outlines on the web are not ideal for learning about past meetings.  I have scanned the programs for all the meetings as well as some of my notes, but those too are less than ideal.  I have been unable to find much of interest out there about the meetings before 2006.  But I did blog that 2006 meeting (see here) as well as the one in 2008 (see here and here) where some detail can be found.

It would take too much out of me to retroblog all these past meetings so I am just going to post links to the programs for the ones in 1998, 2000, 2002, 2006, and 2008 (still working on 2004).  I scanned these in, did OCR and converted to PDF.

But I note, perhaps my favorite part of these meetings have been the quotes. Many of these are in the slides from my talk embedded above but here goes

2004

  • Space-time continuum of genes and genomes
  • Gene sequences are the wormhole that allows one to tunnel into the past
  • The human mind can conceive of things with no basis in physical reality
  • Thoughts can go faster than the speed of light

2006

  • The human guts are a real milieu of stuff
  • You better kiss everybody
  • Microbes not only have a lot of sex, they have a lot of weird sex
  • This is how you do metagenomics on 50 dollars, and that’s Canadian dollars

2008

  • Antibiotics do not kill things, they corrupt them
  • There comes a point in life when you have to bring chemists into the picture
  • The rectal swabs are here in tan color
  • And there’s Jeffrey Dahmer
  • We are the environment. We live the phenotype.
  • If I have time I will tell you about a dream
  • A paper came out next year

2010

  • We have been using this word for many years without actually realizing it was correct
  • Another thing you need to know” pause “Actually you don’t NEED to know any of this
  • “I have been influenced by Fisher Price throughout my life
  • Don’t take that away from us
  • It takes 1000 nanobiologists to make one microbiologist
  • I am going to wrap up as I hear the crickets chirping
  • And we will bring out the unused cheese from yesterday
  • In an engineering sense, the vagina is a simple plug flow reactor
  • This is going to be ironic coming from someone who studies circumcision
  • A little bit about time, but I am going to spend a lot less time on time than on space

And with those I will close out my month – delayed posting about the Lake Arrowhead Microbial Genomes Meetings.  Looking forward to 2012.

————————-
Here are my tweets as captured by Friendfeed – click on the “View on Friendfeed” button to see the older ones.

Update 9/2012 – Friendfeed embed broken so deleted it.  But some other ways to see some of the notes

Lake Arrowhead Microbial Genomes notes, live streaming, I hope here, #LAMG10

Will be posting to Twitter notes on the Lake Arrowhead Microbial Genomes Meeting and am experimenting with FriendFeed and other embedding here. Hope this works for those not using Twitter.

http://friendfeed.com/search?q=%23LAMG10&embed=1

http://widgets.twimg.com/j/2/widget.js
new TWTR.Widget({ version: 2, type: ‘search’, search: ‘#LAMG10’, interval: 6000, title: ‘Lake Arrowhead Microbial Genomes’, subject: ”, width: 250, height: 300, theme: { shell: { background: ‘#8ec1da’, color: ‘#ffffff’ }, tweets: { background: ‘#ffffff’, color: ‘#444444’, links: ‘#1985b5’ } }, features: { scrollbar: false, loop: true, live: true, hashtags: true, timestamp: true, avatars: true, toptweets: true, behavior: ‘default’ } }).render().start();

Can’t wait for this meeting on Microbial Communities as Drivers of Ecosystem Complexity

I truly can’t wait for this meeting: Keystone Symposia Conference | Microbial Communities as Drivers of Ecosystem Complexity – Program

Organizers: Jacques Ravel, Vincent B. Young, Mitchell Sogin and Trina McMahon. March 25 – 30, 2011 • Beaver Run Resort  •  Breckenridge, Colorado

The current program is listed below.  Still time to register.  Oh, and it is in Breckenridge, CO, which is kind of nice.  If you are interested in microbial communities, especially molecular studies of said communities, this could be the place to be …

  • Norman R. Pace, University of Colorado at Boulder, USA 
    Molecular Analysis of Microbial Communities – Historical Perspective
  • Mitchell Sogin, Marine Biological Laboratory, USA Long-Tailed Microbial Communities
  • Susan Lynch, University of California, San Francisco, USA Microbial Community Analysis Using the PhyloChip
  • Jonathan A. Eisen, University of California, Davis, USA Phylogenetic and Phylogenomic Approaches to Metagenomic Analysis
  • Joseph Petrosino, Baylor College of Medicine, USA Sequencing Technologies Applied to Studying Microbial Ecology
  • Patrick D. Schloss, University of Michigan, USA Developing and Validating Tools for Computational Microbial Ecology
  • Rob Knight, University of Colorado, USA Quantitative Insights into Microbial Ecology
  • Jed Alan Fuhrman, University of Southern California, USA Integrating Molecular and Environmental Data to Evaluate Community Patterns
  • John Heidelberg, University of Southern California, USA Metagenomic Analysis of Marine Microbial Communities
  • Peter J. Turnbaugh, Harvard University, USA Metagenomic Analysis of the Human Gut
  • Susannah Tringe, DOE Joint Genome Institute, USA Bioenergy Metagenomics
  • Stanislav Dusko Ehrlich, Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA), France A Human Gut Microbial Gene Catalogue Established by Metagenomic Sequencing
  • Trina McMahon, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA Functional Genomics of Polyphosphate Accumulating Bacteria: ‘Eco-Systems’ Biology for Wastewater Treatment
  • Gregory J. Dick, University of Michigan, USA Talk Title to be Determined
  • Robert L. Hettich, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA A Proteogenomic Approach for Characterizing the Molecular Activities of Gut Microbiomes
  • Brendan Bohannon†, University of Oregon, USA Environmental Microbial Ecology
  • Claire Horner-Devine, University of Washington, USA Biogeography of Microbial Communities
  • Thomas Schmidt, Michigan State University, USA Ecologic Strategies of Environmental Microbes
  • Margaret Riley, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA Antibiotic-Induced Changes in the GI
  • Jacques Ravel, University of Maryland School of Medicine, USA The Temporal Dynamics of the Vaginal Microbiota
  • Forest Rohwer, San Diego State University, USA RNA Virus Communities Associated with Human
  • Zoe G. Cardon, Marine Biological Laboratory, USA Soil Microbial Ecology
  • David A. Stahl, University of Washington, USA Metabolic Modeling of a Mutualistic Microbial Community
  • Jay P. Tiesman, Procter & Gamble, USA Microbial Community Analysis from a Systems Biology Perspective
  • Edward F. Delong, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA Systems Biology of Planktonic Marine Microbial Communities
  • David A. Relman, Stanford University, USA Perturbation of the Human Microbiome: Unrest at Home
  • Julie Segre, NHGRI, National Institutes of Health, USA The Skin Microbiome
  • Vincent B. Young, University of Michigan, USA Integrating Human Microbial Ecology in a Clinical Setting

A complete summary (probably TMI) about my time at the human #microbiome meeting #HMP2010

Well, I am writing this on my flight heading back from St. Louis after going to the “Human Microbiome Research Conference”

I have already posted some summaries of the meetings Day 1 and Day 2  and will soon do one about Day 3.  And you can find out more about the meeting from multiple other sources such as here, here, here and here.  But what I thought I would do here is give some of the story behind the meeting – why I went and what it was like behind the scenes, at least for me.  Note – I know this is very long – but hopefully it will give people a feel both for some of the science, some of the behind the scenes, and some of (my) history relating to this meeting.

Some prelude to the meeting

I headed out to the meeting from Davis on the afternoon on the Monday the 30th.  I was originally planning on only going to the meeting for the last day, Thursday. that was because, well, the 31st was my birthday, and I wanted to spend it with my family.  normally, I reserve important family events and do not travel or schedule things that conflict with them.  So, when George Weinstock invited me to give a talk at the meeting, I told him that I could probably only come for the last day.  So that is when he scheduled my talk.

But then as the meeting approached I changed my mind.  You see, in the last few months I have gotten more and more interested in the human microbiome as a research area.  I had done some work on the human microbiome.  For example, my lab was involved in a collaboration with Michael Zasloff at Georgetown University in which they were conducting human ileal transplants and we looked at the microbial recolonization of the ileum after transplantation.   This project was headed by a stellar student, Amber Hartman, who just finished her PhD in my lab.  Her paper was published recently in PNAS (which I note, we paid for the Open Access option there and really wish more people would do similarly).

Anyway, that project had been my main foray into human microbiome studies.  However, I have led or been involved in dozens of studies looking at the genomics of symbioses (good and bad) between animals and microbes (e.g., see these Open Access papers on Wolbachiasharpshooter nutritional symbiontsdeep sea worm epibiontsa cellulolytic symbiont of shipworms).  In fact, I have been moving more and more towards studies of communities of microbes that live in or on animals and plants.  And I have been writing on and off about the microbiome in my blog including the following posts:

And I guess as the meeting approached I realized I really do want to do more human associated studies.


Day 1, August 30, 2010: Getting there

So, given the above desire to go to the meeting, I changed my flight, and then headed on out on Tuesday PM.  As I was posting to twitter along the way and during the meeting, I am going to use my tweets to give some feel for what I was thinking as things were happening:

Tour de Lance

The trip getting there was OK … I got into Phoenix, my connection city and bumped into, of all people, Lance Price at the airport.  He had a cold, and I avoided him after a brief hello, and then got the good news that I was upgraded to first class. Imagine my surprise when who was in the seat next to me it the man with the cold, Lance Price.  This was funny in a way because I had been pondering a recent interaction I had with Price via my blog.  A while back I had written a post pointing to an interesting paper by Price on the penis microbiome and circumcision.  However, I was not completely happy with the paper, since the press release that came with it was quite misleading.  The press release had made some unfortunate statements that gave the impression that the study had direct implications for the transmission of HIV.  The paper had nothing directly to do with HIV – it was mostly a comparison of the microbes found on the penis of circumcised and uncircumcised males. Sure, this could in theory be connected to HIV since other studies had started to make connections between HIV transmission and circumcision and it was possible that the transmission differences were due in some way to microbiome differences.  But they did not show is in any way and it was inappropriate really to have any suggestion that their study was directly connected to the HIV-circumcision story.  So I said is in the blog and amazingly to me, Price, who happened to be the lead author, got the press release taken down and changed in a VERY short period of time.  Anyway, you can read more about that on my post.

So there he was, in the flesh, with a cold of some kind, sitting next to me.  It was actually quite entertaining …. We had a great time talking about penises and vaginas and anthrax and the FBI and all kinds of other nasty things (this makes me want to say – “and everything was fine until the flight attendant came over and had some paper in his hand, held it up and said” … but people might not get that if they have not heard of Alice’s Restaurant by Arlo Guthrie).  I am certain some of the others in first class were wondering WTF was wrong with us.

  • Sat next to Lance Price on flight to #microbiome mtg – am still impressed w/ his response to blog of mine months ago http://ff.im/-pWTaU
  • Passengers near me & Lance Price on way to #microbiome mtg got earful: anthrax, penises, vaginas, wounds, microbes everywhere

Stranded Landed in St. Louis

We landed around 11:30 PM local time and I asked a flight attendant what time zone we were in she said Eastern.  This meant that it would, be 8:30 PM at home.  So while taxiing I called my wife in the hope I could talk to my kids as they went to sleep to say good night.  But alas, it turns out St Louis is on Central Time and the kids were asleep.  We got off the plane and Price and I headed downstairs … He had checked a bag and after discussing it I decided to not wait and share a cab with Dr. Sniffly.  So I took a cab to the hotel. The hotel the meeting was at (and thankfully where my room was) was the Park Chase Hotel. It was perfectly nice, and my room was enormous.  There were some issues, like the proliferation of pillows on the beds, and the strange key card system in the elevators that did not work well, and the 12$ beers in the lobby bar, and the fact that they kept the conference rooms at something like 60°F but it was still an OK place to have a conference.

No food for you

Anyway, I checked in, dropped my stuff in my room and went out to try and find a place to eat.  On the way out of the hotel, I bumped into Ashlee Earl and Bruce Birren who were working on something on the computer in one of the common areas.  I would have lingered longer, since I have known Ashlee for many years as used to collaborate with her when she worked on one of my favorite organisms Deinococcus radiodurans in John Battista’s lab (see our paper on gene expression in Drad here). But since it seemed I was interrupting some important work, I headed out to look for food since I had missed dinner (note to self, getting upgraded on US Air is certainly better than coach but nothing special – no food except chips).

I headed into the streets to a place directed by the hotel front desk people.  Alas, even though they promised the place would be serving food at 12:10 am, it was not.  So I grabbed some simple thing at a cafe and then went to my room to crash, on what was now, my birthday.

Day 2: Start of the meeting

On the morning of the meeting start, I got up a bit late and rushed downstairs to the conference area.

  • Well, I am late to the human microbiome conference this am – I hate meetings that start at 8 am, especially when not on west coast

I got my conference material and ID badge – I had missed the general introduction by George Weinstock and Jane Peterson and Larry Shapiro.  The current speaker was (I think) Jim Versalovic and I was standing in the way back trying to figure out whether to go get some coffee or get a seat.

The talk ended and then I saw that Bruce Birren was up.  Well, as Bruce does some good/interesting stuff and as I had seen him working away earlier that AM, I figured I should stay.  So I grabbed a seat in the way back, and got out my iPad to start tweeting.  I saw that some others were tweeting the meeting and had settled upon a hashtag of #HMP2010, so I started firing away.  I note I like to live tweet meetings for a variety of reasons, including that I think it is a good way to let people have a feel for a meeting as it is happening.  But I also do it to take notes and force myself to pay attention.

Alas, sometimes you do not always write things out perfectly.  Here are my tweets from his talk:

  • Well, I made it … To catch Bruce Birren from Broad starting his talk on 16s surveys and developing high throughput approaches 
  • The human microbiome meeting #HMP2010 is quite packed – microbes rule http://twitpic.com/2jynzt
  • Bruce Birren says that they developed a 454 rRNA sequencing pipeline that has been tested & is accurate across centers; #HMP2010
  • Birren used a mock community to test rRNA PCR methods – wonder if he has read our mock metagenomics paper http://bit.ly/cPaIKF #HMP2010
  • Bruce Birren testing diversity estimators from rRNA PCR – for simulation got many more OTUs back than they put in #HMP2010 #sequencingerror
  • Birren – given that they trust their PCR, now comparing many human samples – seems like they are way behind the field here #hmp2010
  • Birren presenting clustering of samples based on rRNA analysis – but could do much better referencing prior lit on this #HMP2010
  • Interesting question after Birren’s talk re: archiving samples & informed consent – key things to think about in this type of work #HMP2010

Anyway, more later about the mini firestorm that my tweets about his talk created.  I was moving on to other things at the time.  Like responding to my brother’s Michael’s Happy Birthday wishes, which he surprisingly sent through twitter, which he rarely uses.

Next up speaking was Ian Lipkin.  Lipkin is another one of the people at the meeting I first interacted with through my blog, though with him it was a bit more awkward than with Lance Price.  A few years ago now I had written a post about a paper from Lipkin on colony collapse disorder (CCD).  The post I wrote was not positive, let’s put it that way.  And one of the coauthors of the paper, wrote to me and basically told me I was a jackass and I was wrong about what I had written in the post.

Alas, they were right.  And so I did what I thought any good scientist would do if they published something that was wrong – I retracted the blog post and put out an apology (this will be a recurring theme here) and gave myself a new “genomic jerk award”.  Plus I wrote a new post discussing their paper.   And then I was stunned – Lipkin called me up to thank me for apologizing and retracting the post.  Since then I have interacted with Lipkin on and off over the years and have followed his work with some fascination as in a way he is an old school microbe hunter.

Anyway, here is what I wrote during his talk:

  • Ian Lipkin now up discussing microbe hunting in the 21st century #HMP2010 – mentions problems with Koch’s postulates at start
  • Ian Lipkin talking about emerging infectious diseases – says we have only scratched surface of sampling viral diversity #HMP2010
  • Lipkin showing world wide air traffic to scare us (rightly so) about how fast EIDs can spread #HMP2010
  • Ian Lipkin referring to Edgar Allen Poe and cryptography in trying to sort through Metagenomic data#HMP2010 #binningishard
  • Lipkin talking about nothing controversial: autism and MMR and microbes #HMP2010
  • Lipkin has looked at microbial diversity in biopsies of people w/ &; w/o autism – found microbes associated w/ autism #hmp2010
    • apoorva_nyc asked: @phylogenomics what sort of microbes? that’s all this field needs, more gut/autism theories
    • I wrote back: @apoorva_nyc he simply said that there are differences in the microbial diversity in patients with autism – not claiming causal
  • Really like how Lipkin caveated his autism work by saying “this is one study in one place” & then asked for others to test if real #HMP2010
  • Ok Ian Lipkin has won me over forever . He just quoted Yogi Berra and Neils Bohr in one sentence #HMP2010

Coffee with a Tiger

In the first break, I headed out to get coffee, as I was starting to drag.  I bumped into none other than Owen White, who also was going to get coffee.  Owen was one of the people who helped convince me to take a faculty job at TIGR in 1998.  He was the PI on the project to sequence the genome of Deinococcus radiodurans, the most radiation resistant organism known, and I was at the time working on the evolution of DNA repair and radiation resistance.  One of my first projects at TIGR involved helping Owen analyze the Deinococcus genome and write a paper on our analysis.  I note, look at the figures in that and other TIGR genome papers very very carefully and you will see some secrets Owen, I and others put in there.  For example, in the Deinococcus paper, search for “strangelove.”

I worked at TIGR for eight years before moving to Davis in 2005 and Owen and I worked together on many many projects.  Owen and I did not always see eye to eye on various things while I was at TIGR but I both respect his work enormously and still consider him a friend so it was great to see him from my point of view.

We went to the hotel cafe and got there just before all the others from the meeting since we snuck out just as questions were starting for the last talk.  And then we wandered back to the mixing area outside where the talks were and I bumped into an array of people I knew.  The meeting really was a “who’s who” of microbial genomics and human microbial studies including many of my old TIGR colleagues (most of whom were ow at either UMD or the J. Craig Venter Institute – JCVI).

More talks

Talks started up again I went back to my live tweeting.  I note, it was also interesting to see who else was tweeting the meeting and eventually to meet them in the flesh.  After the break there were four talks:

  • Roger LaskenJohannes Goll discussed metagenomic projects at the J. Craig Venter Institute.  They did a tag team talk with Roger focusing on whole genome amplification (which he was one of the pioneers of) and Johannes discussing the JCVI metagenomic analysis tools.  Here is what I wrote:
    • Roger Lasken from the J Craig Venter Institute now talking about whole genome amplification w/ MDA to get at uncultured organisms’ #hmp2010
    • Roger Lasken: phylogenetic analysis can help assess MDA samples – note work done by Jonathan Badger who used to work in my lab #HMP2010
    • Johannes Goll discussing Metarep – JCVI metagenomics analysis tool #HMP2010 – now available / published http://ff.im/-pYRF7
    • Lasken: shallow 454 sequencing with barcoding – 50-100 MDA reactions to verify 16S classification of HMP samples #HMP2010
    • Best place to find out about Human Microbiome Project?: probably The HMP DACC #HMP2010 #somecoolthingshttp://ff.im/-pYTFo
    • For software geeks: The MetaREP software is open source & uses CAKEPHP, Solr, MySQL mix to do rapid indexing and searching #HMP2010
  • Makedonka Mitreva from Wash. U. then discussed various microbiome projects going on there.
    • Makedonka Mitreva from Wash U Genome Center: shotgun metagenomics of 54 people x 5 body sites: oral, skin, gut, vagina, nasal #HMP2010
    • Mitreva – the big problem in analyzing human microbiome metagenomics data is computational time –#HMP2010 #weneedbettermethods
    • Ugh: Mitreva referred to “lower eukaryotes” – maybe she says this because the podium is high above the meeting hall? #HMP2010
    • Mitreva: current tools for analyzing metagenomic data mostly die (my word, not hers) when analyzing massive new data sets #HMP2010
  • Owen Whitethen gave an overview of the Human Microbiome Project Data Analysis and Coordination Center, which he runs. His talk was quite good – a good mix of detail about what they are doing and big picture commentary about the state and future of this type of activity.
    • Next up Owen White on the HMP Data Analysis and Coordination Center that he runs #HMP2010http://www.hmpdacc.org/
    • White: one of their goals is to have a nice, easy to use website to coordinate information about HMP #HMP2010see http://www.hmpdacc.org/
    • White: major goal is to provide ease of access to certain types of HMP data #HMP2010
    • Key issue: open data is important but ease of access and use of open data also critical #HMP2010
    • Best place to find out about past & ongoing microbial genome projects?: definitelyhttp://www.genomesonline.org/ #HMP2010
    • I almost said same thing: RT @mikethemadbiol#HMP2010 *I* care if we sequence another E. coli genome 😉 Though metadata ARE critical
    • Key issue: genome and metagenome data is not very useful without metadata about samples, methods, etc#HMP2010
    • White: some challenges in downloading data from short read archive from NCBI #HMP2010
    • White: DACC putting together virtual machines to run all sorts of microbiome/metagenomic analyses – can run locally or on cloud #HMP2010
    • White: his goal is to teach community to fish not give them food (i.e., to give community tools, rather than run things for them) #HMP2010
  • Eric Alm gave the final talk in the session.  His was not about human microbiome work but instead about population genomics of Vibrio strains.   
    • And now for something completely different but very
      relevant: ocean microbes and genome evolution from Eric Alm#HMP2010
    • Eric Alm discussing Fred Cohan’s ecotype model for species formation in bacteria and archaea #HMP2010
    • Eric Alm describing how microbial samples are collected from ocean water; me: informatics people need to understand these things #HMP2010
    • Alm: comparing 75 genomes of strains of Vibrio species; note all of these are in essence same OTU/species but lots of differences #HMP2010
    • A questioner asked about something relating to “higher primates” – come one everyone – stop the evolution bogusness #HMP2010
    • Alm, in response to my question, says that much of their evolution analyses done on incomplete genomes but he thinks it works fine #HMP2010

Lunch and PM talk burnout

And then it was time for the herd of scientific sheep to go to lunch.  The mechanisms for getting up to the 11th floor for lunch were awkward. Two-three elevators, no stairs, and nobody sure exactly where to go. But people made it on up to a freezing cold room on the top with a nice view of the park nearby the hotel.  I had a relatively quick lunch, went outside on the balcony to get some air, and then it was time for the PM sessions.

I was now a bit burned out. Too many talks I think.  And it is a bit hard to tweet all the talks and not just space out for a while.  But I soldiered through, and tweeted some more,

Much of the PM talks are a bit blurry to me now, but here is what I wrote on twitter:

  • Ruth FarrellRichard Sharp, both bioethicists from the Cleveland Clinic talked about ELSI issues in the human microbome project
    • Oops … Missed the first part of the talk on ELSI issues associated with the human microbiome project#HMP2010 #importantstuff
    • Issues relating to microbiome ethics: genetic discrimination, GMOS, release of probiotics to world, gene therapy #HMP2010
    • Richard Sharp discussing how patients seem willing to use GMO probiotics even if they don’t like GMO foods#HMP2010
    • Sharp: patients may be susceptible to aggressive marketing of probiotics #HMP2010
    • Sharp saying that we should not oversell the microbiome project – he should read my bloghttp://bit.ly/ahXB4n #HMP2010
  • Jo Handelsman discussed some of her work on looking for antibiotic resistance encoding genes in microbes in the environment
    • Jo Handelsman, one of my favorite scientists, now up talking about finding antibiotic resistance genes in the environment #HMP2010
    • Jo Handelsman refers to the “resistome” – collection of antibiotic resistance genes in a community;#badomics word? – probably #HMP2010
    •  I note, Jo Handelsman coined the word metagenomics many years ago #HMP2010 – this omics word seems OK to me
  • Vincent Denef discussed population genomics in the human microbiome
    • Vincent Denef from Jill Banfield’s lab discussing “how deep does the rabbit hole really go?” #HMP2010
    • Denef now explaining his talk title – lots of closely related organisms and may have to distinguish at very fine scale #HMP2010
    • Denef now giving homage to the red pill blue pill choice from the Matrix #HMP2010#Toldyoumetagenomicswascool #geekytoo
    • Denef discussing metagenomic studies of preterm infant gut -using similar methods as in acid mine drainage studies #HMP2010
    • Denef – looking at population shifts over time using metagenomics -getting to correlating pop. changes with specific allelic diffs #HMP2010
    •  Denef showing how proteomics can be used in environmental studies – Banfield lab does v. cool stuff in this area #HMP2010
    • A main worry re: metagenomic studies: like GWAS, lots of genetic variation but w/ few variables, will always find correlations #HMP2010

In the next break I bumped into Ian Lipkin and we agreed to go to dinner together.  Then the next session seemed to begin way too fast but it was good.

  • David Relman was up first.  I note, before I got accepted to graduate school I had an offer to work in Relman’s lab on rRNA PCR studies (I do not think we ever met, but I am not sure anymore).  I wonder how my career would have ended up if I had joined his lab then …           
    • David Relman is w/o a doubt the Philosopher of the Microbiome – always discussing deep questions #HMP2010
    • David Relman discussing single cell genomics and other approaches to studying single cells in communities#HMP2010
    • Relman: reagents in molec. biology freq. contaminated w/ DNA; this impacts many amplification studies when DNA levels low; #HMP2010   
  • Margaret-McFall-Ngai who I have interacted with on and off over the years and love her approach to studies of symbioses.
    • Margaret McFall-Ngai : vertebrates are a very old group & likely been associated w/ microbes for hundreds of millions of yes #HMP2010
    • McFall-Ngai: humans are not the pinnacle/crown of evolution; me: just YAV (yet another vertebrate) #HMP2010
    • RT @TheGenomeCenter McFall-Ngai: most human genes are old; most genes associated with human disease are also old#HMP2010 
    • McFall-Ngai’s talk is so far an homage to model organisms and how they will be relevant to human microbiome studies #HMP2010
    • McFall-Ngai encouraging everyone to study circadian rhythms of host-symbiont interactions #HMP2010
  • Mihai Pop who I used to work with when we were both at TIGR.  He discussed metagenomic assembly methods.
    • Mihai Pop says his talk on Metagenomic assembly will be very short b/c it is impossible #HMP2010
    • Alas Pop didn’t end his talk, says one can make (somewhat) useful assemblies from metagenomic data; utility depends on goals #HMP2010
    • Pop showing challenge in assembly by showing assembly of A Tale of Two Cities; repeats Ike “it was the” can confuse things #HMP2010
    • Pop: genome assembly is hard b/c of 1) repeats 2) low coverage 3) sequencing errors – gets even harder for metagenomics #HMP2010

A bloggable dinner?

After the last talk that PM I got a drink in the bar and was hanging out talking to people when I realized I was late to meet Ian and I headed over to the lobby and off we went.  We found a place and sat down outside – good to not be in a freezing cold room for a while.  Mike the Mad Biologist of ScienceBlogs wandered by and we invited him to join us (not sure if his real name is public knowledge so not posting it here).  We had a good dinner and Lipkin even got the restaurant to bring out a candle for my birthday after dinner.

Drinks and criticism and bedtime stories

Afterward, we went back to the hotel,  I dropped off my stuff and headed down to the bar to get a birthday drink, and bumped into a crowd of people from the Broad, JCVI and UMD coming from a dinner they had for the sequencing centers involved in the HMP.  I skipped out for a fun 30 minutes to tell bedtime stories to my kids over the phone (I really wonder what the hotel staff lurking nearby thought while listening to me tell a crazy invented story about submarines, polar bearskin, whales, and strange activities).

Anyway I returned to the bar, got some complaints from the Broad and JCVI people about something I tweeted about Bruce Birren’s talk and then went to my room. The comments about my tweet led me to relook at what I had written and especially in light of having been thinking about the Lipkin blog retraction.  So after fretting a bit, I decided I probably was a bit over the top in some of my comments on his talk.  So I wrote up a mini apology and clarification on my blog at night when I wrote up notes on day 1.  In summary what I said in that post I quote here, in part to make this a very very long post, but also b/c I think it is relevant:

As I have tweeted many meetings I guess I am used to various aspects of such activities but many out there clearly are not.  Live tweeting a meeting is a rough thing in many ways, at least for me.  I want to give people a feel for the meeting, as it happens.  I want them to know what I actually think about talks, at least within some reasonable limits.  But alas sometimes, hopefully not too often, I get things wrong.  And sometimes I post something obnoxious.  And sometimes I miss key points.  To me, this is analogous to the conversations people have about talks all the time.  Overall, I think mostly I do an OK job tweeting meetings.  But occasionally I write something that does not sit right with others or myself.  And alas, today has one such tweet (well, only one I know of right now).

It happened during Brice Birren’s talk.  Birren, from the Broad, was discussing a few different things including studies done by the Broad in which they have tried to compare and contrast and use rRNA PCR studies done at different centers associated with the HMP.  Much of what he was discussing was technical details of the control experiments they did to assess how variable the results were between centers.  I felt at the time that he was placing this work in enough of the context of other rRNA studies of the human microbiome.  And I tweeted this feeling.

  • phylogenomics Birren presenting clustering of samples based on rRNA analysis – but could do much better referencing prior lit on this #HMP2010
  • phylogenomics  Birren – given that they trust their PCR, now comparing many human samples – seems like they are way behind the field here #hmp2010

But in the end, after discussions at the bar later, I think I may have missed the point of his talk.   I thought at the time that he was discussing solely new findings and new analysis tools that they developed.  To me, I did not like that he did not spend much time discussing other analysis tools nor how their work compared to other studies of the human microbome.  And that gnawed at me.

But in retrospect, I think perhaps he was focusing more specifically on the comparison across the centers.   In that context, the way he laid out his talk and what other work he referenced makes more sense.  I think perhaps he could have still placed things in a broader context but my comments in retrospect were a bit over the top and unnecessary.  As I said above, I think it is useful to try and post what I am actually thinking at the time.  I try to filter this if I know what I am thinking is rude, biased, obnoxious, etc; but I do post critiques if they seem relevant.  But my filtering was a bit off here.  Alas, now Bruce (if he reads twitter) probably wants to dump a beer on my head and people from Broad think I am a putz (well, some may have thought that before). I guess I may have to change the tuning on my filter a bit … but I still will try and post what I think at the time.  It is a fine balance I do not always do precisely … off to sleep and in the AM – Day 2 plus time to make some in person apologies …

In the end, I accept that live tweeting is a bit risky in the way I do it, where I try to not just say what people are saying but try to say what i think about what they are saying.  Sometimes my comments are overreactions or rude or wrong.  But I always try to correct them or clarify when something was off.  From the emails and tweets out there I know a lot of people follow along when I am tweeting a meeting and they seem to like it … Just got to try and be careful to not be over the top.

Other notes on Day 1 on the meeting.

In addition to my comments about the Birren tweet, I thought it might be of interest to post here what else I said about Day 1.

Well, Day 1 of the Human Microbiome Project meeting is over.  And overall, I think it was quite good.  So now for a Day 1 wrap up.

First, a bit about the meeting.  The meeting is formally called the “Human Microbiome Research Conference” and more information about it can be found here. It is directly tied to the NIH “Human Microbiome Project“, also known as the HMP, which has been in operation for a few years now.  The HMP is one of a small number of NIH “Roadmap” initiatives (these are also known as NIH Common Fund Projects).  These are cross cutting projects that are funded outside of the normal NIH departments/centers.  The HMP started a few years ago and is focused on studies of the communities of microbes that live in and on humans.  The HMP has so far funded a wide array of projects including some big scale and some smaller scale.  This meeting is I think the first to try to cover the diversity of different projects funded by the HMP at once.

Day 1 covered a bit of introduction and then a diversity of HMP related and some not so related (but good) talks.  The talks were perhaps a bit too reviewy for my liking, but I think actually, all of them were interesting.  Some lessons I got from today include the following:

  1. The human microbiome is becoming a fascinating area of research with an ever growing set of data to look at
  2. The data for the HMP seems to be openly available, which is good. Reference genomes can be found here. Some rRNA data can be found here. Strains of microbes are available too.  Not sure where the metagenome data.
  3. Ease of access and use of data is more important than just access to data; the HMP DACC is doing a decent job with helping access data.
  4. As important as access is metadata about samples. Not sure how much of this is available right now nor how easy the metadata is to make sense out of.
  5. As with most (all?) large scale, top down projects, there are multiple areas where improvements could be made in communication and engagement with the broader community.  It seems like the HMP is working hard on this issue.
  6. There are some possible complicated issues around release of microbiome data and medical records from people
  7. There is still a big risk in overselling the potential benefits of microbiome research
  8. Correlations ≠ causation.  Sorry I had to put that here.  See #7 above.
  9. Analyzing and making sense of metagenomic data is still very very hard
  10. We desperately need more ecology driven studies of the microbiome
  11. To me, the HMP should really try to mimic the human genome project and focus on producing reference data (genomes, metagenomes, and rRNA) for everyone to use.  Trying to do complex scientific/clinical studies in this project seems inappropriate.  We all need the baseline to do the science.
  12. As with every meeting, the best stuff that happens is in between talks.
  13. Having the meeting room be something like 40 °C is probably not the best idea nor use of resources (hotel issue, not HMP issue).

Those are some of the lessons I am thinking about now, a few hours after the last talk.  But if you want to get a “real time” feel for the talks, the best way to do this, if you weren’t here, is to look at twitter posts about the meeting.  If you do not know, the common practice these days is to use a code within twitter specific for the meeting called a hashtag.  For this meeting the hashtag is #HMP2010 and you can find the tweets about the meeting easily by searching twitter for this code.  There were other twitter posts about the meeting, but may be somewhat hard to find b/c they did not use this code.  Such is life I suppose.

Anyway, if you want to see all the tweets from the first day of the meeting with this hash tag I have appended them at the bottom of this email.  This includes anyone who may have reposted (aka retweeted) these tweets to their twitter feed. 



Day 3 of trip, Day 2 of meeting.

Anyway, since I was up so late working on the blog post, I overslept and missed the first few talks,  I was really really bummed about this because one of the ones I missed was from Floyd Dewhirst who does some absolutely fascinating stuff.  I also missed a talk by Susan Haake.  Bummer.  But talks did start really early.

Fortunately, I got there in time for most of Jeff Gordon’s talk.  I simply am in awe of Jeff Gordon.  He is to me, the grand guru of the field of human microbiome research.  He has in particular specialized in making studies of germ free animals a key part of work on the microbiome.  I have always had very positive interactions with him, although I think he may still want to get back at me for including him in my April Fools joke about Craig Venter sequencing his own microbiome.

  • Jeff Gordon discussed his current work on using germ free animals to study function and ecology of microbial communities
    • RT @TheGenomeCenter Next talk Jeff Gordon from @wustl on the marriage of comparative metagenomics and gnotobiotics#HMP2010
    • RT @TheGenomeCenter Gordon: took fecal microbe community from healthy donor and graft it into gut of germ-free mice successfully #HMP2010
    • After brief delay now at #HMP2010 – Jeff Gordon up: creating artificial communities of many species & introducing to germ free animals
    • Gordon: using defined communities of microbes to test microbiota response to different diets#HMP2010 – track changes in abundance, txn, etc
    • Gordon : using RNAseq to track gene expression patterns in model microbial communities #HMP2010
    • Gordon: Goal .. use “personal” culture collections isolated from people to get a collection that has coevolved w/ each other #HMP2010
    • Gordon – much of OTU diversity in human gut microbes can be captured via culturing #HMP2010; though this ignores w/in species diversity
    •  Jeff Gordon has electrified the crowd w/ his discussion of model organisms & model communities#HMP2010 #modelorganisms
  • Liping Zhao discussed microbes associated with metabolic syndrome
    • Now Liping Zhao from Shanghai Center of Systems Biomedicine on re-eng. gut microbiota with TCM foods to prevent metab. syndrome #HMP2010
    • Zhao: multiple models could explain connection between microbes and obesity #HMP2010
    • Zhao: who is right? Grandma: you are what you eat; Geneticists: you are your genes #HMP201
    • Good to sea some old school TFLP Data here from Zhao mixed in with sequence data #HMP2010
    • Zhao: what is connection between diet, microbiome and longevity? Doing experiment in mice over four years #HMP2010
    • Zhao: diet / excercise differences -> lifespan differences + microbiota differences; though I note just correlations right now #HMP2010
    • Zhao emphasizes benefits of having reference genomes to sort through metagenomic data #HMP2010
    • Zhao wants to encourage marriage of metagenomics and metabolomics in gut studies #HMP2010

Then there was a brief break and then more talks.  Much of this has blurred together now so I think my tweets will be the best record of what happened from my point of view.

  • Joe Petrosino discussed metagenomic projects at Baylor
    • Now Joseph Petrosino from Baylor on improved metagenomic sequencing and analysis for healthy and diseased individuals #HMP2010
    •  Joe Petrosino from Baylor giving overview of role of Baylor in HMP #HMP2010
    • Petrosino – reminds people that not only is HMP producing data and science, but also spin off benefits akin to space program #HMP2010
    •  Petrosino: key ?s: what are biases, how do new sequencing platforms perform, what is gained/lost from assemblies #HMP2010
    • Petrosino has interesting results on sequencing mock community, I note we have study like this in PLoSonehttp://bit.ly/cPaIKF #HMP2010
    • Petrosino doing some interesting analysis of the risks/benefits of assembly in metagenomics #HMP2010
    • Note of caution: For statement “X manipulations of microbes help treat X ailments in X people X of the time”: X=”some” NOT “all” #HMP2010
    • Petrosino working on a viral metagenomic sequencing pipeline including isolation, concentration strategies#HMP2010
  • Phil Tarr discussed microbes associated with necrotizing enterocolitis
    • Next up – Philip Tarr on the infant microbiome and necrotizing einterocolitis #HMP2010
    • I have created a PaperLi newspaper on the human microbiome meeting tweets – seehttp://www.paper.li/tag/HMP2010 #HMP2010
    • Phil Tarr telling a very sad story of a premature infant dying of necrotizing enterocolitis – which is alas very common #HMP2010
    • Phil Tarr doing “massively parallel stool collection” for necrotizing enterocolitis study “all stools all the time” #HMP2010
    • Tarr: high throughput, barcoded, quick collection of all stools of premies in hospital, then if some get NEC will do sequencing #HMP2010
    • Tarr doing a great job of saying who did the analysis for which he presents results #HMP2010#willtrytodothisbetter
  • Vincent Young
    • Next up Vince Young on the role of gut microbiota in ulcerative colitis, IBD #HMP2010
    • Young: many studies suggesting possible connection between microbes and IBD; but emphasizes these are associations not causal proof #HMP2010
    • Young: complexities in IBD microbe studies incl. lack of time zero, diversity of host history/genetics, no info on microbe function #HMP2010
    • Young looking at “pouchitis” to develop in IBD patients who get inflammation of diverting intestinal pouch#HMP2010
    • Those interested in IBD/microbes might want to look at ileal transplant study from my lab/Georgetown http://bit.ly/XFRWf #HMP2010
  • J. Dennis Fortenberry
    • Dennis Fortenberry: urethral & coronal sulcus microbiome studies of adolescent males; offers caution for sexual nature of talk #HMP2010
    •  Fortenberry “for those of you who have not been thinking about male sexual anatomy this morning, here is a primer” #HMP2010
    • RT @TheGenomeCenter Fortenberry: multiple microbiomes of the penis – in areas where pass urine and areas used during sex#HMP2010
    • Fortenberry discussed scanner image of MF sex, how microbes could exchange, ended w/ “don’t how how they got them in scanner” #HMP2010
    • Fortenberry on difficulty studying microbe-sexual activity connection in teens “These are free-ranging adolescents” #HMP2010
    • Fortenberry: need to train teens “amazing the things teenage males will do with specimen cups that does no involve peeing in cup” #HMP2010
    • Fortenberry discussing ethical issues w/ genomic research on young people; especially on sexual behavior #HMP2010

Then lunch.  I sat again with some people from JCVI including Granger Sutton and Shibu Yooseph.  And I tried to get out of there quickly to get a bit of time to walk around, but it was hard to escape.

Then came the concurrent sessions which made me write this:

  • Oh no – #HMP2010 has concurrent sessions – where to go? Where to go?

Here are some of my notes from the concurrent session talks I went to:

  • Gail Rosen discussed metagenomic binning methods
    • Listening to Gail Rosen talk about naive bayesian classifiers for metagenomic data #HMP2010
    • @ianholmes yes i think kmer classification though got in late
      • @phylogenomics “naive Bayesian classifiers for metagenomics” = clustering using k-mer composition of reads?
    • Here is a link to Gail Rosens Naive Bayesian Classifier tool for metagenomics analysishttp://nbc.ece.drexel.edu/ #HMP2010
    • Here is a link to Gail Rosens Naive Bayesian Classifier tool for metagenomics analysishttp://nbc.ece.drexel.edu/ #HMP2010
  • Tom Schmidt discussed culturing microbes 
    • Tom Schmidt now up talking about culturing the human microbiome #HMP2010
    • Schmidt: Great Plate Count Anomaly misinterpreted to mean most microbes are unculturable – means most don’t grow in one condition #HMP2010
    • Schmidt – cultured organisms very valuable for working on functions in communities #HMP2010
    • Schmidt discussing nice trick for tracking oxygen in tissues – GFP only fluoresces win essence of oxygen#HMP2010
    • Schmidt: to study microbes in colon they developed methods to do colonoscopies on unprepped people so microbes not flushed out #HMP2010
    • Schmidt: in trying to culture from human microbiome have to switch methods and samples often to continue to recover new things #HMP2010
  • Anthony Fodor discussed CF infections
    • Anthony Fodor: how do infections in CF patients respond to antibiotics? Followed CF patients during exacerbation events #HMP2010
    • Fodor pronounces T-RFLP “Tee R Flip” while I and I think others usually say “Tee Riff Lip” – I think I like his more #HMP2010
    • Fodor – OTU diversity (i.e., number of bacterial species) is lower in severe CF infections #HMP2010 though he notes small sample size
  • Diane E. Hoffmann discussed federal regulation of probiotics
    • Listening to a Diane Hoffman discussing federal regulation of probiotics – there is lots of misleading stuff out there #HMP2010
    • Hoffman: for most probiotics we know very little about effectiveness, safety, mechanisms and other key parameters #HMP2010
    • Hoffman: whether/how to regulate probiotics depends on health claims, whether in food or not, etc.#HMP2010
    • Many probiotics sellers make structure/function claims like “x promotes intestinal health” – these are less regulated #HMP2010
    • Hoffman: FDA regulates health claims probiotics though FTC can also be involved if claims in media#HMP2010
    • Hoffman: some think probiotics overregulated (making research harder); others think underregulated (bogus stuff out there) #HMP2010

The worst part of the concurrent sessions was that the schedules somehow got switched in some of them and I missed talks by both Rob Knight and Jeroen Raes.  Completely bummed about this as both are great.  Rob Knight apparently discussed his push for an Open Microbiome Project which I think is brilliant.

After the concurrent sessions I had coffee with a post doc candidate from Wash. U and then wandered back over to the hotel lobby to see if I could find someone who wanted to go to dinner.  I saw Peer Bork and Jeroen Raes having a beer and sat down with them with a plan to go to dinner in a bit. Dusko Ehrlich eventually sat down with us too as did a few others.  Eventually, Peer and Dusko headed off I think to work on their talks for the next day and Jeroen and I wandered off for dinner.  We bumped into Gail Rosen and one of her students and we all went to a pub, had dinner, and eventually I headed back to the hotel to do my bedtime stories activity with my kids again.

Then I wrote up a post on notes from Day 2 of the meeting, which is always good to do while things are fresh in ones head.  Here is what I wrote

Well, Day 2 is over now for the Human Microbiome Meeting.  See my previous post for information about the meeting and about Day 1. I enjoyed Day 2, though some things are starting to wear me down a little bit.  In particular, the fact that the meeting starts at 8 AM, or 6 AM California time, has been really rough.  I missed the first 1.5 talks today because of that.  Not to organizers of meetings everywhere – don’t start meetings so early.  And don’t have too many talks in one day.  It is better, far better, to just have fewer talks, than it is to wear people out.  Also not to meeting organizers – do not change the order of talks in concurrent sessions at the last minute.  Very bad idea.  Anyway – onwards.

As with Day 1, I think the best way to get a feel for the meeting would be to look at Twitter posts with the hashtag #HMP2010.  Unlike what I did with my post for Day 1 I am going to put only my tweets below, not everyones.

Today was split up into one series of talks in the AM and then concurrent sessions in the PM.  What lessons did I learn today?  Well here are a few, with some overlap to those on Day 1 but that is OK by me.

  1. Again – correlations ≠ causation.  Those of you out there who do not get this should GTF out of science.
  2. For statement “X manipulations of microbes help treat X ailments in X people X of the time”: X=”some” NOT “all”
  3. Seems like we are really on the cusp of publications of 100s of clinical studies of microbes and their association with health status
  4. Some of these studies are even starting to get at causation
  5. It should be remembered that all of the methods used in microbiome studies are just methods; none are per se better than others; it is the science that should be judged not the tools themselves
  6. With some effort it seems one can culture many more organisms from a system than might be expected
  7. Cultures have many many uses
  8. But culture based studies do not really get at population genetic frequencies and relative abundance information very well
  9. Be wary of those who stick relentlessly with one idea or method
  10. Very strange how few pharma reps there were here (more on this in my next post)
  11. Please please please do not confuse data with knowledge.  Data can be very very useful and I completely support some projects that just are focused on generating data sets.  But knowledge comes from thinking about the data, and carefully analyzing it.
  12. Microbes, I think, run our lives much more than we would like to believe

Anyway – that is a brief update.  Back to preparing my talk for later this AM …

Finally, I got to work on my talk.  Wow that took a while.  I was up until about 3 am.  Finally I got to sleep a bit worried about missing my alarm ..

Day 4: My talk and heading home

Got up with plenty of time to spare, worked a bit on my talk, got my stuff together, grabbed a coffee, and went to set up my presentation. Peer Bork was already there getting his set up. The AV guy was not pleased that we all wanted to present off of our laptops. He said “We have a mac you can use”. I asked if they had keynote and they did not. Not very useful. Got myself set up and then paced around waiting for the lovely 8 am start. And then we were on.  Here are my tweets from just before my talk:

    • Attn Apple Keynote experts: anyone know how to hide the flashing volume bar when using “record slideshow” option?
    •  In relation to my upcoming talk at #HMP2010 I thought I would share this 2007 April Fools story about microbiomes http://ff.im/-q6t01
    • Next up at #HMP2010 Jonathan Eisen, aka, me: the Genomic Encyclopedia of Bacteria & Archaea & the dark matter of the genomic universe

I note, I tried to record my talk but that did not work for some reason.  I did post my slides on slideshare here.  And I think I can embed them in this post

Here are my notes on the rest of the talks in that AM session.

  • Peer Bork: Towards Microbial Markers for the Human Gut Microbiome
    • Now Peer Bork from EMBL on microbial markers for the human gut #microbiome #HMP2010
    • Peer Bork now discussing covariation of gene families within Metagenomic data sets #HMP2010
    • Bork: analyzing metahit data on metagenomics of the human gut #HMP2010
    • Bork: developed a metagenomics pipeline called SMASH which should be available soon #HMP2010
    • Bork: does some interesting comparisons of phylogenetic vs. Functional composition in Metagenomic samples; #HMP2010
    • Bork: tries to remove vagrants (e.g., organisms in food) from Metagenomic data sets by looking at habitat of reference genomes #HMP2010
    •  Bork: w/ small sample get three distinct clusters of co-ocurring gene families within human Metagenomic samples #HMP2010
    • Bork: then went to analyzing newer Metagenomic Illumina data w/ more samples – get three major clusters of coocurring genes again #HMP2010
    • Bork – also sees three distinct clusters of coocurring rRNA types in human samples #HMP2010 – he now calls these enterotypes
    • Bork – can find specific functional categories that correspond to the three distinct Metagenomic types#HMP2010
    • Bork – can find specific functional categories that correspond to the three distinct Metagenomic types#HMP2010
    • Bork: shows cool pathway analysis iterated along fine scale transecting in hypersaline samples, showing as pathways shift #HMP2010
    • Bork : we need better databases of pathway-gene mapping in diverse organisms and diverse phenotypes#HMP2010
  • Dusko Ehrlich discussed the metahit project 
    • Next: one of most entertaining people in field: S. Dusko Ehrlich discussing the MetaHit approach to relation between microbes & us #HMP2010
    • Ehrlich: discussing the BGI/MetaHit Nature metagenomics paper which I personally found fascinating#HMP2010
    • Ehrlich: in gut metagenomes, a high fraction of all genes are shared between people; same true for species#HMP2010
    • Ehrlich: much of the variation between people in metagenome is in relative abundance not in presence/absence of genes or species #HMP2010
    • Ehrlich: comparing metagenome of 177 Danish people; 67 lean, 110 obese, deep Illumina sequencing#HMP2010
    •  Ehrlich: Identifying some microbial genes associated with host body mass index #HMP2010
    • Ehrlich: the major differences between metagenome in obese vs. lean people are genes from Firmicutes#HMP2010
    • Ehrlich shown a cool graph that he calls the Metahit barcode – 4 species x genes in rows, samples in columns ordered by BMI #HMP2010
    • Here is link to the MetaHit human metagenome paperhttp://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v464/n7285/full/nature08821.html #HMP2010
    • Ehrlich also doing metagenome analysis of IBD, says there are correlations but cautions we do not know causal vs. consequence #HMP2010
    • Ehrlich now showing that his metahit barcode can potentially be used for strain level differences #HMP2010
    • Ehrlich: we are on brink of having diagnostic tests, possibly better treatments, possibly novel treatments for health states #HMP2010
    • Ehrlich ends by saying you should follow @metahit #HMP2010
    • Excellent suggestion from crowd after Ehrlichs talk: we should look at microbiome in non industrialized populations #HMP2010
  • Kanitsak Boonanantanasarn discussed oral cancers
    • Boonanantanasarn looking at microbes associated with oral cancers #HMP2010
    • Boonanantanasarn: see increase in archaea in samples from oral cancer vs. normal #HMP2010 #archaearule
  • Heidi Kong discussed atopic dermatitis
    • Now up Heidi Kong on the skin microbiome, atopic dermatitis and immunodeficiency #HMP2010
    • Kong: how to move from correlation to causation?; using longitudinal studies, selective alteration of microbes, mouse models #HMP2010
  • Yuzhen Ye discussed metagenomic informatics
    • Awesome: Yuzhen Ye just used a drawing by her four year old w/ cryptic writing to discuss difficulty in Metagenomic analysis #HMP2010
    • Ye now discussing her FragGeneScan Metagenomic gene finderhttp://omics.informatics.indiana.edu/FragGeneScan/ #HMP2010
    •  Ye: working on assembling genes from within metagenomics data (and thus not doing assemblies of everything) #HMP2010
    • Ye: has a metagenomic binner called abundancebin which not surprisingly using abundance information to bin #HMP2010
    • Uploaded my slides for my #HMP2010 talk tohttp://slidesha.re/cQQkws
    • Ye: describing SWIFT a fast protein similarity search method using reduced alphabet suffix arrays #HMP2010
  • Daniel Haft, who I used to work with a little bit when we were both at TIGR then discussed protein family analysis
  • Cindy M. Liu
    • Next and last: Cindy Liu talking about the sinus microbiota in health and disease #HMP2010
    • Liu discussing chronic rhinosinusitis – effects millions and costs lots (though kills very few) “We should help them” she says #HMP2010
    • Liu discussing need for ecological models of stable states in human microbiome studies #HMP2010
    • And #HMP2010 is done; overall I enjoyed it; will post thoughts on day 3 later

And then, just like that, the meeting was a wrap. I checked out, chatted a bit with a few people, and then off to the airport and home.  If you have gotten this far in this post, I am impressed …  I am going to hold off a few days before writing up a summary of what I learned from the meeting overall but I think the lessons learned from Day 1 and Day 2 are a good place to start.  Thanks for reading.

———————–
Also here are some other links of relevance to the meeting

Human microbiome project meeting (#HMP2010) Day 2 wrap up

Well, Day 2 is over now for the Human Microbiome Meeting.  See my previous post for information about the meeting and about Day 1.

I enjoyed Day 2, though some things are starting to wear me down a little bit.  In particular, the fact that the meeting starts at 8 AM, or 6 AM California time, has been really rough.  I missed the first 1.5 talks today because of that.  Not to organizers of meetings everywhere – don’t start meetings so early.  And don’t have too many talks in one day.  It is better, far better, to just have fewer talks, than it is to wear people out.  Also not to meeting organizers – do not change the order of talks in concurrent sessions at the last minute.  Very bad idea.  Anyway – onwards.

As with Day 1, I think the best way to get a feel for the meeting would be to look at Twitter posts with the hashtag #HMP2010.  Unlike what I did with my post for Day 1 I am going to put only my tweets below, not everyones.

Today was split up into one series of talks in the AM and then concurrent sessions in the PM.  What lessons did I learn today?  Well here are a few, with some overlap to those on Day 1 but that is OK by me.

  1. Again – correlations ≠ causation.  Those of you out there who do not get this should GTF out of science.
  2. For statement “X manipulations of microbes help treat X ailments in X people X of the time”: X=”some” NOT “all” 
  3. Seems like we are really on the cusp of publications of 100s of clinical studies of microbes and their association with health status
  4. Some of these studies are even starting to get at causation
  5. It should be remembered that all of the methods used in microbiome studies are just methods; none are per se better than others; it is the science that should be judged not the tools themselves
  6. With some effort it seems one can culture many more organisms from a system than might be expected
  7. Cultures have many many uses
  8. But culture based studies do not really get at population genetic frequencies and relative abundance information very well
  9. Be wary of those who stick relentlessly with one idea or method
  10. Very strange how few pharma reps there were here (more on this in my next post)
  11. Please please please do not confuse data with knowledge.  Data can be very very useful and I completely support some projects that just are focused on generating data sets.  But knowledge comes from thinking about the data, and carefully analyzing it.
  12. Microbes, I think, run our lives much more than we would like to believe
Anyway – that is a brief update.  Back to preparing my talk for later this AM …

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My tweets
  • Hoffman: some think probiotics overregulated (making research harder); others think underregulated (bogus stuff out there) #HMP2010 about 9 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Hoffman: FDA regulates health claims probiotics though FTC can also be involved if claims in media #HMP2010 about 9 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Many probiotics sellers make structure/function claims like “x promotes intestinal health” – these are less regulated #HMP2010 about 9 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Hoffman: whether/how to regulate probiotics depends on health claims, whether in food or not, etc. #HMP2010 about 9 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Hoffman: for most probiotics we know very little about effectiveness, safety, mechanisms and other key parameters #HMP2010 about 10 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • MikeyJ
  • Listening to a Diane Hoffman discussing federal regulation of probiotics – there is lots of misleading stuff out there #HMP2010 about 10 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • emergentnexus
  • Fodor – OTU diversity (i.e., number of bacterial species) is lower in severe CF infections #HMP2010 though he notes small sample size about 11 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Fodor pronounces T-RFLP “Tee R Flip” while I and I think others usually say “Tee Riff Lip” – I think I like his more #HMP2010 about 11 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Anthony Fodor: how do infections in CF patients respond to antibiotics? Followed CF patients during exacerbation events #HMP2010 about 11 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Schmidt: in trying to culture from human microbiome have to switch methods and samples often to continue to recover new things #HMP2010 about 11 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Schmidt: to study microbes in colon they developed methods to do colonoscopies on unprepped people so microbes not flushed out #HMP2010 about 11 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Schmidt discussing nice trick for tracking oxygen in tissues – GFP only fluoresces win essence of oxygen #HMP2010 about 11 hours ago via Twitterriffc 
  • emergentnexus
    • Grice: prior to wounding, have differentially expressed skin in diabetic vs normal mouse skin (inflammation from shaving fur) #HMP2010 about 12 hours ago via web Retweeted by you
  • Schmidt – cultured organisms very valuable for working on functions in communities #HMP2010 about 11 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Schmidt: Great Plate Count Anomaly misinterpreted to mean most microbes are unculturable – means most don’t grow in one condition #HMP2010 about 11 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Tom Schmidt now up talking about culturing the human microbiome #HMP2010 about 11 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Here is a link to Gail Rosens Naive Bayesian Classifier tool for metagenomics analysis http://nbc.ece.drexel.edu/ #HMP2010 about 11 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • @ianholmes yes i think kmer classification though got in late about 12 hours ago via Twitterriffc  in reply to ianholmes
  • Listening to Gail Rosen talk about naive bayesian classifiers for metagenomic data #HMP2010 about 12 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Oh no – #HMP2010 has concurrent sessions – where to go? Where to go? about 12 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Fortenberry discussing ethical issues w/ genomic research on young people; especially on sexual behavior #HMP2010 about 13 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Those bloggers are wild: RT @DrBondar oh the drama!! “PZ Myers will reveal his decision on free blogagency on live TV” http://bit.ly/9QBHtx about 13 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • TheGenomeCenter
    • Fortenberry: obtained urine samples from young men; showed urine is appropriate sample to study urethral #microbiome #HMP2010 about 13 hours ago via TweetDeck Retweeted by you and 1 other
  • Fortenberry: need to train teens “amazing the things teenage males will do with specimen cups that does no involve peeing in cup” #HMP2010 about 13 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Fortenberry on difficulty studying microbe-sexual activity connection in teens “These are free-ranging adolescents” #HMP2010 about 13 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Fortenberry discussed scanner image of MF sex, how microbes could exchange, ended w/ “don’t how how they got them in scanner” #HMP2010 about 13 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • TheGenomeCenter
    • Fortenberry: multiple microbiomes of the penis – in areas where pass urine and areas used during sex #HMP2010 about 14 hours ago via TweetDeck Retweeted by you and 2 others
  • Fortenberry “for those of you who have not been thinking about male sexual anatomy this morning, here is a primer” #HMP2010 about 13 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Dennis Fortenberry: urethral & coronal sulcus microbiome studies of adolescent males; offers caution for sexual nature of talk #HMP2010 about 14 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • @andyfell well, the talk here said the hard part was getting large collection of stools associated with NEC, so worth looking into about 14 hours ago via Twitterriffc in reply to andyfell
  • Those interested in IBD/microbes might want to look at ileal transplant study from my lab/Georgetown http://bit.ly/XFRWf #HMP2010 about 14 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Young looking at “pouchitis” to develop in IBD patients who get inflammation of diverting intestinal pouch #HMP2010 about 14 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Young: complexities in IBD microbe studies incl. lack of time zero, diversity of host history/genetics, no info on microbe function #HMP2010 about 14 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Young: many studies suggesting possible connection between microbes and IBD; but emphasizes these are associations not causal proof #HMP2010 about 14 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Next up Vince Young on the role of gut microbiota in ulcerative colitis, IBD #HMP2010 about 14 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Tarr doing a great job of saying who did the analysis for which he presents results #HMP2010 #willtrytodothisbetter about 14 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • @andyfell does he still have it? about 14 hours ago via Twitterriffc in reply to andyfell
  • Tarr: high throughput, barcoded, quick collection of all stools of premies in hospital, then if some get NEC will do sequencing #HMP2010 about 14 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Phil Tarr doing “massively parallel stool collection” for necrotizing enterocolitis study “all stools all the time” #HMP2010 about 14 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Phil Tarr telling a very sad story of a premature infant dying of necrotizing enterocolitis – which is alas very common #HMP2010 about 14 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • I have created a PaperLi newspaper on the human microbiome meeting tweets – see http://www.paper.li/tag/HMP2010 #HMP2010 about 14 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Next up – Philip Tarr on the infant microbiome and necrotizing einterocolitis #HMP2010 about 14 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Petrosino working on a viral metagenomic sequencing pipeline including isolation, concentration strategies #HMP2010 about 14 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Note of caution: For statement “X manipulations of microbes help treat X ailments in X people X of the time”: X=”some” NOT “all” #HMP2010 about 15 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Petrosino doing some interesting analysis of the risks/benefits of assembly in metagenomics #HMP2010 about 15 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Petrosino has interesting results on sequencing mock community, I note we have study like this in PLoSone http://bit.ly/cPaIKF #HMP2010 about 15 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Petrosino: key ?s: what are biases, how do new sequencing platforms perform, what is gained/lost from assemblies #HMP2010 about 15 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Petrosino – reminds people that not only is HMP producing data and science, but also spin off benefits akin to space program #HMP2010 about 15 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Joe Petrosino from Baylor giving overview of role of Baylor in HMP #HMP2010 about 15 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • TheGenomeCenter
    • Now Joseph Petrosino from Baylor on improved metagenomic sequencing and analysis for healthy and diseased individuals #HMP2010 about 15 hours ago via TweetDeck Retweeted by you
  • Zhao wants to encourage marriage of metagenomics and metabolomics in gut studies #HMP2010 about 15 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Zhao emphasizes benefits of having reference genomes to sort through metagenomic data #HMP2010 about 15 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Zhao: diet / excercise differences -> lifespan differences + microbiota differences; though I note just correlations right now #HMP2010 about 15 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Zhao: what is connection between diet, microbiome and longevity? Doing experiment in mice over four years #HMP2010 about 16 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Good to sea some old school TFLP Data here from Zhao mixed in with sequence data #HMP2010Z about 16 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Zhao: who is right? Grandma: you are what you eat; Geneticists: you are your genes #HMP2010 about 16 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Zhao: multiple models could explain connection between microbes and obesity #HMP2010 about 16 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • TheGenomeCenter
    • Now Liping Zhao from Shanghai Center of Systems Biomedicine on re-eng. gut microbiota with TCM foods to prevent metab. syndrome #HMP2010 about 16 hours ago via TweetDeck Retweeted by you and 2 others
  • Jeff Gordon has electrified the crowd w/ his discussion of model organisms & model communities #HMP2010 #modelorganisms about 16 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Gordon – much of OTU diversity in human gut microbes can be captured via culturing #HMP2010; though this ignores w/in species diversity about 16 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Gordon: Goal .. use “personal” culture collections isolated from people to get a collection that has coevolved w/ each other #HMP2010 about 16 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • Gordon : using RNAseq to track gene expression patterns in model microbial communities #HMP2010 about 16 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • @mikethemadbiol explain more .. Why is what they are using not abundance? about 16 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  •  in reply to mikethemadbiol
  • Gordon: using defined communities of microbes to test microbiota response to different diets #HMP2010 – track changes in abundance, txn, etc about 16 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • After brief delay now at #HMP2010 – Jeff Gordon up: creating artificial communities of many species & introducing to germ free animals about 16 hours ago via Twitterriffc
  • TheGenomeCenter
    • Gordon: took fecal microbe community from healthy donor and graft it into gut of germ-free mice successfully #HMP2010 about 16 hours ago via TweetDeck Retweeted by you and 1 other
  • TheGenomeCenter
    • Next talk Jeff Gordon from @wustl on the marriage of comparative metagenomics and gnotobiotics #HMP2010 about 16 hours ago via TweetDeck Retweeted by you and 1 other
  • yowino
    • RT @MetaHIT: #HMP2010 feed integrated to our dashboard dedicated to the Human Microbiome http://ow.ly/2xmNL about 21 hours ago via HootSuite Retweeted by you
  • TheGenomeCenter
    • By the way, for those interested, I am @TheGenomeCenter’s communication coordinator Gaia Remerowski http://bit.ly/9Qa3o2 #HMP2010 about 17 hours ago via TweetDeck Retweeted by you and 1 other
  • The Tree of Life: Human microbiome project meeting #HMP2010 Day 1 wrap up w/ mea culpa http://ff.im/-q1XL8 about 21 hours ago via FriendFeed