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Posts by Axel Visel

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CSP Large Scale Call | Joint Genome Institute The Community Science Program Large Scale Call is focused on genomic science projects that address sustainable biofuel and bioproducts production.

📢 Letters of Intent for our Large Scale call, part of our Community Science Program, are due April 9. Projects should leverage systems-based approaches to address biofuel and bioproducts production.
🖥️ 🧬

More info: jgi.doe.gov/work-with-us/proposals/c...

3 weeks ago 0 2 0 0
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CRAGE-RB-PI-seq reveals transcriptional dynamics of plant-associated bacteria during root colonization - Nature Communications This study reveals how plant-associated bacteria dynamically reprogram gene expression during root colonization, using a new high-throughput approach that overcomes low bacterial biomass and interfere...

Excited to share my latest work on synthetic biology and host–microbe interactions, now published in Nature Communications!
www.nature.com/articles/s41...

3 weeks ago 4 2 1 0
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The Molecular Foundry turns 20 today. 🔬✨

Two decades of open-access nanoscience at @berkeleylab.lbl.gov— thousands of users, discoveries, and stories.

Explore 20 years of impact:
foundry.lbl.gov/impact/

4 weeks ago 8 2 0 3
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Complete Genome of Oil-Rich Alga Reveals Ideal Platform for Bioengineering | Joint Genome Institute Streamlined genome with precise gene targeting transforms oil-producing alga into a powerful platform for developing ​​bio-based industrial products.

New research points to the oil-producing alga Auxenochlorella as a powerful platform for producing specialty oils, chemical feedstocks and industrial precursors—as well as to better enable the mining of critical minerals and materials.
🖥️🧬

@berkeleylab.lbl.gov @axelvisel.bsky.social @biosci.lbl.gov

1 month ago 4 3 0 0
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🚨 Job Alert - Please share! 🙏

Interested in 3D gene regulation in development & evolution? 🤓🧬

💥 Our lab at @cabd-upo-csic.bsky.social is expanding!

We’re recruiting:
✅ PhD students
✅ Postdocs
💻🧪 Experimental or computational backgrounds welcome

👇 Details below

1 month ago 41 38 1 5
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CSP Large Scale Call | Joint Genome Institute The Community Science Program Large Scale Call is focused on genomic science projects that address sustainable biofuel and bioproducts production.

📣Deadline 4/9: The JGI is currently accepting LOIs for our Community Science Program's Large Scale call — for mission-relevant genomic science projects that leverage systems-based approaches.

Learn more: jointgeno.me/LargeScaleCSP

@berkeleylab.lbl.gov @biosci.lbl.gov
@axelvisel.bsky.social

1 month ago 2 2 0 0

Last reminder: Sign up for the webinar now!

1 month ago 0 0 0 0
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2025 Progress Report | Joint Genome Institute Learn more about the JGI's 2025 accomplishments, including research and data output.

Our FY25 Progress Report is now live! We broke our own record by sequencing more than 1Pb of data in a year—on top of serving 2,627 users w/active proposals, plus 17K researchers making use of our data.
🖥️ 🧬 🌱 🍄 🦠 🧪

Full report: jgi.doe.gov/user-science/science-sto...

1 month ago 5 4 0 0
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📣 We're joining up with @jgi.doe.gov in a joint Critical Minerals & Materials Call 👀: https://bit.ly/3MvzWy6

This is an opportunity to use the capabilities and expertise of both facilities. The call opens March 1. You can register for our Feb. 27 webinar now: https://bit.ly/3Oox1I0

2 months ago 4 2 0 0
Banner titled “Mining New Frontiers” for a Joint JGI-TMF User Proposal Call on Critical Minerals and Materials. It announces an informational webinar at 9am PT on Feb. 27, 2026. The design features a green, textured background suggesting plant leaves, with three circular images on the right: mineral ore samples, a close-up of microbial cells, and a seedling with visible roots in soil. A tagline reads “Bridging genomics and nanoscale science.” Logos for the Molecular Foundry, JGI, and Berkeley Lab appear along the bottom.

Banner titled “Mining New Frontiers” for a Joint JGI-TMF User Proposal Call on Critical Minerals and Materials. It announces an informational webinar at 9am PT on Feb. 27, 2026. The design features a green, textured background suggesting plant leaves, with three circular images on the right: mineral ore samples, a close-up of microbial cells, and a seedling with visible roots in soil. A tagline reads “Bridging genomics and nanoscale science.” Logos for the Molecular Foundry, JGI, and Berkeley Lab appear along the bottom.

Critical Minerals and Materials

Genomics🧬 meets Nanoscience🔬 to enable recovery, reuse, and transformation of CMMs

New joint user opportunity from @jgi.doe.gov and @molecularfoundry.lbl.gov at @berkeleylab.lbl.gov

Join our informational webinar on Feb 27, 9am PT:
jgi.doe.gov/work-with-us...

2 months ago 2 1 0 1

Here is the thread with more background by @jotlovell.bsky.social :

bsky.app/profile/jotl...

2 months ago 1 0 0 0
Black-and-white composite image. In the background, a large American chestnut tree lies fallen and dead, its bare, splintered branches reaching outward in a devastated forest landscape. In the foreground are two historic New York Times newspaper clippings from the early 1900s. One headline reads “ALL CHESTNUT TREES HERE ARE DOOMED,” with subheadings describing blight spreading across New York and the last two trees in the Bronx dying. The other reads “CHESTNUT TREES FACE DESTRUCTION,” describing millions of trees dying from a canker with no remedy.  Images from https://archive.nytimes.com/cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/03/23/planting-chestnuts-in-city-where-the-trees-blight-began/

Black-and-white composite image. In the background, a large American chestnut tree lies fallen and dead, its bare, splintered branches reaching outward in a devastated forest landscape. In the foreground are two historic New York Times newspaper clippings from the early 1900s. One headline reads “ALL CHESTNUT TREES HERE ARE DOOMED,” with subheadings describing blight spreading across New York and the last two trees in the Bronx dying. The other reads “CHESTNUT TREES FACE DESTRUCTION,” describing millions of trees dying from a canker with no remedy. Images from https://archive.nytimes.com/cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/03/23/planting-chestnuts-in-city-where-the-trees-blight-began/

“All chestnut trees here are doomed.” — NY Times, 1911

A century ago, pathogens wiped out over 4 billion American chestnuts.

New genomic resources are helping reverse their functional extinction. 🌳🧬

Jared Westbrook, @jgi.doe.gov's @jotlovell.bsky.social et al.:

www.science.org/doi/full/10....

2 months ago 7 0 2 0
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Neil H. Shubin has been elected as the next NAS President! A leading evolutionary biologist and science communicator, Shubin will succeed Marcia McNutt on July 1. The Academy also named Cherry Murray as International Secretary and elected new councilors. Read more: www.nasonline.org/news/2026_pr...

2 months ago 158 32 5 7

Last reminder!

2 months ago 0 0 0 0

Here is @jotlovell.bsky.social's 🧵with more background

bsky.app/profile/jotl...

2 months ago 2 0 0 0
Four-panel “expanding brain” meme. Panel 1 shows a small glowing brain with the text “PAV reflects evolution.” Panel 2 shows a brighter brain with the text “PAV reflects genome quality.” Panel 3 shows an even brighter brain with the text “PAV reflects annotation method.” Panel 4 shows a fully illuminated brain with rays of light and the text “Re-annotate everything before interpreting biology.”

Four-panel “expanding brain” meme. Panel 1 shows a small glowing brain with the text “PAV reflects evolution.” Panel 2 shows a brighter brain with the text “PAV reflects genome quality.” Panel 3 shows an even brighter brain with the text “PAV reflects annotation method.” Panel 4 shows a fully illuminated brain with rays of light and the text “Re-annotate everything before interpreting biology.”

Myth of Fact?

🌿Plant pangenomes show massive presence-absence variation affecting protein-coding gene content 🧬

@jgi.doe.gov's @tomasbruna.bsky.social @jotlovell.bsky.social @avril-m-harder.bsky.social and Avinash Sreedasyam searched for answers

academic.oup.com/nargab/artic...

2 months ago 4 1 1 0
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⏱️Deadline reminder: February 3rd, 2026

Register and submit your abstract for the upcoming @jgi.doe.gov -EMSL meeting in Seattle

Do it now, or do it like Kermit. Up to you.

jgi.doe.gov/work-with-us...

2 months ago 5 3 0 1
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It's obviously a "fist hand shoe"

3 months ago 0 0 1 0

The German word for a glove makes a lot of sense. And of course, the extended version for a mitten, too.

3 months ago 0 0 1 0

There are also Beuteltiere, Kriechtiere, Nagetiere. But note that the Germans didn't make these up, they are just literal translations of the Latin names.

3 months ago 2 1 1 0

You may want to look up the German words for sloth, skunk, armadillo, marmot, mammal, platypus

3 months ago 4 0 0 1
Victorian-style AI slop. A small girl in a blue dress whose name is not Alice for copyright reasons stands in a forest and stares up at an absurdly giant mushroom, surrounded by many other biologically inaccurate fungi. The scene attempts to hint at fungal diversity, scale, and deep evolutionary relationships. Roughly what happens when you reanalyze ~2,000 fungal genomes and realize how much biology is still hiding in the woods.

Victorian-style AI slop. A small girl in a blue dress whose name is not Alice for copyright reasons stands in a forest and stares up at an absurdly giant mushroom, surrounded by many other biologically inaccurate fungi. The scene attempts to hint at fungal diversity, scale, and deep evolutionary relationships. Roughly what happens when you reanalyze ~2,000 fungal genomes and realize how much biology is still hiding in the woods.

What can we learn from comparing ~2,000 fungal genomes?

Find out about:

🍄evolutionary transitions
🍄lifestyles
🍄genome dynamics
🍄sampling gaps
🍄efforts to uncover the remaining fungal dark matter

New review by @jgi.doe.gov's Stephen Mondo and Igor Grigoriev

www.nature.com/articles/s41...

3 months ago 10 7 0 0
Line chart titled “Results per 100,000 citations in PubMed (2015–2025).” Three trends are shown. The term “new” (yellow) is consistently the most frequent, rising slightly from about 16,000 in 2015 to a peak around 18,200 in 2023, then declining to about 17,000 by 2025. “Novel” (red) increases gradually from roughly 7,400 in 2015 to just over 10,000 in 2025. “Innovative” (blue) shows the steepest growth, rising steadily from about 2,300 in 2015 to over 9,000 by 2025, with a notable acceleration after 2022.

Line chart titled “Results per 100,000 citations in PubMed (2015–2025).” Three trends are shown. The term “new” (yellow) is consistently the most frequent, rising slightly from about 16,000 in 2015 to a peak around 18,200 in 2023, then declining to about 17,000 by 2025. “Novel” (red) increases gradually from roughly 7,400 in 2015 to just over 10,000 in 2025. “Innovative” (blue) shows the steepest growth, rising steadily from about 2,300 in 2015 to over 9,000 by 2025, with a notable acceleration after 2022.

It's because of all the innovations

3 months ago 1 0 0 0
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In remembrance of Peer Bork  | EMBL EMBL and its community are deeply saddened by the death of Peer Bork, the organisation’s Interim Director General.

This is very sad news

'It is with great sadness that EMBL announces that Interim Director General Professor Peer Bork passed away from natural causes on 16 January 2026.'

www.embl.org/news/embl-an...

3 months ago 30 10 3 2

TF-MINDI is out! A new method to learn cis-regulatory codes through rich embeddings of TF binding sites. TF-MINDI decomposes motif neighbourhoods, and works downstream of any sequence-to-function deep learning model. We deeply study the enhancer code in human neural development, check out the thread

3 months ago 60 38 1 0

Agree this can happen. But that’s a failure of editorial practice and/or bad reviewing. Just like not citing relevant preexisting peer-reviewed work. Your preprint is still first in the public record.

3 months ago 1 0 0 0

A preprint is a public, timestamped disclosure that establishes priority.

If someone submits the same or a very similar idea, analysis, or data after your preprint, they must cite it, and reviewers must assess novelty relative to the preprint, regardless of journal publication status.

3 months ago 2 0 1 0
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The 'Hell-Plant' of Death Valley offers hope to a hotter world We humans are a delicate bunch. We don’t have bark, boney exo-plates, or lush fur to protect us from hostile environments, so we have to steal what other creatures produce just to survive in regions a...

"Tidestromia oblongifolia took only two days to increase its photosynthetic capacity to produce energy and thrive in extreme heat, and by day 14 reached its ideal photosynthetic temperature of 45 °C (113 °F)"

#PlantScience #PlantStress #ClimateChange

Original paper: www.cell.com/current-biol...

3 months ago 23 11 0 0
Client Challenge

Our work on #RegulatoryTrajectories is out today in Nat. Comms: www.nature.com/articles/s41...
Led by @raquelrouco.bsky.social, this study establishes a new framework to study how enhancer landscapes act sequentially at developmental loci and are silenced to shape gene expression patterns. (1/n)

3 months ago 37 18 2 2

Here is the meme-torial

bsky.app/profile/moor...

3 months ago 0 0 0 0