Science outreach today in middle school classes: we extracted DNA from strawberries🍓 One kid while staring at the clumped pink DNA in her vial shouted "that's so sigma!"
Turns out all that time spent watching brainrot videos shared by friends was useful after all!
Posts by Pamela Ferretti
mvif 48
#MVIF 48 starts next week!
Free registration: cassyni.com/s/mvif-48
⭐️ Highlights:
🇺🇸 Rachel R. Rock
🇺🇸 @pamferretti.bsky.social
⭐️ Keynote:
🇦🇺 @pam-engelberts.bsky.social and @jamesvolmer.bsky.social
⭐️ Talks:
🇨🇳 Linxing Chen
🇨🇳 Zhemin Zhou
🇦🇺 Hoai-An Nguyen
MVIF 48 program
We have a new #MVIF program to share with you! 🤩
Free registration: cassyni.com/s/mvif-48
⭐️ Highlights:
🇺🇸 Rachel R. Rock
🇺🇸 @pamferretti.bsky.social
⭐️ Keynote:
🇦🇺 Gene Tyson
⭐️ Talks:
🇨🇳 Linxing Chen
🇨🇳 Zhemin Zhou
🇦🇺 Hoai-An Nguyen
Good question Chris! We did not find statistically significant differences in Bifido dominance between milk from mothers that gave birth vaginally vs via C-section (p=0.43). Mine is just a speculation, and our cohort might not be the ideal setting to evaluate this (heavily skewed towards vag births)
Congratulations Lisa, very well deserved!
Room full of participants sitting and looking at a large screen with a slide titled "Deep Dive D: Human Milk Bioactives". The moderator (Lars Bode) is introducing the session.
Room packed with participants. The speaker, behind a podium, is presenting an acknowledgment slide.
Participants are gathered outdoors to take the group picture. The weather is sunny and there is a building in the background.
Some participants are discussing at a table while facing the beach and the ocean. The weather is sunny and there are palm trees nearby.
It's been a real blast being at #HMI26 in San Diego this year! Great talks and discussions on human breast #milk and infant & maternal health. So nice to join this wonderful community!
It was a pleasure speaking at the "New Mathematical Theory in Eco-Evolutionary Modelling of Host-Symbiont Communities" workshop, held last week at the Banff International Research Station. Looking forward to seeing everyone in person next time!
www.birs.ca/events/2026/...
Congratulations Chan Yeong!
Hi @arsweeny.bsky.social, can I add you to the Wild Animal Microbiome starter pack?
go.bsky.app/LXjWaJq
The press release highlighting the results of our breast milk microbiome study is available on the BSD UChicago news page
biologicalsciences.uchicago.edu/news/microbe...
Written by Grace Niewijk, UChicago.
#Milk #Microbiome #Nutrition #Breastfeeding
These are very exciting times for the field, and hopefully these questions won’t stay open for long!
Study designs so far have lacked the appropriate range of body sites sampled, the necessary sampling frequency, and the sequencing depth needed to address these questions. There is no clear evidence yet for a resident mammary gland microbiome either!
While much discussed, I have not yet seen convincing evidence supporting the existence of an entero-mammary pathway (maternal gut -> milk). Rather, I think gut taxa might end up in breast milk through the infant’s oral cavity shortly after birth (maternal gut -> infant oral cavity -> milk).
Thanks Matt! That's another major open question in the field. Where do these microbes come from? Skin around the nipple and retrograde flow (infant's oral microbiome -> milk) are both very plausible, but some milk taxa are typically found in the gut.
Huge thanks to the team that made this work possible: Mattea Allert, Kelsey Johnson, Marco Rossi, Timothy Heisel, Sara Gonia, Dan Knights, David A. Fields, Frank Albert, Ellen Demerath, Cheryl Gale and @blekhman.bsky.social.
This project would not have been possible without funding from the NIH.
Finally, we explored the antimicrobial resistance genes and functional potential of microbes found in breast milk and in the infant gut. Check out the paper for more results!
Four phylogenetic trees show examples of strain sharing between milk and infant stool samples for specific microbes: B. longum, S. salivarius, P. vulgatus and K. pneumoniae. Instances of mother-infant pairs sharing the same strain are highlighted with black rectangles.
Beyond milk composition, we assessed potential mother-to-infant microbial transmission through breastfeeding. We found that microbes present in both breast milk and the infant gut included not only commensals such as Bifidobacteria, but also potential pathobionts like Klebsiella pneumoniae.
We discuss the possible reasons for this discrepancy and its implications in the paper. TL;DR: a priority for the field is to compare amplicon vs. metaG sequencing of human milk samples to assess the impact of technical factors, such as amplification biases in amplicon sequencing and lysis duration.
Heatmap showing which microbes are present in human milk samples and at what abundance. Bifidobacterium longum is the first of the list.
In contrast to previous amplicon studies that reported the milk microbiome to be dominated by Staphylococcus and Streptococcus, we found that the most prevalent and abundant taxa in milk were #Bifidobacteria. The milk microbiome also included species typically found in the oral cavity, gut, and skin
Excited to share our new study out in Nature Communications. We mapped the composition of the human breast #milk #microbiome and showed that microbes present in breast milk directly contribute to the assembly of the #infant gut microbiome in the first months of life.
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
Breast milk contains a unique community of microbes that can transfer to infants, influencing the development of the gut microbiome and supporting early immune and metabolic functions. doi.org/hbh4wd
Our Review article is now featured in the January issue of @natrevgenet.nature.com, check it out!
Human figure wrapped in DNA, surrounded by viruses, bacteria, and other microorganisms, with a globe in the background, symbolizing global health and genetics.
📢 Our January issue is live and it's a special one🦠🧫! Featuring a range of article types, including Reviews, Comments and Journal Club articles, this Focus issue explores the insights gained from the application of microbial genomics within ecological and evolutionary contexts go.nature.com/3MNmsgR
🧬 🦠 🏙️
Urban vs rural lifestyles create dramatically different gut microbiomes. But how do these different gut microbiomes affect the host?
Excited to share our new paper: www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
⚠️ Be aware! There are phishing websites for commonly used bioinformatics tools! ⚠️ Samtools and minimap2 affected, but it's likely just the tip of the iceberg. Be careful to use only official sources for your downloads, and let your colleagues and lab members know.
#bioinformatics #microsky
Are you a scientist who speaks Italian? Consider joining this initiative that connects scientists with elementary or middle school students in Italy through monthly correspondence ✒️
If you generate or reuse #microbiome data, check out these guidelines for equitable sequence data reuse. Grateful to @alexjprobst.bsky.social and his team for leading this important work and for bringing together 160+ microbiome scientists (myself included) to contribute!
doi.org/10.1038/s415...
Our article on equitable reuse of public sequencing data is out! Led by @alexjprobst.bsky.social, @lhug.bsky.social, Cristina Moraru, @geomicrosoares.bsky.social, @folker.bsky.social and myself -, co-authored by Anke Heyder, and developed in consultation with 167 scientists. tinyurl.com/n6yeanmk
Here the original article:
@oliveraasmets.bsky.social
@tartumicrobiome.bsky.social @elinorg.bsky.social @estbiobank.bsky.social
doi.org/10.1128/msys...
My commentary article, featuring the work of Aasmets et al. on the long-lasting effects of medications on the gut microbiome, is now out in mSystems @asm.org
#microbiome #microsky
doi.org/10.1128/msys...