
Microbial Genes Recovery in Galaxy
A new Galaxy workflow enables researchers to recover and analyze microbial genes from metagenomic data.

Microbial Genes Recovery in Galaxy
A new Galaxy workflow enables researchers to recover and analyze microbial genes from metagenomic data.
🦠🧬🦴 Do you work in #metagenomics (#microbiomes, #MicrobialGenomics #sedaDNA) and/or #aDNA, with interest in #bioinformatics , #OpenScience and curiosity about ancient metagenomes?
😢 The @spaam_community are struggling to find reviewers for our preprint: https://f1000research.com/articles/12-926/v1
🙏 If you would have the time to help us and be willing to review a small python tool facilitating access to public data, please
feel contact me https://www.jafy.eu/ so I can pass on your details to the journal. Thx!
1st position, Assistant Prof in
#Microbiology, emphasis on
#MicrobialGenomics. Review begins 10/16/23. jobs.untsystem.edu/postings/76309
After years of silently lurking around Twitter, I finally decided to say #hello to the community with a short #introduction.
I am a postdoc at #wwu University of #Münster pretending to know something about #microbialgenomics 🧫 . In my PhD I did research on #zoonotic pathogens 🐷 🐣 . More recently, I am trying to learn #metagenomics
🧬 .
Currently, I am also administrator of miGenomeSurv, a platform to harmonize genomic #surveillance in Germany https://www.migenomesurv.org.
Thank you to the #Microbiology in #Meanjin organisers for this opportunity to show our collaborative #research from UniSC. So handy to Zoom in from windy #Wellington in Aotearoa New Zealand
📌One clone to rule them all: Culture-independent genomics of Chlamydia psittaci from equine and avian hosts in Australia
Interested? Our work was published in this month's #OpenAccess issue of #MicrobialGenomics 🎉
Feel free to check it out: https://doi.org/10.1099/mgen.0.000888
#SciComm #MicrobiologySociety #MiM2022

One clone to rule them all: Culture-independent genomics of Chlamydia psittaci from equine and avian hosts in Australia | Microbiology Society
Chlamydia psittaci is an avian pathogen with zoonotic potential. In Australia, C. psittaci has been well reported as a cause of reproductive loss in mares which subsequently have been the source of infection and illness in some in-contact humans. To date, molecular typing studies describe the predominant and clonal C. psittaci sequence type (ST)24 strains in horse, psittacine, and human infections. We sought to assess the clonality between ST24 strains and the emergence of equine ST24 with a comprehensive genomics approach. We used culture-independent probe-based and metagenomic whole-genome sequencing to investigate 13 C . psittaci genomes from horses, psittacines, and a pigeon from Australia. Published genomes of 36 C . psittaci strains were also used to contextualise our Australian dataset and investigate lineage diversity. We utilised a single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) based clustering and multi-locus sequence typing (MLST) approach. C. psittaci has four major phylogenetic groups (PG1-4) based on core-genome SNP-based phylogeny. PG1 contained clonal global and Australian equine, psittacine, and human ST24 genomes, with a median pairwise SNP distance of 68 SNPs. PG2, PG3, and PG4 had greater genomic diversity, including diverse STs collected from birds, livestock, human, and horse hosts from Europe and North America and a racing pigeon from Australia. We show that the clustering of C. psittaci by MLST was congruent with SNP-based phylogeny. The monophyletic ST24 clade has four major sub-lineages. The genomes of 17 Australian human, equine, and psittacine strains collected between 2008 and 2021 formed the predominant ST24 sub-lineage 1 (emerged circa 1979). Despite a temporal distribution of 13 years, the genomes within sub-lineage 1 had a median pairwise SNP distance of 32 SNPs, suggesting a recent population expansion or potential cross-host transmission. However, two C. psittaci genomes collected in 2015 from Victorian parrots clustered into distinct ST24 sub-lineage 4 (emerged circa 1965) with ovine strain C19/98 from Germany. This work describes a comprehensive phylogenomic characterisation of ST24 and identifies a timeline of potential bird-to-equine spillover events.
It seems hashtags are the way to join the broader conversation (and are needed to get indexed by the search), so I'll add a bunch that should have been included in my original toot
#microbiome #secondarymetabolism #bacteria #genomics #microbialecology #evolution #microbiology #microbes #antibiotics #microbialgenomics #microbialchemistry #bgc