Thursday, November 27, 2008

Tree of Life Post on Thanksgiving

A nice post over at Tree of Life on what scientists should be thankful for:

http://phylogenomics.blogspot.com/2008/11/what-scientists-should-be-thankful-for.html

Have a great Thanksgiving.

Thursday, September 18, 2008

NIH Open Access Mandate Under Attack

Here is a message from PLoS that was posted today. Legislation has been introduced that would effectively end the mandatory deposition of manuscripts reporting NIH-funded research into the freely available PubMed Central archive. Please contact your representatives and urge them to oppose this legislation and to preserve access to taxpayer-funded research. Thank you.

______________

NIH Mandate under attack - we need your help by 9.24

Hello Facebook page fans,

A rare individual note from us today but it is in a good cause. We don't like to bug our fans too much but sometimes we need your assistance.

We need you to make a noise for OA by contacting your representatives and senators to protest a new bill introduced into congress that would effectively reverse the NIH Public Access Policy. There's an especially nice post from David Dooling at PolITigenomics on the topic here http://www.politigenomics.com/2008/09/open-access-under-attack.html

The last time we asked our Facebook fans to take action in support of the mandate, you guys did such a good job that we were asked by certain folks who shall remain nameless to "call off the dogs" because they "had the point already"! Now we need to ask you to act again.

So what's the story? On September 11, 2008, the Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee (Rep. John Conyers, D-MI) introduced a bill that would effectively reverse the NIH Public Access Policy, as well as make it impossible for other federal agencies to put similar policies into place.

The legislation is HR6845: “Fair Copyright in Research Works Act” http://judiciary.house.gov/hearings/pdf/HR6845.pdf. You can read more about the intentions of this legislation here http://www.taxpayeraccess.org/nih/HR6845calltoaction.html

Please contact your Representative and Senators no later than September 24, 2008 to express your support for public access to taxpayer-funded research and ask that he or she OPPOSE HR6845.

Especially important are members of the House Judiciary Committee http://judiciary.house.gov/about/members.html and Senate Judiciary Committee http://judiciary.senate.gov/about/members.cfm.

Draft text and contact details are included below.

--------------------------

Dear [Representative/Senator];

On behalf of [your organization], I strongly urge you to OPPOSE HR 6845, the Fair Copyright in Research Works Act, introduced to the House Judiciary Committee, Subcommittee on the Courts, Intellectual Property and the Internet, on September 11, 2008. This bill would reverse the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Public Access Policy, prohibit American taxpayers from accessing any and all research funded by taxpayer dollars, and stifle critical advancements in lifesaving research and scientific discovery.

Because of the NIH Public Access Policy, millions of Americans now have access to vital health care information from the NIH’s PubMed Central database. Under the current policy, nearly 4,000 new crucial biomedical articles were deposited in the last month alone. HR6845 would prohibit the deposit of these articles so that, as a result, researchers, physicians, health care professionals, families and individuals will be seriously impeded in their ability to access NIH-funded, critical health-related information.

[Why you support taxpayer access and the NIH policy]. The NIH policy must be allowed to continue to ensure public access to the results of research funded by the agency with taxpayer dollars. Please OPPOSE HR6845.

Sincerely,

-------

CONTACT INFORMATION

SENATE COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY

name state fax

Senator Patrick Leahy VT 202-224-3479 (Chairman)
Senator Arlen Specter PA 202-228-1229 (Ranking Member)
Senator Jeff Sessions AL 202-224-3149
Senator Jon Kyl AZ 202-224-2207
Senator Dianne Feinstein CA 202-228-3954
Senator Joseph Biden DE 202-224-0139
Senator Charles Grassley IA 202-224-6020
Senator Richard Durbin IL 202-228-0400
Senator Sam Brownback KS 202-228-1265
Senator Edward M. Kennedy MA 202-224-2417
Senator Benjamin Cardin MD 202-224-1651
Senator Charles Schumer NY 202-228-3027
Senator Tom Coburn OK 202-224-6008
Senator Sheldon Whitehouse RI 202-228-6362
Senator Lindsey Graham SC 202-224-3808
Senator John Cornyn TX 202-228-2856
Senator Orrin Hatch UT 202-224-6331
Senator Herb Kohl WI 202-224-9787
Senator Russell Feingold WI 202-224-2725

HOUSE COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY

name state fax
Rep. John Conyers, Jr. TX 202-225-0072 (Chairman)
Rep. Lamar Smith TX 202-225-8628 (Ranking Member)
Rep. Artur Davis AL 202-226-9567
Rep. Trent Franks AZ 202-225-6328
Rep. Howard Berman CA 202-225-3196
Rep. Zoe Lofgren CA 202-225-3336
Rep. Maxine Waters CA 202-225-7854
Rep. Linda T. Sanchez CA 202-226-1012
Rep. Brad Sherman CA 202-225-5879
Rep. Adam Schiff CA 202-225-5828
Rep. Elton Gallegly CA 202-225-1100
Rep. Dan Lungren CA 202-226-1298
Rep. Darrell Issa CA 202-225-3303
Rep. Robert Wexler FL 202-225-5974
Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz FL 202-226-2052
Rep. Ric Keller FL 202-225-0999
Rep. Tom Feeney FL 202-226-6299
Rep. Hank Johnson GA 202-226-0691
Rep. Steve King IA 202-225-3193
Rep. Luis Gutierrez IL 202-225-7810
Rep. Mike Pence IN 202-225-3382
Rep. William D. Delahunt MA 202-225-5658
Rep. Keith Ellison MN 202-225-4886
Rep. Melvin Watt NC 202-225-1512
Rep. Howard Coble NC 202-225-8611
Rep. Jerrold Nadler NY 202-225-6923
Rep. Anthony Weiner NY 202-226-7253
Rep. Betty Sutton OH 202-225-2266
Rep. Steve Chabot OH 202-225-3012
Rep. Jim Jordan OH 202-226-0577
Rep. Steve Cohen TN 202-225-5663
Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee TX 202-225-3317
Rep. Louie Gohmert TX 202-226-1230
Rep. Chris Cannon UT 202-225-5629
Rep. Rick Boucher VA 202-225-0442
Rep. Robert Scott VA 202-225-8354
Rep. Bob Goodlatte VA 202-225-9681
Rep. J. Randy Forbes VA 202-226-1170
Rep. Tammy Baldwin WI 202-225-6942
Rep. F. James Sensenbrenner, Jr. WI 202-225-3190

Thank you so much for everything you do to support us. Let's stop the madness.

Best wishes

PLoS

Saturday, September 6, 2008

Sarah Palin and Botryotinia fuckeliana

Enormous hat-tip to Jonathan Eisen for uncovering the evolutionary connection between Sarah Palin (or, more correctly, the peptide SARAHPALIN) and a hypothetical protein from -- wait for it -- B. fuckeliana. You could almost say that it looks intelligently designed... Link to Jonathan's blog post at Tree of Life here.

Friday, August 15, 2008

For profit, closed-access publishing

An excellent post on for-profit publishers over at The Questionable Authority.

Saturday, August 2, 2008

Ithaca, NY

The Sciencenter (link) in Ithaca is the best children's science museum I've ever seen. The exhibits are attention-grabbing and (more impressively) attention-holding, even for an 8 year old. I've been twice in the past two days. We also did the Carl Sagan Planet Walk through Ithaca, which was a really cool way to think about relative sizes and distances in the solar system.

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Olivia Judson on reading "Origin of Species"

The column (link) is an easy read; the book, less so.

Monday, June 23, 2008

George Carlin

Today is a sad, sad day. George Carlin, one of my favorite comedians, has died. I used to listen to his albums as I fell asleep as a junior high school student, and only much later realized how spot on he was about the absurdity of life and the hypocrisy of government. He has left at a time when we need his insights and his laughs more than ever.

Sunday, June 22, 2008

Sour cream fudge cake.

Joy of Cooking. Page 931. The sour cream fudge cake is the best cake recipe I've ever made. We've put it to the test twice now. Outstanding.

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

PLoS ONE

I recently became the Section Editor for Infectious Diseases at PLoS ONE. While I've been an academic editor there since pretty close to the beginning, I'm really excited to take on this new role. Infectious diseases is already one of the largest article categories at PLoS ONE, and as a medical and scientific field with truly global reach, it is one that can benefit most from the open access model of publishing. I'm still getting the feel of my new role, but soon I hope to start collecting advice from friends and colleagues to help me grow the profile of PLoS ONE as a place where people submit and publish the best infectious diseases research.

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

More on Design and the Elastic Mind

The NY Times has a story today about a piece in the Design and the Elastic Mind exhibit at MoMA (which I have blogged about in the past). It seems that a "living coat" made of mouse stem cells had to be put down due to aberrant growth. Link to story.

Sunday, April 20, 2008

Infocom, HHGG, and a blast from the past.

For anyone who grew up as a computer geek in the 1980s, this blog post from Andy Baio will be of very great interest. It seems that he has come across the network drive from Infocom, the premier interactive fiction company of that time, and that one of the things on the drive is a fragment of an unreleased sequel to the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy game. There's not much to the fragment itself, but the comments on the site and the emails that he quotes are priceless.

Enjoy. (Link)

Saturday, April 12, 2008

Last Day: Liveblogging the Molecular Evolution/Infectious Diseases Keystone Conference

Day 3
Eun-Chung Park (NIAID) made an announcement about NIH funding opportunities for non-US investigators. There is a new PA for international research in infectious diseases PAR-08-130.

Morning Session
David Alland (UMDNJ) gave a fantastic talk on the evolution of drug resistance in M. tuberculosis. He uses SNP-based phylogenetic analysis to link specific mutations to drug resistance phenotypes. In the setting of confusing data as to which mutations actually cause resistance and which are simply epidemiologically linked, he showed that phylogenetic analyses can provide answers, including answers that impact patient care, that other techniques cannot.

M. Cristina Gutierrez spoke about “rethinking tuberculosis in the light of evolution.” She focused on smooth-colony variants of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTb), which are an uncommon but confusing cause of human disease. Using MLST, she showed that MTb can be divided into distinct lineages, which she calls MTb and Mycobacterium prototuberculosis. She provided estimates of the age of the split between the two lineages and hypothesized about the relevance of this to TB in hominid ancestors.

Bruce Levin delivered an “opinionated rant” about recombination in bacteria with a focus on transformation. Using a combination of equations, experiments, and “yak-yak,” he put forward a new hypothesis about the evolution of transformation and genetic competence. He hypothesizes that although competent bacteria may have a growth deficit in comparison to non-competent competitors, in the setting of occasional, punctuated selective pressure, the competent strains will predominate.

A short talk describing MLST analysis was given by Sebastien Gagneux from MRC. He focuses on the biogeography of MTb and links phylogenetic analysis to hypotheses about human migrations.

Anne Buboltz from Penn State gave a short talk about a strain of Bordetella bronchiseptica that has become less virulent due to a recombination event. Her group mapped this recombination, and using careful genetic studies linked the genes involved to the loss of virulence.

In the afternoon session, Jim Musser gave a phenomenal talk about his group’s integrated systems biology approach to group A streptococcus virulence. Using longitudinally collected human disease isolates, full genome sequencing, and unique animal models, they have linked single mutations on the streptococcal chromosome (including a single nucleotide change in one case) to both overall virulence and (in at least one case) to anatomic site specificity. Amazing, amazing work. I plan to go back and read several of the papers that he described again.

Nancy Moran gave an exciting talk about the evolutionary genomics of bacterial symbionts of insects. This is an area that has exploded recently, especially with the publication of the paper taking a genomic look at the dual sharpshooter symbiosis. She gave an overview of the field, focusing on the common characteristics of genomes of obligate symbionts (small size, loss of metabolic functions), the importance of maternal passage of symbionts to their evolution, and how more recently established symbioses may differ from ancient ones.

Mark Achtman (University College Cork) spoke about the complex and intimate relationship between Helicobacter pylori and humans. In addition to learning a tremendous amount about the organism itself, his group has used the rapid evolution and recombination within H. pylori to trace human migrations at a level of resolution that human genomic studies cannot approach. This is an extremely useful and creative use of evolutionary and phylogenetic analysis and a field that is just beginning.

Martin Antonio spoke about Streptococcus pneumoniae, an extremely important cause of childhood mortality worldwide. His group looked at invasive S. pneumoniae disease in Africa and, through a detailed MLST analysis, linked a specific serotype to severity of disease.

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Day 2: Liveblogging the Molecular Evolution/Infectious Diseases Keystone Conference

Day 2
Morning Session: DNA viruses
Elliot Lefkowitz gave the opening session today. He spoke about gene acquisition and loss as driving factors in speciation of poxviruses. He focused on the orthopoxviridae (the group containing vaccinia, variola, monkeypox, and other pathogens). They have developed computational tools to do gene prediction and annotation across all known poxvirus genomes. This has allowed them to get around problems with inconsistency in annotation among deposited sequences. Gene acquisition in the core region appears to play much less of a role in orthopoxvirus speciation. These techniques have also enabled them to look at the process of gene fragmentation and loss over the evolutionary history of these viruses. They have begun to test these predictions, especially with regard to promoters. Some of this work is in a recent PNAS paper:
ResearchBlogging.orgAssarsson, E., Greenbaum, J.A., Sundstrom, M., Schaffer, L., Hammond, J.A., Pasquetto, V., Oseroff, C., Hendrickson, R.C., Lefkowitz, E.J., Tscharke, D.C., Sidney, J., Grey, H.M., Head, S.R., Peters, B., Sette, A. (2008). Kinetic analysis of a complete poxvirus transcriptome reveals an immediate-early class of genes. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 105(6), 2140-2145. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0711573105

The parvovirus family was the subject of the next talk, by Colin Parrish from Cornell. His title was “How to change your host range in a few easy steps: canine and feline parvoviruses.” In the 1970s, there was a host range shift within a feline parvovirus (FPV) that allowed it to infect dogs rather than cats. Within a year or two, this (now) canine parvovirus (CPV-2) spread through a wide geographic area and shifted again to allow efficient spread to both cats and dogs. All of the canine parvoviruses today appear to be descendants of this virus, and most are in the CPV-2a group. Nearly whole genome analysis has allowed description of geographically distinct clades within the CPV-2a group. Certain residues on the threefold spike of the capsid protein appear to control host range. The host receptor is the transferrin receptor, and binding to it triggers chathrin-mediated uptake.

Thomas Schultz talked about diversity within the rhadinoviruses (RV, which are gamma-2-herpesviruses, including KSHV – the causative agent of Kaposi’s sarcoma). There are two major branches within the RV lineage, and these are distant relatives of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). Within KSHV, there was an early split into a number of geographically distinct lineages. More recently, there has been significant recombination among these lineages as well as introduction of sequences at the ends of the genome. KSHV protein K1, which contains hypervariable regions and has oncogenic properties, is located at one end of the genome at a position analogous to LMP-1 in EBV. KSHV protein K15, which activates host cell proinflammatory signaling, is at the other end. Homologues of K15 appear in other related viruses and seem to have distinct signaling profiles.

Mary Odom from the Lefkowitz lab gave a short talk about gene acquisition by poxviruses via horizontal transfer. She has developed bioinformatic techniques to look for putative transfer events. By looking at multiple databases (viral vs. eukaryotic or viral vs. bacterial), they can generate 2D plots of best BLASTP scores to generate leads.

Edgar Sevilla-Reyes gave a short talk about the dynamic gene content of human cytomegalovirus (CMV). Gene disrupting mutations occur after only a few passages in vitro. After more passages, larger deletions predominate, especially at the ends of the UL sequence. They studied genetic integrity at the ends of UL for 22 CMV isolates and found striking clustering of the sites of mutations. These same sites were also found to be mutated in a subset of non-passaged clinical CMV isolates, raising the question of what the selective pressures on these sites might be.


Workshop
short talk session

Nels Elde described an evolutionary arms race between poxviruses and their hosts. Protein kinase R (PKR) is a host factor with antiviral effects. In its dimeric (active) form, PKR phosphorylates eIF2alpha, which leads to a global transcriptional arrest. This blocks viral protein synthesis and can aid in host defense. As evidence of the importance of this strategy, several pathogenic viruses encode substrate mimics to block PKR. These mimics (K3L is the poxvirus example used here) are structurally similar to eIF2aplha and can block the PKR/eIF2alpha interaction. Analysis of the dN/dS ratio suggested that PKR was under positive selection but eIF2alpha was subject to purifying selection (i.e. PKR is undergoing adaptive evolution, while changes in eIF2alpha are generally selected against). By mapping specific sites in all three of the involved proteins (PKR, eIF2alpha, and K3L), the picture of a rapidly evolving selective race appears.

Willem van Ballegooijen talked about surveillance of hepatitis B virus (HBV) sequences following targeted vaccination of risk groups (not global vaccination!) in the Netherlands, starting in 1998. He used coalescent-based analysis of HBV DNA sequence and Bayesian analysis to provide statistical support for a decreasing incidence of infection, starting in about 2000.

Intrahost diversity and evolutionary dynamics of influenza were the topics of
Elodie Ghedin’s talk. Because of evidence of reassortment among cocirculating clades of influenza during a single season (see yesterday’s talks), she hypothesized that coinfection of individuals must occur. Using samples from human isolates, she examined diversity among influenza sequences. She found convincing evidence for double and even triple infections with influenza subtypes (which is something that we see clinically as well) and hypothesizes that this may be a source for flu reassortment and diversity during the active season.

Ma Luo from the University of Mannitoba discussed evolutionary interactions between HLA alleles and HIV-1 infection within an East African sex worker population. She studied women from the Pumwani sexworker cohort (high prevalence) and a mother-child cohort (low prevalence). They examined linkage of HLA class I alleles to the risk of seroconversion during the study and grouped these into “protective” and “susceptible” alleles. Over time (1985-1992 vs. 1993-2001) there was a decrease in the susceptible allele prevalence and an increase in the protective allele prevalence in the high-risk cohort.

Molly OhAinle talked about the evolution of the APOBEC3 locus of anti-retroviral elements in hominids. She presented evidence that the anti-retroelement of APOBEC3H, which is a broadly active member of the family, has undergone very recent changes. Macaque APOBEC3H efficiently inhibits HIV infectivity, which human APOBEC3H does not. The loss of this activity of APOBEC3H appears to have occurred independently at least twice in recent human evolution. Human APOBEC3H is considerably less stable than that of other primates, which accounts for its lack of activity. Ancestral sequence reconstitution suggests that recent human ancestors had stable (effective) APOBEC3H. Is there selection for non-functional APOBEC3H alleles in the human population?

Bouke de Jong (NYU) examined the phylogeography of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex, specifically the appearance of M. africanum in West Africa. By looking at genotypes of organisms from smear-positive tuberculosis (TB) cases and their contacts. A significant portion of TB in the Gambia appears to be caused by M. africanum. There are differences in risk of progression but not transmission or severity when comparing M. africanum with M. tuberculosis.

Joel Wertheim used Bayesian dating strategies to calibrate a molecular clock for SIV evolution. They used envelope and polymerase sequences to develop their model, which allowed specific estimation of dates for divergence of SIV clades as well as HIV-2.

Tsan Yuk Lam discussed transmission dynamics of natural reassortant H5N1 influenza in Indonesia. His analysis is consistent with a single clade arising from a single H5N1 introduction from China. There has been intralineage reassortment within Indonesia over a short time.

Evening Session: Retroviruses

Beatrice Hahn (UAB): Origins of HIV-1 and adaptation to its human host
John Moran (U. Michigan): Studies of a human transposable element (LINE elements)
Nathan Wolfe (UCLA): Cross-species transmission and establishment of novel human retroviruses.
Christine Clouser (U. Minnesota): Short talk: Exploiting the mutation rate of HIV

Day 1: Liveblogging the Molecular Evolution/Infectious Diseases Keystone Conference

Day 1

Today’s talks were focused on the evolutionary dynamics of RNA viruses, including influenza, dengue, measles, and SARS coronavirus.

Morning session:

Jeffrey Taubenberger led off the day by talking about influenza, the “continuously emerging infectious disease.” He emphasized the importance of the explosion of sequenced influenza genomes that have become available in the past several years. Starting with a 2005 PLoS Biology paper that looked at H3N2 influenza viruses, he discussed the process by which a minor influenza clade can transition into a dominant clade. A recent PLoS Pathogens paper used concatenated genomes to generate a phylogenetic tree. This analysis showed that there is little antigenic drift during the influenza season – drift seems to occur primarily between seasonal peaks of flu. This leads to a “source-sink” model of the generation of influenza diversity: sites in the tropics may serve as a supply of genetic diversity that leads to differences in seasonal strains elsewhere. Also, there is tremendous influenza sequence diversity within wild birds, and within host genetic transfer is thought to generate a large pool of reassortant viruses. A host switch to humans leads to a dropoff in diversity, thought to be due to lack of access to this tremendous sequence pool. The selective pressures on influenza viruses within avian hosts are only beginning to be explored.

ResearchBlogging.orgHolmes, E.C., Ghedin, E., Miller, N., Taylor, J., Bao, Y., St. George, K., Grenfell, B.T., Salzberg, S.L., Fraser, C.M., Lipman, D.J., Taubenberger, J.K. (2005). Whole-Genome Analysis of Human Influenza A Virus Reveals Multiple Persistent Lineages and Reassortment among Recent H3N2 Viruses. PLoS Biology, 3(9), e300. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.0030300

ResearchBlogging.orgNelson, M.I., Simonsen, L., Viboud, C., Miller, M.A., Holmes, E.C. (2007). Phylogenetic Analysis Reveals the Global Migration of Seasonal Influenza A Viruses. PLoS Pathogens, 3(9), e131. DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.0030131


Edward Holmes talked about the molecular evolution and phylodynamics of dengue virus. The 4 serotypes of dengue (DENV-1 through -4) seem to have split ~2000 years ago, with most diversity appearing in the past several hundred years. Studies of the microevolution of dengue in Bangkok showed complex interactions among serotypes, with DENV-1 through -3 largely in phase and DENV-4 predominating when other serotypes were less prevalent. There are also distinct genotypes within each serotype, with DENV-2 undergoing significant genotype changes in Vietnam between 1999-2007. Importantly, as we move toward phase 3 trials of investigational dengue vaccines, the combination of detailed spatial data and dengue genome sequences will be indispensable for understanding the consequences of vaccination.

Oliver Pybus from Oxford presented new data about the complex within-host evolution of hepatitis C virus that occurs during chronic infection. Using longitudinal data from a number of chronically infected patients, they derived multiple viral sequences over several years. They found marked diversity over time, considerably more than was seen in a similar longitudinal study of HIV. This was thought to be consistent with discontinuous variation – i.e. low-level variation of HCV punctuated by periods of vastly increased diversity. This may be the result of a sequestered hepatic pool of HCV genetic diversity, which seeds the plasma at different times.

Paul Rota from CDC gave an overview of the global laboratory-based surveillance for measles and mumps. This talk was particularly important in light of the ongoing outbreak of measles in Switzerland that has led to a number of imported cases in the U.S. (the index case was, not surprisingly, an unvaccinated child). Genotyping of measles viruses worldwide has greatly enhanced our understanding of its epidemiology. There is a reasonable amount of geographic restriction of measles genotypes. Importantly, though, genotyping can help trace the origin of imported cases. Despite the presence of multiple genotypes, measles is still a monotypic virus, and the vaccine (which is a genotype A virus) provides protection across all measles genotypes. Likewise with mumps, where vaccination with the Jeryl Lynn strain continues to provide protection across all circulating mumps strains.

These were followed by two short talks. The first was by Phillipe Lerney, who uses Bayesian models to infer probable modes of geographic spread of a variety of viral diseases. Naomi Forrester spoke about rabbit haemorrhagic disease virus. Her group did a phylogenetic analysis of circulating RHD sequences in healthy rabbits in the UK. There were 2 major circulating subtypes, an epidemic strain and a “widely divergent” strain, and they hypothesize that there may be some degree of cross-protection between these two clades.


In the evening session, Kathryn Holmes gave a great talk on coronaviruses (CoV) and host adaptation. The groups of CoV (1, 2a, 3, and 3b) each contain tremendous diversity with respect to host range and receptor specificities. The spike glycoprotein (through its S1 region) dictates receptor binding, but CoV accessory genes are important in host tropism as well. However, many of the accessory genes have unknown origins and functions. There is little homology in these accessory genes among groups, and while they are generally not necessary for in vitro replication, they can have important effects on fitness in vivo. She finished by using mouse hepatitis virus and bovine CoV as models to ask whether viruses can drive the evolution of host receptors.

Alan Barrett from UTMB traced the global spread of west nile virus (WNV) and the incredible diversity of hosts (>300 species of birds, >60 species of mosquitoes) that it can utilize. Sequence analysis showed the presence of 3 distinct clades of WNV (the old world, Eastern U.S., and North American clades), and phenotype analysis of these is ongoing.

Michael Katze gave a description of his systems biology-based investigations of host response to influenza infection. Both reconstructed 1918 and H5 flu are highly virulent in murine and primate models of infection. Microarray-based profiling of host responses showed an important role of control of the early inflammatory response in the lung for survival. Animals infected with 1918 flu had a rapid and uncontrolled response that led to death.

The final talk of the day was from Chun-Chau Hon, who did a phylogenetic analysis of coronaviruses and a Bayesian molecular clock analysis. By examining a novel clade of bat SARS-like CoV, he made predictions regarding the potential ancestor of human SARS CoV. Some of this work was recently in J Virol.

ResearchBlogging.orgHon, C., Lam, T., Shi, Z., Drummond, A.J., Yip, C., Zeng, F., Lam, P., Leung, F.C. (2007). Evidence of the Recombinant Origin of a Bat Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS)-Like Coronavirus and Its Implications on the Direct Ancestor of SARS Coronavirus. Journal of Virology, 82(4), 1819-1826. DOI: 10.1128/JVI.01926-07

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Liveblogging the Molecular Evolution/Infectious Diseases Keystone Conference

I am in Breckenridge at the Keystone Symposium on Molecular Evolution as a Driving Force in Infectious Diseases. This is my first attempt at liveblogging a conference, and I'll do my best to post highlights of each session. My training is in infectious diseases, not evolutionary biology, but I'm here because our most recent paper, which described a new member of the cholesterol-dependent cytolysin family of bacterial toxins, led me into a project looking at the evolutionary history of that family. I'll be presenting some of that work later in the conference and am hoping to learn from people who think about these things for a living.

So far, the conference has been great. It is a very internationally representative group, something that Keystone has been striving for with their Global Health Series of symposia. The evening session today was a plenary lecture by Sir David Weatherall, who spoke about the interaction between malaria and human evolution. The title of the talk was "The Role of Genetic Variation in Susceptibility to Malaria in Human Evolution: Was Haldane Right?" He started off with brief descriptions of the pathophysiology of malaria and the hemoglobinopathies. He described JRS Haldane's response to a description of thalassemia mutation rates at a conference in 1948, in which he postulated a heterozygote advantage for carriers of hemoglobinopathy alleles. Weatherall reviewed his data, collected over decades, and those of other groups, showing how far we have come toward a mechanistic understanding of the interaction between hemoglobinopathies and malaria and how powerful the selective pressure of some diseases can be on the shaping of human evolution. Two issues that I had never even considered were the interactions between alleles in people who carry multiple mutations (such as HbS trait/alpha-thalassemia or HbE/beta-thalassemia) on overall malaria susceptibility (overall point: it can be quite complicated, and some of these interactions may even restore wild-type susceptibility), and the possible implications of these very frequent alleles as we move forward with malaria vaccine trials in Africa and elsewhere. Some of the most recent work on polygenic interactions is covered in a recent PNAS paper as well.

I'm looking forward to the sessions tomorrow, which focus on viral diseases, and I'm also hoping that FedEx delivers my poster as scheduled...


ResearchBlogging.org
O'Donnell, A., Premawardhena, A., Arambepola, M., Allen, S.J., Peto, T.E., Fisher, C.A., Rees, D.C., Olivieri, N.F., Weatherall, D.J. (2007). Age-related changes in adaptation to severe anemia in childhood in developing countries. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 104(22), 9440-9444. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0703424104

A good day for open access

The NIH public access mandate goes into effect today. Jonathan Eisen has a good post about this (and, more specifically, about the role of the Public Library of Science in making this happen) at The Tree of Life. Importantly, a growing number of journals are making compliance with the NIH mandate automatic, and those that have not yet will be under increasing pressure to do so as we go forward.

Saturday, April 5, 2008

JBC offers an open access option

In a welcome move, the Journal of Biological Chemistry has announced that in addition to their free-access papers in press feature, they will now allow authors to elect (for a fee) an "Author's Choice Publication Option." Essentially this allows authors to have their work immediately available under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial license (not quite as open as the PLoS Journals, but certainly not bad). It appears in their instructions to authors that copyright is still transferred to ASBMB for all manuscripts, though.

I've published some of the work that I am most proud of in JBC, and it is great to see them making open access an option for authors.

Thursday, April 3, 2008

Measles outbreak in U.S. started by unvaccinated child.

The measles outbreak that started in San Diego was imported by an unvaccinated 7 year old boy who visited Switzerland. The MMWR early release report is here. There have been at least 11 secondary cases, and a large-scale public health response has been required to deal with the many contacts of this child who are also unvaccinated because their parents used "personal beliefs exemptions." How many of these does it take before we do away with these ridiculous exemptions? Parents who refuse vaccines not only put their own children at risk, but also risk the lives of children who have to rely on herd immunity for protection (immunocompromised children who cannot receive the live-attenuated measles vaccine and those too young to be vaccinated).

Silver Guy, San Diego, 3/29/2008

Monday, March 31, 2008

Paul Offit on the Poling Case

Paul Offit has a typically brilliant op-ed piece in today's New York Times. He takes a logical look at the Vaccine Injury Compensation Program and the potentially destructive fallout of the recent and highly publicized Poling case. An especially compelling (and often missed) point is the harm that cases such as this may do to autism research and, indirectly, to affected children. Every dollar spent trying to prop up the discredited vaccine-autism link is a dollar diverted from research that might lead to a better understanding of a complex disorder.

Note: There is also the obligatory asinine response from David Kirby at Huffington Post.

Thursday, March 27, 2008

Moon Jellyfish


Scripps Aquarium, 3/26/2008.

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

On Rejection

Ferric Fang has a commentary in Infection and Immunity called "On Rejection." It is certainly worth reading if you've ever received (or written!) a rejection letter. The calls for civility on the part of editors, reviewers, and authors have certainly been made before, but it is a theme that bears repeating.


ResearchBlogging.org
Fang, F.C. (2008). GUEST COMMENTARY: On Rejection. Infection and Immunity DOI: 10.1128/IAI.00315-08

Friday, March 14, 2008

Google Sky

Google Sky. Outrageous.

Design and the Elastic Mind

I recently went to the Design and the Elastic Mind exhibit at the Museum of Modern Art. Here is the website text describing the rationale behind the exhibit:

Over the past twenty-five years, people have weathered dramatic changes in their experience of time, space, matter, and identity. Individuals cope daily with a multitude of changes in scale and pace—working across several time zones, traveling with relative ease between satellite maps and nanoscale images, and being inundated with information. Adaptability is an ancestral distinction of intelligence, but today’s instant variations in rhythm call for something stronger: elasticity, the product of adaptability plus acceleration. Design and the Elastic Mind explores the reciprocal relationship between science and design in the contemporary world by bringing together design objects and concepts that marry the most advanced scientific research with attentive consideration of human limitations, habits, and aspirations. The exhibition highlights designers’ ability to grasp momentous changes in technology, science, and history—changes that demand or reflect major adjustments in human behavior—and translate them into objects that people can actually understand and use. This Web site presents over three hundred of these works, including fifty projects that are not featured in the gallery exhibition.

The group that I visited with included a mathematician, a music journalist, an obstetrician, three seven year-olds, and me. I was absolutely stunned at the ability of nearly all of the projects to appeal to everyone in that group. The web site is worth a look, with everything from computer animation of the Dicer enzyme to curved origami to "accessories for lonely men." Link.

Thursday, March 13, 2008

E. coli and your receptors

Ok. This is cool. I took a break from grant-writing to read this paper, and I’m glad that I did. Starting with an in silico screen, Cirl et al. showed that some pathogenic bacteria (they focused on uropathogenic E. coli) secrete proteins that are homologues of a domain of the mammalian toll-like receptors (TLR). TLR are the sentinel molecules of the innate immune system, detecting conserved pieces of pathogens (peptidoglycan, lipopolysaccharide, or good-old bacterial DNA) and initiating immune responses. They are present on all kinds of cells, including the epithelial cells that line the urinary tract. The E. coli proteins that this group found bind to the TIR domain, the part of TLR that are responsible for transducing signals, and interrupt the signaling cascade, effectively silencing the alarm. This blunts the immune response and, presumably, protects the bacteria from attack. The paper is a great piece of work, telling a coherent story and taking the idea from the initial screen to a mechanistic investigation that has real clinical implications. Well done!

Link to article. (Sadly, not open access.)
ResearchBlogging.org

Cirl, C., Wieser, A., Yadav, M., Duerr, S., Schubert, S., Fischer, H., Stappert, D., Wantia, N., Rodriguez, N., Wagner, H., Svanborg, C., Miethke, T. (2008). Subversion of Toll-like receptor signaling by a unique family of bacterial Toll/interleukin-1 receptor domain–containing proteins. Nature Medicine DOI: 10.1038/nm1734

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

NIH Public Access Policy -- Public Comments Needed

The following is an email that went out to the PLoS ONE Editorial Board today. Please do consider contacting NIH in support of the Public Access Policy and against the attempts to further delay its implementation. Thanks.


_____________
Dear Editorial and Advisory Board Members,

Apologies for sending this email round to everyone as this policy mostly applies to people in the USA, especially people funded by the NIH. However, anyone is free to comment.

As I am sure many of you know, the US congress recently passed a bill to require public access to NIH funded research. A summary of developments is here http://www.plos.org/cms/node/308.

The deadline for the implementation of the NIH Public Access Policy (4/7/08) is fast approaching and some traditional publishers are trying to delay this important step.

The NIH seeks your input immediately.
To fully understand the scientific and taxpayer community perspective of this important initiative, the NIH urges you to add comments at this website http://publicaccess.nih.gov/comments/comments.htm
by Monday 3/17 5pm EDT.

Please comment in your own words – however, you may find the following ideas useful in framing a response.
The proposed NIH policy:

Positively contributes to the advancement of science
Serves the public health—by enabling discovery, speeding treatment, and cures
Provides a direct return for public investment in the NIH
Keeps the USA in step with other countries who have recently enacted similar polices
Democratizes teaching and learning—by providing new resources for scientists to use in new and innovative ways.

If you have questions about the policy and how it affects you, you should ask these questions on the website, but we’d encourage you to preface them with a statement of support (it would be a shame if such questions were misinterpreted as a lack of support for the policy).

These comments will be considered alongside verbal presentations at the Open Meeting on Public Access on 3/20 (you may also register here http://publicaccess.nih.gov/comments/registration.htm to attend this meeting by Monday 3/17 5pm EDT).
Thank you, in advance, for letting the NIH know that you and your community supports this policy.

Please do feel free to forward this message along to U.S. colleagues, friends, and family members, as this policy affects researchers, patients, and the taxpaying public.

Best wishes,
Mark

Mark Patterson
Director of Publishing

Public Library of Science
European Office:
7 Portugal Place
Cambridge
CB5 8AF, UK

t: +44 (0)1223 463331
e: mpatterson@plos.org
w: www.plos.org
---------------------------------

Saturday, March 8, 2008

Screening for new antibiotic resistance genes

A recent article in PLoS ONE takes a broad look at antibiotic resistance in Pseudomonas aeruginosa, an environmental organism and a cause of opportunistic infections. Pseudomonas infections are particularly difficult to treat, as it is frequently resistant to numerous classes of antibiotics. Children who are predisposed to chronic colonization or infection with Pseudomonas, such as those with cystic fibrosis, may eventually harbor bacteria that are resistant to all available antibiotics. Fajardo et al. (citation below) screened two transposon libraries of P. aeruginosa looking for genes that either increased or decreased susceptibility to a panel of antibiotics. Their results are of interest, as many of their hits (genes associated with a change in susceptibility) were in classes of genes not previously linked to resistance. A weakness of the study is that they do not go on to make defined mutations in these genes or to complement the phenotype by expressing the mutated gene on a plasmid, but it is an interesting screen that has the potential to provide targets for future antimicrobial development.


Here is the PubMed link so that you can reach the PubMed Central version of the article if the PLoS ONE site continues to be slow.
ResearchBlogging.org
Fajardo, A., Martínez-Martín, N., Mercadillo, M., Galán, J.C., Ghysels, B., Matthijs, S., Cornelis, P., Wiehlmann, L., Tümmler, B., Baquero, F., Martínez, J.L., Falagas, M. (2008). The Neglected Intrinsic Resistome of Bacterial Pathogens. PLoS ONE, 3(2), e1619. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0001619

Friday, March 7, 2008

Shameless promotion for my friend's new book...

My good friend Sam Wang and his coauthor Sandra Aamodt have just published their book, Welcome to Your Brain. The subtitle is "Why You Lose Your Car Keys but Never Forget How To Drive and Other Puzzles of Everyday Life." It is simultaneously useful, thought-provoking, and funny, and it has already gotten wonderful reviews (summarized at welcometoyourbrain.com). Give it a try! Amazon link.



Wednesday, March 5, 2008

A high-profile retraction

There are an announcement and a news article in the current issue of Nature retracting a paper from Linda Buck's lab about mapping olfactory connections in the mouse. The paper was retracted following the inability of their group and others to reproduce the data. There is often a great deal of controversy following a retraction like this, but it seems that this is one good example that the system of peer-review, publication, and independent replication works well as a road to scientific truth. Falsification (or legitimate, unintentional error) may persist for a while in the literature, but eventually, we hope, the truth comes out.

This is, of course, yet another argument in favor of making published research reports and even primary data as widely available as possible.
ResearchBlogging.org

Zou, Z., Horowitz, L.F., Montmayeur, J., Snapper, S., Buck, L.B. (2001). Genetic tracing reveals a stereotyped sensory map in the olfactory cortex. Nature, 414(6860), 173-179. DOI: 10.1038/35102506
.

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

CDC vaccine safety site

The CDC has a new vaccine safety site. This is a much better place to get scientifically valid information than, for example, a Republican presidential candidate.

Monday, March 3, 2008

Avery and the pneumococcus

I gave a lecture on Streptococcus pneumoniae (pneumococcus) in our global antimicrobial resistance course today. Despite more than a hundred years of work, the pneumococcus remains a major cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. We have vaccines, we have effective antibiotics (fewer and fewer…), yet pneumococcal infection still kills about a million kids every year.

Here’s something that I do when I want to feel small: I look back at the papers that Oswald Avery published on the topic of the pneumococcus between 1915 and 1946 in the Journal of Experimental Medicine. (Thanks, JEM, for opening up your archive back to the very first issue!). Not only is the paper defining DNA as the transforming substance in there, but nearly everything that we understand about the pneumococcus was done or predicted by Avery. The carrier state, capsular polysaccharide (and the fact that one can diagnose pneumococcal infection by detecting it in the urine), autolysis, hydrogen peroxide production, discovery of C-reactive protein, and how to make a conjugate vaccine: it’s all there. Our best diagnostics and vaccines are still offshoots of his work.

As with any great scientist, he did not work alone, and many others have contributed to advancing the field, but I remain in awe of Avery.



ResearchBlogging.org
Dochez, A.R., Avery, O.T. (1915). THE OCCURRENCE OF CARRIERS OF DISEASE-PRODUCING TYPES OF PNEUMOCOCCUS . Journal of Experimental Medicine, 22(1), 105-113.