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es/by-sa/2.0/. Metagenomics Prof:Rui Alves 973702406 Dept Ciencies Mediques Basiques, 1st Floor, Room.

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Presentation on theme: "es/by-sa/2.0/. Metagenomics Prof:Rui Alves 973702406 Dept Ciencies Mediques Basiques, 1st Floor, Room."— Presentation transcript:

1 http://creativecommons.org/licens es/by-sa/2.0/

2 Metagenomics Prof:Rui Alves ralves@cmb.udl.es 973702406 Dept Ciencies Mediques Basiques, 1st Floor, Room 1.08 Website of the Course:http://web.udl.es/usuaris/pg193845/Courses/Bioinformatics_2007/ Course: http://10.100.14.36/Student_Server/

3 Studying an organism …ACTG… >Dna MAACTG… >DNA Pol MTC… Stress Measure Response Find signatures for physiological dynamics in genomic data

4 Diversity of Life on Earth Described species: ~1.5 millions Predicted to exist: >30 millions Cultivate in the lab: ~thousands How do we know the genome of the species we can not cultivate? How can we know if the genes that are expressed in nature follow the same patterns as those in the lab?

5 Metagenomics Metagenomics (also Environmental Genomics, Ecogenomics or Community Genomics) is the study of genetic material recovered directly from environmental samples.

6 Sampling in Metagenomics Take a sample off of the environment Isolate and amplify DNA/mRNA Sequence it

7 Shotgun Sequencing Restriction Enzymes

8 Computer assembly ACT…GTC CTA …ATC … …GGGG How do we know which genes belong to which genome???? How do we assemble them???

9 The Best Case Scenario Coverage is enough to assemble independent genomes

10 What normally happens Coverage is not enough and assembly is fragmentary Worst Case Scenario: Some fragments can not be assigned

11 Down Side of Metagenomics Often fragmentary Often highly divergent Rarely any known activity No chromosomal placement No organism of origin Ab initio ORF predictions Huge data

12 Marine Metagenomics Microbes account for more than 90% of ocean biomass, mediate all biochemical cycles in the oceans and are responsible for 98% of primary production in the sea. Metagenomics is a breakthrough sequencing approach to examine the open-space microbial species without the need for isolation and lab cultivation of individual species.

13 PI Larry Smarr Paul Gilna Ex. Dir. PI Larry Smarr

14 Marine Genome Sequencing Project Measuring the Genetic Diversity of Ocean Microbes Sorcerer II Data from this area has already reach to 10% of GenBank. The Entire Data Will Double Number of Proteins in Embank !

15 Sample Metadata from GOS Site Metadata  Location (lat/long, water depth)  Site characterization (finite list of types plus “other”)  Site description (free text)  Country Sampling Metadata  Sample collection date/time  Sampling depth  Conditions at time of sampling (e.g., stormy, surface temperature)  Sample physical/chemical measurements (T (oC), S (ppt), chl a (mg m-3), etc)  “author” Experimental Parameters  Filter size  Insert size

16 Flat File Server Farm W E B PORTAL Traditional User Response Request Dedicated Compute Farm (1000 CPUs) TeraGrid: Cyberinfrastructure Backplane (scheduled activities, e.g. all by all comparison) (10000s of CPUs) Data- Base Farm 10 GigE Fabric Calit2’s Direct Access Core Architecture Will Create Next Generation Metagenomics Server Source: Phil Papadopoulos, SDSC, Calit2 + Web Services Sargasso Sea Data Sorcerer II Expedition (GOS) JGI Community Sequencing Project Moore Marine Microbial Project NASA Goddard Satellite Data Community Microbial Metagenomics Data Web (other service) Local Cluster Local Environment Direct Access Lambda Cnxns

17 Marine Metagenomics Who is there? Drug discovery Environmental survey Microbial genetic survey Microbial genomic survey Symbiosis Organism discovery Marine conservation Evolution study Bioenergy discovery Endosymbiosis Biogeochemistry mapping Metabolic pathway discovery

18

19 9/4/201519 http://creativecommons.org/licens es/by-sa/2.0/

20 Nutrigenomics Prof:Rui Alves ralves@cmb.udl.es 973702406 Dept Ciencies Mediques Basiques, 1st Floor, Room 1.08 Website of the Course:http://web.udl.es/usuaris/pg193845/Courses/Bioinformatics_2007/ Course: http://10.100.14.36/Student_Server/

21 9/4/201521 What is Nutrigenomics? Nutrigenomics is the science that examines the response of individuals to food compounds using post-genomic and related technologies. The long-term aim of nutrigenomics is to understand how the whole body responds to real foods using an integrated approach. Studies using this approach can examine people (i.e. populations, sub-populations - based on genes or disease - and individuals), food, life- stage and life-style without preconceived ideas.

22 9/4/201522 Why is Nutrigenomics important? Most non-genetic diseases are behaviorally related. E. g. Last year in the world, heart disease was responsible for a fraction of deaths comparable to that caused by infectious diseases. Diabetes, obesity growing!!! Of course genes are a factor. Finding the right combination of nutrients for each genotype can help in changing behavior and preventing many of these diseases. This combination may change with age, sex!!

23 9/4/201523 Problem 1: Nutrition – tasty + complex

24 9/4/201524 Genes – Lifestyle – Calories

25 100 50 0 % Energy Low-fat meat Chicken Eggs Fish Fruit Vegetables (carrots) Nuts Honey 100 50 0 % Energy Fruit Vegetables Beans Meat Chicken Fish Grain Milk/-products Isolated Carbohydrates Isolated Fat/Oil Alcohol 1.200.000 Generations between feast en famine Paleolithic era 2-3 Generations in energy abundance Modern Times The same genes – The changed diet

26 9/4/201526 Molecular nutrition

27 9/4/201527 Optimal Nutrition Lifestyle Individual genotype Functional phenotype Problem 2: Our “gene passports” and nutrition AA AB BB Improvement Maintenance of Health “Eat right for your genotype??”

28 9/4/201528 Personalized diets?

29 9/4/201529 Energy homeostasis Nutrient absorption Cell proliferation Nutritional factors Transcription factors Gene transcription Nutrients acts as dietary signals

30 9/4/201530 Transcription-factor pathways mediating nutrient-gene interaction

31 9/4/201531 A key instrument in Nutrigenomics research: The GeneChip® System

32 9/4/201532 Predisposition Genotype Prognostic markers Diagnostic markers Changes in pathway dynamics to maintain homeostasis Surrogate Biomarkers Late biomarkers of disease Early biomarkers of disease Onset of disease Nutritional Systems Biology

33 9/4/201533 Nutrigenomics Target Genes Mechanisms Pathways Signatures Profiles Biomarkers Foods Nutrition Molecular Nutrition & Genomics Nutritional Systems Biology Identification of dietary signals Identification of dietary sensors Identification of target genes Reconstruction of signaling pathways Measurement of stress signatures Identification of early biomarkers Small research groups Small budgets Large research consortia Big money Complexity

34 9/4/201534 “Molecular Nutrition & Genomics” The strategy of Nutrigenomics 80-100000 proteins 20-25000 genes 100000 transcripts 50000 (?) metabolites

35 9/4/201535 Integration of enabling technologies in nutrigenomics Microarray & SAGE

36 9/4/201536 Two Strategies (1)The traditional hypothesis-driven approach: specific genes and proteins, the expression of which is influenced by nutrients, are identified using genomics tools — such as transcriptomics, proteomics and metabolomics — which subsequently allows the regulatory pathways through which diet influences homeostasis to be identified. Transgenic mouse models and cellular models are essential tools. provide us with detailed molecular data on the interaction between nutrition and the genome. (2) The SYSTEMS BIOLOGY approach: gene, protein and metabolite signatures that are associated with specific nutrients, or nutritional regimes, are catalogued, and might provide ‘early warning’molecular biomarkers for nutrient-induced changes to homeostasis. Be more important for human nutrition, given the difficulty of collecting tissue samples from ‘healthy’ individuals.

37 9/4/201537 LIPGEN Lipids & genes (EU, 14M€) DIOGENES obesity (EU, 12M€) Innovative Cluster Nutrigenomics Chronic metabolic stress (Dutch, 21M€) EARNEST early life nutrition (EU, 14M€) Linking to other EU programs NuGO

38 9/4/201538 (1) Nutrigenomics researchers must know the challenge of understanding polygenic diet related diseases. (2) Short-term goals: 1. to identify the dietary signals. 2. to elucidate the dietary sensor mechanisms. 3. to characterize the target genes of these sensors. 4. to understand the interaction between these signalling pathways and pro-inflammatory signalling to search for sensitizing genotypes. 5. to find ‘signatures’ (gene/protein expression and metabolite profiles). Conclusion and future perspective

39 9/4/201539 (3) Long-term goals: Nutrigenomics is to help to understand how we can use nutrition to prevent many of the same diseases for which pharmacogenomics is attempting to identify cures. SNP database will be effect on disease risk. Future personalized diets


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