I’m cross-posting a description of the project below:
This week in eLife, our lab published a study entitled Gut bacteria are rarely shared by co-hospitalized premature infants, regardless of necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) development. Spearheaded by a talented Banfield Lab post-doc, Tali Raveh-Sadka, in collaboration withMichael Morowitz’s Lab, the study aimed to find the causative agent in an outbreak of NEC cases that happened last summer. NEC is a life threatening gastrointestinal disease that primarily afflicts preterm infants and the cause of disease remains cryptic. While the hypotheses and aims of the study were human focused, the results have a direct impact on how the readership of microBEnet might view built environment microbial communities. But first, the main findings from the study:
Hypotheses:
Results:
At first the negative results (#1 above) were extremely unsatisfying. We wanted to save the babies! We wanted to find the smoking gun. Previous reports of the distinct colonization pattern of preterm infants and observations that NEC tends to occur in outbreak clusters indicated that microbes could be the etiological agent. Our results certainly don’t preclude microbes from playing a role, but the data suggests the cause to be more multifaceted – likely a combination of abnormalities in host development, microbial community maturation, and environmental factors.
The most interesting and unsuspected finding of the study (to me at least), was the diversity of strains found in infants housed in the same ward, at the same time. As a graduate student studying how the built environment effects building occupants, this leaves a number of important questions to be answered:
The paper is definitely worth a look! There are several other interesting topics I didn’t mention, such as the use of ddPCR for biomass quantification (could be interesting for those who are attending the live/dead workshop or generally interested in techniques for bacterial counts) and the use of the fast evolving CRISPR loci to better differentiate strains in a population.
Selected Works
Singular Genomics 2024Project type
Metabiomics 2020Project type
KALEIDO 2019Project type
PHD DISSERTATION 2018Project type
ML IDENTIFIES INFANT ROOMS 2018Project type
WE FOUND THE STRAINS!!! 2017Project type
ISME 2016Project type
IHMC 2015Project type
NECROTIZING ENTERCOLITIS 2015Project type
PROTEOMICS OF PREMIES 2015Project type
PREMIES IN A NICU 2014Project type
MSG SPRING SYMPOSIUM 2013Project type
PREMIES IN A NICU 2013Project type
EXTRACTION KIT COMPARISON 2011Project type
MICROBES TAN NAKED 2008Project type