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Bibliography on: Metagenomics

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ESP: PubMed Auto Bibliography 10 Apr 2026 at 01:31 Created: 

Metagenomics

While genomics is the study of DNA extracted from individuals — individual cells, tissues, or organisms — metagenomics is a more recent refinement that analyzes samples of pooled DNA taken from the environment, not from an individual. Like genomics, metagenomic methods have great potential in many areas of biology, but none so much as in providing access to the hitherto invisible world of unculturable microbes, often estimated to comprise 90% or more of bacterial species and, in some ecosystems, the bulk of the biomass. A recent describes how this new science of metagenomics is beginning to reveal the secrets of our microbial world: The opportunity that stands before microbiologists today is akin to a reinvention of the microscope in the expanse of research questions it opens to investigation. Metagenomics provides a new way of examining the microbial world that not only will transform modern microbiology but has the potential to revolutionize understanding of the entire living world. In metagenomics, the power of genomic analysis is applied to entire communities of microbes, bypassing the need to isolate and culture individual bacterial community members.

Created with PubMed® Query: ( metagenomic OR metagenomics OR metagenome ) NOT pmcbook NOT ispreviousversion

Citations The Papers (from PubMed®)

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RevDate: 2026-04-08

Martínez-Murcia A, Navarro A, Miró-Pina C, et al (2026)

Early detection of nosocomial pathogens in air and surfaces using an innovative genetic approach for surveillance in healthcare settings.

Antimicrobial resistance and infection control, 15(1):.

BACKGROUND: Healthcare-associated infections remain a major cause of morbidity, mortality, and financial burden worldwide, further exacerbated by the emergence of antimicrobial resistance. Environmental reservoirs of pathogens, including air and surfaces, play a critical role in nosocomial transmission. This study aimed to validate an integrated air and surface molecular surveillance system for the early detection of clinically relevant pathogens and resistance genes in hospital environments.

METHODS: Weekly air and surface samples were collected over 28 weeks from two hospitals in southeastern Spain. DNA and RNA were extracted and analysed by quantitative PCR (qPCR) targeting bacterial, fungal, and viral pathogens, as well as antimicrobial resistance genes. A subset of samples underwent shotgun metagenomic sequencing to confirm qPCR results and characterize microbial communities. Environmental findings were compared with clinical infection data from both hospitals.

RESULTS: Viral, bacterial and fungal pathogens were detected with similar patterns between air and surface samples and between hospitals. Carbapenem resistance genes showed distinct distribution profiles between hospitals. Respiratory viruses displayed strong temporal correlations with patient admissions, with viral RNA occasionally detected before clinical peaks.

CONCLUSIONS: This integrated molecular surveillance system allows sensitive detection of pathogens and resistance genes in hospital environments. Coupling air and surface sampling with qPCR provides a robust tool for identifying contamination sources and tracking temporal infection trends. Its scalability and adaptability make it suitable for implementation as an early warning system in infection prevention programmes, enhancing patient safety and supporting proactive control of nosocomial infections.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s13756-026-01725-8.

RevDate: 2026-04-07

Deng S, Wu X, Xu W, et al (2026)

Multi-dimensional immunoprotection of Ganoderma lucidum spore oil in immunosuppressed mice via microbiome-proteome-metabolome network analysis.

Scientific reports, 16(1):.

UNLABELLED: Ganoderma lucidum has a long-standing history of use as a medicinal mushroom, with its spore oil (GLSO) extracted from broken cell walls using CO2 supercritical extraction. However, there is a notable scarcity of experimental studies on the protective effects and underlying mechanisms of GLSO on immune function impairment. The present study aims to explore the characteristics that GLSO contributes to protecting immune functions in cyclophosphamide-induced immunocompromised mice through a multi-omics analysis approach. GLSO administration significantly improved serum hemolysin levels, macrophage phagocytosis, and NK cell activity in immunosuppressed mice. Metagenomics, metabolomic, and proteomic analyses revealed that the immune protection mediated by GLSO was associated with structural rearrangements within gut microflora and shifts in microbial diversity. Specifically, there was an increase in beneficial microorganisms and a decrease in pathogenic organisms, accompanied by various alterations in metabolites and protein expressions. The identified 5 metabolites (propionic acid, beta-glycyrrhetinic acid, 3-aminosalicylic acid, creatine, and 2-phenylacetamide) and 5 proteins (Slc9a9, Blm, Hk3, AP1M2, and J chain) might serve as potential mediators of GLSO to alleviate immune dysfunction collectively caused by CYP in immunosuppressed mice.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1038/s41598-026-40137-x.

RevDate: 2026-04-07

Larsson DGJ, Flach CF, E Kristiansson (2026)

Antibiotic resistance gene analyses in microbial communities: challenges and opportunities.

Nature communications, 17(1):.

Culture-independent antibiotic resistance gene analyses enable broad explorations of microbial communities but often fail to link such genes to bacterial hosts and genetic contexts. This makes assessing prevalence of resistant pathogens and likelihood of further transmission or resistance evolution uncertain.

RevDate: 2026-04-09

Shen Y, S Qu (2026)

Ganciclovir for severe neonatal varicella pneumonia when acyclovir is unavailable: a case report.

Virology journal pii:10.1186/s12985-026-03142-0 [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: Perinatal varicella is a rare and severe condition with a high mortality rate, particularly when it leads to complications such as pneumonia in neonates. Acyclovir is the standard treatment for varicella-zoster virus (VZV) infections; however, limited options exist when it is unavailable. This case report describes the successful treatment of neonatal varicella pneumonia with ganciclovir and provides insights into its potential as an alternative therapy. A female Asian neonate was admitted to our hospital on the 9th day of life with a rash, fever, and respiratory distress. Her mother developed varicella at 39 weeks of pregnancy, four days before delivery. The infant was diagnosed with VZV pneumonia based on clinical presentation and confirmed by detection of VZV DNA in blood(metagenomic next-generation sequencing detected 109,491 sequences with 100% relative abundance and 99% confidence).

INTERVENTION: Ganciclovir 5 mg/kg every 12 h for 8 days; intravenous immunoglobulin 400 mg/kg once daily for 3 days.

OUTCOME: The infant was successfully weaned off mechanical ventilation, with normalized blood gas parameters (PaO₂/FiO₂ ratio 346) and inflammatory markers (CRP decreased from 29.44 mg/L to 2.87 mg/L). She was discharged home with stable breathing and crusted skin lesions. Telephone follow-up at 2 and 4 weeks post-discharge confirmed the infant remained well with no respiratory symptoms or developmental concerns.

CONCLUSION: Ganciclovir may serve as a life-saving alternative for severe neonatal VZV pneumonia when acyclovir is unavailable. This case highlights the need for further research to establish its safety, optimal dosing, and efficacy in this population.

RevDate: 2026-04-09
CmpDate: 2026-04-09

Craddock HA, Motro Y, Winner KM, et al (2026)

Metagenomic analysis of antimicrobial resistance genes in domestic canines.

One health (Amsterdam, Netherlands), 22:101380.

A One Health approach is critical to addressing the spread of antimicrobial resistance (AMR). A key source of AMR in humans is companion animals, particularly canines. Recent investigation has shown that the canine fecal microbiome is rich in antimicrobial resistant genes (ARGs), yet few studies have studied the resistome of working canines. Our objective was to investigate the resistome of canines to elucidate associations between various exposures and demographic factors and ARG carriage. We performed resistome and microbiome analyses on previously-generated metagenomic sequence data from 126 Israeli working canines and 147 global canines. We found that the canine microbiome and resistome varied significantly with country of origin, and the resistome varied significantly with gastrointestinal disease state, canine job type, and microbiome composition. Tetracycline resistant genes were the most dominant across all canines. Extended-spectrum beta lactamase (ESBL) genes were observed in up to 33% of canines. Genes of concern, including potential carbapenemases (blaOXA-181 and blaOXA-347) and colistin resistance genes (mcr-10) were infrequently observed. The Inc family of plasmids, typically associated with ESBL genes, were frequently detected. Altogether our research suggests that canines, including working dogs, are a potential source of ARGs and plasmids which carry ARGs. Importantly, the abundance and identity of these ARGs is associated with various potentially modifiable factors such as microbiome composition. As canines are an important human exposure within the One Health paradigm, future work is necessary to understand the risk and transmission dynamics of ARGs between humans and their companion canines.

RevDate: 2026-04-09
CmpDate: 2026-04-09

Brown JR, Ross CS, Worth A, et al (2026)

Identifying virulent avian paramyxovirus type-1: A paediatric case of progressive encephalitis diagnosed by clinical metagenomics with case series review.

IDCases, 44:e02555.

BACKGROUND: Immunocompromised patients presenting with encephalitis can present a diagnostic conundrum as infection can be caused by a broad range of pathogens, many of which are not detected by standard of care testing pathways. Untargeted metagenomics has proven utility in the diagnosis of such infections, particularly for immunocompromised patients.

METHODS: An immunosuppressed adolescent presented with idiopathic progressive muscle weakness resulting in respiratory failure, 16 years after haematopoeitic stem cell transplant for familial haemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis type 5. Clinical and radiological findings suggested a diagnosis of isolated central nervous system haemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis, however the patient demonstrated no improvement on immunosuppressive therapy. Untargeted metagenomics was performed on brain biopsy tissue.

RESULTS: Clinical metagenomics detected avian paramyxovirus 1 (APMV-1) in the brain tissue 12 days after biopsy, confirmed by targeted PCR and immunohistochemistry. The metagenomics results guided treatment; immunosuppression was stopped and medication with potential activity against RNA viruses started. The patient died 8 months after symptom onset.

CONCLUSIONS: We describe the third published case of fatal encephalitis caused by APMV-1, detectable only in brain parenchyma and only by clinical metagenomics, demonstrating the utility of brain biopsy and metagenomics when investigating encephalitis in immunocompromised patients. Case series review suggests profoundly immunocompromised patients are at risk of severe infection caused by AMPV-1.

RevDate: 2026-04-09
CmpDate: 2026-04-09

Song J, Li Y, Wang L, et al (2026)

Comparative study of the physicochemical properties, volatile compounds, and bacterial microbiota in commercial and traditional yak yogurt from the Qinghai-Tibet plateau.

Food chemistry: X, 35:103771.

This study aimed to elucidate differences between the commercial starter culture (CK) and traditional starters from different Tibetan regions (Gannan (GN), Qinghai (QH), Tibet (XZ)) in fermenting yak yogurt by physicochemical properties, flavor, and bacterial community. Results indicated acidity, proline, arginine, alanine, and C6:0 contents were significantly higher in the traditional starter culture than CK (P < 0.05). Gas chromatography-ion mobility spectrometry analysis found the traditional starter culture group was dominated by alcohols and esters, whereas CK exhibited richer ketones. Metagenomic analysis revealed Lactobacillus delbrueckii (49.56% in XZ, 24.86% in GN) and Streptococcus spp. (18.30% in CK, 17.21% in QH) as the dominant. Moreover, pH and titratable acidity were primary factors affecting microbial diversity. Meanwhile, glutamic acid modulated ester biosynthesis like ethyl acetate, while C16:0 fatty acids inhibited off-odor ketones such as 2-pentanone. This study offers valuable insights into developing specialized fermentation agents and standardizing the quality of yak yogurt.

RevDate: 2026-04-09
CmpDate: 2026-04-09

Ivan FX, Versi A, Tiew PY, et al (2026)

Multidrug-resistant Haemophilus influenzae cluster of severe asthma from sputum bacteriome-resistome.

ERJ open research, 12(2):.

BACKGROUND: Severe asthma encompasses heterogeneous inflammatory phenotypes and airway bacteriome diversity but the state of its airway resistome remains understudied. We therefore evaluated the link between the airway microbiome and the antibiotic-resistant genes by determining the clusters from a bacteriome-resistome integration from sputum samples of patients with severe asthma.

METHODS: Induced sputum samples from severe asthma (SA; n=96), mild-moderate asthma (MMA; n=23) and healthy controls (HCs; n=23) in the European U-BIOPRED asthma cohort were metagenomically sequenced. Respiratory bacteriome was evaluated by taxonomical and functional classification. The comprehensive antibiotic resistance database was used to determine airway resistome and Similarity Network Fusion to cluster integratively the bacteriome-resistome.

RESULTS: More multidrug-resistance genes were present in SA compared with MMA and HCs with the hmrM, encoded in Haemophilus influenzae chromosome, being highest. Two of the three defined clusters were dominated by commensals with resistance genes from different classes but different in α- and β-diversities. The third cluster was dominated by multidrug-resistant H. influenzae, with SA characteristics of increased asthma duration, reduced pulmonary macrophages and decreased lung function. It had the highest signature expression of neutrophil activation, NETosis and of interleukin (IL)-5, IL-6, IL-13, IL-17 and IL-33 signalling pathways. These clusters were reproduced in an Asian-Singapore SA cohort including the multidrug-resistant H. influenzae cluster, but with an additional cluster of multidrug-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa.

CONCLUSION: The demonstration of U-BIOPRED multiresistant H. Influenzae and of Asian-Singapore multiresistant P. aeruginosa clusters highlights the potential importance of antibiotic-resistant genes in driving severe asthma.

RevDate: 2026-04-09
CmpDate: 2026-04-09

Banerjee M, Lahiri A, Basak S, et al (2026)

StaLAENet: A stacked LSTM-nested deep-autoencoder network for identification of antimicrobial resistance of nosocomial pathogens.

Journal of biosciences, 51:.

As various technological innovations are assisting medical science in a considerable way, rendering a significant leap towards 'lab-to-land' delivery, in a similar vein, algorithm development and concomitant framework-based approaches help the field to enrich its patient care. Although antimicrobial drugs revolutionized this particular area, antimicrobial resistance is a pressing global health concern as microbial strains are becoming resistant to conventional antibiotics, undermining the efficacy of these drugs and leading to increased illness and healthcare costs. To tackle this menace, apart from technological innovations such as diagnostic kits, an informatics-based framework approach is the call of the day. Despite the emergence of several computational approaches, they lack in generalization, scope, and scalability. Here, we have developed a novel framework StaLAENet (stacked LSTM-nested deep-autoencoder network) to predict antibiotic-resistant gene drug classes targeting ESKAPE pathogens. This framework comprises two modules: a feature representation module comprising a stacked LSTM-nested deep autoencoder and a classification module that leverages a dense network using latent features. StaLAENet demonstrated an efficient performance - accuracy: 0.938±0.043, specificity: 0.888±0.061, precision: 0.912±0.020, and recall: 0.881±0.021 - for Enterococcus faecium using 4-mer data, with similar results for other organisms using various k-mer data. Comparative analysis confirmed its superiority over existing pipelines. Further, independent evaluation with non-redundant sequences (sourced from another database) and with a metagenomic dataset highlighted its generalizability, robustness, and capability to analyze complex microbial communities. StaLAENet can offer a robust solution for combating AMR, enabling an efficient way of antimicrobial stewardship and patient care.

RevDate: 2026-04-09

Zhao P, Liu H, Dong J, et al (2026)

From hepatitis misdiagnosis to zoonotic false alarms: a metagenomic blacklist framework for the parvo-like hybrid viral group.

RevDate: 2026-04-09

Shukla N, Budhbhatti U, Puvar A, et al (2026)

Genomic and evolutionary characterization of Chandipura virus: a cause of the 2024 outbreak in Gujarat, India.

Microbiology spectrum [Epub ahead of print].

UNLABELLED: Acute encephalitis syndrome (AES) caused by Chandipura virus (CHPV) is a rapidly progressive and often fatal neurological illness predominantly affecting children in India. However, limited research on CHPV disease progression and viral genomics has hindered a comprehensive understanding of its transmission dynamics and evolutionary behavior. CHPV is endemic in India, with previous outbreaks (2003-2004) reported case fatality rates (CFRs) ranging from 56% to 75%. In the current (2024) outbreak, the CFR declined to 46%, with an overall test-positivity rate of 18.6%, possibly reflecting improvements in supportive care. Despite advances in genomics and sequencing technologies, only a limited number of CHPV genomes are publicly available. To address this gap, we performed whole-genome sequencing of CHPV isolated from a pediatric patient aged 12 years from Patan, Gujarat. Comparative genomic analysis with previously reported Indian strain revealed approximately 293 mutations, including 24 non-synonymous. The estimated evolutionary rate of CHPV was ~1.62 × 10[-2] substitutions/site/year. Furthermore, the selective pressure analysis showed that, despite the virus being under strong purifying (negative) selection, several non-synonymous changes were identified. Nonetheless, as the present analysis is based on the single genome, further sequencing, validation, and broader comparative analysis are required to draw a definitive inference. However, these findings suggest that even under purifying selection pressure, CHPV retains the ability to infect and cause severe disease in children. This highlights the continued need to investigate virus-host interactions, particularly host immune responses, to better understand CHPV pathogenesis and its ability to cause disease in children.

IMPORTANCE: Chandipura virus (CHPV) is an etiological agent of acute encephalitis syndrome (AES) in children, characterized by rapid neurological decline; yet the viral and host factors governing its neuropathogenesis and sudden outbreak dynamics remain poorly defined. Despite minimal genomic variation indicative of strong purifying selection, which supports the continued efficacy of existing molecular diagnostics and candidate therapeutics, CHPV re-emerges unpredictably in human populations, as exemplified by the 2024 AES cluster in Gujarat. This outbreak underscores the importance of continuous genomic surveillance to elucidate viral behavior and immune-evasion mechanisms. Moreover, it highlights the utility of both amplicon-based and metagenomic next-generation sequencing approaches for future CHPV detection and comprehensive genome characterization.

RevDate: 2026-04-09

Kruis T, Wassermann M, Graf B, et al (2026)

Correction: Unmasking the mimic: vertebral alveolar echinococcosis diagnosed by metagenomic next‑generation sequencing.

RevDate: 2026-04-09

Liu P, Zhang J, Liu X, et al (2026)

Metagenomic next-generation sequencing for comprehensive pathogen detection in intraocular infection.

European journal of clinical microbiology & infectious diseases : official publication of the European Society of Clinical Microbiology [Epub ahead of print].

RevDate: 2026-04-09
CmpDate: 2026-04-09

Prabhu A, C Rinke (2026)

ICTV Virus Taxonomy Profile: Krittikaviridae 2026.

The Journal of general virology, 107(4):.

The family Krittikaviridae includes dsDNA viruses associated with the marine archaeal lineage Poseidoniales. These viruses have been identified through metagenomic analysis of brackish estuarine samples and are closely related to other 'magroviruses'. The family belongs to the order Magrovirales and includes the genus Velanvirus and the species Velanvirus brisbanense. Viruses in the family have a genome of about 80 kbp that includes modules for DNA replication and virion morphogenesis. Krittikavirids are predicted to form virions with an icosahedral capsid and helical tail, characteristic of viruses belonging to the class Caudoviricetes. This is a summary of the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV) Report on the family Krittikaviridae, which is available at ictv.global/report/krittikaviridae.

RevDate: 2026-04-09

Wu Z, Chen H, Yao Y, et al (2026)

Clinical evaluation of probe capture based targeted next generation sequencing for pulmonary infection in immunocompromised patients: a cross-sectional diagnostic accuracy study.

Infectious diseases (London, England) [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: Timely aetiological diagnosis of pulmonary infection in immunocompromised patients (ICPs) remains challenging because clinical presentations may be atypical and conventional microbiological tests (CMTs) have limited sensitivity. Probe capture based targeted next generation sequencing (ptNGS) has emerged as a potential alternative to metagenomic next generation sequencing (mNGS), but its clinical performance in this population remains incompletely defined.

METHODS: In this cross-sectional diagnostic accuracy study, immunocompromised adults undergoing bronchoalveolar lavage for suspected pulmonary infection were enrolled. Bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) samples were analysed using CMTs, mNGS, and ptNGS. Composite clinical adjudication served as the reference standard. Diagnostic performance was compared at the case level, and pulmonary microbiota characteristics were explored.

RESULTS: Among 78 enrolled patients, 60 were classified as having pulmonary infection. Causative pathogens were identified in 52 cases, and fungal pathogens, particularly Pneumocystis jirovecii, were the most frequently detected. At the case level, ptNGS and mNGS demonstrated higher sensitivity than CMTs (80.0% vs 80.0% vs 26.7%) and showed high concordance in microorganisms identified (91.7%). Specificity was 72.2% for CMTs, compared with 44.4% for mNGS and 38.9% for ptNGS. Positive sequencing results were also observed in patients without pulmonary infection (n = 18), predominantly involving viral or opportunistic microorganisms. Microbiota analysis of 65 samples revealed reduced microbial alpha diversity and altered community composition in patients with pulmonary infection.

CONCLUSIONS: In ICPs with suspected pulmonary infection, ptNGS substantially increases pathogen detection compared with CMTs and demonstrates diagnostic performance comparable to mNGS. Sequencing results require careful clinical interpretation, given the difficulty in distinguishing infection from colonisation in respiratory specimens. Exploratory microbiota analyses suggest infection associated alterations in lung microbial ecology that warrant further validation.

RevDate: 2026-04-09

Sahu TK, Rathored J, P Patil (2026)

Tri-layer microbiology for LMIC Hospitals: linking syndromic panels with reflex culture and targeted sequencing for real world care - a narrative review.

The Brazilian journal of infectious diseases : an official publication of the Brazilian Society of Infectious Diseases, 30(3):105808 pii:S1413-8670(26)01198-0 [Epub ahead of print].

Rapid, syndromic molecular panels and high throughput sequencing have transformed the diagnostic landscape for sepsis, respiratory, gastrointestinal, and central nervous system infections, but their value in routine practice depends on how they are integrated with conventional microbiology and antimicrobial stewardship. This review synthesises recent high-quality evidence to propose a pragmatic three-tier hybrid framework. Tier 1 comprises syndrome specific rapid panels that provide organism and selected resistance markers within hours, primarily to accelerate early escalation or de-escalation rather than to replace culture. Tier 2 positions reflex culture and targeted adjunct tests as the non-negotiable specificity anchor, confirming molecular hits, distinguishing infection from colonisation or contamination, generating phenotypic susceptibility data and supplying isolates for infection prevention and public health surveillance. Tier 3 reserves targeted or metagenomic sequencing for a small, clinically critical subset of high suspicion, panel negative and culture negative cases, where additional breadth can realistically change management. Across sepsis/BSI, pneumonia, gastrointestinal infection and CNS disease, available data indicate that clinical benefit is driven less by any individual technology and more by disciplined implementation: clear indications, explicit reflex rules, close linkage to antimicrobial stewardship and systematic audit of key performance indicators such as time-to-targeted therapy, spectrum of antimicrobial use and cost per additional actionable diagnosis. The proposed tiered, syndrome wise algorithms provide a transferable conceptual scaffold that can be adapted to local resources, allowing laboratories in both high and low resource settings to introduce advanced diagnostics without abandoning culture-based anchors or stewardship accountability.

RevDate: 2026-04-09

Chen Y, Zhuo G, Liu C, et al (2026)

Efficient cadmium removal and immobilization from acid mine drainage by composite sulfate-reducing consortia: Mechanistic insights from EPS characterization, key enzyme activities, and metagenomics.

Journal of hazardous materials, 509:141956 pii:S0304-3894(26)00934-9 [Epub ahead of print].

Bioremediation has gained increasing attention for remediating heavy-metal wastewater from mining activities, such as acid mine drainage (AMD). Cadmium (Cd) is of special concern due to its high mobility, bioaccumulation, and highly toxic with stringent discharge limits, yet community- and metabolism-level mechanisms that sustain remediation under metal stress remain insufficiently understood. Here, three lab-scale up-flow anaerobic sludge bed (UASB) reactors enriched with sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) were established with inocula containing 100% sludge, 75% sludge + 25% soil, and 50% sludge + 50% soil to evaluate Cd removal performance and microbial adaptation. All reactors achieved ≥ 97.5% Cd removal, with effluent Cd consistently below detection, demonstrating effective immobilization under tested conditions. Sequestration in the bottom layer helped maintain a more favorable metabolic environment in the upper zone. Integrated analyses of extracellular polymeric substances (EPS), enzyme activities, and metagenomic revealed inoculum-dependent trade-offs: moderate soil addition enhanced recovery resilience, whereas the pure-sludge inoculum retained stronger sulfur-cycling potential than soil-derived communities. Metagenomic profiling supported distinct roles of dissimilatory sulfate reduction in sulfide generation and metal sulfide precipitation and assimilatory sulfur pathways in cellular sulfur demand and stress buffering. Notably, direct interspecies electron transfer/extracellular electron transfer (DIET/EET) associated genes and electron-transport indicators were enriched in reactors with superior recovery, supporting an inferred sulfate reduction-DIET (SR-DIET) synergy whereby coupled sulfur cycling and enhanced interspecies/extracellular electron exchange may facilitate energy restoration and sustained Cd immobilization. These findings advance mechanistic understanding of SRB-based treatment and inform engineering of resilient anaerobic consortia for mine-impacted and industrial effluents.

RevDate: 2026-04-09

Luo M, Fan J, Wang X, et al (2026)

Microplastics drive the reconfiguration of microbial sulfur cycling pathways in seagrass bed sediments.

Environmental pollution (Barking, Essex : 1987), 398:128089 pii:S0269-7491(26)00459-8 [Epub ahead of print].

Microplastics (MPs) pollution threatens marine biogeochemical cycles, but its impact on the sediment sulfur cycle remains unclear. A 112-day microcosm incubation experiment was conducted to investigate the effects of three common MPs, polylactic acid (PLA), polyethylene (PE), and polystyrene (PS), on sulfur speciation, microbial communities, and functional genes in seagrass bed sediments using integrated amplicon sequencing and metagenomics. MPs significantly altered sediment sulfur speciation, with PLA inducing the strongest shifts, including 111.2% accumulation of total inorganic sulfate (TIS) and a 163.3% increase in TIS/Sulfide ratios, indicative of enhanced sulfur oxidation, while PE and PS promoted sustained sulfide accumulation. Distinct polymer-specific changes in sulfur-cycling bacteria communities were observed, with PLA suppressing the dominant Bradymonas (31.3% decrease) while enriching heterotrophic Sulfitobacter (26.5% increase), PE driving a transition towards autotrophic pathways with Thiohalomonas increasing by 272.8%, and PS selectively enriching generalist sulfur-oxidizing genera such as Roseovarius and Methyloceanibacter. Metagenomic analysis highlighted a shift from assimilatory biosynthetic pathways to dissimilatory energy-generating processes. These findings suggest that MPs intensify sulfide stress and disrupt sulfur metabolism, thereby reducing sediment biogeochemical stability and potentially impairing carbon burial and ecosystem resilience. These results provide critical insights into the ecological consequences of MP exposure on biogeochemical cycles in seagrass bed sediments.

RevDate: 2026-04-09

Cornu Hewitt B, Odendaal ML, de Rooij MMT, et al (2026)

Impacts of inhaled exposures on the upper respiratory tract microbiome: a systematic review.

The Science of the total environment, 1030:181776 pii:S0048-9697(26)00440-7 [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: Inhaled exposures can substantially affect human health. The upper respiratory tract (URT) microbiome forms a critical first point of interaction with inhaled agents (e.g. air pollutants and chemicals), yet its response to most inhaled exposures remains poorly characterised beyond the well-studied effects of tobacco smoking.

METHODS: We systematically reviewed research articles from 2005 to 2024 investigating the effects of inhaled exposures on the human URT microbiome, using sequencing-based approaches. Database searches in PubMed, Scopus, and EMBASE yielded 5263 unique publications. Following screening using ASReview, 66 studies met inclusion criteria, covering four exposure domains: urban outdoor, rural outdoor, household indoor, and occupational settings.

RESULTS: Inhaled exposures were consistently associated with alterations in the URT microbiome, often differing by anatomical niche (e.g. nasal, nasopharynx, oral, oropharynx). Outdoor air pollution and urbanisation were linked to reduced microbial diversity and depletion of commensals, whereas green space and agricultural exposures were associated with higher diversity, enrichment of health-associated taxa, and introduction of animal- and soil-associated microbes. Findings for other exposures (e.g. indoor pollutants, pesticides) were more heterogeneous.

CONCLUSIONS: Overall, the URT microbiome remains understudied as a mediator of respiratory health effects related to inhaled exposures, while methodological heterogeneity complicates comparability across studies. Future research should prioritise benchmarked protocols, longitudinal designs, and functional analyses (e.g. metagenomics) to clarify how inhaled exposures alter microbial activity, resilience, ecological interactions, and host outcomes. This synthesis highlights the need for integrated environmental health approaches and for assessing the long-term consequences of inhaled exposures.

RevDate: 2026-04-09

Besharati Fard M, Guo H, De Vrieze J, et al (2026)

Chronic ciprofloxacin exposure reduces anaerobic digestibility of waste microalgal-bacterial aerobic granular sludge: Metagenomics and metatranscriptomics overview.

Water research, 299:125876 pii:S0043-1354(26)00558-0 [Epub ahead of print].

Microalgal-bacterial aerobic granular sludge (MB-AGS) is a promising wastewater treatment technology, but its long-term sustainability depends on whether its waste biomass (WMB-AGS) can be effectively stabilized through anaerobic digestion, particularly under antibiotic stress. Here, we compared the digestibility and ciprofloxacin response of WMB-AGS and conventional waste activated sludge (WAS) using 21-day biochemical methane potential (BMP) tests, 3-day hydrolysis-acidogenesis assays, and 90-day semi-continuous digesters, supported by enzyme activity, extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) characterization, and multi-omics profiling. The WAS produced substantially higher methane yields (302 ± 7 mL CH4/g VS) than WMB-AGS (62 ± 4 mL CH4/g VS), confirming the superior digestibility of WAS. Ciprofloxacin effects were exposure-regime dependent, a single initial dose up to 1000 µg/L did not affect methane production in BMP assays. However, continuous ciprofloxacin exposure in semi-continuous digesters significantly reduced daily biogas production, from 114 ± 9 to 96 ± 6 mL/day in WAS and from 23 ± 1 to 15 ± 2 mL/day in WMB-AGS. During the hydrolysis-acidogenesis, ciprofloxacin promoted volatile fatty acid accumulation and inhibited key hydrolytic, acidogenic, and methanogenic enzymes. Biotransformation was the dominant ciprofloxacin removal mechanism. The EPS acted as an initial protective interface but also contributed to hydrolysis limitation. Multi-omics analyses showed that chronic ciprofloxacin exposure did not suppress core methanogenesis genes, but reconfigured upstream electron-transfer and methyl-transfer functions, with enrichment of Corynebacterium and Methanobacterium. Overall, WMB-AGS is inherently less digestible than WAS. These findings highlight the need to consider substrate-specific matrix effects and long-term antibiotic pressure when evaluating the downstream anaerobic valorization.

RevDate: 2026-04-09

Wang X, Xue T, Li J, et al (2026)

Novel photoelectron-driven nitrate reduction in anammox granules using photosensitive semiconductor iron mineral for wastewater treatment.

Water research, 299:125862 pii:S0043-1354(26)00544-0 [Epub ahead of print].

The accumulation of nitrate byproducts and limited electron availability fundamentally constrain the efficacy of anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox) processes. While iron minerals regulate electron transfer, their potential to drive anammox via semiconductive photoexcitation remains underexplored. Here, we establish a novel "Photo-Chemo-Bio" strategy to overcome these thermodynamic bottlenecks using light-excited hematite (α-Fe2O3). Among tested minerals, hematite exhibited superior band-structure suitability, achieving a 3.65-fold photocurrent enhancement (4.06 μA·cm[-2]) upon bio-hybridization, facilitated by the active recruitment of photo-electrons via upregulated outer-membrane c-type cytochromes. Crucially, this photo-enhanced electron supply boosted the total nitrogen removal rate by 27.4% while suppressing nitrate yield by 42.8%. Kinetic analysis revealed a precise metabolic decoupling: solar irradiation did not accelerate ammonia oxidation but specifically diverted electron flow toward nitrate reduction pathways. Genome-resolved metagenomics unraveled the molecular basis of this synergy, identifying a "hardwired" cooperative network: flanking Desulfobacillus-like species, characterized by a specific metabolic truncation (absence of nor genes), act as obligate "net NO providers" to fuel the anammox core; concurrently, heterotrophic Casimicrobiaceae unexpectedly encode Photosystem II (psbA), functioning as auxiliary "energy antennas" to harvest photons. These findings demonstrate how mineral-microbe hybrids can orchestrate electron flux to close the nitrogen loop, offering a sustainable, carbon-free strategy for high-efficiency wastewater treatment.

RevDate: 2026-04-09

Sorgato AC, Kim B, Papillon J, et al (2026)

Microbial fuel cells inoculated with French vertical flow treatment wetland sludge: A step towards clogging biodetector development.

Bioelectrochemistry (Amsterdam, Netherlands), 171:109297 pii:S1567-5394(26)00083-6 [Epub ahead of print].

Clogging is considered an operational challenge in French vertical flow treatment wetlands (VFTWs), causing hydraulics and aeration problems. The available monitoring methods are labor intensive. Microbial fuel cells (MFCs) have emerged as real-time biosensors, including for treatment wetlands (TW) systems. In this study, French VFTW sludge was investigated as inoculum in MFCs, to assessing its adaptation into electrochemical environment as a step for clogging MFC-based biodetector implementation in such systems. The results show that the inoculum was successfully adapted, with stable current generation at 0.4 mA. The electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) demonstrated the establishment of a biofilm with electroactive characteristics and non-limiting anode. Metagenomic analysis showed that the French VFTW harbor electroactive species, and the MFC created a selective pressure on the VFTW sludge inoculum and significantly shaped the microbial community and function, stimulating the enrichment of electroactive bacteria (EAB), such Geobacterales (4.11% to 5.83%), with potential expression of cytochrome-c for extracellular electron transference (EET). This study illustrates the feasibility of developing electroactive biofilms from French VFTW and suggests its use as an inoculum, improving the integration of TW-MFC systems. Considering these results, the well-adapted anodic biofilm could enable the detection of aeration limitations via cathodic reactions in future studies.

RevDate: 2026-04-09
CmpDate: 2026-04-09

Rober AR, Reese LC, Brown SP, et al (2026)

Hydrologic History Regulates Microbial Biofilm Diversity and Ecosystem Function.

Environmental microbiology, 28(4):e70300.

Aquatic biofilms are an understudied component of northern peatlands and are expected to play a more prominent role in ecosystem processes in areas where aquatic habitat is expanding. The goal of this study was to investigate how hydrologic history influences biofilm diversity and functional genes. This study was conducted in a long-term water table manipulation that simulates drought (lowered water table treatment) and flooding (raised water table treatment) conditions relative to a control treatment (no manipulation). We used a combination of metabarcoding and metagenomic approaches to (1) examine the diversity of eukaryotic algae, cyanobacteria, bacteria and fungi within the biofilm and (2) identify functional genes associated with alternating wet-dry transitional states. Historical flooding, but not drought, led to broad changes in composition and functional genes, especially those associated with carbon metabolism and nitrogen cycling. Differences were related to changes in relative abundance rather than the presence/absence of individual taxa or genes. Hydrologic history influenced community diversity by reducing interspecific competition or by alleviating resource limitation. These findings show that hydrologic history regulates species membership of the community (and thereby associated genes) but differences in water chemistry and interspecific interactions alter the relative abundance of species and their functional potential.

RevDate: 2026-04-09

Cui T, M Huang (2026)

Tuberculous Peritonitis Diagnosed by Metagenomic Next-Generation Sequencing Progressing to Fatal Encapsulating Peritoneal Sclerosis in a Peritoneal Dialysis Patient: A Case Report.

Seminars in dialysis [Epub ahead of print].

A 40-year-old woman on peritoneal dialysis for 3 years presented with febrile peritonitis. Metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS) confirmed Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex in ascitic fluid, leading to prompt anti-tuberculosis therapy. She initially improved but developed ultrafiltration failure 15 months later and transitioned to hemodialysis. At 18 months, she developed bowel obstruction, bloody ascites, and characteristic imaging and laparoscopic findings of encapsulating peritoneal sclerosis (EPS). Despite supportive care, she deteriorated and died 30 months after tuberculosis peritonitis diagnosis. This case highlights that mNGS enables rapid diagnosis of tuberculous peritonitis when conventional tests are inconclusive, and that tuberculosis peritonitis may serve as a potent inflammatory trigger for EPS even after peritoneal dialysis cessation. Early recognition and timely intervention may improve outcomes.

RevDate: 2026-04-09

Li X, Xie M, Kang JX, et al (2026)

Bifidobacterium catenulatum boosts anti-PD-1 efficacy in microsatellite stable colorectal cancer via activating CD8[+] T cells.

Gut pii:gutjnl-2025-336025 [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: Certain gut bacteria are associated with improved responses to immunotherapy.

OBJECTIVE: We aim to identify bacteria that inhibit colorectal cancer (CRC) progression and enhance immunotherapy efficacy.

DESIGN: The abundance of bacteria in CRC patients was evaluated in our in-house cohorts and validated in published datasets. The effect of candidate bacterium with anti-PD-1 therapy was determined in two syngeneic mouse models of MC38 (microsatellite instability-high) and CT26 (microsatellite stable, MSS), transgenic Apc [min/+] mice and azoxymethane/dextran sulfate sodium (AOM/DSS)-induced CRC tumourigenesis model. Immune landscape changes were identified by multicolour flow cytometry and immunohistochemistry staining. Metabolomic profiling was performed on stool, serum and tumour tissues.

RESULTS: Bifidobacterium catenulatum was significantly depleted in stool samples of 110 CRC patients compared with 112 healthy controls, which was further validated in 3 published metagenomic datasets comprising 198 CRC patients and 176 normal subjects. Oral administration of B. catenulatum inhibited tumour growths in multiple CRC models including MC38 and CT26 syngeneic models, Apc[min/+] mice and AOM/DSS-induced CRC. Notably, B. catenulatum synergised with anti-PD-1 therapy through enhancing intratumoural CD8[+] T cell infiltration in MSS CRC models of Apc[min/+] mice and CT26 allografts. B. catenulatum-derived acetate was identified as the functional metabolite. Mechanistically, acetate directly bound to MCT-4 in CD8[+] T cells and activated mitogen-activated protein kinase signalling. Pharmacological and genetic MCT4 ablation abolished acetate-mediated CD8[+] T cell activation in vitro.

CONCLUSION: B. catenulatum suppresses colorectal tumourigenesis through generating acetate, which also improves anti-PD-1 efficacy through activating CD8[+] T cells in MSS CRC. B. catenulatum is a potential adjuvant to improve immunotherapy against CRC.

RevDate: 2026-04-09

Yang S, Wang X, Duan J, et al (2026)

Effects of replacing chemical fertilizer with organic fertilizer on organic carbon mineralization and carbon cycle functional genes in yellow soil.

Scientific reports pii:10.1038/s41598-026-47725-x [Epub ahead of print].

Fertilization-mediated soil organic carbon (SOC) mineralization is a key process in agroecosystem carbon cycling, yet the microbial mechanisms involved under different fertilization regimes remain unclear. This study, based on a three-year field experiment in acidic yellow soil (Ultisol) in Guizhou, integrated SOC mineralization incubation and metagenomic sequencing to compare SOC mineralization and functional gene profiles under no fertilization (CK), chemical fertilizer alone (NP), and replacing chemical fertilizer with 50% or 100% organic fertilizer (1/2NPM and M). Fertilization significantly increased cumulative mineralized SOC (Ct) (p < 0.05); NP showed high mineralization, whereas organic-fertilizer replacement reduced the cumulative mineralization ratio (Ct/SOC). Metagenomic analysis indicated NP did not substantially alter carbon-cycling genes but lowered the C/N ratio, increasing microbial diversity and driving "carbon-compensation" mineralization. Conversely, 1/2NPM and M improved soil pH, available phosphorus (AP), and nitrate nitrogen (NO3[-]-N), reshaped microbial community structure, up-regulated carbon-fixation genes (korA, facA, coxS), and suppressed carbon-degradation genes (pel, chi), enhancing carbon sequestration capacity. Partial least squares path modeling confirmed a "stoichiometry-community diversity" cascade significantly regulated SOC mineralization (p < 0.01), with organic-fertilizer replacement shifting functional profiles from carbon degradation to carbon fixation.

RevDate: 2026-04-09

Yang M, Fang J, Q Liao (2026)

Comment on: "Exploring the gut microbiome in systemic lupus erythematosus: metagenomic and metabolomic insights into a new pro-inflammatory bacteria Clostridium scindens"-a call to disentangle clostridium scindens' bile acid metabolism from glucocorticoid modulation in SLE pathogenesis.

RevDate: 2026-04-09

Kan J, Spotton K, Morales-Amador A, et al (2026)

Mode of action guided metagenomic natural product discovery reveals convergent evolution of a ClpP-targeting motif.

Nature communications pii:10.1038/s41467-026-71586-7 [Epub ahead of print].

The discovery of natural products with specific modes of action from metagenomes remains challenging. Here, we present resistance-CONKAT-seq, a pipeline that links biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) to self-resistance genes, enabling identification of metabolites with desired molecular targets. Using clpP-directed resistance-CONKAT-seq, we identify the calprotamides, which activate native ClpP and enhance its activity. Cryo-EM and bioinformatic analyses reveal that the calprotamides' medium-chain N-acylphenylalanine substructure is a convergently evolved ClpP-targeting motif and identify additional BGCs predicted to encode this moiety, including some with co-localized clp genes. The synthesis of structures bioinformatically inspired by two such clp-linked BGCs, desmethyl jomthonic acid C and tuscamide, reveals that both enhance ClpP activity. Extending our bioinformatically guided synthesis study to additional BGCs lacking nearby clp genes shows that ClpP activity enhancement correlated with antibacterial activity, with the strongest enhancers exhibiting narrow-spectrum antibiotic activity. These findings establish N-acylphenylalanine as a previously unrecognized but common natural motif for targeting ClpP, which should help guide the discovery of both natural and synthetic ClpP modulators for antibiotic and anticancer development. Resistance-CONKAT-seq offers a scalable method for exploring biosynthetic dark matter for metabolites with desired modes of action.

RevDate: 2026-04-08

Tang G, Zhang C, Zhang X, et al (2026)

Multi-omics revealed the effects of rumen to blood path on early lactation performance in transition dairy cows.

Microbiome pii:10.1186/s40168-026-02403-y [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: The transition period is vitally important to the life cycle of dairy cows. However, the function of the microbiota during both pre- and post-partum and their relationship with ruminal, plasma, and milk metabolites still require systematic investigation. To address this, the 7 highest- and 7 lowest-performing animals among a cohort of 100 dairy cows were selected based on their postpartum energy-corrected milk yield. Rumen fluid and plasma samples were collected during both pre- and post-partum periods, whereas milk samples were obtained postpartum. Shotgun metagenomics of rumen contents in addition to metabolomics of rumen, plasma, and milk samples were performed to evaluate the associations between ruminal microbes and early lactation performance in transition dairy cows.

RESULTS: Compared with prepartum cows, postpartum high-yield cows had greater concentrations of ruminal volatile fatty acids and plasma total bile acid. Moreover, plasma urea nitrogen and most amino acids, peptides, and their derivatives in plasma and milk were increased in postpartum high-yield cows, relative to postpartum low-yield cows. Metagenomic analysis revealed that the relative abundances of several species within the Prevotella, Succinimonas, Succinatimonas, and Methanosphaera increased, while other bacteria belong to Alistipes and Bacteroides, and archaeal Methanobrevibacter species decreased in postpartum cows, particularly in postpartum high-yield cows. Co-occurrence network and correlation analysis suggested that Prevotella and Succinatimonas were negatively correlated to Alistipes, Bacteroides, and Methanobrevibacter, potentially contributing to the nutritionally efficient phenotype of postpartum high-yield cows. A metabolic pathway analysis of our metagenomic data revealed that postpartum high-yield cows possessed more microbial genes involved in starch utilization and amino acid synthesis, while a wide range of microbial genes involved in cellulose utilization, acetogenesis, and amino acid degradation were found in prepartum cows with low-yield in postpartum. A structural equation model analysis showed that the increased relative abundances of Prevotella tf.2-5 and Succinatimonas CAG_777 were related to greater concentrations of plasma chenodeoxycholic acid glycine conjugate, milk 5-Methoxytryptophan, and energy-corrected milk yield. Finally, pan-genomic analysis confirmed that Alistipes, Bacteroides, and Methanobrevibacter possess genetic conservation of both hydrogenases and dehydrogenases, which may contribute to energy loss in the rumen via hydrogen dissipation.

CONCLUSION: In summary, our findings provide a fundamental understanding of how microbiome-dependent mechanisms contribute to early lactation performance in dairy cows during the transition period. The increased abundance of Prevotella, Succinimonas, and Succinatimonas in postpartum cows suggest that they are important microbes during the transition period and may help in coping with metabolic challenges, while improving nutrient utilization efficiency during this period. Our study underscores the importance of the ruminal microbiome during the transition period and highlights the need for rumen-based nutritional intervention strategies to improve production efficiency in ruminants. Video Abstract.

RevDate: 2026-04-08

Yang X, Zhu C, Liu B, et al (2026)

Astragaloside IV Exhibited Antidiabetic Effects by Improving Glucose Metabolism, Repairing Damaged Gut Barrier and Regulating Intestinal Microbiota.

Phytotherapy research : PTR [Epub ahead of print].

Astragaloside IV (AS-IV), a main active ingredient derived from Astragali Radix, displays a favorable effect in treating type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). This study was aimed to figure out its antidiabetic mechanisms. The db/db mice were treated with AS-IV, and the metabolism phenotype and epithelial barrier permeability were tested. Trans-epithelial resistance assay was performed in Caco-2 cells. Metagenomic sequencing was used to determine the gut microbiota composition and function. The content of short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) in feces was determined using Agilent 8890-5977B GC-MS. Despite increasing mice body weight, AS-IV significantly reduced hyperglycemia in the db/db mice, decreased the ratio of liver weight/body weight, alleviated hepatic total cholesterol and triglyceride levels. AS-IV reduced inflammation through suppressing pro-inflammatory genes (Il1b, Tnf, Ccl2) and elevating anti-inflammatory genes (Il10, Il4, Il13, Il33) in the colonic epithelium. AS-IV also reversed the increased intestinal permeability and decreased expression of tight junction (TJ) proteins Claudin-1, ZO-1 in the db/db mice and Claudin-1, Occludin in Caco-2 cells. Additionally, metagenomic sequencing showed AS-IV altered composition and function of gut microbiota. The 80 species of gut microbiota were markedly changed, e.g., boosting of Alistipes spp. and Prevotella copri, decreasing of relative abundance of Ruminococcus gnavus and Enterocloster bolteae. AS-IV upregulated the SCFA related pathway, increased the content of SCFA, upregulated the transcription levels of SCFA receptors (i.e., GPR41, GPR43 and GPR109a), thereby improved glucose metabolism in the db/db mice. These findings demonstrate that AS-IV exhibited favorable antidiabetic effects by improving glucose metabolism and altering intestinal microbiota symbiosis via repairing the damaged gut barrier. This study will provide valuable reference for the development of new antidiabetic drugs and medication of T2DM.

RevDate: 2026-04-08
CmpDate: 2026-04-08

Sun W, Li Y, Su J, et al (2026)

Multi-kingdom metagenomic characterization of the gut bacteriome, mycobiome, and virome in chronic functional constipation.

Frontiers in cellular and infection microbiology, 16:1744020.

BACKGROUND: Chronic functional constipation (CFC) is a common gastrointestinal disorder increasingly linked to gut microbiome dysbiosis. However, multi-kingdom metagenomic characterization of bacterial, fungal, and viral communities in CFC remains limited.

METHODS: Fecal samples from 53 CFC patients and 48 healthy controls were analyzed using whole-metagenome shotgun sequencing. Microbial composition, function, cross-kingdom interactions, and diagnostic potential were evaluated using diversity analyses, KEGG annotation, network analysis, and random forest modeling.

RESULTS: Compared with healthy controls, CFC patients exhibited marked alterations across multiple microbial kingdoms. The gut bacteriome showed significant community-structure shifts despite comparable α-diversity, characterized by depletion of health-associated Firmicutes (e.g., Faecalibacterium and Roseburia) and enrichment of Proteobacteria (e.g., Klebsiella). The mycobiome displayed selective changes in diversity and composition, with several potentially pathogenic fungal taxa enriched in CFC (e.g., Fusarium sp. c181). In the virome, community composition differed significantly between groups, with higher viral richness in CFC and widespread depletion of diverse bacteriophages in CFC patients. Functional profiling suggested feature-level functional differences without a clear global shift, including reduced carbohydrate transport and utilization pathways and relatively higher abundance of stress-response and metabolic adaptation modules in CFC. Cross-kingdom network analysis demonstrated substantially denser microbial interactions in CFC, dominated by viral associations, with Faecalibacterium prausnitzii and Faecalibacterium_SGB15346 acting as central hubs. Machine-learning models showed strong discriminatory power for CFC classification based on bacterial and viral features, whereas fungal features contributed less.

CONCLUSIONS: CFC is associated with coordinated multi-kingdom gut microbiome dysbiosis involving bacteria, fungi, and viruses, accompanied by functional shifts and intensified cross-kingdom interactions. Bacterial and viral signatures show strong potential as microbiome-based biomarkers for CFC, highlighting the importance of integrating multi-kingdom analyses to better understand disease-associated gut ecosystem alterations.

RevDate: 2026-04-08
CmpDate: 2026-04-08

Howells AEG, Santana M, Cook EM, et al (2026)

Pushing the upper temperature limit of methanotrophy in continental hydrothermal ecosystems, active biological methane oxidation in hot springs of Yellowstone National Park.

Frontiers in microbiology, 17:1736896.

Methane oxidation in terrestrial geothermal systems is an understudied process contributing to carbon cycling in extreme environments. We combined geochemical analyses, 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing, shotgun metagenome sequencing, and [14]CH4 microcosm assays across 61 Yellowstone hot springs spanning pH 1.9-9.0 and temperatures of 28.6-92.2 °C to survey hydrothermal systems for methanotrophy. Bacterial aerobic methanotroph phylotypes were detected at multiple sites, including Verrucomicrobia (order S-BQ2-57) and Alphaproteobacteria, with the family Methylocystaceae having the highest relative abundance among bacterial methanotroph phylotypes. No known archaeal anaerobic methanotrophs were observed. Biological methane oxidation was widespread, occurring at 14 of 17 experimental sites under both ambient and air-amended conditions. Rates were highest at CH4-rich, NH3-poor sites dominated by bacterial methanotrophs, consistent with energy supply predictions integrating CH4/O2 and CH4/NH3 concentration ratios. Conversely, NH3-rich, energy-rich sites exhibited lower methane oxidation rates (MOR) and were dominated by archaeal ammonia oxidizers, primarily Candidatus Nitrosocaldus, suggesting chemical competitive inhibition of NH3 on methanotrophy. Remarkably, significant methane oxidation occurred at eight sites where no known methanotrophs were detected, including a site at 89.9 °C-well above the previously reported upper growth temperature limit for methanotrophs from continental geothermal and hydrothermal systems-pointing to uncharacterized thermophilic lineages. These results suggest that biological methane oxidation in Yellowstone hot springs is influenced by the interplay of substrate availability and energy supply. By linking energy supply calculations with microbial distributions, we identify both known methanotrophs (Verrucomicrobia, Alphaproteobacteria) and archaeal ammonia oxidizers as potential active contributors, while highlighting the potential for novel thermophilic lineages, thereby expanding the ecological and thermal boundaries of methane oxidation in extreme terrestrial ecosystems.

RevDate: 2026-04-08
CmpDate: 2026-04-08

Zhu G, Zou Z, Fang Z, et al (2026)

Rare but Critical: Severe Tropheryma Whipplei Pneumonia-Induced Cardiopulmonary Failure in a Young Immunocompromised Adult-A Case Report and Literature Review.

Clinical case reports, 14(4):e72448.

Tropheryma whipplei, traditionally linked to classic Whipple's disease with gastrointestinal involvement, is increasingly recognized as a cause of pneumonia. Reports of T. whipplei-associated pneumonia progressing to respiratory failure with concurrent acute cardiac failure remain extremely rare. A 38-year-old man with poorly controlled diabetes presented to the emergency department with acute chest tightness, dyspnea, and impaired consciousness. Laboratory findings indicated type II respiratory failure and elevated inflammatory markers. Imaging revealed scattered patchy hazy opacities and increased density bilaterally, prompting emergent intubation and transfer to the intensive care unit. Despite empirical antibiotics for severe pneumonia, he developed acute cardiac failure on day 3, manifesting as bloody sputum and diffuse moist rales with rhonchi on auscultation, alongside an LVEF of 49% and a markedly elevated serum BNP level of 3100 pg/mL. Metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS) of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid detected abundant T. whipplei sequences. He was administered targeted therapy with meropenem, supported by mechanical ventilation, diuresis, and glycemic control. Cardiopulmonary function improved, and he was discharged on oral doxycycline plus hydroxychloroquine. Follow-up endoscopy and biopsy showed no gastrointestinal involvement (Periodic Acid-Schiff negative), restored cardiac function (LVEF 58.6%), and no recurrence. This case underscores T. whipplei as a potential cause of isolated pneumonia with cardiopulmonary failure in functionally immunocompromised hosts and highlights the critical role of mNGS in guiding timely targeted therapy to improve outcomes.

RevDate: 2026-04-08

Saini G, Yadav R, Bagga R, et al (2026)

Cervicovaginal microbiota in female sex workers with bacterial vaginosis: A metagenomic perspective.

RevDate: 2026-04-08

Marriott L, Martinez-Lopez A, Liga A, et al (2026)

An automated and portable platform for rapid cell-free DNA isolation and its application in microbial DNA metagenomic sequencing from human blood samples.

Lab on a chip [Epub ahead of print].

The prompt identification of pathogens in human circulation in a clinically deployable format remains an unmet clinical need. The established test for infection diagnostics remains blood culture, which typically takes 2-4 days and is positive in less than 15% of cases, with many prevalent pathogens difficult or impossible to culture. While microbial cfDNA in blood could facilitate the diagnosis of sepsis, febrile and infectious conditions, sample preparation for cell-free DNA (cfDNA) analysis in decentralised settings presents challenges due to its complexity and the low concentration and fragmented nature of cfDNA in blood plasma. We developed a portable and automated platform and a consumable (CNASafe) for cfDNA isolation from human plasma samples. The platform-device performance was evaluated by comparing relative cfDNA yield against a reference (QIAGEN QIAamp Circulating Nucleic Acid Kit). cfDNA eluates from ten non-cultured blood samples from hospital patients were sequenced on a nanopore sequencer, and results compared to blood cultures. Extraction of cfDNA using the CNASafe device was completed in 40 minutes, compared to the 1 hour 15 min reference protocol. The device achieved an average relative cfDNA recovery of 100.5% over 333 unique extractions encompassing all parameter variations, demonstrating a performance equivalent to the reference kit. From the patient samples, a sufficient quantity of microbial cfDNA was extracted to either identify pathogens missed by blood cultures or confirm negative cultures. The CNASafe platform and real-time nanopore sequencing offer a promising solution for the rapid deployment of metagenomic diagnostics, enabling pathogen identification within a few hours in decentralised clinical environments.

RevDate: 2026-04-08

Chen Y, Sun N, Gan B, et al (2026)

Targeting Bifidobacterium animalis alleviates high-fluoride exposure-induced kidney injury in mice.

AMB Express pii:10.1186/s13568-026-02031-7 [Epub ahead of print].

RevDate: 2026-04-08
CmpDate: 2026-04-08

Adolph JE, Pentek C, Bauch T, et al (2026)

Next-generation sequencing of cell-free microbial DNA in blood samples of critically ill children: a single-center experience.

Molecular and cellular pediatrics, 13(1):.

BACKGROUND: Rapid and accurate pathogen detection is critical for optimizing outcomes in pediatric sepsis. Next-generation sequencing (NGS) of cell-free DNA (cfDNA) from blood enables culture-independent identification of microbial DNA from bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites. We evaluated the diagnostic yield and clinical impact of cfDNA-based NGS in critically ill and predominantly immunocompromised pediatric patients (≤ 18 years) with suspected infection. This retrospective single-center study included pediatric patients who underwent plasma cfDNA-NGS at a tertiary care hospital in Germany. Following computational removal of human DNA, remaining sequences were aligned to curated microbial reference databases. Diagnostic performance was compared with blood cultures and viral PCR, and clinical relevance was assessed by pediatric infectious disease specialists.

RESULTS: 111 tests in 78 pediatric patients, mostly with systemic inflammatory response syndrome of unknown etiology, were performed. Overall, 61 tests (54.5%) were positive for pathogenic cfDNA. Compared with conventional microbiological diagnostics, NGS demonstrated a sensitivity of 64.7% and specificity of 88.2% when blood cultures and viral PCR served as the reference standard. NGS identified additional pathogens in a substantial proportion (41.1%) of cases that remained negative by standard testing. Of those pathogens only found by NGS, over 60% were deemed clinically relevant. In 14.8% of positive NGS results, a pathogen-specific therapy was started, while 40.2% of tests led to a discontinuation of therapy (51.0% of negative tests). Out of all positive NGS, 38 (62.3%) were classified as clinically relevant. NGS testing also detected rare infections with fungi and parasites in four cases each.

CONCLUSION: Detection of pathogenic cfDNA through NGS from blood shows promising results as an additional diagnostic tool in critically ill pediatric patients with suspected infections. Clinical utility is currently still limited by its high cost, undetermined diagnostic validity and limitations in testing for resistances and restricted availability of raw sequencing data due to data-protection constraints.

RevDate: 2026-04-08
CmpDate: 2026-04-08

Lerhzouli H, Al Ibrahmi B, Khal-Layoun S, et al (2025)

New therapeutic approaches based on modulation of the intestinal microbiota to correct dysbiosis in patients with type 2 diabetes.

La Tunisie medicale, 103(11):1707-1717 pii:/article/view/6101.

Type 2 diabetes is a chronic disease characterized by insulin resistance and reduced insulin production in pancreatic cells. Conventional treatment of type 2 diabetes relies on hypoglycemic drugs, physical activity and a balanced low-carbohydrate diet, but with technological advances in metagenomics and metabolomics researchers have developed new therapeutic approaches aimed to modulate, the gut microbiota to correct the dysbiosis confirmed in people with type 2 diabetes. This literature review provides an update on therapies aimed to modulate the gut microbiota to correct dysbiosis in type 2 diabetics and summarizes the latest advances in this field.

RevDate: 2026-04-08
CmpDate: 2026-04-08

Kador SM, Shila JF, Afrin S, et al (2026)

Microbial diversity, functional genomics and antibiotic resistance in integrated chicken and fish farming systems of Bangladesh.

PloS one, 21(4):e0344367 pii:PONE-D-24-54113.

The integrated chicken and fish farming system in Bangladesh is widely practiced for its resource efficiency, yet its microbial structure, functional potential, and associated antimicrobial resistance risks remain poorly understood. This study investigated microbial communities, metabolic functions, and antimicrobial resistance profiles across multiple components of integrated farming systems, including chicken gut, chicken droppings, feed, fish intestine, and pond sediment. Microbial profiling was performed using 16S ribosomal ribonucleic acid (rRNA) gene sequencing, functional metagenomic prediction, and culture-based isolation, complemented by antimicrobial susceptibility testing. A total of 2,838 operational taxonomic units were identified, with bacteria constituting the vast majority of detected microorganisms. Microbial community composition was strongly shaped by sample type, reflecting distinct ecological niches within the farming system. Chicken gut samples were dominated by Firmicutes, feed samples by Cyanobacteria, and sediment samples exhibited the highest microbial diversity, including taxa involved in biogeochemical cycling. Functional analysis revealed that pathways related to amino acid and carbohydrate metabolism were most abundant across all samples, while sediment and feed were enriched in pathways associated with xenobiotic degradation, suggesting a role in environmental detoxification. Culture-based methods isolated clinically relevant bacteria, including Escherichia coli and Proteus mirabilis, although metagenomic analysis indicated that these organisms represented only a minor fraction of the overall microbial community. Antimicrobial susceptibility testing demonstrated notable resistance, particularly to tetracyclines and fluoroquinolones. Metagenomic analysis further identified multiple antimicrobial resistance genes, with several showing strong associations with specific bacterial genera. This study provides the first comprehensive characterization of microbial diversity, functional capacity, and antimicrobial resistance within integrated chicken and fish farming systems in Bangladesh, highlighting potential environmental reservoirs of resistance and underscoring the need for improved management strategies to enhance sustainability and reduce public health risks.

RevDate: 2026-04-08

Cai X, Yao Y, Zheng Y, et al (2026)

Multi-omics gut microbiome signatures for treat-to-target management in inflammatory bowel disease.

Microbiological research, 309:128511 pii:S0944-5013(26)00075-3 [Epub ahead of print].

Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) care now relies on an expanding portfolio of biologics and small molecules, yet symptom-driven phenotyping often misses molecular endotypes, contributing to primary non-response and loss of response. This review examines how gut microbiota-centered multi-omics can be translated into decision support within treat-to-target (T2T) management and therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM). We synthesize evidence from stool and mucosal metagenomics/metatranscriptomics, virome and bacteriophage signals, metabolomics, blood proteomics, and host transcriptomic/epigenomic and genetic layers, emphasizing analytical validity, external validation, calibration, and action-linked thresholds. Longitudinal data indicate that IBD-associated dysbiosis is predominantly functional and time-varying, enabling applications in diagnosis, prognosis, therapy-response prediction, and monitoring of inflammatory burden and remission depth. However, many reported predictors show limited transportability due to pre-analytical variation, batch effects, endpoint heterogeneity, and confounding by diet, antibiotics, and prior therapies. We propose a pragmatic, tiered workflow: deploy minimal, interpretable signatures at baseline and early induction, and interpret outputs alongside fecal calprotectin/CRP, endoscopy or imaging when indicated, and drug exposure/anti-drug antibodies to distinguish underexposure and immunogenicity from true mechanistic non-response, guiding dose optimization versus mechanism switching. Digital/remote monitoring can operationalize iterative reassessment while reserving deeper omics for decision-critical checkpoints. Overall, the microbiome is best framed as an actionable layer within a multi-signal IBD management system rather than a standalone biomarker; translation will depend on standardization, workflow integration, prospective validation, and demonstrated clinical and economic value.

RevDate: 2026-04-08

Cao S, Liu X, Tao Y, et al (2026)

EPS-mediated mineralization drives granule densification and enhances denitratation-anammox coupling under alkaline conditions.

Water research, 299:125888 pii:S0043-1354(26)00570-1 [Epub ahead of print].

The granular-based CANDAN (Complete Ammonium and Nitrate removal via Denitratation-Anammox over Nitrite) process offers a promising low-carbon and high-rate strategy for nitrogen removal; yet the mechanisms by which alkaline conditions regulate granule structure and functional coupling remain insufficiently understood. Here, a 9-L sequencing batch reactor (SBR) was operated for 130 days with stepwise pH elevation from 7.31 ± 0.03 to 8.52 ± 0.08 to elucidate alkaline condition-driven structural and functional adaptations in CANDAN granules. Moderate alkaline conditions significantly improved nitrogen removal, with total nitrogen removal efficiency increasing to 91.4 ± 0.1 %, accompanied by pronounced improvement in sludge settleability (sludge volume index after 30 min of settling, SVI30, decreased from 76.4 to 19.4 mL g[-1] SS) and stabilization of dominant granule sizes at 0.5-1 mm, accounting for approximately 69.8 % of the total granules, indicating progressive granule densification. Mineralogical analyses revealed that hydroxyapatite dominated the inorganic matrix, with co-precipitation of calcium carbonate (CaCO3) and transient magnesium ammonium phosphate formation reinforcing granule structure. Elevated pH also remodeled extracellular polymeric substances (EPS), increasing loosely bound EPS, raising the protein-to-polysaccharide ratio, and enriching tryptophan-like proteins that facilitated EPS-mediated mineral nucleation. Metagenomic analysis revealed streamlined carbon metabolism and enrichment of key nitrogen-cycling genes (napA, nosZ, hzsA), while downregulation of Ca[2+], Mg[2+], and phosphate transport genes favored extracellular mineral accumulation. Overall, moderately alkaline conditions drive EPS-mediated mineralization that densifies granules and stabilizes Denitratation-Anammox coupling, providing mechanistic insight for optimizing low-carbon nitrogen removal under alkaline wastewater conditions.

RevDate: 2026-04-08

Zuo Z, Xing Y, Qiao L, et al (2026)

Unveiling in-pipe carbon-sulfur transformation and microbial function during urine transport for centralized management.

Water research, 299:125840 pii:S0043-1354(26)00522-1 [Epub ahead of print].

Source-separated urine collection and centralized nutrient recovery at city-scale hold great potential for advancing sustainable resource management. As the critical link between urine collection systems and nutrient recovery facilities, urine-transporting sewer systems have recently been incorporated into life cycle assessments (LCA), yet their potential for biochemical transformations has not been explored. Here, for the first time, we experimentally unveil key pollutant transformations and microbial functions in a urine-fed bioreactor (representing urine transport), with a sewage-fed bioreactor serving as a control. Major urine nutrients (N, P, and K) remained largely stable during transport, whereas organic carbon and sulfate decreased markedly. Methane production was negligible over 160 days, while sulfide production initially declined but fully recovered by day 80, accompanied by elevated microbial activity and substantial sulfide accumulation in sediments. Microbial community analyses revealed that urine exposure reduced community richness and led to a pronounced community, with methanogenic archaea strongly inhibited and sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) becoming dominant under prolonged urine stress. A Desulfomicrobium-like SRB species was progressively enriched (∼35% of total metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs)) and likely responsible for the sulfide rebound. Spatial heterogeneity of microbial communities in sediments further explains depth-specific sulfide accumulation. Overall, this study provides important insights into carbon-sulfur transformations and microbial adaptation in urine transport systems, informing improved system design, operation, and further LCA.

RevDate: 2026-04-08

Yan S, Han Q, Chen L, et al (2026)

Simultaneous removal of Se(IV) and Cr(VI) from acidic wastewater using a Se(IV)-reducing internal circulation reactor: performance and microbial resistance mechanisms.

Bioresource technology pii:S0960-8524(26)00618-8 [Epub ahead of print].

Acidic wastewater contaminated with selenite (Se(IV)) and chromate (Cr(VI)) poses elevated environmental risks due to the combined toxicity of metal(liod) and acidity. Metal(loid)-resistant consortia, such as Se(IV)-reducing sludge (SeRS), provide a promising strategy for treating such wastewater by converting Se(IV) and Cr(VI) into less toxic Se(0) and Cr(III), respectively. In this study, an internal circulation (IC) reactor loaded with SeRS and granular activated carbon was constructed to evaluate its performance in treating such wastewater. In the absence of Cr(VI), the reactor achieved 94.6-98.5% Se(IV) removal at influent pH 4.5-8.0 with 1-3 mM Se(IV). At optimal pH 5.5, nearly complete removal of both oxyanions was achieved at Se(IV)/Cr(VI) molar ratio of 5.2-10.4. Alkalinity generation from acetate oxidation buffered influent acidity at influent pH 4.5-5.5 and sustained microbial activity. Cr(VI) stress selectively enriched Brucella, Trichlorobacter, and Seleniivibrio for Cr(VI) reduction, while Pseudomonas accounted for Se(IV) and Cr(VI) reduction. Integrated extracellular polymeric substances (EPS), glutathione reductase (GOR), and metagenomic analyses revealed microbial resistance to Cr(VI) stress likely relied on intracellular glutathione-related detoxification, enzymatic Se(IV)/Cr(VI) reduction and antioxidant defenses, while extracellular EPS protection declined. Overall, it was demonstrated that the developed IC reactor process enabled robust and efficient removal of both Se(IV) and Cr(VI) from acidic wastewater.

RevDate: 2026-04-08

Rana N, Angrup A, Tiewsoh K, et al (2026)

Automating Microbial Community Analysis (AMCA): Development and application of as amplicon based graphical pipeline in patients with Chronic Kidney Disease.

Indian journal of medical microbiology pii:S0255-0857(26)00068-X [Epub ahead of print].

INTRODUCTION: Amplicon sequencing is a targeted approach used to assess the diversity of microbial communities by amplifying and sequencing a specific genetic locus from DNA. QIIME2 is one of the most prevalent methods for metagenomics analysis due to its plugin-based design wherein distinct modules can be utilized to perform specific functions. However, QIIME2 data input, and plugin utilization is cumbersome to navigate. Previous amplicon pipelines also lack host depletion and statistical biomarker identification modules from upstream and downstream analysis.

METHODS: To this effect, we assembled a simple and customizable Zenity based GUI workflow for analysing amplicon data with Automating Microbial Community Analysis (AMCA). The analysis integrates key attributes of amplicon analysis: host depletion with Bowtie2 and biomarker prediction by LEfSe. The bash-based analysis guides and allows the user to select filtering parameters based on intermediate results while minimizing the need to navigate command-based plugins.

RESULTS: The outputs from the AMCA workflow include the filtered and host-depleted raw sequencing data, taxonomic abundances, alpha and beta diversity indices, alpha rarefaction analysis, phylogenetic tree (rooted and unrooted) and significant features which explain key microbial differences between conditions/classes of the experiment. The implementation of the designed workflow has been tested on a pilot study based on amplicon sequencing in 100 samples from patients of Chronic Kidney Disease and healthy controls. The exploratory LEfSE analysis revealed key taxa Streptococcus, Bacteroides and Faecalibacterium to vary between disease and control conditions. The source code related to the analysis can be assessed from the Github repository at https://github.com/Nitika-Rana/AMCA.

CONCLUSION: The study delivers an efficient, user-friendly, and customizable workflow for amplicon analysis, simplifying QIIME2 execution while enabling host depletion and biomarker characterization.

RevDate: 2026-04-08

Kariya E, Tirard-Collet P, Boulagnon-Rombi C, et al (2026)

Integrated histomolecular diagnosis of mesenteric anisakiasis.

Journal of clinical pathology pii:jcp-2026-210635 [Epub ahead of print].

A 49-year-old woman was admitted with gastrointestinal symptoms and imaging consistent with duodeno-ileitis. Her clinical course was complicated by mesenteric ischaemia, requiring resection of a 45-cm ileal segment. A pre-adult Anisakis spp. larva was identified within a mesenteric nodule through an innovative diagnostic approach combining histopathological analysis with shotgun metagenomic analysis.

RevDate: 2026-04-08

Heng YC, Dagar SS, Fliegerova K, et al (2026)

Metagenome-assembled genomes, and gene and protein catalogues from the global wild boar faecal microbiome.

Scientific data pii:10.1038/s41597-026-07154-x [Epub ahead of print].

Prophylactic antibiotic use in pig farming has contributed to the rise of antimicrobial resistance, spurring interest in probiotics to enhance pig gut health and immunity. Wild relatives of domestic pigs may harbour beneficial microbes, yet their gut microbiomes remain underexplored. In this study, we reconstructed 3,288 metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) from 89 wild boar faecal samples collected across four countries, all meeting at least MIMAG medium-quality standard (≥50% completeness, <10% contamination). These MAGs represented 968 distinct species, including 956 bacterial species from 113 families and 419 genera, and 12 archaeal species from 2 families and 7 genera, with half classified as novel. In addition, we also constructed catalogues of genes and proteins from the wild boar faecal metagenomes. Notably, most species (58%), genes and proteins (85%) identified in the wild boar faecal microbiomes were absent from equivalent catalogues of domestic pigs. Our catalogues highlight wild boars as a reservoir of previously untapped microbial resources for microbiome research and the exploration of biotechnological applications including probiotics.

RevDate: 2026-04-08

Wang H, Wu SH, Zhang K, et al (2026)

Multiple hypervariable markers improve mycobiome classification in metatranscriptome and metagenome data.

Communications biology pii:10.1038/s42003-026-09820-7 [Epub ahead of print].

Profiling the taxonomic and functional composition of mycobiome using metagenomic and metatranscriptomic sequencing is advancing our understanding of fungal functions in ecosystems. However, the sensitivity and accuracy of mycobiome classification using genome- or core protein-based approaches, is limited by the availability of reference genomes and the resolution of sequence databases. To address this, we propose the MicroFisher, a novel tool to identify taxonomically useful reads from metagenomic or metatranscriptomic data, enabling taxonomic identification of community members based on multiple hypervariable markers. We applied MicroFisher to profile the simulated fungal communities to assess the performance of the developed tool, and found higher performance in fungal prediction and abundance estimation compared to existing tools. In addition, we also used metagenomes from forest soil and metatranscriptomes of root eukaryotic microbes to test our method and found that MicroFisher provided more accurate profiling of environmental microbiomes compared to other classification tools. MicroFisher leverages high-resolution hypervariable marker gene databases and weighted integration algorithms to deliver more accurate fungal community classification compared to existing state-of-the-art tools. Additionally, it enables the detection of rare taxa, which is challenging with other available tools. Thus, MicroFisher serves as a novel pipeline for classification of fungal communities from metagenomes and metatranscriptomes.

RevDate: 2026-04-08

Somerville TF, SB Kaye (2026)

Comment on: 'Metagenomic next-generation sequencing: a game changer in the diagnosis of unique intraocular infections'.

RevDate: 2026-04-08

Wang Y, Li Y, Fang J, et al (2026)

A Novel Broad pH-Adaptive Bile Salt Hydrolase from Nomascus concolor Fecal Microbial Metagenome Facilitates the Cholesterol-Lowering Ability of Escherichia coli Nissle 1917.

Probiotics and antimicrobial proteins [Epub ahead of print].

RevDate: 2026-04-07
CmpDate: 2026-04-07

Zhu W, Qian J, Peng M, et al (2026)

Post-COVID-19 Area Postrema Syndrome With SARS-CoV-2 in CSF: A Dual-Case Report and Review of the Literature.

Immunity, inflammation and disease, 14(4):e70421.

BACKGROUND: Neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder (NMOSD) is a rare autoimmune astrocytopathy characterized by inflammatory demyelinating lesions in the central nervous system. Area postrema syndrome (APS), marked by intractable nausea, vomiting, and hiccups, is a recognized but less common initial manifestation. Post-infectious autoimmunity triggered by SARS-CoV-2 has been increasingly associated with NMOSD pathogenesis; however, the clinical significance of direct viral neuroinvasion and its relationship to divergent patient outcomes remains poorly understood.

METHODS: We report two female patients who developed isolated APS shortly after COVID-19 infection. Both patients underwent comprehensive neurological evaluation, including brain and spinal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analysis with metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS), and serological testing for aquaporin-4 immunoglobulin G (AQP4-IgG), myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein immunoglobulin G (MOG-IgG), and glial fibrillary acidic protein immunoglobulin G (GFAP-IgG) using cell-based assays. Clinical outcomes were compared in the context of antibody serostatus and treatment strategies. A review of the relevant literature on post-COVID NMOSD was also performed.

RESULTS: Both patients presented with intractable vomiting and hiccups following SARS-CoV-2 infection, and MRI demonstrated isolated T2/FLAIR hyperintense lesions in the dorsal medulla consistent with area postrema involvement. SARS-CoV-2 RNA sequences were detected in the CSF of both patients via mNGS, suggesting direct viral neuroinvasion or blood-brain barrier compromise. Despite similar initial presentations, their outcomes diverged dramatically. Patient 1 was AQP4-IgG negative, responded well to immunotherapy with intravenous immunoglobulin and corticosteroids followed by mycophenolate mofetil maintenance, and remained relapse-free at 12-month follow-up with significant lesion regression on MRI. Patient 2 was AQP4-IgG positive in both serum and CSF, and despite acute treatment, experienced a fatal relapse 6 months later with longitudinally extensive transverse myelitis while on low-dose prednisone monotherapy.

CONCLUSIONS: Isolated APS may represent an important yet under-recognized manifestation of post-COVID-19 autoimmune neuroinflammation. Detection of SARS-CoV-2 in CSF supports a role for direct viral neuroinvasion as a localized inflammatory stimulus. AQP4-IgG serostatus serves as a critical prognostic determinant: seronegativity is associated with a benign, monophasic course, whereas seropositivity mandates prompt initiation of potent immunosuppressive therapy to prevent devastating relapses. Clinicians should maintain a high index of suspicion for NMOSD in patients with unexplained persistent vomiting following COVID-19, and perform urgent neuroimaging and antibody testing for early risk stratification.

RevDate: 2026-04-07
CmpDate: 2026-04-07

Liu F, Xie F, Zhong Q, et al (2026)

Application Value of Metagenomic Next-Generation Sequencing Using Bronchoalveolar Lavage Fluid and Blood Samples in Patients with Severe Pneumonia Complicated with Bloodstream Infection.

Polish journal of microbiology, 75(1):75-83 pii:pjm-2026-008.

This study was designed to systematically evaluate the diagnostic performance of metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS) using blood and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) samples in patients with severe pneumonia complicated by bloodstream infections. A retrospective analysis of 30 patients with severe pneumonia-bloodstream infection admitted to our hospital from January 2018 to December 2022 was conducted, and the potential pathogens in both BALF and blood samples were simultaneously detected by conventional microbial examination (traditional group) and mNGS tests (mNGS group), comparing the differences in pathogen species and detection rates between the two methods. There was no significant difference in the positivity of pathogen detection in BALF and blood samples using mNGS (p = 0.492). The proportion of bacteria (p = 0.005) and fungi (p = 0.037) detected by BALF mNGS was higher than that by blood mNGS, but there was no significant difference in the proportion of viruses (p = 0.121). In addition, the positive rate of pathogen detection by mNGS in BALF and blood samples was significantly higher than that by traditional methods (p < 0.01). BALF mNGS demonstrated superior diagnostic sensitivity for bacterial and fungal pathogen detection compared to blood mNGS and conventional culture methods. Notably, blood specimens retained distinct advantages in identifying specific viral infections. Future prospective studies with larger sample sizes are warranted to validate these findings.

RevDate: 2026-04-07
CmpDate: 2026-04-07

Zhou G, Chen L, Ma L, et al (2026)

Sodicity Thresholds Alter Biodiversity-Multifunctionality Relationships Through Fungal Dominance and Microbial Trait-Based Strategies.

Global change biology, 32(4):e70843.

Increasing soil sodicity represents a critical threat to global agroecosystem health, but how exchangeable sodium percentage (ESP) modulates relationships between biodiversity and ecosystem multifunctionality (BEF) is unresolved. We surveyed 378 soil samples from 189 paired saline-sodic lands and adjacent farmlands across four major saline-sodic regions of China spanning ~2000 km. Random forest models demonstrated that ESP emerged as the primary abiotic predictor of soil multifunctionality, defining sharp thresholds ~13% for cropped systems and ~44% for natural saline-sodic habitats beyond which BEF relationships undergo fundamental reorganization. These breaks coincide with significant shifts toward fungal dominance within microbial communities. Notably, under hyper-sodic conditions, fungal diversity emerges as essential for sustaining ecosystem functions. Metagenomic and trait-based analyses further characterized three functional dimensions of microbial trait-based strategies-environmental responsiveness, metabolic capacity, and nutrient recycling. We then mechanistically linked microbial life-history strategies to soil multifunctionality. Our results showed that in farmland soils, nutrient recycling was positively associated with multifunctionality, whereas metabolic capacity was negatively correlated with multifunctionality, and in saline-sodic soils metabolic capacity exhibited a positive association with multifunctionality. Collectively, this study establishes ESP as a key regulator of BEF relationships and microbial eco-evolutionary adaptations, providing mechanistic insights for managing saline-sodic soils under escalating climate change.

RevDate: 2026-04-07

Cai S, Li E, Sun T, et al (2026)

Amine-Containing Micropollutants Exposure Reshapes Sludge Anaerobic Digestion via Enzymatic Inhibition and Stress-Mediated Alteration of Methanogenic Pathways.

Environmental science & technology [Epub ahead of print].

Amine-containing micropollutants (AMPs), a class of structurally diverse polar compounds characterized by one or more amine functional groups, are frequently detected in wastewater sludge. However, the anaerobic transformation of these compounds and their impacts on microbial metabolism during anaerobic digestion (AD) remain poorly understood. In this work, six representative AMPs were selected to cover 16 structurally diverse primary, secondary, tertiary amine, and quaternary ammonium functionalities. α-C hydroxylation and N-acetylation were identified as the dominant initial reactions among the detected transformation products (TP), collectively accounting for 42.6% of all identified TPs. Furthermore, compound-specific differences in metabolic disturbance were observed. Quaternary ammonium compounds, N-dodecyl-N-benzyl-N,N-dimethylammonium chloride (DDBAC) and N,N-Didodecyl-N,N-dimethylammonium chloride (DDDAC) markedly reduced acetate kinase activity by 10.69 and 14.28%, respectively, and resulted in methane production yield reductions of 88.97 and 88.19%. The genome-centric metagenome revealed that exposure to AMPs prompted the reassembly of the microbial community, altered its functional attributes, and disturbed interspecies cross-feeding interactions. Specifically, AMPs triggered a shift in the methanogenic consortium from mixotrophic Methanosarcina flavescens to hydrogenotrophic Methanobacterium sp., owing to the latter's metabolic versatility, vigorous proliferation, and superior energy conservation. These findings indicated that the chemical properties of amine functional groups have effects on anaerobic biotransformation pathways and microbial energy metabolism, providing mechanistic insight into AMPs toxicity and guiding mitigation strategies to enhance the stability and resilience of full-scale AD systems.

RevDate: 2026-04-07

Feng Z, Lu JN, Wang G, et al (2026)

Beyond Metal(loid) Immobilization: Redox-Stratified Biocrusts Shield Humid Mining Regions.

Environmental science & technology [Epub ahead of print].

Biological soil crusts (biocrusts) develop vertical redox-microbial-nutrient stratification that regulates hydrological and elemental cycles and contributes to ecological restoration in extreme environments, including mining regions. However, the roles of this heterogeneity in metal(loid) immobilization remain unclear, particularly in humid regions, where pronounced redox and microbial stratification may foster unrecognized stabilization mechanisms. We integrated physicochemical characterization with bioinformatic analysis to reveal stratified microbial communities and metabolic potentials in humid tailings biocrusts. Biocrusts exhibited stratified functionality through the upper photoautotrophic layer (PL) and the lower heterotrophic layer (HL). In the PL, Cyanobacteria and SWB02 formed a self-reinforcing oxygen barrier through clay-silt enrichment (2.8-fold higher than bare tailings sand) and extracellular polysaccharide accumulation (18-fold), which swelled upon hydration to physically hinder oxygen infiltration, confining Gammaproteobacteria-associated iron-manganese oxide immobilization to this layer. Beneath this barrier, the HL harbored sulfidogenic potential through microbes enriched in hydB (17.4-fold) and phsC (3.4-fold) genes, including Bacteroidota and Desulfobacterota, supporting a potential mechanism for metal(loid) sequestration via sulfide formation in underlying tailings, where sulfur occurred exclusively as sulfides at 5 cm depth. This barrier-mediated effect may outweigh metal(loid) immobilization within biocrusts. Our findings elucidate biocrust-mediated protection against metal(loid)s and provide theoretical support for remediation in humid mining regions.

RevDate: 2026-04-07

Wang Z, Zhang J, Lu H, et al (2026)

Gemella morbillorum Promotes Colorectal Carcinogenesis: LPBDCP-Mediated Invasion Activates Ras Signaling and Destabilizes p53.

Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) [Epub ahead of print].

Gut microbiota dysbiosis promotes colorectal cancer (CRC) tumorigenesis. A global fecal metagenomic analysis identified Gemella morbillorum as a key contributor to the CRC-associated microbiota. Fluorescence in situ hybridization revealed that Gemella morbillorum is enriched in CRC tumor tissues compared to adjacent normal tissues. In vitro and in vivo experiments elucidated the oncogenic effects of Gemella morbillorum on human CRC cell lines and mouse models. Multimodal imaging shows that Gemella morbillorum can internalize into host cells. RNA sequencing, co-immunoprecipitation, and mass spectrometry identified that Gemella morbillorum invades host cells via interaction between its LysM peptidoglycan-binding domain protein (LPBDCP) and host cell surface transmembrane protein TMEM140. This invasion triggers Ca[2] [+] influx, downregulates RASA4, and activates the PI3K-AKT-NF-κB and RAF-MEK-ERK signaling pathways. Following invasion, Gemella morbillorum secretes NAD-dependent protein deacetylase (NDPD), which induces p53 deacetylation and degradation. Collectively, these events accelerate cell proliferation, shorten the cell cycle, and inhibit apoptosis, thereby promoting malignant transformation. Genetic knockout of LPBDCP or TMEM140 effectively inhibits bacterial invasion and abrogates the oncogenic effects of Gemella morbillorum. In tumor-bearing mice, knockout of LPBDCP or NDPD eliminates the tumor-promoting effects of Gemella morbillorum. These results underscore Gemella morbillorum's role in CRC and pinpoint potential intervention targets.

RevDate: 2026-04-07

Sutaoney P, Singh P, Malakar S, et al (2026)

Microbial lipases: Catalyzing sustainable solutions for industrial innovations.

Enzyme and microbial technology, 198:110869 pii:S0141-0229(26)00052-9 [Epub ahead of print].

Microbial lipases are multifaceted biological catalyst that have surfaced as a key driver in various industries and are both eco-friendly and cost efficient.In large scale applications, lipases produced from bacteria, fungi and yeasts function better than their equivalents generated from plants and animals due to their wide substrate specificity, catalytic efficacy and stability under physicochemical circumstances. Recent developments in microbial lipase research, including sources, screening techniques, assay procedures, production methods, purification tactics, and biochemical characterisation, are critically examined in this review.The structural and mechanistic elements that control lipase function-such as lid domains, interfacial activation, and catalytic triads-are given special attention since they all have an impact on the stability, specificity, and industrial performance of the enzyme.Large-scale screening is done to check for the production of lipase in Bacillus sp., Achromobacter sp., Alcaligenes sp., Arthrobacter sp., Pseudomonas sp., and Penicillium sp. Additionally, the combination of synthetic biology, metagenomics, CRISPR-Cas technologies, enzyme engineering, and AI-assisted modelling is emphasized as a revolutionary strategy for identifying and customizing lipases with desired characteristics, including extreme environment microbes and application-specific variants.The review also highlights the growing industrial uses of microbial lipases in the bio-fuel, food and beverage, detergent, textile, leather, pharmaceutical, and medical industries, highlighting their contribution to the development of economically feasible and ecologically safe bioprocesses. All things considered, microbial lipases are an important biotechnological tool for developing sustainable industrial innovation and green chemistry.

RevDate: 2026-04-07

Yang Y, Wang Y, Li J, et al (2026)

Temperature-dependent demethylation of methylarsenic by methanogens: Linking carbon metabolism to arsenic speciation in landfills.

Journal of hazardous materials, 509:141986 pii:S0304-3894(26)00964-7 [Epub ahead of print].

The environmental risk posed by arsenic (As) in landfills, driven by its high concentrations and mobility, is a significant concern. While inorganic arsenate [As(V)] and arsenite [As(III)] are dominant, the microbial-mediated conversion of these inorganic species into less toxic methylated arsenicals (MAs) is a key attenuation pathway. However, the reverse process-the demethylation of MAs back to more toxic inorganic forms-and its microbial drivers in landfills are not well understood. The availability of substrates and temperature are important growth factors and environmental factors that affect the activity and community structure of MA. This study investigated the demethylation of dimethylarsinic acid (DMAs) by methanogenic communities enriched from the leachate saturated zone (LSZ) under different thermal fields (15℃, 35℃, 55℃). We found that methylotrophic methanogens were the primary agents of DMAs demethylation, with the highest efficiency observed at mesophilic temperature (35℃), followed by thermophilic (55℃) and psychrophilic (15℃) conditions. Interestingly, methane (CH4) release exhibited a distinct trend (55℃ > 35℃ > 15℃), indicating an inconsistency between methanogenic activity and MAs demethylation efficiency at higher temperatures. A partial least squares path model (PLS-PM) revealed that both the abundance of methanogenic functional genes and CH4 release had a significant negative effect on As species (path coefficients of -0.615 and -0.376, respectively). Metagenomic analysis identified Methanosarcina as the dominant methylotrophic genus at 35℃, while Methanosarcina thermophila and JAULTD01 sp. were key drivers at 55℃. Our findings demonstrate that methanogens dynamically couple carbon metabolism to As speciation, and this coupling can be reshaped by temperature-mediated shifts in the dominant methanogens and their functional genes distribution.

RevDate: 2026-04-07

Deng B, Ren ZH, Ren CY, et al (2026)

Inhibiting Cr(VI)-mediated ARG dissemination in wastewater: Synthetic antioxidant-, extracellular polymeric substance-, and nuclease-producing microbiome targeting ROS, MGEs, and ARG-MRG co-occurrence.

Journal of hazardous materials, 509:141985 pii:S0304-3894(26)00963-5 [Epub ahead of print].

Heavy metals (HMs) trigger the sustained enrichment and dissemination of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) by exerting selective pressure, and there is an urgent need for effective and environmentally friendly control strategies. Herein, we found that long-term (180 d) hexavalent chromium [Cr(VI)] stress (10 mg/L) could facilitate the enrichment of multidrug-resistant plasmids (e.g., blaTEM and sul1) and significantly increase (p < 0.05) the conjugative transfer frequency. Subsequently, we constructed a synthetic carotenoid- and extracellular nuclease gene exeM-producing microbiome centered on Deinococcus radiodurans R1, which synthesizes and secretes extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) via the Wzx/Wzy-dependent pathway, thereby alleviating environmental oxidative stress by adsorbing Cr(VI) (over 85%) and scavenging ROS (approximately 18-26-fold). qPCR results demonstrated that the synthetic microbiome effectively reduced ARG abundances, along with the mobile genetic elements traG and intI1 (by more than one order of magnitude, MGEs) and the metal resistance gene chrA (by more than two orders of magnitude, MRG). Electron microscopy and metagenomic analysis demonstrated that the synthetic microbiome could further reduce the co-occurrence of ARGs and MRGs (e.g., tetA, chrA, and chrB) by impairing plasmid integrity and preserving cell membrane integrity (ompC, oprC, plsB, and fabR), thus inhibiting horizontal gene transfer. In addition, it reduced the abundance of Pseudomonadota (the host harboring ARGs and MGEs, p < 0.05) by 33-48%. This study provides a sustainable bioremediation strategy for controlling the dissemination of ARGs in heavy metal-polluted wastewater.

RevDate: 2026-04-07

Bamanu B, Liu Y, Wan H, et al (2026)

Deciphering β-lactam stress response in anammox systems: Off-target enzyme binding, electron transfer compensation and microbial collaboration.

Bioresource technology pii:S0960-8524(26)00642-5 [Epub ahead of print].

The prevalence of antibiotics in pharmaceutical and municipal wastewater poses a critical threat to biological wastewater treatment, especially the anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox) process. This study investigated the inhibitory mechanism of cephalexin (CFX), a β-lactam antibiotic, on anammox performance. Exposure to 100 mg/L CFX reduced nitrogen removal efficiency to 48.5% and suppressed specific anammox activity and heme c content, while lower concentrations (≤10 mg/L) caused no significant inhibition. Molecular docking indicated strong binding affinities of CFX toward key functional enzymes, including nitrite reductase and hydrazine synthase, with binding energies of -7.6 and -7.4 kcal/mol, respectively, suggesting off-target enzyme interference rather than direct β-lactam-specific inhibition. The system showed reversible inhibition with multi-level adaptation, including enhanced extracellular polymeric substances secretion, strengthened antioxidant defense, elevated electron transport activity, and microbial community restructuring. Metagenomic analysis revealed enrichment of β-lactamase, efflux pump, and antioxidant-related genes during recovery, supporting detoxification and adaptive resistance. These insights establish a mechanistic framework for designing resilient anammox systems capable of recovering from β-lactam antibiotic shocks in practical wastewater treatment applications.

RevDate: 2026-04-07

Campo-Beamud C, Adan Ruiz A, Bastante Quijano J, et al (2026)

Publicly available multimodal large language models for ocular surface infections: benchmarking against corneal specialists in triage, diagnosis and treatment.

The British journal of ophthalmology pii:bjo-2025-328867 [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND/AIMS: Ocular surface infections remain a major cause of visual loss worldwide, yet diagnosis often relies on slow or insensitive microbiological techniques. Artificial intelligence may complement emerging molecular tools by supporting rapid triage and diagnostic reasoning. This study benchmarked publicly available multimodal large language models (LLMs) against corneal specialists for the diagnosis, treatment and urgency triage of infectious keratitis and conjunctivitis.

METHODS: A single-centre diagnostic-accuracy study included 60 microbiologically confirmed infectious keratitis and conjunctivitis cases, each comprising a slit-lamp photograph and a paired clinical vignette. Six multimodal LLMs (GPT-4o, GPT-5, Gemini, Claude, Perplexity and Grok) were evaluated for diagnosis, treatment and urgency triage under three input conditions (image-only, text-only and image+text). Outputs were compared with two corneal specialists.

RESULTS: LLM performance depended strongly on input modality. Image-only accuracy was lowest (best GPT-5, 61.4%; κ=0.38) with frequent misclassification of fungal and Acanthamoeba keratitis and hallucinations confined to this setting. Text input improved results (GPT-5, 83.3%; κ=0.78), though accuracy remained below specialists (87-90%; κ≈0.8). Combined image+text achieved near-human accuracy without consistently surpassing corneal specialists (Perplexity 96.7%; κ=0.95; GPT-5 91.7%; κ=0.87). Treatment accuracy remained lower (81-85% vs 90-98%), while urgency triage matched experts in multimodal input.

CONCLUSION: Publicly accessible multimodal LLMs can approach expert-level performance in diagnosis and triage when provided with clinical context and slit-lamp images. Gaps in therapeutic reasoning and rare pathogen recognition underscore the need for targeted refinement and validation. These models may complement specialist care, supporting rapid triage and integration with molecular or metagenomic diagnostics, especially in resource-limited settings.

RevDate: 2026-04-06
CmpDate: 2026-04-06

Lu T, Dietz ZK, Ericsson AC, et al (2026)

Eco-tank Housing Maintains Wild-Type Microbiota and Rewilds the Laboratory Mouse Gut Microbiome to Restore Natural Immune Tone.

bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology.

Laboratory mice housed under individually ventilated cage (IVC) conditions harbor simplified gut microbiota and immune phenotypes that diverge substantially from those shaped by environmental exposure, limiting translational relevance. To reintroduce controlled ecological complexity while maintaining biosafety and reproducibility, we developed the Eco-tank, a pathogen-monitored semi-natural housing system incorporating environmental substrates and dietary diversity. Longitudinal 16S rRNA sequencing revealed that even wild-caught Mus musculus rapidly lose microbial richness and predicted metabolic breadth under IVC housing. Eco-tank conditions stabilized diversity and preserved elements of wild-associated community structure during extended captivity. In parallel, standardized C57BL/6 mice housed in Eco-tanks underwent rewilding-like restructuring, with increased richness and community shifts toward a wild-associated configuration. Functional inference analyses indicated expansion of predicted pathways linked to short-chain fatty acid production, amino acid metabolism, and environmental substrate utilization. Eco-tank housing enhanced baseline resistance to pulmonary Pseudomonas aeruginosa (Pa) infection without compromising vaccine-induced protection, indicating that restoration of environmental microbial signals does not impair adaptive immunity. Together, these findings identify housing ecology as a dominant determinant of microbiome structure and functional potential. The Eco-tank provides a scalable and tractable framework for integrating environmental microbial complexity into laboratory models to better align preclinical immunology with ecologically conditioned immune systems.

RevDate: 2026-04-06
CmpDate: 2026-04-06

Do TT, Le VV, Nguyen LTT, et al (2026)

Metagenomic and Culture-Based Insights into Salinity-Driven Bacterial Community Dynamics throughout Crude Oil-Degrading Enrichment Cultivation.

Journal of microbiology and biotechnology, 36:e2508050 pii:jmb.2508.08050.

Soil salinization and crude oil contamination are critical global threats to ecosystems, agriculture, and human health. Bioremediation is widely recognized as a cost-effective and eco-friendly strategy for removing petroleum pollutants from soil. In this study, we investigated salinity-driven bacterial community dynamics collected from crude oil-contaminated soil in Cam Ranh Bay, Khanh Hoa, over a 21-day enrichment cultivation, using shotgun metagenomic and culture-based approaches. The enrichment cultivation was performed in Bushnell-Haas mineral salts (BHMS) medium supplemented with 5% (v/v) crude oil-diesel mixture (5:95) and 1.5% NaCl. Shotgun metagenomic analysis revealed that after 21 days of enrichment, the relative abundance of crude oil-degrading genera increased markedly in the enriched samples compared to the native samples-for example, Pseudomonas rose from 0.44% to 3.51%, Gordonia from 0.03% to 78.68%, and Achromobacter from 0.03% to 3.77%. Functional analysis further identified metabolic pathways, including hydrocarbon degradation, osmoprotection, and heavy metal detoxification. In addition, 36 representative bacterial strains were isolated from the enriched cultures, predominantly belonging to the genera Pseudomonas, Bacillus, Stenotrophomonas, and Achromobacter. All isolates were able to degrade crude oil under salinity stress conditions of up to 4%. Notably, Rhodococcus sp. KH5 and Gordonia sp. KH53 maintained consistently high degradation efficiencies across 0-4% salinity, ranging from 17.67-35.00% and 28.67-36%, respectively. Overall, our findings demonstrate that saline enrichment shifts the bacterial community toward halotolerant hydrocarbon and crude oil degraders.

RevDate: 2026-04-06
CmpDate: 2026-04-06

Sizikova TE, Lebedev VN, SV Borisevich (2026)

The Mengla virus (Filoviridae: Dianlovirus).

Voprosy virusologii, 71(1):7-12.

INTRODUCTION: Filoviruses associated with various species of pteropodid bats (Chiroptera: Pteropodidae) are traditionally regarded as potential causative agents of hemorrhagic fevers with epidemic potential. The known agents of Ebola and Marburg fevers periodically cause sporadic cases and epidemic outbreaks in African countries. Recent discoveries of novel filoviruses associated with pteropodid bats in South and Southeast Asia highlight the necessity to investigate their genetic diversity and pathogenic potential. The aim of this study was to investigate the genetic diversity and pathogenic potential of new filoviruses associated with bats, based on literature data.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: This review is based on an analysis of published literature describing the detection and molecular characterization of novel filoviruses identified in different geographic regions, with a particular focus on filoviruses associated with pteropodid bats in South and Southeast Asia. The analyzed studies include data on virus discovery, genome organization, taxonomic classification, and experimental assessment of biological properties.

RESULTS: Several novel filoviruses have been identified by metagenomic RNA sequencing of tissues from pteropodid bats captured in South and Southeast Asia. Among them, Mengla virus was detected in tissues of pteropodid bats (Rousettus spp.) captured in Mengla County, Yunnan Province, People's Republic of China. Owing to a high level of genetic divergence, Mengla virus was classified as a representative of a new genus, Dianlovirus, within the family Filoviridae. Although a live isolate of Mengla virus has not yet been obtained, experimental studies using chimeric minigenome systems and virus-like particles suggest that the virus may exhibit tropism for tissues of various vertebrate hosts, including humans.

CONCLUSION: Members of the family Filoviridae are widely distributed within the geographic range of their natural reservoir-pteropodid bats-across South and Southeast Asia, including viruses evolutionarily related to Ebola and Marburg viruses. Although human disease caused by Mengla virus and other recently discovered filoviruses has not been documented, the potential for cross-species transmission and the emergence of novel filovirus infections in endemic regions remains.

RevDate: 2026-04-06

Chen X, Xie M, Feng J, et al (2026)

From Diet to Resistome: Habitat Fragmentation Rewires Gut Microbiomes To Elevate Antibiotic Resistance Gene Enrichment in a Horseshoe Crab Sentinel.

Environmental science & technology [Epub ahead of print].

Habitat fragmentation may amplify antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs), yet the ecological pathways linking landscape patterns to host resistomes in intertidal systems remain unclear. Macrobenthic organisms as potential reservoirs and dispersal nodes are ideal models. Focusing on the horseshoe crab (Tachypleus tridentatus), a food web hub and habitat indicator, we integrated landscape metrics, metagenomics, and path modeling (PLS-PM) to examine, across fragmented habitats, links among sediment physicochemistry, larval diet, gut microbiota, mobile genetic elements (MGEs), and ARGs. Results revealed that more fragmented habitats promoted individuals with higher ARG abundance and diversity, alongside stronger MGE enrichment and increased ARG-MGE co-occurrence, indicating enhanced mobility potential. Fragmentation also coincided with greater dietary diversity but higher among-individual convergence, selective assembly of gut microbiota with higher diversity, and tight ARG-MGE association. PLS-PM supported a diet-gut microbiota-MGE-ARG cascade, while the direct effects of sediment chemistry were not significant. Attributing ARG hosts at the MAG level, Enterobacteriaceae and Vibrionaceae dominated ARG abundance and enrichment, indicating lineage selectivity. Multidrug and polymyxin resistance was most prominent. These findings identify key AMR risk pathways and inform priority interventions for T. tridentatus and habitat conservation. The developed assessment framework is scalable and offers a paradigm for One Health management in mudflat systems.

RevDate: 2026-04-06
CmpDate: 2026-04-06

Cheng Y, Peng L, Liu D, et al (2026)

Case Report: A rare culprit of severe pulmonary infection in children: prevotella.

Frontiers in pediatrics, 14:1782202.

BACKGROUND: To characterize the clinical features, diagnostic pitfalls, and treatment of severe pediatric pulmonary infection caused by Prevotella species.

METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed clinical data, the diagnostic workflow, antimicrobial regimens, and outcomes of two children with severe Prevotella pulmonary infection.

RESULTS: Case 1 was an 11-year-old boy with necrotizing pneumonia, and Case 2 was a 13-year-old boy with retained foreign-body aspiration. Both patients responded poorly to initial cephalosporin-based therapy. Metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS) of bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid identified Prevotella nanceiensis (sequence count 299,022; relative abundance 92.24%) and Prevotella oralis (210,449; 67.98%) within 24 h, whereas anaerobic culture (Case 1) became positive after 4 days. Based on mNGS results antibiotics were adjusted to metronidazole plus a carbapenem (meropenem for Case 1; imipenem-cilastatin for Case 2), and both children received adjunctive pulmonary rehabilitation before discharge. They subsequently recovered and were discharged.

CONCLUSION: Severe Prevotella pulmonary infection in children has non-specific manifestations and may respond poorly to conventional beta-lactam therapy, leading to delayed diagnosis. mNGS enables rapid pathogen identification and supports targeted anti-anaerobic treatment. For severe or complicated cases refractory to empirical therapy, metronidazole combined with a carbapenem may be an effective option.

RevDate: 2026-04-06
CmpDate: 2026-04-06

Halphen J, Ahmadzade M, Mankidy B, et al (2026)

Letter to the Editor: Evidence for a two-step species-level pulmonary nocardiosis diagnostic approach.

World journal of radiology, 18(3):118126.

Pulmonary nocardiosis, a rare and diagnostically challenging infection, usually presents with heterogeneous radiographic findings, compounded by the low sensitivity of traditional confirmatory cultures. In their most recent work, Wang et al analyzed 102 patients with pulmonary nocardiosis to address these concerns, investigating species-characteristic imaging patterns, pathological associations, and the role of metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS) in the diagnostic approach. High-resolution computed tomography (CT) in adult patients with pulmonary infections caused by Nocardia wallacei was demonstrated to have a sensitive (85.71%) and specific (83.34%) presentation of bronchopneumonia in relation to the five Nocardia species in the sample with CT data. The authors also compared traditional cultures to mNGS, finding that traditional cultures and mNGS were concordantly positive in only 3.3% of cases. This letter supports a combined radiologic and molecular diagnostic approach, enabling earlier and more accurate species identification in pulmonary nocardiosis, thereby informing treatment decisions, and enhancing epidemiologic understanding.

RevDate: 2026-04-06
CmpDate: 2026-04-06

Ye B, Liu R, Li R, et al (2026)

Comparative gut microbiome composition and predicted microbial functions in captive and free-range yaks (Bos grunniens).

Veterinary world, 19(2):864-876.

BACKGROUND AND AIM: The gut microbiota is essential for nutrient digestion, immune function, and environmental adaptation in ruminants, particularly high-altitude species like yaks (Bos grunniens). Different husbandry practices (captive vs. free-range) can potentially alter the microbial communities and affect the yak health. However, comparative data on how these systems affect yak gut microbiomes remain limited, with most studies focusing on taxonomy rather than functional implications. This study aimed to compare gut microbiome composition, diversity, and predicted functional profiles between captive (CY) and free-range (FY) yaks using a 16S rRNA gene metabarcoding approach.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: Fecal samples were collected from healthy ~2-year-old yaks (n=5 CY, n=5 FY) in Litang County, Ganzi Prefecture, Sichuan, China, during summer. DNA was extracted, and the V4 region of the 16S rRNA gene was sequenced on Illumina NovaSeq 6000. Bioinformatic analyses included quality filtering, Operational taxonomic units (OTU) clustering (97% similarity), taxonomic annotation (SILVA database), α- and β-diversity analysis. The microbial function was predicted using PICRUSt2 (KEGG pathways), BugBase (community phenotypes), and FAPROTAX (ecological functions). Statistical comparisan used Welch's t-tests, Wilcoxon rank-sum tests, principal coordinates analysis (PCoA), and Analysis of similarities (ANOSIM) with significance set at p < 0.05.

RESULTS: α-Diversity indices (e.g., Shannon p = 0.5476) showed no significant differences between CY and FY. However, β-diversity revealed distinct community structures (PCoA: PC1 30.52%, PC2 12.25%; ANOSIM R = 0.976, p = 0.007), with FY samples more homogeneous. At the genus level, CY were enriched in Ruminococcaceae bacterium UCG-005, Streptococcus, Escherichia-Shigella, Treponema, Christensenellaceae R-7, and Clostridium sensu stricto 1 (many fermentative or potentially opportunistic). FY showed higher abundances of Bacillus, Arthrobacter, Rhodococcus, Candidatus Saccharimonas, Prevotellaceae UCG-001, and Paenibacillus. Predicted functions indicated FY had greater capacities for carbohydrate/amino acid metabolism, DNA repair, fatty acid biosynthesis, and vitamin B pathways, while CY favored fermentation and reductive acetogenesis. BugBase highlighted higher anaerobic phenotypes in CY.

CONCLUSION: Husbandry practices profoundly influence yak gut microbiome structure and inferred metabolic potential, with free-range systems promoting, homogeneous communities suited to natural high-fiber diets while captive systems promotes fermentative and opportunistic shifts. These microbiome differences suggest opportunities for probiotic interventions to enhance yak health, productivity, and sustainability in high-altitude pastoral systems. Future metagenomic and metabolomic validation is needed.

RevDate: 2026-04-06
CmpDate: 2026-04-06

Dai Z, Lu Q, Sun M, et al (2026)

Discovery of a novel orthototivirus-like virus in patients with vulvovaginal candidiasis.

Frontiers in cellular and infection microbiology, 16:1779554.

INTRODUCTION: Vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC) is a common fungal infection affecting women worldwide. Although the vaginal microbiome has been extensively studied, the diversity of viruses present in the vaginal microenvironment remains poorly characterized.

METHODS: Vaginal swab samples from patients diagnosed with VVC were subjected to viral metagenomic sequencing using an Illumina NovaSeq platform. Viral contigs were assembled, annotated, and screened against public databases. Genome organization, pairwise sequence identity, and phylogenetic relationships were analyzed to determine the evolutionary position of the detected virus.

RESULTS: Here, we identified a novel double-stranded RNA virus, tentatively named Vaginal-associated orthototivirus-like 1 (VAOTV-1), in vaginal swab samples from patients with vulvovaginal candidiasis. VAOTV-1 was represented by a partial genome sequence of 4,332 bp, encoding a complete RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp; 729 amino acids) and a partial capsid protein (CP; 532 amino acids). The encoded RdRp protein shared a maximum amino acid sequence identity of 47.43% with Totiviridae sp. isolate 22AP502 (GenBank accession no. XTJ93729.1), reported from Bandicota indica. In contrast, the CP showed no significant similarity to any sequences currently available in public databases, and BLASTn searches against the NCBI nucleotide database did not yield any significant matches. Phylogenetic analysis, together with the relatively low amino acid sequence identity to known members of the genus Totivirus within the family Orthototiviridae, suggests that VAOTV-1 represents a distinct and highly divergent orthototivirus-like lineage.

DISCUSSION: These findings indicate that VAOTV-1 represents a highly divergent orthototivirus-like virus and expands the known diversity of totiviruses detected in human-associated mucosal environments. This discovery highlights previously unrecognized viral diversity in the vaginal virome and provides new insights into viruses associated with vulvovaginal candidiasis.

RevDate: 2026-04-06
CmpDate: 2026-04-06

Turner ML, Nguyen MT, Kung Y, et al (2026)

Rhizopus angle abscess, scleritis and endophthalmitis following Kahook Dual Blade goniotomy and phacoemulsification.

American journal of ophthalmology case reports, 42:102572.

PURPOSE: To describe a rare case of Rhizopus angle abscess progressing to scleritis and endophthalmitis after routine cataract surgery with Kahook Dual Blade (KDB) goniotomy in an immunocompetent patient.

OBSERVATION: A 79-year-old male developed hyphema and anterior chamber fibrin three days after uncomplicated phacoemulsification with KDB. Despite intravitreal vancomycin and ceftazidime, inflammation worsened, and by postoperative day nine vision was count fingers with intraocular pressure of 29 mmHg. Slit-lamp exam showed an inferonasal corneal infiltrate with a purulent angle abscess at the goniotomy site and dense vitritis. Intravitreal and oral voriconazole were started for presumed fungal infection. Standard cultures and PCR were negative, but metagenomic RNA deep sequencing of aqueous fluid detected Rhizopus stolonifer. After two months of systemic and intravitreal voriconazole, the infection resolved and visual acuity improved to 20/70, leaving localized limbal thinning.

CONCLUSION AND IMPORTANCE: This case illustrates that Rhizopus angle abscess can occur in an immunocompetent host following anterior segment surgery and may masquerade as bacterial endophthalmitis. Early suspicion of fungal infection and use of metagenomic deep sequencing were critical for diagnosis and successful treatment, emphasizing the need to consider invasive fungal pathogens and advanced molecular diagnostics in culture-negative postoperative ocular infections.

RevDate: 2026-04-06
CmpDate: 2026-04-06

Bagul SY, S S, Saran PL, et al (2026)

Deciphering genotype and geography dependent microbiome composition and its role in disease suppression in Ashwagandha.

Frontiers in microbiology, 17:1786817.

Ashwagandha, Withania somnifera (L.) Dunal is a perennial evergreen shrub widely used to treat mental health disorders and physical debility, and to enhance overall physiological function. Variations in genotype and geographic origin significantly influence rhizospheric microbial communities by altering soil physicochemical properties. This study applied shotgun metagenomic sequencing to investigate microbial community shifts in the rhizosphere of Nagori Ashwagandha (RN) from Rajasthan, Vallabh Ashwagandha-1 (GV) from Gujarat, and Nagori Ashwagandha from Rajasthan cultivated in Gujarat (GN). Fusarium wilt incidence was 67%, affecting the roots, which represent the most economically important part of ashwagandha. Taxonomic analysis identified Actinomycetota (46-60%) and Pseudomonadota (35-42%) as the predominant phyla, with Nocardioides (3.1-8.8%), Streptomyces (4.5-6.5%), and Bradyrhizobium (1-1.6%) as dominant genera across all groups in metagenomic analysis. Alpha-diversity analysis revealed higher species richness and Simpson's index in the GV group compared to the GN and RN groups. Beta-diversity assessment using Bray-Curtis distances showed partial clustering of GN and RN relative to GV in principal coordinate analysis and hierarchical dendrograms. Functional profiling based on KEGG annotation indicated that core metabolic and cellular pathways predominated across all genotypes, with no significant differences in Tier 1 and Tier 2 functional categories. To our knowledge, this represents the first shotgun metagenomic analysis of ashwagandha. Culturomics analysis yielded seventeen isolates from two rhizospheric locations; among these, Bacillus subtilis DMA1 exhibited the highest mycelial inhibition against Fusarium solani (64%), with a germination rate of 98%, root length of 2.1 cm, shoot length of 1.3 cm, seed vigor index of 333.2, and maximum fresh biomass of 1.12 g. Co-inoculation with F. solani and Bacillus subtilis DMA1 in pot trials significantly increased root length (20.1 cm), shoot length (39.5 cm), root girth (14.9 mm), and total biomass (51.1 g) compared to control and Fusarium-only treatments. These findings indicate that Bacillus subtilis DMA1 reduced wilt incidence by 70% and enhanced plant growth under pathogen-stress conditions.

RevDate: 2026-04-06
CmpDate: 2026-04-06

Rey-Mariño A, Ruiz-Ruiz S, Jiménez-Hernández N, et al (2026)

Patterns of gut microbiome composition, function and dynamics in toddlers, adolescents and adults over a three-year period.

Frontiers in microbiology, 17:1768977.

Despite their relevance, studies of the long-term stability of the gut microbiome are rare due to the difficulty in following the same individual through long periods of time, particularly during childhood and adolescence. Here, we have been able to analyze microbiome stability throughout a 3-year period in toddlers, adolescents, and adults of the same population, at the levels of taxonomic composition and functional profile. Our analyses show that stability is lower at taxonomical than at functional level in all three age groups, indicating the existence of functional redundancy through time. Considering the entire period of sampling, toddlers were significantly more unstable than the other two groups at the level of taxonomic composition. However, local analyses revealed that low stability for both composition and function was restricted to the time period between 20 and 24 months of age, whereas after this point stability levels in toddlers were similar to those of adolescents and adults. Although the microbiome stabilized at around two years of age in terms of large-scale, rapid changes in diversity, composition, and functional profile, further changes did occur both before and after adolescence. Therefore, adolescence remains a transitional period, in which the abundances of some taxa and functions still differ from adult levels. These include, among others, Bifidobacterium, Streptococcus, Bacteroides fragilis and several members of the Lachnospiraceae, as well as various functions related to energy metabolism. Overall, our results pinpoint the two-years mark as a point of significant stabilization for the gut microbiome, without precluding the further occurrence of important changes in the relative abundance of specific taxa and gene functions both before and after adolescence.

RevDate: 2026-04-06
CmpDate: 2026-04-06

Li X, Jin S, Hu H, et al (2026)

Feeding Diqing Tibetan pigs with 50% of soybean meal replaced by walnut meal can reduce subcutaneous fat deposition and promote intramuscular fat accumulation.

Frontiers in microbiology, 17:1794046.

BACKGROUND: Protein feed resource shortage is a major constraint to the sustainable development of the livestock industry and a bottleneck problem hindering the growth of the Tibetan pig industry in China's Qinghai-Tibet Plateau region. Walnut meal, rich in protein, holds promise as a substitute for soybean meal. However, the effects and underlying mechanisms of walnut meal substitution on Tibetan pigs in Diqing remain unclear.

RESULTS: The study showed that substituting 50% of soybean meal with walnut meal in the diet of Diqing Tibetan pigs significantly reduced backfat thickness and increased intramuscular fat content (P < 0.05). Integrated multi-omics analyses, including metagenomics, transcriptomics, and lipidomics, revealed that walnut meal substitution significantly reduced the abundance of Clostridium butyricum in the cecum of Diqing Tibetan pigs. The reduction in Clostridium butyricum was linked to the lipolytic capacity of subcutaneous adipose tissue, potentially facilitating the breakdown of triglycerides into free fatty acids (FFAs), which are then released into the bloodstream. When these free fatty acids are transported to muscle tissue, the muscle exhibited inhibited oxidative metabolism (e.g., a decrease in acylcarnitine metabolites), while showing an upregulation in the expression of genes related to adipocyte differentiation (e.g., MEDAG, VDR) and triglyceride synthesis (e.g., PPARGC1A, ANGPTL4). Ultimately, these processes may contribute to the synthesis and storage of triglycerides in muscle, thereby facilitating intramuscular fat deposition.

CONCLUSION: This study reveals that walnut meal can serve as a substitute for soybean meal, and a 50% substitution ratio is conducive to intramuscular fat deposition in Diqing Tibetan pigs. The findings provide valuable insights for the development and application of unconventional protein feed resources, and offer new perspectives for the production of marbled pork.

RevDate: 2026-04-06
CmpDate: 2026-04-06

Alibrandi A, Plewka J, di Primio R, et al (2026)

Microbial diversity and community shifts in a petroleum reservoir under production: effects of water breakthrough and anthropogenic alterations.

Frontiers in microbiology, 17:1741638.

Subsurface petroleum reservoirs host indigenous microorganisms that survive extreme conditions and long-term isolation. Microbial activity in these environments can contribute to adverse effects such as oil biodegradation and reservoir souring. Unlike the broader deep biosphere, oil reservoirs are frequently subjected to anthropogenic disturbances, particularly during production, when processes like water injection introduce external microbes and electron acceptors. In this study, we investigated microbial diversity, community structure, and the impact of water breakthrough using 16S rRNA gene and metagenomic sequencing of produced fluids, production water, and injection water samples from the Edvard Grieg oil reservoir offshore Norway. We found clear regional heterogeneity in community composition, characterized by overall low diversity, dominated by thermophilic, anaerobic, and halotolerant taxa. The southern region (wells A13, A17, A18, and A19) exhibited lower diversity, while the microbial community composition of well A07 showed a distinct signature. The prevailing genera included the strictly anaerobic bacterium Thermoanaerobacter and the hyperthermophilic archaeon Thermococcus. Water breakthrough triggered shifts in community structure, not because of widespread replacement by injected microbes, but due to the increase in sulfate-reducing bacteria. Comparison between sequence data from production fluids and water samples allowed the identification of microbial signatures that can act as cost-effective tools for monitoring oil reservoir processes and integrity.

RevDate: 2026-04-06
CmpDate: 2026-04-06

Navarro-Nieva A, Martínez-Checa F, Delgado R, et al (2026)

Airborne microorganisms in muddy rain: microbe-mineral interactions and their ecosystem impact.

Frontiers in microbiology, 17:1772201.

The Sahara Desert and the Sahel region in North Africa contribute approximately 50-70% of global atmospheric dust emissions. Microorganisms can attach to dust particles and be dispersed into exogenous environments, being subsequently deposited by gravitational sedimentation (dry deposition) or through aqueous precipitation (wet deposition) also known as muddy rain. In the present work, five muddy rain samples were collected in Granada (Spain) during different episodes in 2021-2022. The SEM-EDX study demonstrated a high content of fine clay particles which may facilitate the atmospheric transport of microorganisms. The colonization of strategic microsites and the formation of mineral aggregates might be possible mineral-bacteria interactions. According to metagenomic analysis, Pseudomonadota (64%), Bacteroidota (13%), and Bacillota (6%) were the main phyla. At the genus level, extremophiles, plant-beneficial bacteria, and others involved in soil biogeochemical cycles have been described. Fourteen cultivable microorganisms were isolated and identified by means of 16S rRNA sequencing. Members of the phyla Pseudomonadota, Bacillota, Actinomycetota and Bacteroidota have been found. Among the isolates, Stenotrophomonas rhizophila and Brevundimonas bullata potentially exert beneficial effects at the ecosystem level. In general, muddy rain facilitates the transport and dispersal of microorganisms from different environments, with a potential positive influence on soils and vegetation in terrestrial ecosystems.

RevDate: 2026-04-06
CmpDate: 2026-04-06

Luo H, Wang Y, Hou H, et al (2026)

Advances and applications in sequencing-based pathogen surveillance.

aBIOTECH, 7(1):100004.

The ongoing emergence of infectious diseases necessitates cutting-edge diagnostic methodologies. Traditional diagnostic methods are constrained by limited range, lengthy processing times, and inadequate sensitivity. High-throughput sequencing technologies, particularly multiplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based targeted sequencing, have emerged as transformative tools for pathogen detection, offering enhanced sensitivity, specificity, and cost efficiency. However, challenges in primer design, such as dimerization and bias, limit the effectiveness of these approaches. This review explores advances in sequencing technologies, emphasizing the roles of culturomics, metagenomics, and metatranscriptomics in pathogen discovery. We spotlight innovative strategies for error-tolerant primer design that address existing limitations by balancing coverage and specificity, thereby optimizing the multiplex PCR process. Furthermore, integration of artificial intelligence enhances the precision and scalability of sequencing, enabling real-time diagnostics. Collectively, these advances offer promising pathways to bolster global health, food security, and ecological resilience through robust and sustainable pathogen-detection systems.

RevDate: 2026-04-06
CmpDate: 2026-04-06

Huang F, Shi X, Chen P, et al (2026)

Dietary drivers of gut microbiota diversity and function in wildlife of Wolong Nature Reserve: a metagenomic study.

Current zoology, 72(1):14-29.

While diet is known to regulate the composition, function, and diversity of the human gut microbiome, its effects on wildlife remain understudied. Here, noninvasive sampling methods were first used to conduct metagenomic analyses of the gut microbiomes of 10 protected wild animals in the Wolong Nature Reserve. There were significant differences in microbiota composition and function between herbivores and carnivores. Herbivores exhibited higher microbial diversity and evenness (Shannon and Pielou indices), with Bacillota and Acinetobacter predominating, whereas carnivores were enriched in Pseudomonadota and Escherichia. Cellulose-degrading bacterium Ruminococcus champanellensis was abundant in herbivores, while Rhodococcus and Pediococcus, which were associated with toxin degradation and pathogen inhibition, were more prevalent in carnivores. Carnivores showed higher lipid metabolism and protein degradation, as evidenced by the enrichment of leucyl aminopeptidase and oligopeptidase B, while herbivores demonstrated superior cellulose and starch digestion, characterized by the enrichment of cellulose 1,4-beta-cellobiosidase. Stochastic processes shaped gut microbiome assembly, especially in herbivores. Potential health risks from pathogens such as Escherichia and Listeria were identified, and Escherichia abundance was positively correlated with niche width. Furthermore, the findings suggest that high-altitude environments may promote the persistence and spread of pathogens. Overall, our findings underscore the intricate linkages between diet, gut microbiota composition, assembly processes, and host ecology in protected wildlife, address a key knowledge gap, and provide important theoretical and practical insights for ecological conservation, species restoration, and environmental management.

RevDate: 2026-04-06
CmpDate: 2026-04-06

Jeong GH, KS Lim (2025)

Exploring the potential of salivary small RNAs as non-invasive biomarkers in pigs.

Journal of animal science and technology, 67(6):1207-1214.

Saliva, a non-invasive potential source of circulating microRNAs (miRNAs) and microbiomes, is not well described in pigs. Salivary miRNA expression profiles and the functional significance in pigs were investigated in this study. Saliva samples were extracted from adult female pigs, and small RNA sequencing revealed 26 known and 223 novel miRNAs. The large number of novel miRNAs also demonstrates the differences between salivary miRNAs in pigs and other biological samples. Functional analysis of miRNA target genes indicated enrichments in molecular functions related to transcription regulator activity, cytoskeleton organization, and protein binding, suggesting roles for this interaction in gene expression and physiological control. Moreover, metagenomic analysis revealed microbial sequences representing around 39% of the total reads, with Corynebacterium genus, an important member of the oral microbiota, being the most prevalent. Combining miRNA with microbiome data indicates that porcine saliva is rich in molecular information that will be useful for salivary health monitoring and microbiome studies. This study underscores the potential of salivary miRNAs as biomarkers for physiological processes and microbiome interactions in pigs, paving the way for further research into their diagnostic and monitoring applications.

RevDate: 2026-04-06
CmpDate: 2026-04-06

Buysse M, Ballinger MJ, Bruley M, et al (2026)

A human-associated Spiroplasma ixodetis lineage responsible for infantile cataracts and adult febrile illness.

iScience, 29(4):115233.

Bacteria of the Spiroplasma ixodetis clade are well characterized as reproductive parasites and defensive endosymbionts of arthropods. Nevertheless, clinical evidence indicates that they can also infect humans, causing neonatal ocular disease and acute febrile illness in adults. Using metagenomic assembly and phylogenomic analyses of Spiroplasma ixodetis-related human infections (SiRHIs), combined with a systematic meta-analysis of public datasets, we identified 25 human cases across ten European countries. Despite the frequent detection of multiple S. ixodetis strains in ticks, our data provide no evidence implicating tick-associated strains in human infections. Instead, SiRHI constitute a distinct monophyletic lineage within the S. ixodetis clade, consistent with a shared evolutionary origin with arthropod-associated relatives. Notably, SiRHI genomes harbor horizontally acquired chaperone genes absent from most arthropod-associated Spiroplasma, while retaining conserved effector genes typical of endosymbionts, suggesting the preservation of ancestral symbiotic traits alongside newly acquired molecular adaptations.

RevDate: 2026-04-06

Huang C, Feng Q, Yu B, et al (2026)

Diabetes affects the composition of the respiratory tract microbiome and transcriptome in patients with viral pneumonia.

Microbiology spectrum [Epub ahead of print].

UNLABELLED: Research shows that patients with viral pneumonia complicated by diabetes have a worse prognosis and higher mortality. Our study aimed to assess the effect of diabetes on respiratory tract microbes and the transcriptome in patients with viral pneumonia. We included 76 subjects from China-Japan Friendship Hospital, including 16 healthy people, 17 patients with viral pneumonia and diabetes (VD), and 43 patients with viral pneumonia without diabetes (VP). We collected their sputum samples for both metagenomic and 16S rRNA sequencing and collected blood samples for RNA sequencing. In transcriptome analysis, the VD group downregulated the expression of PTCH1 and upregulated the expression of ANK1, RBM38, BPGM, CRYM, TAL1, and HBD. The differential pathways are mainly reflected in the formation, development, and maintenance of red blood cells, the activity of immunoglobulins, and the membrane transport and transportation of substances. There is a significant difference in microbial diversity between the two groups. Both analysis methods demonstrate a significant increase in the abundance of g__Treponema, s__Treponema_denticola, and s__Campylobacter_rectus in the VP group. The host genes AGAP1, RNF182, and ANKRD9 are particularly closely associated with microorganisms. Our results suggest that diabetes may inhibit the expression of genes related to immune regulation, energy metabolism, and oxygen utilization in patients with viral pneumonia. Meanwhile, we predict that VD may be associated with a decrease in microbial diversity and a decline in microbial functions in cellular processes, environmental adaptation, metabolism, and genetic activity. These abnormalities can worsen the course of viral pneumonia and affect the prognosis of patients.

IMPORTANCE: We used 16S rRNA and metagenome sequencing to analyze the respiratory microbial composition of patients with viral pneumonia complicated by diabetes (VD) and patients with viral pneumonia without diabetes (VP) and used transcriptome sequencing to compare the gene expression of patients in VD, VP, and healthy people. Our results indicate significant differences in gene expression and respiratory microbiota profiles between VD and VP. VD may inhibit the immune regulatory response and affect cell energy metabolism and oxygen transport and utilization by regulating related gene pathways. The abundance of Treponema denticola in the VP group was significantly higher than that in the VD group. We predicted that the functions of differential microorganisms may be related to cellular processes, environmental information processing, genetic information processing, human diseases, and metabolism. This study found characteristic biomarkers related to viral pneumonia with diabetes, providing a new strategy for further research and clinical treatment.

RevDate: 2026-04-06

Li Y, Zhang H, Xiang B, et al (2026)

Enhanced microbiota-derived mucinases in colorectal cancer patients revealed by gut metagenome probing coupled with functional validation.

Applied and environmental microbiology [Epub ahead of print].

Mucinases produced by the gut microbiota play a dual role in regulating the integrity and renewal of the mucus layer, which is essential for maintaining gut homeostasis and human health. In this study, we constructed protein hidden Markov models based on 11 known mucinases and used them to systematically identify mucinase sequences from gut metagenome-assembled genomes derived from 80 colorectal cancer (CRC) patients and 86 healthy (Healthy) subjects. A total of 1,869 mucinases were detected, widely distributed across the studied cohorts, with the majority originating from Bacteroides, Phocaeicola, and Akkermansia species. Further analysis identified 42 mucinases that differed significantly in abundance between the two groups, all of which were enriched in CRC patients. Taxonomic attribution revealed that, in CRC patients, these mucinases were primarily derived from Bacteroides (36.0%), Phocaeicola (30.6%), Akkermansia (8.8%), Alistipes (8.6%), and Escherichia (6.4%), whereas in Healthy subjects, they mainly originated from Bacteroides (26.1%), Akkermansia (22.7%), and Phocaeicola (20.3%), with a notably higher proportion from Akkermansia. Among the 42 mucinases, WL42 and LLN1 exhibited significantly higher abundance levels compared to the others. Phylogenetic and predicted structural analyses suggested that these two mucinases belonged to the M60 and M98 families, respectively. Functional validation through co-incubation experiments demonstrated that both mucinases could cleave the glycosylated MUC1 and MUC2 substrates, but not the corresponding non-glycosylated proteins. These findings confirm the feasibility of discovering novel mucinases directly from gut metagenomic data and provide insights into their potential roles in health and disease.IMPORTANCEOur study established a feasible bioinformatics pipeline for the systematic identification of microbial mucinases within the gut microbiome, providing a methodological foundation for large-scale mining of functionally active mucin-degrading enzymes. We identified 42 mucinases significantly enriched in CRC patients, suggesting their potential involvement in CRC pathogenesis. Among them, two mucinases were experimentally validated for their ability to degrade mucin, offering direct functional evidence of their capacity to disrupt the mucosal barrier. Genus-level metagenomic profiling further identified Bacteroides, Phocaeicola, and Akkermansia as major mucinase-producing genera. Maintaining the secretory balance of these mucinase-producing bacteria might be crucial for ameliorating intestinal barrier dysfunction in CRC patients. The findings of this study offer critical insights into the microbial origins and potential mechanistic contributions of mucinases in colorectal cancer, underscoring their relevance in mucus barrier breakdown and disease progression.

RevDate: 2026-04-06
CmpDate: 2026-04-06

Yersin S, Gody JC, Mazel F, et al (2026)

Strain-level translocation and enrichment dynamics of oral bacteria in the lower gastrointestinal tract of stunted children.

Gut microbes, 18(1):2653550.

Emerging evidence suggests that ectopic colonization of oral bacteria in the lower digestive tract may exacerbate gastrointestinal disorders. Nevertheless, it remains unclear whether bacteria of oral origin are continuously translocating from the oral cavity to the lower gastrointestinal tract or are locally adapted and persist in their respective niches. We investigated strain translocation dynamics in 44 healthy and stunted children from Bangui, Central African Republic. Using cross-sectional shotgun metagenomic sequencing of saliva, gastric, duodenal, and fecal samples, and isolation and whole-genome sequencing of 87 Streptococcus salivarius isolates, we showed the translocation of members of the genera Streptococcus, Veillonella, Rothia, and Haemophilus. Fecal isolates were more closely related to oral isolates from the same individuals than to those from other individuals. Additionally, saliva showed higher S. salivarius nucleotide diversity compared to other compartments, which is consistent with frequent intraindividual translocations from the oral cavity to the lower gastrointestinal tract. Finally, we showed that overrepresentation of oral bacteria in the duodenum of stunted children is related to increased biomass, while in the colon, it is linked to depletion of overall biomass, including in butyrate-producing strains. Our study quantifies dynamics of oral-to-gut translocation and enrichment of oral taxa, providing key insights into microbiota disruption in stunted children.

RevDate: 2026-04-06

Jin Z, Yuan Q, Wang J, et al (2026)

Recycling of Sedimentary Phosphorus Pools in Two Yunnan-Guizhou Plateau Lakes, Southwest China.

Environmental science & technology [Epub ahead of print].

Applying phosphate oxygen isotopes (δ[18]OP) to identify sediment phosphorus (P) sources and its recycling is still challenging due to poor understanding in δ[18]OP variations of sediment P pools and their driving mechanisms. Here, we analyzed the δ[18]OP in inorganic P (Pi) pools of sediment cores and varied P sources from Lake Dianchi and Lake Erhai in the Yunnan-Guizhou Plateau, Southwest China. The δ[18]OP values of sediment detrital Pi (Det-Pi, nonbioavailable P) were consistent with those of watershed soils (within ∼0.4-0.6‰), indicating that the δ[18]OP of sediment Det-Pi inherits the δ[18]OP of soil Det-Pi. The δ[18]OP values of aluminum-bound Pi (Al-Pi) and authigenic Pi (Auth-Pi) in sediment were close to or within the δ[18]OP equilibrium (δ[18]OP-eq) ranges, implying oxygen isotopic exchange equilibrium between phosphate and ambient water prior to the formation of sediment Al-Pi and Auth-Pi. However, the δ[18]OP of iron oxide-bound Pi (Fe-Pi) in sediment was lighter (∼3‰) than δ[18]OP-eq, retaining the negative isotopic signal of organic P (Po) remineralization. Furthermore, [31]P NMR and metagenomic analysis indicated that microbial-mediated Po mineralization and Pi recycling are the driving factors for δ[18]OP changes in sediment Fe-Pi, Al-Pi, and Auth-Pi. These integrated insights deepen our understanding of the biogeochemical cycling for sedimentary P.

RevDate: 2026-04-06
CmpDate: 2026-04-06

Liao Y, Wang B, Li Y, et al (2026)

Establishment of the chromid database and analysis of evolutionary research.

Molecular genetics and genomics : MGG, 301(1):.

In bacterial multireplicon genomes, in addition to the main chromosome, there is a widespread class of secondary replicons with a distinct evolutionary status known as chromids. These elements possess plasmid-like replication and partitioning systems, while their nucleotide composition and gene functions are highly similar to those of the main chromosome. Therefore, chromids are considered to play important roles in the evolution of bacterial genome architecture and in environmental adaptation. With advances in long-read sequencing technologies and breakthroughs in bioinformatics methods, metagenomic data resources have been greatly expanded. Using our previously developed automated tool, "Chromid-Finder", we systematically identified and collected chromid sequences from large-scale metagenomic assemblies. These data were then uniformly curated, classified, and centrally managed to construct a public database platform dedicated to chromids-Chromid Database. On this basis, we conducted comprehensive analyses of the evolutionary and genetic characteristics of chromids. Phylogenetic analyses revealed the overall evolutionary landscape of chromids. Variation analyses showed that SNP distributions on chromids exhibit clear and well-organized patterns, depicting a dynamic population that is continuously adapting to the environment through fine-scale sequence tuning and non-coding regulatory mechanisms. Structural variation analyses further identified several hotspot regions significantly enriched in key genes related to metabolic functions, nutrient acquisition, and antibiotic resistance. The distribution patterns of recombination events suggest that their occurrence is likely driven primarily by non-phylogenetic factors such as environmental conditions and ecological niches. In addition, systematic quantification of heritable mobile genetic elements indicated that the number of integrative and conjugative elements (ICEs) largely determines the overall mobile element burden within chromids.

RevDate: 2026-04-06
CmpDate: 2026-04-06

Hennen J, Ifrach J, Morse C, et al (2026)

First reported case of Lawsonella clevelandensis brain abscess in the setting of invasive cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma identified via bedside stereotactic aspiration: illustrative case.

Journal of neurosurgery. Case lessons, 11(14): pii:CASE25887.

BACKGROUND: Brain abscesses associated with malignant skull base invasion pose unique diagnostic and management challenges for neurosurgeons, particularly when routine cultures remain negative. The authors report the first documented intracranial infection caused by Lawsonella clevelandensis, a recently described anaerobe that mimics Nocardia or Mycobacterium sp., diagnosed using bedside stereotactic biopsy as well as metagenomic next-generation sequencing.

OBSERVATIONS: A 74-year-old woman with recurrent, locally invasive facial squamous cell carcinoma presented with recent-onset shaking of her lower extremity and a large right frontal mass extending through the calvarium and orbit. Imaging revealed ring-enhancing lesions consistent with abscess. Bedside stereotactic biopsy and drainage were performed, and metagenomic sequencing identified L. clevelandensis. Antibiotics were narrowed to ceftriaxone and metronidazole, stabilizing her condition, although repeat drainage was required for radiographic progression. She subsequently underwent multidisciplinary skull base resection and reconstruction, with operative cultures isolating Enterococcus faecium but no further Lawsonella sp.

LESSONS: This case represents the first documented intracranial L. clevelandensis infection and demonstrates the diagnostic value of molecular sequencing in culture-negative brain abscesses. It also highlights bedside stereotactic biopsy and drainage as a safe, minimally invasive strategy for managing intracranial infection in medically complex patients. https://thejns.org/doi/10.3171/CASE25887.

RevDate: 2026-04-06

Chen W, Zhang Y, Tian Y, et al (2026)

Multi-cycle application of Virgibacillus dokdonensis induces a root-knot nematode-suppressive soil via specifically recruiting functional Pseudomonas.

Journal of advanced research pii:S2090-1232(26)00283-3 [Epub ahead of print].

INTRODUCTION: Inducing the development of disease-suppressive soils against root-knot nematodes (RKNs) represents a sustainable strategy for reducing pesticide dependence, with microbial management serving as a core approach. However, the formation mechanisms, key microbial drivers, and functional stability of RKN disease suppressive soil remain poorly understood.

OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to elucidate the ecological mechanisms underlying soil microbiome-mediated suppressiveness against RKNs induced by multi-cycle application of the deep-sea biocontrol bacterium Virgibacillus dokdonensis MCCC 1A00493.

METHODS: Using a three-cycle consecutive microcosm experiment, we tracked RKN disease incidence and soil microbial community dynamics. We combined microbiome sequencing with functional assays to identify key functional taxa, and constructed synthetic microbial communities (SynComs) to validate their synergistic suppression with V. dokdonensis.

RESULTS: Continuous application of V. dokdonensis significantly reduced RKN disease, with the control efficacy reaching 37.86%, 51.11%, and 65.85% over three cropping cycles. This suppressiveness was achieved through direct antagonism and the reshaping of the soil bacterial community, which involved the successful colonization of V. dokdonensis and specific enrichment of indigenous functional Pseudomonas. Metagenomic analysis indicated a significant upregulation of bacterial chemotaxis genes. Further chemotaxis assays confirmed that the fermentation supernatant of V. dokdonensis specifically attracts high-nematicidal Pseudomonas, achieving a relative chemotaxis index reaching 3.0 to 9.1. Based on this, we constructed synthetic communities of functional Pseudomonas with varying complexity levels. Among them, a simplified SynComV1, consisting of Pseudomonas monteilii, P. parafulva, P. fulva, P. plecoglossicida, and P. putida, exhibited the greatest disease suppression, reaching 48.38%. Notably, co-application of V. dokdonensis and SynComV1 demonstrated significant synergistic effects, enhancing the control efficacy to 58.33%.

CONCLUSIONS: Overall, this study revealed that multi-cycle application of V. dokdonensis induces a RKN-suppressive soil by specifically recruiting indigenous high-nematicidal Pseudomonas to synergistically suppress RKN disease. These findings provide a practical strategy for developing efficient and sustainable technologies for RKN management.

RevDate: 2026-04-06
CmpDate: 2026-04-06

Xia Y, Kuda T, Zhou Q, et al (2026)

Bidirectional modulation of microbial communities by tea polyphenols and gallic acid enhances quality in dry fermented sausages.

Food research international (Ottawa, Ont.), 233(Pt 1):118924.

Tea polyphenols (TP) and its primary component gallic acid (GA) possess antibacterial and antioxidant properties, serving as natural additives to enhance the safety and quality of fermented meat products. This study investigated the bidirectional regulatory effects of TP and GA on microbial dynamics and quality attributes in dry fermented sausages. TP (1-4 mg/mL) enhanced the growth of Lactiplantibacillus plantarum while inhibiting Staphylococcus aureus and Escherichia coli, promoting lactic acid bacteria (LAB) dominance and reducing spoilage and pathogenic bacteria. Sausages treated with TP showed reduced levels of biogenic amines (291.06 vs. 376.22 mg/kg) and NDMA (0.86 vs. 1.32 μg/kg), improved texture (hardness and springiness), and better color stability, all without affecting sensory acceptability. Metabolomic and metagenomic analyses suggested that GA enriched beneficial Lactococcus garvieae and suppressed spoilage-associated Enterococcus faecalis and Citrobacter freundii. Besides, it promoted the microbial-mediated production of key antioxidant metabolites and flavor enhancers (e.g., purpurogallin, sesamol). These results indicated that TP and GA could serve as multifunctional additives that enhance fermentation efficiency, microbial safety, and sensory quality by precisely regulating microbial communities and their metabolic functions.

RevDate: 2026-04-06
CmpDate: 2026-04-06

Zhang F, Wang X, Wang J, et al (2026)

Revealing the microbial diversity and functional annotation during postharvest storage of sweet cherry using metagenomics.

Food research international (Ottawa, Ont.), 233(Pt 1):118955.

This study aimed to investigate the dynamic changes in the quality characteristics, microbial community diversity, functional annotation and metabolic pathways of sweet cherries stored at 25 °C for 0, 1, 3, 5 or 7 days. The results showed that the quality characteristics of sweet cherries gradually deteriorated with increasing storage time, and the abundance of Proteobacteria increased gradually. Mucoromycota appeared on D3 group, which may be one of the main microbial groups causing sweet cherry rot. In addition, 3D principal coordinate analysis showed that the species composition of sweet cherries stored for 1 day and fresh cherries was highly similar. The results of the Bray-Curtis distance analysis indicate a significant trend towards separation in species composition from the third day of storage. Moreover, KEGG annotations of metabolites and enzymes suggest that glycolysis and pyruvate metabolism are important in the storage of sweet cherries. Meanwhile, the pathway diagram shows that the main substances maintaining the pathway are pyruvate kinase and pyruvate dehydrogenase, which are detected in groups D5 and D7 groups. This study examines the changes in microbial communities and functional annotations that occur during the storage of sweet cherries after harvest. This provides a theoretical basis for developing new, efficient antibacterial agents for storing sweet cherries.

RevDate: 2026-04-06

Peña-Valencia MF, Robaina-Estévez S, Custer GF, et al (2026)

Lignocellulose-mediated selection of potential halophilic PET-degrading enzymes from mangrove soil.

Nature communications pii:10.1038/s41467-026-71548-z [Epub ahead of print].

Mangroves are ecosystems located at land-sea transition zones, where they are continuously exposed to plant biomass and plastic pollution. Their soils harbor extensive microbial diversity with potential for discovering polymer-degrading enzymes. Here, we perform a microcosm experiment to examine how mangrove soil microbial communities respond to inputs of lignocellulose or polyethylene terephthalate (PET) in the presence and absence of seawater, and to explore the selection of putative PET-active enzymes (PETases) using gene- and genome-resolved metagenomics. Incubation conditions lead to a gradual increase in salinity, resulting in the enrichment of halophilic taxa, including spore-forming bacteria and archaeal species, particularly in seawater-depleted treatments. Lignocellulose input is the primary driver of soil microbial community restructuring, followed by seawater presence. In dry, lignocellulose-amended microcosms (L treatment), microbial diversity is significantly reduced, while lignocellulolytic taxa within the phyla Bacillota and Actinomycetota are enriched. Twelve potential PETases are identified in the L treatment, sharing >70% sequence similarity with known PETases, and three are predicted to be thermostable. Two putative PETases from Microbulbifer species display distinct sequence and structural features, thereby expanding the currently limited PETase sequence landscape. This study demonstrates that perturbing environmental microbiomes with plant-derived polymers represents a promising strategy for capturing novel PETases.

RevDate: 2026-04-06

Liu SW, Wang XX, Xian LY, et al (2026)

Metagenomic analysis of intestinal microbiota characteristic differences between patients with ankylosing spondylitis and healthy individuals.

BMC microbiology pii:10.1186/s12866-026-04996-8 [Epub ahead of print].

RevDate: 2026-04-06

Maimaitiming A (2026)

Metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS) for severe cat bite infections with negative aerobic culture: a single-center retrospective study in a rabies vaccination center.

BMC infectious diseases pii:10.1186/s12879-026-13222-9 [Epub ahead of print].

RevDate: 2026-04-06

Bruna P, Barra PJ, García M, et al (2026)

Unraveling plasmid contributions to phosphorus acquisition in soil microbiomes.

Environmental microbiome pii:10.1186/s40793-026-00887-7 [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: Phosphorus (P) is a fundamental macronutrient for plant and microbial growth, but its availability in soils is often constrained by strong interactions with minerals and organic matter. While the role of bacteriophages in P cycling has gained attention, plasmids remain comparatively underexplored despite their central role in horizontal gene transfer. This study aimed to investigate the occurrence, diversity, and ecological relevance of plasmid-borne genes involved in P acquisition across soils with contrasting P availability.

RESULTS: Using curated plasmid databases and soil metagenomes from diverse biomes, we identified a broad repertoire of plasmid-encoded P-acquisition genes. These genes encompassed regulatory pathways, transport systems, organic P mineralization, and inorganic P solubilization. Regulatory and transporter genes were the most abundant categories, with phoB, phoP, and ugpC among the most frequently detected. When additional analyses were performed using habitat-specific P classifications and continuous P gradients, these associations appeared weak and were not significant after multiple-testing correction. These results suggest that plasmid-encoded P-acquisition genes are broadly distributed across environments rather than tightly constrained by measured soil P levels, while taxonomic assignment revealed that Pseudomonadota were the predominant plasmid hosts, followed by Bacillota and Actinobacteriota, suggesting broad host diversity.

CONCLUSIONS: This study provides a genomic overview of plasmid-borne genes associated with P acquisition in soils. Our results show that these genes are widespread across plasmids from diverse environments and host taxa, suggesting that the soil mobilome may represent an important reservoir of functions related to microbial P metabolism. While the presence and relative abundance of these genes indicate their potential ecological relevance, functional expression and ecological impact remain to be experimentally validated. These findings expand current knowledge of plasmid contributions to nutrient cycling and highlight the mobilome as a potential target for future studies aiming to better understand microbial strategies for P acquisition in soil ecosystems.

RevDate: 2026-04-04

Zhang W, Su Q, Shi H, et al (2026)

Discovery and characterization of Christensenella hongkongensis as a novel bacterium in the adenoma-carcinoma progression.

Journal of translational medicine, 24(1):.

BACKGROUND: Colorectal cancer (CRC) is one of the most prevalent malignancies worldwide and commonly starts from a pre-cancerous stage. This study aimed to identify potential fecal bacterial candidates associated with progression of CRC from the adenoma-carcinoma sequence and to explore underlying mechanisms of carcinogenesis.

METHODS: Publicly metagenomic datasets were analyzed using MaAsLin2 to identify bacterial species enriched in CRC patients compared to healthy controls. Additionally, we established a large cohort in mainland China, consisting of 686 subjects, including 285 CRC patients, 73 advanced adenoma patients (AA), 134 non-advanced adenoma patients (nAA), and 194 healthy controls (NC). Fecal samples from this cohort were analyzed by duplex quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) to validate the abundance of key bacterial candidate and its association with tumor node metastasis (TNM) stages. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis was performed to evaluate the diagnostic performance of Christensenella hongkongensis (C. hongkongensis) alone and in combination with fecal immunochemical test (FIT) across different CRC stages. In vitro experiments and transcriptome sequencing were performed to explore the effects of C. hongkongensis and its mechanisms in CRC progression.

RESULTS: MaAsLin2 analysis identified seven bacterial species were significantly more abundant in fecal samples of CRC patients than in healthy controls (p < 0.05). Among them, C. hongkongensis, an obligately anaerobic, catalase-positive, motile, non-sporulating, gram-positive coccobacillus was distinguished by its lowest abundance in healthy controls and significant enrichment in CRC patients. Validation in our recruited cohort showed that the abundance of C. hongkongensis progressively increased from non-advanced adenomas to advanced adenomas and CRC. For classifying AA from nAA, C. hongkongensis yielded an area under the ROC curve (AUC) of 0.60 (95% CI 0.53–0.68), with 45.2% sensitivity and 85.8% specificity. A combined model integrating C. hongkongensis abundance and FIT further improved diagnostic performance, increasing AUCs from 0.77 to 0.81 for AA vs NC (p < 0.05) and from 0.76 to 0.82 for AA vs nAA (p < 0.001). Linear regression analysis revealed a significant positive association between C. hongkongensis and TNM stages in CRC. In vitro experiments showed that C. hongkongensis promoted CRC cell proliferation, inhibited apoptosis, and enhanced the growth of patient-derived CRC organoids. RNA-seq analysis identified activation of the Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway, which was further validated by elevated protein levels of active β-catenin, reduced phosphorylation of GSK3β, and the upregulation of downstream targets c-Jun and Cyclin-D1.

CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that C. hongkongensis promotes colorectal tumorigenesis via Wnt/β-catenin activation, and highlight its potential as a novel non-invasive bacterial marker for early detection and monitoring of CRC progression.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s12967-026-07886-9.

RevDate: 2026-04-05

Bai Y, Zhao J, Wang Z, et al (2026)

A case of Rickettsia felis caused pneumonia and diagnosed by clinical analysis and Targeted Next-Generation Sequencing (tNGS) using Bronchoalveolar Lavage Fluid (BALF): A case report and literature review.

Journal of infection and public health, 19(5):103217 pii:S1876-0341(26)00089-4 [Epub ahead of print].

Feline rickettsia pneumonia is a rare lung disease caused by feline R. felis infection, which is mainly transmitted by feline fleas. A 57-year-old male patient was hospitalized with pain in the back of the sternum. Chest CT showed bilateral diffuse interstitial lung disease with multiple nodules. After the empirical anti-infection treatment was ineffective, the second-generation meta-genome sequencing (mNGS) of bronchoalveolar lavage (BALF) was diagnosed as feline rickettsia infection. In terms of treatment, inject tegacycline intravenously and then sequentially take minocycline. The patient's symptoms were relieved quickly, and the imaging improved significantly. This report summarizes the clinical and imaging characteristics and diagnosis and treatment experience of the case, aiming to provide reference for the early identification and treatment of such rare infections.

RevDate: 2026-04-05

Keller MI, de Zawadzki A, Thiele M, et al (2026)

Alcohol-Related Liver Disease Disrupts Bile Acid Homeostasis and Gut Microbial Bile Acid Metabolism.

JHEP reports : innovation in hepatology pii:S2589-5559(26)00119-9 [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND & AIMS: Alcohol overuse disrupts liver function and alters gut microbial communities, with alcohol-related liver disease (ALD) causing half of all liver-related deaths worldwide. Bile acids (BAs) regulate liver and gut function, but their homeostasis becomes disrupted in ALD. Gut microbes transform primary BAs to secondary BAs, which are reabsorbed via enterohepatic circulation, but BA metabolism during ALD progression remains poorly understood.

METHODS: We investigated BA homeostasis in a cross-sectional ALD cohort (n=462), alongside matched healthy controls (n=148), and validated key findings in two independent ALD cohorts (n=34 and n=52). We integrated BA concentrations, measured by targeted mass spectrometry in feces and plasma, with liver proteomics and gut microbiome profiles from metagenomic and metatranscriptomic sequencing.

RESULTS: Advanced fibrosis states were associated with decreased hepatic BA synthesis, impaired hepatic BA uptake from blood but with increased levels of primary and secondary BAs in plasma (inprimis, taurocholic acid: F=69.9, p=8.6e-66) and feces (inprimis, cholic acid: F=5.5, p=1.4e-4). The abundance of microbial secondary BA dehydroxylation and epimerization pathways in the gut microbiome community increased with disease severity. Genes encoding the oxidation arm in the multi-step dehydroxylation pathway (e.b. baiB) increased, whereas those in the reduction arm (baiN) were depleted. In ALD patients, we suggest Eggerthella lenta, Mediterraneibacter torques, and Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron as relevant microbes for BA metabolism.

CONCLUSION: Fibrotic ALD is characterized by disrupted primary BA synthesis and hepatic uptake, leading to hepatotoxic BA accumulation in the gut and blood circulation. Altered microbial secondary BA metabolism reflects a functional shift in the gut microbiome throughout the fibrosis stages. Our findings highlight the gut-liver axis as an important factor influencing ALD progression, even in early, asymptomatic fibrosis stages.

CLINICAL TRIAL NUMBER: GALAXY main cohort: Danish Data Protection Agency nos. 13/8204, 16/3492 and 18/22692; and Odense Patient Data Exploratory Network under study identification nos. OP_040 and OP_239 Validation cohort 1: EudraCT number 20214-001856-51 Validation cohort 2: ClinicalTrial.gov ID NCT03863730 IMPACT AND IMPLICATIONS: This study shows that integrating different omics approaches provides insight into metabolic disruptions across the gut-liver axis that drive alcohol-related liver disease progression. Additionally, our study identifies specific bacterial species influencing bile acid concentrations in alcohol-related liver disease using data from human fecal metagenomics and metatranscriptomics. These findings could inform the design of future therapeutic targets focusing on either the liver or the gut for treating alcohol-related liver disease.

RevDate: 2026-04-05

Sambucci KM, Samaš P, Ssebide B, et al (2026)

Shifts in strongylid communities associated with chronic wasting in mountain gorillas.

International journal for parasitology pii:S0020-7519(26)00079-2 [Epub ahead of print].

Host-parasite relationships are typically maintained in a dynamic equilibrium, but disruptions to this balance can lead to clinical disease and population-level health impacts. Chronic wasting, characterized by chronic loss of body condition, alopecia, a browning hair coat and pot belly, is an emerging health concern in mountain gorillas of Bwindi Impenetrable National Park, Uganda. Deworming of suspected cases has led to marked short-term health improvements, implicating intestinal helminths. To investigate, we analysed faecal samples from human-habituated gorillas collected in 2018 and 2021, and unhabituated gorillas in 2018, using high-throughput sequencing of strongylid nematodes (ITS-2) and gut bacteria (16S). Strongylid community composition varied with chronic wasting occurrence, with Oesophagostomum emerging as a key taxon driving this difference, while bacterial communities remained relatively stable. Strongylid diversity increased between 2018 and 2021, and habituated gorillas exhibited reduced strongylid genetic diversity, higher relative abundance of Oesophagostomum and lower relative abundance of Murshidia compared to unhabituated gorillas. These results suggest that a higher abundance of Oesophagostomum is associated with chronic wasting in mountain gorillas due to either a causative association or because of other genetic, immunological or environmental causes allowing Oesophagostomum, a common member of the gut eukaryote community of the Bwindi gorillas, to overpopulate.

RevDate: 2026-04-05

Lazarevic V, Ruppé E, J Schrenzel (2026)

10th International Conference on Clinical Metagenomics (ICCMg10): meeting report.

Trends in microbiology pii:S0966-842X(26)00067-3 [Epub ahead of print].

The 10th International Conference on Clinical Metagenomics (ICCMg10) brought together clinicians, microbiologists, bioinformaticians, and industry partners to review progress and challenges in translating metagenomics into routine clinical practice. Discussions focused on advances in sequencing technologies, automation, clinically oriented workflows, and computational and reporting strategies. Clinical sessions addressed diagnostic implementation across infectious syndromes, including respiratory, prosthetic joint, bloodstream, and deep-seated infections, with attention to cell-free DNA assays, long-read sequencing, and antimicrobial resistance detection. Broader applications of metagenomics, spanning microbiota research and environmental systems, reflected the expanding scope of the field. Overall, ICCMg10 underscored the importance of multidisciplinary collaboration, harmonized practices, and clinically meaningful interpretation to support the broader implementation of clinical metagenomics.

RevDate: 2026-04-05

Uematsu S (2026)

Programming systemic and mucosal immunity through co-adjuvant-based prime-boost vaccination.

Current opinion in virology, 76:101525 pii:S1879-6257(26)00017-9 [Epub ahead of print].

The development of effective mucosal vaccines has been limited by the limited availability of mucosal adjuvant approaches with established clinical track records and an incomplete understanding of how systemic and mucosal immunity are coordinated. Recent studies indicate that the priming phase of vaccination plays a decisive role in programming the quality, durability, and anatomical distribution of subsequent immune responses. This review discusses emerging evidence that co-adjuvant-based priming strategies can establish long-lasting immune programs that enable adjuvant-free mucosal boosting. Focusing on the combination of CpG DNA and curdlan as a prototypical example, this review highlights how coordinated activation of innate immune receptors during priming imprints dendritic cells, B cells, and T cells to support robust mucosal IgA and tissue-resident immunity. This review further discusses translational advances demonstrating that this immune programming paradigm can be maintained using translationally oriented formulations designed with clinical development in mind and validated in non-human primates. Independent studies using mRNA and protein-based vaccines support the general principle that the quality of priming, rather than the boosting modality, determines successful mucosal immunity. Together, these findings redefine vaccine adjuvants as tools for immune programming and provide a conceptual framework for next-generation vaccine design.

RevDate: 2026-04-05

Zhou Z, Song Y, Y Zhou (2026)

Metagenomic Next-Generation Sequencing Profiling of Primary versus Iatrogenic Osteoarticular Infections: Unveiling Distinct Pathogen Spectra and Diagnostic Implications.

International journal of infectious diseases : IJID : official publication of the International Society for Infectious Diseases pii:S1201-9712(26)00323-1 [Epub ahead of print].

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the diagnostic performance of metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS) versus microbial culture in primary osteoarticular infection (POI) and iatrogenic osteoarticular infection (IOI), and to analyze pathogen spectrum differences and clinical implications.

METHODS: Ninety-two patients with confirmed osteoarticular infection (POI, n=42; IOI, n=50) were retrospectively analyzed. All specimens were tested using both mNGS and conventional culture. The pathogen detection rates, pathogen spectrum composition, detection of mixed infections, and concordance of results between the two methods were compared.

RESULTS: mNGS demonstrated a significantly higher overall detection rate than culture (72.83% vs. 43.48%; P < 0.001), particularly in IOI (78.00% vs. 34.00%; P < 0.001). Pathogen profiling showed predominance of Staphylococcus aureus in POI, whereas IOI exhibited greater microbial diversity with increased detection of Staphylococcus epidermidis (31.03%) and anaerobes (13.79%). Polymicrobial infections were more frequently identified by mNGS (14.13% vs. 4.35% by culture; P = 0.024), primarily in the IOI group. Concordance between mNGS and culture was substantial in POI (κ = 0.66; 95% CI: 0.42-0.89) but only slight in IOI (κ = 0.12; 95% CI: -0.12 to 0.35), largely attributable to the high rate of mNGS-exclusive positives in IOI (48.00%).

CONCLUSION: mNGS improves pathogen detection in osteoarticular infections, especially in IOI where it identifies complex and polymicrobial infections more effectively than culture, providing critical support for guiding antimicrobial therapy.

RevDate: 2026-04-05

Wang J, Bi Y, Fu Z, et al (2026)

Harvesting reed (Phragmites australis) for wetland nitrogen removal: Productivity, microbial communities, and underlying mechanisms.

Bioresource technology pii:S0960-8524(26)00634-6 [Epub ahead of print].

Non-point source nitrogen (N) pollution is a primary driver of aquatic eutrophication. While reed (Phragmites australis) wetlands effectively intercept N, the optimal harvesting strategy for maximizing N removal while maintaining ecosystem function remains unclear. This study investigated the effects of different harvesting frequencies on N removal, plant productivity, and associated microbial mechanisms in wetland microcosms over a three-year period. Four treatments were evaluated: unplanted control (CK), planted with no harvest (T0), annual harvest (T1), and biennial harvest (T2). Results demonstrated that all planted treatments significantly enhanced N removal compared to CK. Although not statistically significant among planted groups, T1 consistently achieved the highest average removal efficiencies for total nitrogen, ammonium-nitrogen, and nitrate-nitrogen. Furthermore, T1 produced the greatest aboveground biomass, facilitating the largest export of N and other nutrients. Metagenomic analysis revealed that reed planting shifted the microbial community, suppressing Cyanobacteria (e.g., Stanieria) and Nitrospirota (e.g., Nitrospira F), while enriching Proteobacteria and Chloroflexota. These compositional changes were coupled with a functional shift that key dissimilatory pathways (denitrification and dissimilatory nitrate reduction) were upregulated, while assimilatory nitrate reduction was suppressed. Additionally, annual harvesting fostered a more complex and stable microbial co-occurrence network. Structural equation modeling indicated that harvesting enhanced N removal primarily through plant-microbe interactions, with increased plant N accumulation promoting microbial N-functional gene abundance, and ultimately driving N removal. Overall, annual harvesting optimally coupled high biomass production with microbial N removal, presenting a sustainable management strategy for wetlands that balances water purification with resource recovery.

RevDate: 2026-04-05

Ghaly TM, Shah BS, Coleman NV, et al (2026)

Agriculture alters protein evolution of respiratory nitrate reductase in soil bacteria at a global scale.

Environmental research pii:S0013-9351(26)00759-0 [Epub ahead of print].

Humans are a major evolutionary force, yet our impacts on the evolution of Earth's microbiomes and their biogeochemical processes remain poorly understood. Notably, the overlooked potential for the intensive use of agricultural fertiliser to drive evolutionary changes in soil nutrient cycling genes warrants urgent attention. Here, analysing >2,500 soil metagenomes from across the globe, we identify increased rates of diversifying positive selection on genes involved in the reduction of nitrate (a key component of nitrogen fertilisers) in agricultural, but not natural land systems. Altered selection on genes encoding the respiratory nitrate reductase (Nar) were specific to Burkholderiales, a major group of denitrifying bacteria. Nar protein regions under positive selection flanked the enzyme's substrate channel, favouring smaller amino acids, likely resulting in the widening of the channel entrance. We present a novel hypothesis that this channel widening could increase rates of substrate turnover, which we propose would be evolutionarily advantageous under excess nitrate availability, ultimately enhancing growth rates despite potential enzymatic trade-offs. As Burkholderiales are dominant nitrate reducers globally, such evolutionary consequences of agriculture on this lineage could have cascading environmental impacts, including increased nitrous oxide emissions. These findings indicate that anthropogenic selection might be altering protein-level evolution of vital microbial biogeochemical processes.

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ESP Quick Facts

ESP Origins

In the early 1990's, Robert Robbins was a faculty member at Johns Hopkins, where he directed the informatics core of GDB — the human gene-mapping database of the international human genome project. To share papers with colleagues around the world, he set up a small paper-sharing section on his personal web page. This small project evolved into The Electronic Scholarly Publishing Project.

ESP Support

In 1995, Robbins became the VP/IT of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, WA. Soon after arriving in Seattle, Robbins secured funding, through the ELSI component of the US Human Genome Project, to create the original ESP.ORG web site, with the formal goal of providing free, world-wide access to the literature of classical genetics.

ESP Rationale

Although the methods of molecular biology can seem almost magical to the uninitiated, the original techniques of classical genetics are readily appreciated by one and all: cross individuals that differ in some inherited trait, collect all of the progeny, score their attributes, and propose mechanisms to explain the patterns of inheritance observed.

ESP Goal

In reading the early works of classical genetics, one is drawn, almost inexorably, into ever more complex models, until molecular explanations begin to seem both necessary and natural. At that point, the tools for understanding genome research are at hand. Assisting readers reach this point was the original goal of The Electronic Scholarly Publishing Project.

ESP Usage

Usage of the site grew rapidly and has remained high. Faculty began to use the site for their assigned readings. Other on-line publishers, ranging from The New York Times to Nature referenced ESP materials in their own publications. Nobel laureates (e.g., Joshua Lederberg) regularly used the site and even wrote to suggest changes and improvements.

ESP Content

When the site began, no journals were making their early content available in digital format. As a result, ESP was obliged to digitize classic literature before it could be made available. For many important papers — such as Mendel's original paper or the first genetic map — ESP had to produce entirely new typeset versions of the works, if they were to be available in a high-quality format.

ESP Help

Early support from the DOE component of the Human Genome Project was critically important for getting the ESP project on a firm foundation. Since that funding ended (nearly 20 years ago), the project has been operated as a purely volunteer effort. Anyone wishing to assist in these efforts should send an email to Robbins.

ESP Plans

With the development of methods for adding typeset side notes to PDF files, the ESP project now plans to add annotated versions of some classical papers to its holdings. We also plan to add new reference and pedagogical material. We have already started providing regularly updated, comprehensive bibliographies to the ESP.ORG site.

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Papers in Classical Genetics

The ESP began as an effort to share a handful of key papers from the early days of classical genetics. Now the collection has grown to include hundreds of papers, in full-text format.

Digital Books

Along with papers on classical genetics, ESP offers a collection of full-text digital books, including many works by Darwin and even a collection of poetry — Chicago Poems by Carl Sandburg.

Timelines

ESP now offers a large collection of user-selected side-by-side timelines (e.g., all science vs. all other categories, or arts and culture vs. world history), designed to provide a comparative context for appreciating world events.

Biographies

Biographical information about many key scientists (e.g., Walter Sutton).

Selected Bibliographies

Bibliographies on several topics of potential interest to the ESP community are automatically maintained and generated on the ESP site.

ESP Picks from Around the Web (updated 28 JUL 2024 )