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FEMS Affiliates Letter May 2013

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The FEMS Affiliates Letter is the monthly newsletter of FEMS about its Grants, Journal, Member Societies and much more.
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www.fems-microbiology.org The official newsletter for FEMS Affiliates AFFILIATES LETTER MAY 2013 Also in this issue: Society Feature Russian member IACMAC Publications Page Hidden underground: soil microbiology Jensen Award 2013 Granted to Francesca Turroni Grants Corner FEMS Research Fellowship Deadlines FEMS-Sponsored Meetings Microbiology TidBits She has already organised 25 ses- sions in bars in her home town Manchester over the past four years. And in July, there will be a special meeting of her Bad Bugs Bookclub in a Leipzig Biergarten for the participants of the FEMS 2013 congress. Start reading Nem- esis by Philip Roth, and join Joanna Verran at this informal get-togeth- er, highlighting the microbiological aspects of an easy-to-read novel. Joanna Verran is FEMS’ co-opted member at large for microbiology education across Europe. Within the Federation, she is currently bringing together a group of representatives from all our member societies, to discuss issues on microbiology edu- cation. But her initiatives also exist on a local scale, as shown by her ‘Bad Bugs Book Club’. Bookclub meetings last for around 60-90 minutes, and are held in different venues (often pubs!) across Manchester. Verran has already reviewed the scientific and microbiological insights of about 25 novels, intended for general reading. ‘With the Bad Bugs Bookclub, we want to get people interested in sci- ence, specifically microbiology’, Ver - ran says, ‘by reading novels in which infectious disease forms some part of the story. We also try to associate books, where possible, with some other activity or event, to widen the interest and to broaden the impact.’ Continue on page 2. Join the Bad Bugs Bookclub at FEMS 2013 Special edition of Joanna Verran’s review sessions on microbiology novels The Bad Bugs Bookclub discusses microbiology novels in local bars.
Transcript
Page 1: FEMS Affiliates Letter May 2013

www.fems-microbiology.org

The official newsletter for FEMS Affiliates

A F F I L I AT E S L E T T E RMAY 2013

Also in this issue:

Society FeatureRussian member IACMAC

Publications PageHidden underground: soil microbiology

Jensen Award 2013Granted to FrancescaTurroni

Grants CornerFEMS Research Fellowship

Deadlines

FEMS-Sponsored Meetings

Microbiology TidBits

She has already organised 25 ses-sions in bars in her home town Manchester over the past four years. And in July, there will be a special meeting of her Bad Bugs Bookclub in a Leipzig Biergarten for the participants of the FEMS 2013 congress. Start reading Nem-esis by Philip Roth, and join Joanna Verran at this informal get-togeth-er, highlighting the microbiological aspects of an easy-to-read novel.

Joanna Verran is FEMS’ co-opted member at large for microbiology education across Europe. Within the Federation, she is currently bringing together a group of representatives from all our member societies, to discuss issues on microbiology edu-cation. But her initiatives also exist

on a local scale, as shown by her ‘Bad Bugs Book Club’. Bookclub meetings last for around 60-90 minutes, and are held in different venues (often pubs!) across Manchester. Verran has already reviewed the scientific and microbiological insights of about 25 novels, intended for general reading.

‘With the Bad Bugs Bookclub, we want to get people interested in sci-ence, specifically microbiology’, Ver-ran says, ‘by reading novels in which infectious disease forms some part of the story. We also try to associate books, where possible, with some other activity or event, to widen the interest and to broaden the impact.’

Continue on page 2.

Join the Bad Bugs Bookclub at FEMS 2013Special edition of Joanna Verran’s review sessions on microbiology novels

The Bad Bugs Bookclub discusses microbiology novels in local bars.

Page 2: FEMS Affiliates Letter May 2013

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F E M S A F F I L I A T E S L E T T E R , M A Y 2 0 1 3

Continuation of page 1.

Not just funDuring FEMS 2013, Verran will set up a special session of her bookclub, especially intended for congress participants. In Leipzig, a novel called Nemesis will be discussed. Verran: ‘It is about an outbreak of polio in a Jewish area of Newark, New Jersey in 1944. But it is also a great read, narrated by a child who was affected during the outbreak. The child describes the impact of the events in the life of Bucky Cantor, the school playground instructor.’

According to Verran, polio is still a disease of importance today. ‘WHO is coordinating a global eradication scheme, reducing cases by over 99% since 1988. The numbers decreased from an origi-nal 350,000 people infected to 1,352 in 2010. India was recently declared polio-free, but it remains persistent on Afghanistan-Pakistan border, and in Northern Nigeria.’

Award winning authorThe author of Nemesis is Philip Roth. In 2011, he was the winner of the prestigious Man Booker In-ternational Award, a biennial prize given to writers of fiction for their lifetime of work.

New bookclubsApart from the fact that a meeting of the Bad Bugs Bookclub can be a fun activity during even-ing hours, it also serves another goal. Verran: ‘We would like to encourage others to set up their own local bookclub, suggesting books and ac-companying activities to all other clubs. I hope and expect that among the attendants of FEMS 2013, potential new bookclub initiators could be present.’

Want to know more? Visit the Bad Bugs Bookclub website.

How to prepare yourself for the Bad Bugs Bookclub session in Leipzig

You are all invited to take part in the FEMS 2013 edition of the Bad Bugs Bookclub. To get prepared, acquire and read the novel Nem-esis by Philip Roth over the next two months. You can buy it online or in your local book shop.

At the congress, please look out for further announcements re-garding time and location. We will try and find a Biergarten near to the conference location!

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F E M S A F F I L I A T E S L E T T E R , M A Y 2 0 1 3

S O C I E T Y F E AT U R E

One of FEMS’ Russian member societies is IAC-MAC, the Interregional Association for Clinical Microbiology and Antimicrobial Chemothera-py. It is an active association that initiates both scientific and educational activities.

IACMAC was founded in 1997 and now includes over 1,500 members from 36 regions in Russia. The association is an adviser of various interna-tional organizations, such as WHO and the APUA. It publishes Clinical Microbiology and Antimicro-bial Chemotherapy, a quarterly and internation-ally peer-reviewed journal. Members of IACMAC receive this journal and have on-line access to all issues.

Monitoring antibiotic resistanceThe association has established programs of regional and interregional antibiotic resistance monitoring (RusNet) and is now developing plans to expand these programs onto national level. Furthermore, some clinical and microbiologi-cal multicenter studies were founded under the direction of IACMAC. Research is done on the

spread and resistance of RTI, UTI, bloodstream and surgical infections of pathogens from both hospitals and the community.

Several annual meetingsEach year in May, IACMAC organizes the inter-national congress on antimicrobial therapy in Moscow. Since 1997, it has gathered more than 15,000 specialists, among them more than 1,000 microbiologists, on various congresses, confer-ences and workshops throughout Russia.

Online and offline schoolingBacteriologists and clinicians in Russia can follow graduate courses on bacteriology and clinical pharmacology, organized by IACMAC. The association also published a practical paper guide on anti-infective chemotherapy. Until now, 55,000 copies have been distributed free of charge already.

IACMAC has established www.antibiotic.ru, the first non-commercial information portal and online center of distance education on antimicrobial therapy in Russia. This website, which complies with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health information, gives health practitioners, medical tutors, post-graduates, registrars and pharmaceutical professional the opportunity to improve their knowledge on an-timicrobial therapy of internal diseases for free.

Check out www.iacmac.ru for more information.

Our Russian member IACMAC

IACMAC president Roman Kozlov.

Attendants of a IACMAC Regional Conference.

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P U B L I C AT I O N S PA G E

Microbes are present in every habitat you can possibly think of, but they are especially abundant below ground. FEMS journals have published on microbial soil life extensively and this month, FEMS Microbiology Letters is dedicating its first thematic issue on one important group of soil inhabitants: Actinobacteria. Find out more about a world of intriguing life forms hidden under-ground.

Hidden underground

Actinobacteria in soils make up one of the largest groups of bacteria. Members of the phylum take part in many subsurface processes, like the decomposition of or-ganic materials. Evidently, much research on soil Acti-nobacteria has already been done, but even more is still to be discovered. That is why the second May issue of FEMS Microbiology Letters has been dedicated totally to this group, revealing their importance to a wide range of microbiologists.

This thematic issue is based on the topics of a recent symposium in Münster, Germany: the varied capaci-ties of soil Actinobacteria for mutualism, symbiosis and pathogenesis. You will find publications on strategies for interaction with insects, amoebae, other bacteria and fungi, on community dynamics, symbiosis with plants, plant pathogenic traits, and on lessons de-duced from genomics, stress responses and regulatory as-pects. Read the issue online.

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P U B L I C AT I O N S PA G E

Subsurface microbiology: the life below our feet

FEMS Microbiology Ecology 81:1 was a special issue on subsurface microbiology in general. Quoting the issue editor Tillmann Lueders, ‘mankind currently experiences an increasing urge to venture into the subsurface, just like in Jules Verne’s classic novel A Journey to the Centre of the Earth’. Well, FEMS Ecol-A Journey to the Centre of the Earth’. Well, FEMS Ecol-’. Well, FEMS Ecol-ogy has done so! It went to caves and karsts, to polluted aquifers, to the deep terrestrial subsurface, to mines, gas and coal formations, to waste deposition sites, to shallow and deep marine sediments and to methane hydrate deposits.

Sediments from the Flingern aquifer, used for research on the ecology of hydrocarbon degradation. Kellerman et al. (2012), FEMS Microbiology Ecology 81:1.

Standardization of methods

As all scientists know, method standardization is crucial for correct data comparison and interpreta-tion. A minireview in FEMS Microbiology Ecology presents an overview of the existing and forthcom-ing ISO standards in soil microbiology. It highlights possible future research efforts to be undertaken for developing new standards.

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Soil microcosm determines bacterial diversity

From the human eye, soils may seem rather homogenous habitats. But when you look at it from a mi-crobial point-of-view, this is not at all true. The species diversity of bacteria in soils is directly caused by micro-scale factors like matrix heterogeneity, convective water flow and weathering. It is all discussed very recently in FEMS Microbiology Reviews.

Enlargements of soil particles shows that soils aren’t as homogenous as we might think. Vos et al. (2013),FEMS Microbiology Reviews.

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F E M S A F F I L I A T E S L E T T E R , M A Y 2 0 1 3

Jensen Award for Francesca TurroniThe Jensen Award 2013 has been granted to Dr. Francesca Turroni from the Probiogenomcs Lab of the University of Parma, Italy. Dr. Turroni will evaluate the crosstalk of bifidobacteria with their host, the human gut, at University College Cork, Ireland.

Bifidobacteria are anaerobic, Gram-positive and branched rod-shaped bacteria that are common in the gastro-intestinal tracts of humans and most other animals, even insects. Their presence has been associated with beneficial health effects, such as the prevention of diarrhea in patients treated with antibiotics, lactose intolerance, cho-lesterol reduction and immunomodulation. This knowledge has caused the widespread use of bifi-dobacteria as components of health-promoting or ‘probiotic’ food.

Despite their generally accepted importance, lit-tle is known about the molecular background of the probiotic features of bifidobacteria. Turroni’s project will shed light on the genetics underlying the interactions between bifidobacteria and their hosts. It will offer crucial information to facilitate the discovery of ‘probiotic’ genes.

Turroni has been recommended by Dr. Abelardo Margolles from CSIC in Villaviciosa, Spain and by Dr. Marco Ventura from the University of Parma. During the project, she will be supervised by Dr. Douwe van Sinderen.

Stay updated with FEMSTweets!

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F E M S A F F I L I A T E S L E T T E R , M A Y 2 0 1 3

G R A N T S CO R N E R

Grant description

FEMS Research Fellowships are meant to assist young European scientists in pursuing research up to 3 months in a European country different from that in which he/she lives. These grants are intended to support travel and living costs of the Fellow only.

A FEMS Research Fellowship covers travel (at economy rates) and living costs for the fellow to a maximum of EUR 4 000 (no financial assistance for the host - e.g. bench fees).

The deadlines for receipt of applications at FEMS Central Office are 1 December (first round) and 15 June (second round).

The regulations and application forms are avail-able electronically. Please read them carefully and check the list at the right before contacting the FEMS Central Office.

Upon its receipt at FEMS Central Office, the appli-cation is checked for eligibility and completeness.

Complete applications are then submitted to the Grants Board.

The Grants Board formulates its recommenda-tions to the Executive Committee, which then makes the final decision that will be communi-cated soon thereafter.

FEMS Research Fellowships

Application checklist

FEMS Research Fellowships regulations apply to each application for the FEMS Research Fellow-ships.

The requirements consist of, but are not limited to the following:

• You are an active microbiologist.

• You are below 36 years of age.

• You are a citizen of a European country.

• You are a member of a FEMS member society (at least for 1 year before applying).

• You will pursue your project in a European country which is not your country of resi-dence.

• You have thoroughly read the regulations governing FEMS Research Fellowships

• You have completed the relevant applica-tion form available on the FEMS website with the following attachments:

- Your curriculum vitae

- Letter of reference

- Letter of acceptance from the host laboratory

- Research project proposal written by yourself

- Your photograph

• Your application is endorsed by a FEMS Delegate.

Send the complete application to [email protected] before the deadline of 15 June 2013.

15 June of each year is a deadline for the FEMS Research Fellowships Grants. Interested in apply-ing? Do it on time and send your complete application file to FEMS Central Office by email and as a hard copy.

Page 8: FEMS Affiliates Letter May 2013

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The voice of microbiology in Europe.We advance and unify microbiology knowledge.

Keverling Buismanweg 4, 2628 CL Delft, The NetherlandsT: 0031 15 269 3920 | F: 0031 15 269 3921 | E: [email protected] The FEMS Affiliates Letter

is a production of the Federation of European Microbiological Societies

F E M S A F F I L I A T E S L E T T E R , M A Y 2 0 1 3

DEADLINES1 June 2013

15 December 2013FEMS National & Regional

Congresses Grants

15 June 2013 1 December 2013

FEMS Research Fellowships

1 September 2013 1 April 2014

FEMS Meeting Attendance Grants

1 December 2013FEMS - ASM Exchange Grant

1 March 2014 FEMS Meeting Grants

(for meetings to be held in 2015)

1 9 - 2 1 J u n e 2 0 1 3 9th International Symposium on the Biology of Acinetobacter, Cologne, Germany.

2 9 A u g u s t - 3 S e p t e m b e r 2 0 1 3 26th International Conference on Yeast Ge-netics and Molecular Biology, Frankfurt/M, Germany.

7 - 11 September 201314th International Conference on Pseu-domonas, Lausanne, Switzerland.

8 - 13 September 2013Symposium on Aquatic Microbial Ecology, SAME13, Stresa, Italy.

8 - 13 September 2013Thermophiles 2013, Regensburg, Germany.

FEMS-Sponsored Meetings, Spring/Summer 2013

MICROBIOLOGY TIDBITS

Liquorice DNADo you want to explain very visually to some-one how DNA is built up (or are you just look-ing for a nice way to spend your Sunday after-noon)? Make your own DNA double helix out of winegums or liquorice, using these instructions. Great side benefit: enjoy the bases, desoxyribo-ses and phosphates afterwards. But make your helix as it should be! Apparently, double helixes are often pictured turning to the left. But that wouldn’t result in life as we know it. So be wise and let your DNA turn to the right.

How malaria parasites act – and how we can stop themThe malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum has got a very effective way of making its vec-tor bring him to a new host. It triples the sense of smell in Anopheles gambiae mosquitoes, enabling the insect to find human blood much quicker. On top of that, the mosquitos take sig-nificantly larger meals each time. Read the open access article in PLoS ONE. On the other hand, there are also indica-tions that we might one day be able to bring a halt to malaria, although for now only through another mosquito species. Nature published an investigation in which the Wolbachia bac-teria, which kills the P. falciparum parasite, can be passed on from generation to generation in Aedes aegypti mosquitoes.

Mutation hot spot in Schmallenberg virusThe June issue of the Journal of General Virolo-gy reports new insights into the Schmallenberg virus. Scientists found a hypervariable region in its M-segment. The arbovirus, spread by midges, causes malformations and stillborn in sheep and is only known since December 2011. In the UK, a vaccine will become available soon.


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