(Press-News.org) In remembrance of Peer Bork
In a new study published in Cell, scientists in the Bork Group at EMBL Heidelberg reveal that microbes living in similar habitats are more alike than those simply inhabiting the same geographical region. By analysing tens of thousands of metagenomes, the team found that while most microbes adapt to a specific ecosystem, a rarer subset known as ‘generalists’ can thrive across very different habitats.
Known for being ecologically tolerant, generalists are capable of moving from habitat to habitat, interacting with and transferring their genes to other microbes, creating what the team describe as an interconnected, planet-wide network of microbiomes.
Developing a more holistic view of the microbiome
Up until now, most large-scale microbiome studies have been on a specific ecosystem basis, due to the technical and logistical constraints that a global analysis poses. The recent development of databases like SPIRE (Searchable, Planetary-scale mIcrobiome REsource) by scientists at EMBL and their international partners has made planet-wide studies more feasible.
As a publicly available database, SPIRE integrates, processes, and annotates microbial data from diverse habitats all over the world. Using 85,604 metagenomic samples from the SPIRE database, EMBL researchers were able to pinpoint 40 distinct microbial habitat types.
“Rather than presuming which environmental drivers shape the microbiome structure, we let the microbes tell us themselves,” said Daniel Podlesny, Research Scientist at EMBL and co-first author on the paper. “We quantified the similarity of each microbiome to all others in the dataset and identified 40 clusters of compositionally similar microbiomes, each comprising hundreds to thousands of samples from multiple independent studies. Using curated contextual metadata from our Metalog database, we then determined what the microbiomes within a cluster have in common, such as host age or ocean temperature.”
Generalist microbes as genetic ‘bridges’
Depending on how they adapt to their environment, scientists broadly classify microbes as either specialists or generalists. As the name implies, specialists can only cope with specific environmental conditions, whereas generalists are capable of thriving in a wide range of habitats.
As generalists move across ecosystems, they laterally transfer their genes to other microbes that they come in contact with, in a process known as horizontal gene transfer. Through this exchange of genetic information, generalists create ‘bridges’ between geographically distant habitats – and therefore microbiomes – that would otherwise not exist.
“Even disparate habitats, with fundamentally different physiochemical conditions, are connected by generalist species," said Jonas Schiller, Predoctoral Fellow in the Bork Group and co-first author on the study.
Certain human-driven activities, including sewage disposal and anthropogenic climate change, accelerate the dispersal of generalists by creating new and faster routes for microbes to move between. Further compounding this issue is a surge in the overuse and misuse of antibiotics, which leads to generalists evolving antimicrobial resistance genes.
According to the World Health Organisation, antimicrobial resistance is one of the top ten global public health threats, claiming more lives every year than malaria and HIV/AIDS combined. Antimicrobial resistance occurs when bacteria and other microorganisms evolve resistance to drugs, leading to historically treatable infections, like pneumonia, becoming harder, or sometimes impossible, to cure.
Viewing planetary health beyond a human-centred perspective
“Our findings show that such microbes play an important role in linking human, animal, and environmental health – also known as One Health – emphasising the need to view planetary health beyond a purely human-centred perspective,” said Chan Yeong Kim, Postdoctoral Fellow in the Bork Group and co-first author on the study.
Though the concept itself is fairly new, the idea behind One Health dates back to the nineteenth century when Rudolf Virchow, a German physician and physiologist, coined the term ‘zoonosis,’ to describe how infectious diseases can jump from animals to humans.
Today, One Health is embraced by the Quadripartite organisations, a group consisting of the World Health Organisation (WHO), Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), World Organisation for Animal Health (WOAH), and United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP).
By revealing that generalists can transfer their genes to other microbes as they move between environments as different as wastewater and the human gut, the team demonstrates just how much human health depends on the health of animals and the planet.
END
Microbiomes interconnect on a planetary-scale, new study finds
In the largest study of its kind, EMBL scientists reveal that certain microbes can thrive across different ecosystems, contributing to the global spread of antimicrobial resistance
2026-02-09
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Let’s get on pancreatic cancer’s nerves
2026-02-09
Pancreatic cancer has a lot of nerve. Notoriously tricky to detect, the disease also often resists traditional therapy. So, researchers are urgently looking for new ways to disrupt tumor formation. Though scientists know that the nervous system can help cancer spread, its role in the disease’s earliest stages remains unclear. “One phenomenon that is known is called perineural invasion,” says Jeremy Nigri, a postdoc in Professor David Tuveson’s lab at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL). “This means cancer cells will migrate within the nerve and use the nerve as a way to metastasize.”
Now, Nigri and his colleagues at CSHL have discovered ...
Intermittent fasting cut Crohn’s disease activity by 40% and halved inflammation in randomized clinical trial
2026-02-09
Contact:
Rachel Peifer
rpeifer@crohnscolitisfoundation.org
Intermittent Fasting Cut Crohn’s Disease Activity by 40% and Halved Inflammation in Randomized Clinical Trial
First study of time-restricted feeding in people with IBD suggests a role in long-term remission
February 9, 2026 — A new randomized controlled study funded by the Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation found that time-restricted feeding—a form of intermittent fasting—significantly reduced symptomatic disease activity and systematic inflammation in adults with Crohn’s ...
New study in JNCCN unlocks important information about how to treat recurring prostate cancer
2026-02-09
PLYMOUTH MEETING, PA [February 9, 2026] — New research in the February 2026 issue of JNCCN—Journal of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network found that incorporating information from prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) PET/CT scans may be able to predict progression-free survival (PFS) and guide treatment planning in patients with rising prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels following removal of the prostate.
The researchers used retrospective clinical data from 113 patients treated for prostate ...
Simple at-home tests for detecting cat, dog viruses
2026-02-09
Pet owners want quick answers when their beloved cat or dog is sick. And if these furry friends are experiencing digestive distress, lethargy and fever, it’s important to rapidly rule out serious illnesses like feline panleukopenia (also called feline parvovirus) and canine parvovirus. Now, researchers in ACS’ Analytical Chemistry report improved lateral flow assays for at-home screening. In tests on veterinary clinic samples, the assays demonstrated 100% sensitivity and reproducibility for both parvoviruses.
“Feline parvovirus (FPV) and canine parvovirus (CPV) infection can be deadly for pets, and clinical signs alone are often insufficient to ...
New gut-brain discovery offers hope for treating ALS and dementia
2026-02-09
CLEVELAND—A significant discovery by Case Western Reserve University researchers could change how doctors treat two of the most devastating neurodegenerative diseases.
The team identified a link between gut bacteria and the deterioration of the brain in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) and Frontotemporal Dementia (FTD). The researchers discovered that certain bacterial sugars cause immune responses that kill cells—and how to prevent it.
FTD mainly affects the brain’s frontal and temporal ...
Cognitive speed training linked to lower dementia incidence up to 20 years later
2026-02-09
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Adults age 65 and older who completed five to six weeks of cognitive speed training — in this case, speed of processing training, which helps people quickly find visual information on a computer screen and handle increasingly complex tasks in a shorter time period — and who had follow-up sessions about one to three years later were less likely to be diagnosed with dementia, including Alzheimer’s disease, up to two decades later, according to new findings published today in Alzheimer’s & Dementia: Translational Research and Clinical Interventions.
This National Institutes of Health ...
Businesses can either lead transformative change or risk extinction: IPBES
2026-02-09
Manchester, UK — Every business depends on biodiversity, and every business impacts biodiversity. The growth of the global economy has been at the cost of immense biodiversity loss, which now poses a critical and pervasive systemic risk to the economy, financial stability and human wellbeing. This is a central finding of a landmark new report published today by the Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES).
Even companies that might seem far-removed from nature or that do not see themselves as nature-based rely, directly or indirectly, on material inputs, regulation of environmental conditions - such as ...
Opening a new window on the brainstem, AI algorithm enables tracking of its vital white matter pathways
2026-02-09
The signals that drive many of the brain and body’s most essential functions—consciousness, sleep, breathing, heart rate and motion—course through bundles of “white matter” fibers in the brainstem, but imaging systems so far have been unable to finely resolve these crucial neural cables. That has left researchers and doctors with little capability to assess how they are affected by trauma or neurodegeneration. In a new study, a team of MIT, Harvard, and Massachusetts General Hospital researchers unveil AI-powered software capable of automatically segmenting eight distinct bundles in any ...
Dr. Paul Donlin-Asp of the University of Edinburgh to dissect the molecular functions and regulation of local SYNGAP1 protein synthesis with support from CURE SYNGAP1 (fka SynGAP Research Fund)
2026-02-09
Mill Valley, CA – February 3, 2026 – CURE SYNGAP1 (fka SynGAP Research Fund), a 501(c)(3) organization, announces a $130,000 grant to Dr. Paul Donlin-Asp, PhD, of the Simons Initiative for the Developing Brain (SIDB) at The University of Edinburgh. The grant supports his work in investigating the molecular functions and regulation of local SYNGAP1 protein synthesis, with the goal of advancing therapies for SYNGAP1-Related Disorders (SRD).
Why We Supported This Project
Dr. Donlin-Asp’s research focuses on a critical aspect of SRD: the production of SYNGAP1 protein at
synapses, which plays a key role in regulating ...
Seeing the whole from a part: Revealing hidden turbulent structures from limited observations and equations
2026-02-09
The irregular, swirling motion of fluids we call turbulence can be found everywhere, from stirring in a teacup to currents in the planetary atmosphere. This phenomenon is governed by the Navier–Stokes equations—a set of mathematical equations that describe how fluids move. Despite being known for nearly two centuries, these equations still pose major challenges when it comes to making predictions. Turbulent flows are inherently chaotic, and tiny uncertainties can grow quickly over time. In real-world situations, scientists can only observe part of a turbulent flow, usually its largest and slowest ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Dana-Farber research helps drive FDA label update for primary CNS lymphoma
Deep-sea microbes get unexpected energy boost
Coffee and tea intake, dementia risk, and cognitive function
Impact of a smartwatch hypertension notification feature for population screening
Glaciers in retreat: Uncovering tourism’s contradictions
Why melting glaciers are drawing more visitors and what that says about climate change
Mount Sinai scientists uncover link between influenza and heart disease
Study finds outdated Medicare rule delays nursing care, wastes hospital resources
Mortality among youth and young adults with autism spectrum disorder, intellectual disability, or cerebral palsy
Risk factors for the development of food allergy in infants and children
Organizational factors to reattract nurses to hospital employment
What drives food allergies? New study pinpoints early-life factors that raise risk
Early diagnosis key to improving childhood cancer survival
Microbiomes interconnect on a planetary-scale, new study finds
Let’s get on pancreatic cancer’s nerves
Intermittent fasting cut Crohn’s disease activity by 40% and halved inflammation in randomized clinical trial
New study in JNCCN unlocks important information about how to treat recurring prostate cancer
Simple at-home tests for detecting cat, dog viruses
New gut-brain discovery offers hope for treating ALS and dementia
Cognitive speed training linked to lower dementia incidence up to 20 years later
Businesses can either lead transformative change or risk extinction: IPBES
Opening a new window on the brainstem, AI algorithm enables tracking of its vital white matter pathways
Dr. Paul Donlin-Asp of the University of Edinburgh to dissect the molecular functions and regulation of local SYNGAP1 protein synthesis with support from CURE SYNGAP1 (fka SynGAP Research Fund)
Seeing the whole from a part: Revealing hidden turbulent structures from limited observations and equations
Unveiling polymeric interactions critical for future drug nanocarriers
New resource supports trauma survivors, health professionals
Evidence of a subsurface lava tube on Venus
New trial aims to transform how we track our daily diet
People are more helpful when in poor environments
How big can a planet be? With very large gas giants, it can be hard to tell
[Press-News.org] Microbiomes interconnect on a planetary-scale, new study findsIn the largest study of its kind, EMBL scientists reveal that certain microbes can thrive across different ecosystems, contributing to the global spread of antimicrobial resistance