Integration of Host, Pathogen and Microbiome -omics Data for Studying Infectious Diseases

Integration of Host, Pathogen and Microbiome -omics Data for Studying Infectious Diseases
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ISBN-10 : OCLC:1370160431
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Book Synopsis Integration of Host, Pathogen and Microbiome -omics Data for Studying Infectious Diseases by : Mohammadhassan Mirhakkak Esfahani

Download or read book Integration of Host, Pathogen and Microbiome -omics Data for Studying Infectious Diseases written by Mohammadhassan Mirhakkak Esfahani and published by . This book was released on 2022* with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: In an ever-growing worldwide population, human infectious diseases are an increasingly serious problem for public health. In particular, more than a million deaths and millions of infectious disease cases per year caused by fungal pathogens have been reported globally in recent years. Hence, more investments must be put into fungal research to overcome the problem. The opportunistic pathogen Candida albicans and the airborne Aspergillus fumigatus are the two most prevalent fungal pathogens causing serious issues in medical care units. Despite the recent advances in fungal research, there is little knowledge about the role of fungal metabolism in developing the infection when coexisting within the human body with microbial community members in different organs. This dissertation applied computational tools, and implemented systems biology approaches to uncover key factors in the colonization of the pathogens, especially C. albicans and A. fumigatus, from a systems biology perspective and unseen by wet-lab experiments alone. Next to multi-omics data analysis, a major effort was put into genome-scale metabolic models (GEMs) generation and analysis as a promising approach to shed light on the role of metabolism in developing the infection. In brief, this thesis sheds light on key factors leading to the inhibition or promotion of fungal growth. This especially includes the first available GEM reconstruction of C. albicans to theoretically study the intricate interaction of the fungus with the human host and the microbial community members. Lastly, a platform of 252 A. fumigatus GEMs at the strain resolution was generated. It revealed the phenotypic diversity of A. fumigatus strains isolated from different hospitals and farms in Germany and explained the contribution of the fungus to the shaping of the metabolic landscape of the lung microbiome in a favorable manner for fungal growth.


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