46 episodes

Stories where genes and genomes are key to solving energy and environmental challenges. Hear diverse voices in science talk about their JGI-supported research to better understand — and harness — the superpowers encoded in plants, fungi, microalgae, environmental viruses, and bacteria to contribute to a more sustainable world. 

Genome Insider JGI

    • Science

Stories where genes and genomes are key to solving energy and environmental challenges. Hear diverse voices in science talk about their JGI-supported research to better understand — and harness — the superpowers encoded in plants, fungi, microalgae, environmental viruses, and bacteria to contribute to a more sustainable world. 

    What Happens To a Rainforest When You Dial Up Drought? - Linnea Honeker and Malak Tfaily

    What Happens To a Rainforest When You Dial Up Drought? - Linnea Honeker and Malak Tfaily

    Rainforests store a big fraction of all the carbon on Earth, and soil microbes play a key role in pulling that carbon out of the atmosphere. This episode, researchers take a look at what happens to that storage when a rainforest hits a drought. Tag along with their experiments in a fully enclosed, human-made ecosystem: Biosphere 2. Links from this episode:Submit your own proposal to work with the JGIJoin us at the 2024 JGI User MeetingFICUS programEpisode TranscriptPaper: Drought re-rout...

    • 22 min
    The Megadata of Lake Mendota - Part 3: Boating Out to David Buoy

    The Megadata of Lake Mendota - Part 3: Boating Out to David Buoy

    This is the third and final episode of our series on a giant metagenome assembly from Wisconsin’s Lake Mendota. In the last two episodes, we’ve covered the specialized software and supercomputers behind this project. But every part of this project depends on lakewater samples — so this episode is a look at how researchers get these specialized snapshots of a freshwater ecosystem.Links from this episode:Submit your own proposal to work with the JGIEpisode TranscriptThe Megadata of Lake Mendota...

    • 24 min
    The Megadata of Lake Mendota - Part 2: Souped Up Computing

    The Megadata of Lake Mendota - Part 2: Souped Up Computing

    This series is the story of a giant metagenome assembly from Wisconsin’s Lake Mendota. In this episode: a look at the supercomputing that stitches together large datasets with the assembler program MetaHipMer2.Oak Ridge National Lab is home to two supercomputers — Summit and Frontier — that process terabytes of data with MetaHipMer2. And the National Energy Research Scientific Computing (NERSC) has another supercomputer, Perlmutter that works at large scale. But nearby the JGI, a cluster call...

    • 22 min
    The Megadata of Lake Mendota - Part 1: Many, Many Mers

    The Megadata of Lake Mendota - Part 1: Many, Many Mers

    Lake Mendota sits right next to the University of Wisconsin, Madison. And Trina McMahon's lab has been sampling the microbes of that lake for over 20 years, to understand how the freshwater ecosystem works. So a few years ago, when they set out to analyze 500 metagenomes, it was the biggest project the JGI had ever put together. The next 3 episodes are the story behind that giant assembly from Lake Mendota. In this episode: the software evolution that made metagenome assemblies like...

    • 26 min
    Experimenting with EcoFABs for Student Labs - Jill Bouchard & Ying Wang

    Experimenting with EcoFABs for Student Labs - Jill Bouchard & Ying Wang

    To set up flexible, repeatable experiments on plants and microbes, Trent Northen’s group at Berkeley Lab created a fabricated ecosystem – an EcoFAB. These small plastic growth chambers let researchers around the world compare their work consistently. And EcoFABs also work well in the classroom. This episode, we visit Los Medanos College to see EcoFABs in action in Jill Bouchard’s BIO 21 lab course. Links from this episode:Submit your own proposal to work with the JGIFind out more about E...

    • 22 min
    JGIota: A Surprise for Chloroflexota — The First Flagella!

    JGIota: A Surprise for Chloroflexota — The First Flagella!

    To understand how organisms adapt to extreme environments, Marike Palmer and Brian Hedlund study organisms living in hot springs. Hear how their recent work revealed more about the history of the Chloroflexota phylum and a new way of moving: a tail-like flagella. Submit your own proposal to work with the JGIJoin us at the 2023 JGI User MeetingLinks from this episode:Episode TranscriptPublication: Palmer, M, et al.Thermophilic Dehalococcoidia with unusual traits shed light on an unexpecte...

    • 8 min

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