Meeting Report: The Terabase Metagenomics Workshop and the Vision of an Earth Microbiome Project

Jack A. Gilbert(University of Chicago), Folker Meyer(Argonne National Laboratory), Dion Antonopoulos(Argonne National Laboratory), Pavan Balaji(Argonne National Laboratory), C. Titus Brown(University of Florida), Christopher T. Brown(Michigan State University), Narayan Desai(Argonne National Laboratory), Jonathan A. Eisen(Joint Genome Institute), Dirk Evers, Dawn Field, Wu Feng(Wake Forest University), Daniel H. Huson(Bernstein Center for Computational Neuroscience Tübingen), Janet Jansson(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Rob Knight(University of Colorado Boulder), James Knight, Eugene Kolker(Seattle Children's Hospital), Kostas Konstantindis(Georgia Institute of Technology), Joel E. Kostka(Florida State University), Nikos C. Kyrpides(Joint Genome Institute), Rachel Mackelprang(Joint Genome Institute), Alice C. McHardy(Max Planck Institute for Informatics), Christopher Quince, Jeroen Raes, Alexander Sczyrba(Joint Genome Institute), Ashley Shade(Yale University), Rick Stevens(Virginia Tech)
Standards in Genomic Sciences
January 1, 2010
Cited by 280Open Access
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Abstract

Between July 18(th) and 24(th) 2010, 26 leading microbial ecology, computation, bioinformatics and statistics researchers came together in Snowbird, Utah (USA) to discuss the challenge of how to best characterize the microbial world using next-generation sequencing technologies. The meeting was entitled "Terabase Metagenomics" and was sponsored by the Institute for Computing in Science (ICiS) summer 2010 workshop program. The aim of the workshop was to explore the fundamental questions relating to microbial ecology that could be addressed using advances in sequencing potential. Technological advances in next-generation sequencing platforms such as the Illumina HiSeq 2000 can generate in excess of 250 billion base pairs of genetic information in 8 days. Thus, the generation of a trillion base pairs of genetic information is becoming a routine matter. The main outcome from this meeting was the birth of a concept and practical approach to exploring microbial life on earth, the Earth Microbiome Project (EMP). Here we briefly describe the highlights of this meeting and provide an overview of the EMP concept and how it can be applied to exploration of the microbiome of each ecosystem on this planet.


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