Anaerobic culture of the normal human intestinal microbiota

Webinar

Wednesday, 16th June, 2021  
14.00 to 16.00 GMT+1 (UTC+1)

Replay

For over forty years DWS has supplied Anaerobic Workstations to clinical and research customers. More recently, users conducting work on the Human Microbiome have seen the need for not only precise control of Anaerobic conditions but also the ability to house equipment in their workstations.

In this Webinar, guest speakers will provide an insight into the work they are conducting at the Rowett Institute in Aberdeen and Microbiotica in Cambridge. There will also be a talk from our head of science, Dr Andrew Pridmore, about variable oxygen tolerances across different bacterial strains associated with the intestinal microbiota. We will also have a session focused on equipment set-ups and how the group at the Rowett Institute has used various pieces of technology in their workstation to massively increase their experimental throughput.

Program:

14:00 Steve Robertson, Sales Director,
Don Whitley Scientific
Introductions
 
14:10 Petra Louis, PhD, Rowett Institute, University of Aberdeen Elucidating gut microbial physiology using culture-based approaches.
Petra’s talk will use recent work on the breakdown of dietary fibre by gut microbes and on vitamin requirements of gut bacteria to highlight the power of bacterial growth experiments in helping to understand the activities of the microbial community in the human large intestine.
 
14:30 Andrew Pridmore, PhD, Head of Science, Don Whitley Scientific Variability in oxygen tolerance among bacterial strains associated with the normal intestinal microbiota.
Andrew will be speaking about work performed in the DWS labs showing the variable oxygen tolerance of anaerobic strains associated with intestinal microbiota, including pathogens, “normal microbiota”, and more recently characterized potentially therapeutic strains
 
14:45   Break
 
15:00 Anne Neville, PhD, Microbiotica Translating precision in microbiome science into transformative medicines and biomarkers.
Anne’s talk will focus on Microbiotica’s work identifying gut bacteria linked to patient phenotype with unprecedented precision to develop validated live bacterial therapeutics and biomarkers based on clinical datasets.
 
15:20 Freda Farquharson, University of Aberdeen and Steve Rogerson, Don Whitley Scientific Evolution of a system for high throughput bacterial growth monitoring.
Freda and Steve will detail the development of the Rowett’s laboratory process, increasing the level of throughput from individual tube manipulation and reading to being able to monitor the anaerobic growth of nearly 1000 growth incubations simultaneously and uninterrupted.
 
15:35 Daniel Secker, Product Specialist, Don Whitley Scientific Question & Answer Session
 
15:50 Steve Robertson Closing Remarks


For more information click here
 

Presented by:


Petra Louis
Petra Louis is a molecular microbiologist who has worked in the field of gut microbiology, human nutrition and health since 2002. She is interested in health-promoting effects exerted by the human gut microbiota, with a focus on microbial dietary non-digestible carbohydrate degradation, fermentation and metabolite production.
 

Andrew Pridmore
Andrew has been with DWS since 1991, when he joined as a new graduate. He subsequently completed a PhD on the phenotypic, metabolic and molecular responses of anaerobic bacteria to oxygen exposure, concentrating on bacteria associated with periodontal disease. He currently manages our in-house microbiology laboratory, where we continue to work with fastidious anaerobes on a daily basis. A major area of work is antibiotic susceptibility testing of anaerobes on behalf of our contract research clients
 

B. Anne Neville PhD
Anne Neville leads the Microbiology Team at Microbiotica, having joined the company in May 2017, soon after its formation. In this role, she leads the team which specialises in microbial cultivation and the application of genomics techniques to the human gut microbiota.
 

Freda Farquharson
Freda Farquharson is a research assistant at the Rowett Institute working in the field of molecular microbiology for over 30 years. She has developed and utilises a range of methods such as anaerobic microbiology, real-time PCR and molecular community analysis to investigate the functional roles of different gut microbes.
 

Steve Rogerson
Steve is a Technical Specialist for Don Whitley Scientific Ltd. During the 15 years he has worked in the sales department he has used the knowledge he gained working in clinical microbiology in the PHLS and as a manager in a contract microbiology laboratory to develop relationships with a wide range of customers.