Pablo Vinuesa
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pvinuesa.bsky.social
Pablo Vinuesa
@pvinuesa.bsky.social
Microbiologist interested in #genomics, #evolution, and #host-microbe interactions. Professor #CCG-UNAM, #LCG-UNAM. Developer of #GET_PHYLOMARKERS and #GET_HOMOLOGUES. https://github.com/vinuesa | www.ccg.unam.mx/~vinuesa/ | #protists #amoebae #bacteria
I'm glad to share the latest preprint from our lab www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1.... This study elucidates the manganese homeostasis system in S. maltophilia, demonstrating that MntH is essential for optimal replication within Acanthamoeba castellanii phagosomes. Kudos to Stefany Argueta👏🙌!
The Stenotrophomonas maltophilia MntR miniregulon includes novel extracytoplasmic components and affects replication in Acanthamoeba castellanii phagosomes
Manganese homeostasis is crucial for bacterial survival, particularly for opportunistic pathogens like Stenotrophomonas maltophilia that switch lifestyles between contrasting environments. This study ...
www.biorxiv.org
October 16, 2025 at 4:44 PM
A pleasure and privilege to teach at the International #Bioinformatics Workshops #TIB2025 on #Pangenomics and #Phylogenomics at @ccg_unam with these motivated and talented participants from 🇵🇪, 🇨🇷, and 12 Mexican 🇲🇽 States. Find the course's contents available on #GitHub 👉 tinyurl.com/4um82sbn #UNAM👏👏👏
August 10, 2025 at 6:10 PM
Reposted by Pablo Vinuesa
🚨 Join us July 21 at 1 p.m. ET for the next Journal of Virology Seminar Series as we explore how giant viruses block competition by downregulating phagocytosis in amoebas.

📅 Save your spot: asm.social/2tA
📄 Read the paper: asm.social/2tz
June 26, 2025 at 5:05 PM
Reposted by Pablo Vinuesa
Reposting this advert. Only a few days left to apply to this position. Come join us!!
We are recruiting!! Exciting opportunity to join our team as a Postdoctoral Researcher in the Dept. of Life Sciences at Imperial College as part of the amazing Preventing Plastic Pollution Engineering Biology Hub (P3EB). More information and how to apply here: www.imperial.ac.uk/jobs/search-...
Description
Please note that job descriptions are not exhaustive, and you may be asked to take on additional duties that align with the key responsibilities ment...
www.imperial.ac.uk
June 26, 2025 at 6:36 PM
Reposted by Pablo Vinuesa
📣 Don’t miss out — just a few days left to apply!

The abstract submission deadline for the @embo.org  #Workshop "Evolution and Origins of Multicellularity Across the Tree of Life" 🦠🧬 has been extended to July 1!

✍️ Apply now: https://meetings.embo.org/event/25-multicellularity
June 26, 2025 at 2:04 PM
Reposted by Pablo Vinuesa
#phage #phagesky

The human phageome: niche-specific distribution of bacteriophages and their clinical implications | Applied and Environmental Microbiology journals.asm.org/doi/10.1128/...
The human phageome: niche-specific distribution of bacteriophages and their clinical implications | Applied and Environmental Microbiology
In recent years, there has been a tremendous increase in interest in human microbiome studies. The great part of this study area is covered by bacteria; however, bacteriophages (phages, viruses able to infect bacteria) also play a crucial role in this structure. Phages, as a significant part of the microbiome, have become the subject of increasing interest. Nevertheless, studies of the phageome remain challenging due to the great diversity of these viruses and lack of universal markers (unlike bacteria which have 16S rRNA for identification) (1). Traditional methods of phage identification based on bacterial host cultures have limited applicability for phage detection, mostly due to the significant contribution of laboratory unculturable or difficult-to-culture bacteria that are hosts for many phages constituting the phageome. These barriers have been overcome to some extent by the use of high-throughput DNA sequencing like next-generation sequencing (NGS). Application of this technology was a milestone in phageome studies (2). NGS has become the major tool for exploring and investigating phage presence in biological samples. Sequencing-based molecular methods have revealed that many human niches are inhabited by unique and place-specific microbiomes including phages (3). Due to the development of metagenomic profiling, comprehensive analysis of phages inhabiting different compartments of human bodies has become possible. These analyses demonstrated that phages are most abundant in the oral cavity, gastrointestinal tract, urinary tract, skin, and lungs (4).
journals.asm.org
June 21, 2025 at 4:41 PM
Reposted by Pablo Vinuesa
Thrilled to announce this work on an under-appreciated molecular complex in marine algae! Congratulations to all co-authors: past, visiting, and long past (Richard😜)
*Longer thread on the big picture impact of 'Jotnarlogs' for cell biology forth-coming*
#protistsonsky

www.cell.com/iscience/ful...
Prevalence and environmental abundance of the TSET complex in cosmopolitan algal groups
Cell biology; Plant biology; Plant evolution; Aquatic biology; Plant development
www.cell.com
June 3, 2025 at 7:36 PM
Reposted by Pablo Vinuesa
Our structural core gene pipeline Unicode is now published at GBE
📄 doi.org/10.1093/gbe/...

Please also check out @dongwookkim.bsky.social’s
🧵 bsky.app/profile/dong...
June 3, 2025 at 5:19 PM
Reposted by Pablo Vinuesa
URGENT: FlyBase has lost practically all its funding overnight; even user fees are tied up in denied grant funding. 🤬🤯

Any lab using @flybase.bsky.social please donate using the link in post below.

This incredible community, on whose backs our #Drosophila labs depend, can't be left out to dry.
My lab studies bacterial infections. We spend a lot of time looking at (or for) species-specific genetic and genomic databases for hosts and microbes. FlyBase is the best of all—there is literally no comparison. Its existence is under threat. Please donate.
www.philanthropy.cam.ac.uk/give-to-camb...
Drosophila Genetic Database
The Drosophila Genetic Database, FlyBase, is on the brink of collapse due to the sudden termination of the FlyBase NIH grant, which includes salaries for 5 literature curators based at the University ...
www.philanthropy.cam.ac.uk
June 3, 2025 at 5:20 PM
A genomic catalog of Earth’s bacterial and archaeal symbionts, by @astrogenomics and colleagues, is now on bioRxiv👉 www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1... #Symbiosis #Evolution #Phylogenomics #Metagenomics
A genomic catalog of Earth’s bacterial and archaeal symbionts
Microbial symbiosis drives the functional and phylogenomic diversification of life on Earth, yet remains underexplored due to culturing challenges. This study employed machine learning (ML) to predict...
www.biorxiv.org
June 3, 2025 at 3:59 AM
Reposted by Pablo Vinuesa
#Science Bluesky, do your thing:
We're organising the International Symposium on Mechanobiology (ISMB) 2026 in #Glasgow & we're looking for research groups in Latin America & Africa who are doing great work in #Mechanobiology or adjacent areas.
Can you indicate some names to me?
May 30, 2025 at 8:24 PM
Reposted by Pablo Vinuesa
I don't think anyone outside of universities, pharma and biotech, independent research institutions have any idea of what is happening right now. If you haven't sounded the alarm among your friends, family and colleagues, now is the time to do it.
May 31, 2025 at 11:25 AM
Reposted by Pablo Vinuesa
RFK Jr celebrated the release of the MAHA report by downing raw milk shooters in the White House with influencer Paul Saladino. Hazards of raw milk include Listeria, Salmonella, Campylobacter, Yersinia, E. coli O157:H7, and now-- avian flu.
May 30, 2025 at 2:30 PM
Reposted by Pablo Vinuesa
Do #protistsonsky know that there is a protistology YouTube out there? And almost no subscribers. Meahwile Sina Adl is describing how he wrote a Protistology Book! Which is amazing! youtu.be/QfMxq1Pygcw?...
ISOP member spotlight Adl 2025
YouTube video by Protistologists
youtu.be
February 28, 2025 at 5:43 PM
Reposted by Pablo Vinuesa
There are 2 previous historical cases of countries destroying their science and universities, crippling them for decades: Lysenkoism in the USSR and Nazi Germany. The Trump administration will be the 3rd.
It's not just budgets but research, institutions, expertise, and training the next generation.
May 31, 2025 at 4:43 AM
Reposted by Pablo Vinuesa
Terminal Genome Viewer (tgv), written in Rust github.com/zeqianli/tgv
May 27, 2025 at 5:37 PM
Reposted by Pablo Vinuesa
Out in Science! Zakem et al. mechanistically modeled global marine prokaryotic functional diversity, grounded with field data. Shifts in community composition drive respiration and thus biological C storage. This facilitates C cycle projections in a warming ocean
www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
Functional biogeography of marine microbial heterotrophs
Heterotrophic bacteria and archaea (“heteroprokaryotes”) drive global carbon cycling, but how to quantitatively organize their functional complexity remains unclear. We generated a global-scale unders...
www.science.org
May 22, 2025 at 10:34 PM
Reposted by Pablo Vinuesa
Sexually transmissible shigellosis has gone from an obscure cause of sporadic outbreaks to a sustained endemic AMR priority in only two decades! 🧫💊 Check out our latest preprint to understand how this happened 1/11
www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1...
The natural history of the emergence of sexually transmissible shigellosis
Shigellosis is a gastrointestinal illness caused by bacteria belonging to one of four species of Shigella . Sexually transmissible shigellosis was first reported in 1974, but recently there has been a...
www.medrxiv.org
May 23, 2025 at 12:44 PM
Reposted by Pablo Vinuesa
To be clear: The virtual event is free for anyone in a low or middle income country.

It's also rather inexpensive even if you're not. ($10/$20/$30 for student/postdoc/professional members of the societies; +$10 if a non member)
#Evol2025 starts next week with virtual talks and workshops! Everyone eligible for our Global Membership Assistance program is eligible for free virtual meeting registration - request your discount code here: www.evolutionsociety.org/index.php?mo...
May 21, 2025 at 7:10 PM
Reposted by Pablo Vinuesa
New on my blog: Google's Gemini 2.5 Pro release really made a splash last month. They've just announced an update to 2.5 Flash, a faster and cheaper model; I put it through its paces on challenging #rstats coding problems.

www.simonpcouch.com/blog/2025-05...
May 21, 2025 at 4:27 PM
Reposted by Pablo Vinuesa
Very excited to present the Great Barrier Reef Microbial Genomes Database (GBR-MGD), a comprehensive DB of 1000s of high-quality prokaryote, virus, plasmid, and chromosome-level eukaryote MAGs using Nanopore long reads. Subthreads incoming. Please share widely. 🙂

www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
The planktonic microbiome of the Great Barrier Reef
Large genome databases have markedly improved our understanding of marine microorganisms. Although these resources have focused on prokaryotes, genomes from many dominant marine lineages, such as Pela...
www.biorxiv.org
May 21, 2025 at 7:34 AM
Reposted by Pablo Vinuesa
Autocycler: long-read consensus assembly for bacterial genomes www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1... 🧬🖥️🧪 github.com/rrwick/Autoc...
May 17, 2025 at 9:10 AM
Reposted by Pablo Vinuesa
On this day, 10 years ago, my lab published the @nature.com paper reporting the discovery of the Asgard archaea (Lokiarchaeota at the time), revealing the archaeal nature of eukaryotic cells, and reshaping the Tree of Life. What a ride it has been since then... www.nature.com/articles/nat...
Complex archaea that bridge the gap between prokaryotes and eukaryotes - Nature
This study identifies a clade of archaea that is the immediate sister group of eukaryotes in phylogenetic analyses, and that also has a repertoire of proteins otherwise characteristic of eukaryotes—pr...
www.nature.com
May 14, 2025 at 1:48 PM
Reposted by Pablo Vinuesa
Every week @lizneeley.bsky.social’s newsletter manages to pull coherence & moral clarity out of the wreckage of the news around science and higher ed. This week it feels particularly impressive (and more critical than ever!) to have pulled off.

buttondown.com/liminalcreat...
Week 16
Figuring out what to focus on now & next in science and higher ed
buttondown.com
May 10, 2025 at 1:19 PM