FEMS Affiliates Letter, Nov 2012

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www.fems-microbiology.org The official newsletter for FEMS Affiliates AFFILIATES LETTER NOVEMBER 2012 Also in this issue: Publications Page Gas bubbles in Yeast, Highlight article from FEMS Yeast Research Fungal infections and bacteria in Solorina, Highlight article from FEMS Microbiology Ecology New FEMS Journal open for submissions FEMS Microbiology Reviews is looking for a new Chief Editor Grants Corner Featured Grantees from the Spanish Society for Microbiology and Hungarian Society for Microbiology Call for Applications: National and Regional Congresses Grant Society Feature: Croatian Microbiological Society Leipzig, home to the next FEMS Congress Deadlines List of FEMS-sponsored meetings Microbiology Tidbits Pathogens and Disease Chief Editor Patrik Bavoil could not contain his enthusiasm about this new jour- nal while he sat in front of his com- puter for our Skype interview. “The excitement is still ongoing. We have taken risks to make improve- ments from FEMS Immunology and Medical Microbiology which this journal is replacing, but the poten- tial benefits outweigh the risks,” he explained. He continued to describe Pathogens and Disease as an attractive publish- ing platform from every corner of research in pathogenesis and every part of the planet because of its scope. “This journal will focus on trends in infectious disease research. There might be an overlap as to the topics we want to publish with other scien- tific journals. What makes it differ- ent from other journals dealing with infectious diseases though is that our articles will not only deal with patho- genesis as studied in the laboratory in idealised systems. Our articles will also deal with pathogenic microbes in their real environment, at the site of infection. No other journal does both,” he added. As a sign that the journal is receiving positive feedback from the scientific community, Dr Bavoil was delighted to share some big names who have already contributed to the journal. “We have received contributions from Europe, America and Asia. These include articles from Bob Han- cock, a leading microbiologist from Canada, Feng Yi from the National Academy of Science in China and our very own Jeff Cole (Chief Editor, FEMS Microbiology Letters ) from the United Kingdom,” he said. “Moreover, a very important aspect that scientists should consider when contributing to Pathogens and Dis- ease and other FEMS Journals is the fact that FEMS re-invests in science. The money earned from the journals never leave the realms of science. So contribute to us and keep research alive,” he concluded. Chief Editor Patrik Bavoil invites microbiologists to submit articles to Pathogens and Disease.

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FEMS Affiliates Letter, Nov 2012

Transcript of FEMS Affiliates Letter, Nov 2012

Page 1: FEMS Affiliates Letter, Nov 2012

www.fems-microbiology.org

The offi cial newsletter for FEMS Affi liates

AFF I L I AT E S L E T T ERNOVEMBER 2012

Also in this issue:

Publications Page• Gas bubbles in Yeast,

Highlight article from FEMS Yeast Research

• Fungal infections and bacteria in Solorina, Highlight article from FEMS Microbiology Ecology

• New FEMS Journal open for submissions

• FEMS Microbiology Reviews is looking for a new Chief Editor

Grants Corner• Featured Grantees from

the Spanish Society for Microbiology and Hungarian Society for Microbiology

• Call for Applications: National and Regional Congresses Grant

Society Feature: Croatian Microbiological Society

Leipzig, home to the next FEMS Congress

DeadlinesList of FEMS-sponsored meetingsMicrobiology Tidbits

Pathogens and Disease Chief Editor Patrik Bavoil could not contain his enthusiasm about this new jour-nal while he sat in front of his com-puter for our Skype interview.

“The excitement is still ongoing. We have taken risks to make improve-ments from FEMS Immunology and Medical Microbiology which this journal is replacing, but the poten-tial benefi ts outweigh the risks,” he explained.

He continued to describe Pathogens and Disease as an attractive publish-ing platform from every corner of research in pathogenesis and every part of the planet because of its scope.

“This journal will focus on trends in infectious disease research. There might be an overlap as to the topics we want to publish with other scien-tifi c journals. What makes it differ-ent from other journals dealing with infectious diseases though is that our articles will not only deal with patho-genesis as studied in the laboratory in idealised systems. Our articles will also deal with pathogenic microbes in their real environment, at the site of infection. No other journal does both,” he added.

As a sign that the journal is receiving positive feedback from the scientifi c community, Dr Bavoil was delighted to share some big names who have already contributed to the journal.

“We have received contributions from Europe, America and Asia. These include articles from Bob Han-cock, a leading microbiologist from Canada, Feng Yi from the National Academy of Science in China and our very own Jeff Cole (Chief Editor, FEMS Microbiology Letters) from the United Kingdom,” he said.

“Moreover, a very important aspect that scientists should consider when contributing to Pathogens and Dis-ease and other FEMS Journals is the fact that FEMS re-invests in science. The money earned from the journals never leave the realms of science. So contribute to us and keep research alive,” he concluded.

Chief Editor Patrik Bavoil invites microbiologists to submit articles to Pathogens and Disease.

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F E M S A F F I L I A T E S L E T T E R , N O V 2 0 1 2

P U B L I C AT I O N S PA G E

The FEMS Immunology and Medical Microbiology journal no longer accepts submissions. Its last issue will appear in December 2012.

Pathogens and Disease, the new journal of FEMS, will be published in 2013.

SUBMIT to Pathogens and Disease TODAY.

The FEMS Immunology and Medical Microbiology journal no longer accepts submissions. Its last issue will appear

Gas bubbles in yeast

This article shows that yeasts produce gas bubbles that fi ll a signifi cant part of the cell. The missing link between intracellular CO

2 production by glycolysis and eventual CO

2 release

from cells has therefore been resolved.

The yeast-bubble phenomenon may serve as a model that will provide a better understanding of the origins and effects of CO

2 in biology, food,

medicine, physics, as well as the environment.

Volume 12, Issue 7, pages 867–869, November 2012Swart, C. W., Dithebe, K., Pohl, C. H., Swart, H. C., Coetsee, E., van Wyk, P. W.J., Swarts, J. C., Lodolo,

E. J. and Kock, J. L.F. (2012), Gas bubble formation in the cytoplasm of a fermenting yeast. FEMS Yeast Research, 12: 867–869. doi: 10.1111/j.1567-1364.12004.x

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FEMS Microbiology Reviews is looking for a new Chief Editor. FEMS Microbiology Reviews is looking for a new

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P U B L I C AT I O N S PA G E

Fungal infections and bacteria in Solorina

The lichen symbiosis allows a self-sustained life under harsh environmental conditions, yet symbiotic integrity can be affected by fungal parasites.

Nothing is known about the impact of these biologically diverse and often specifi c infections on the recently detected bacterial community in lichens.

To address this question, the authors stud-ied the arctic–alpine ‘chocolate chip lichen’ Solorina crocea, which is frequently infected by Rhagadostoma lichenicola. The authors sampled healthy and infected lichens at two different sites in the Eastern Alps.

Volume 82, Issue 2, pages 472–481, November 2012Printzen, C., Fernández-Mendoza, F., Muggia, L., Berg, G. and Grube, M. (2012),

Alphaproteobacterial communities in geographically distant populations of the lichen Cetraria aculeata. FEMS Microbiology Ecology, 82: 316–325.

doi: 10.1111/j.1574-6941.2012.01358.x

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G R A N T S CO R N E RG R A N T S CO R N E R

Gyozo KajanMember, Hungarian Society for Microbiology

Meeting Attended: 10th International Adenovirus Meeting, SwedenMember, Hungarian Society for Microbiology

Lorena RodriguezMember, Spanish Society for Microbiology

Meeting Attended: 22nd Annual Meeting of the Society for Virology, Germany

Lorena RodriguezMember, Spanish Society for Microbiology

Meeting Attended: 22nd Annual Meeting of the Society for Virology, Germany

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THE FEMS-LWOFF AWARD IS NOW OPEN FOR NOMINATIONS. SUBMIT YOUR APPLI-

CATIONS BEFORE 10 JANUARY 2013.CLICK HERE FOR MORE INFORMATION.

F E M S A F F I L I A T E S L E T T E R , N O V 2 0 1 2

G R A N T S CO R N E R

Grant Description

The FEMS National and Regional Congresses Grant (NRCG) is meant to provide assistance to support the microbiological congresses of FEMS Member Societies on the national or regional level.

FEMS fi nds it very important to have microbiolo-gists meet under the wings of their local society.

The NRCG may be used by the organisers in any way as long as it ensures a successful organisation of the meetings.

Annual budget for these grants is € 30 000.The grant amount may vary to between € 1 000 and € 3 000 depending on the number of society members and expected participants at an event.

The regulations and application forms areavailable electronically. Please read themcarefully and check the list at the right beforecontacting the FEMS Central Offi ce.

Upon its receipt at the FEMS Central Offi ce, the application is checked for eligibility and completeness. Complete applications are thensubmitted to the Grants Board.

Grants Board formulates its recommendationsto the Executive Committee, which then makesthe fi nal decision that will be communicatedsoon thereafter.

Application Checklist

FEMS National and Regional Congresses Grants (NRCG) regulations apply to each application for the FEMS NRCG.

The requirements consist of, but are not limited to, the following:

✓ You are a FEMS Member Society organising a national or regional society meeting

✓ Your meeting will be held between 1 January and 30 June 2013 (for meetings between 1 July and 30 December, the deadline is 1 June)

✓ You have read the regulations governing the FEMS National and Regional Congresses Start-up grants

✓ You have completed the relevant application form available on the FEMS website

✓ You have provided the general and budgetary information, full programme and list of speakers along with your completed application form

✓ You have been endorsed by the FEMS Delegate of the host FEMS Member Society

✓ You have indicated how you intend to use/spend this grant

After completion of the application form, you may send it to [email protected] before the deadline of 15 December 2012.

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The next FEMS supported confer-ence organized by the CMS will be held in Primošten, Croatia in October 2013.ence organized by the CMS will be held in Primošten, Croatia in October 2013.

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S O C I E T Y F E AT U R E

Society Profi leCroatian Microbiological Society (CMS) was founded in 1958. It became independent from the Federation of Yugoslav Microbiological Societies in 1991 and a FEMS and IUMS full member in 1992. The Society exists to promote the advancement of research and teaching in all branches of microbiology and immunology as well as to encourage the exchange of scientifi c information. 

Since 1992, CMS has grown to approximately 300 members divided into seven sections -- bacteriology, virology, mycology, applied microbiology, immunology, food microbiology and environmental microbiology. Members come mainly from universities, industries, research institutes and public health institutions.

The Society is governed by an eleven-member Executive Committee consisting of volunteers directly elected by its members.

ActivitiesCMS currently organises at least one international con-ference a year. From year 2000, 20 international micro-biological events have been organised or co-organised by CMS (six congresses, eleven symposia, two summer schools and one workshop).

Apart from the Croatian Microbiological Congress with International Participation which is held every four years, the majority of listed international conferences such as the Central European Symposium on Antimicrobial Resistance (CESAR) and Power of Microbes in Industry and Environment, are organised periodically.

Numerous associations outside Croatia have been in-volved in its organisation, which has helped to establish different types of collaboration with microbiological, biotechnological or life science societies from Austria, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Czech Republic, Hungary, Italy, Slovakia, Slovenia and Turkey.

In 2011, CMS organised an international symposium Power of Fungi and Mycotoxins in Health and Disease

which sparked a great interest among mycologists and mycotoxicologists and will probably have a sequel in 2015.

CMS has recently published four books written by its members, as well as two textbooks and two poems. Veterinary Microbiology - Special Bacteriology and Mycol-ogy was published in 2005 and Veterinary Clinical Immu-nology in 2012. Poems Microbes and Fungus, Fung’sling – Webbing of Life written by professor Stjepan Pepeljnjak were published in 2004 and 2008, respectively. These were both translated into several foreign languages.

The CMS website was created for the convenience of its members and for the promotion of the Society, micro-biology and immunology. 

The 34th FEMS Council Meeting hosted by the CMS took place in Dubrovnik (Croatia) on 8 September 2007. Delegates and Executive Board members in front of the

Nautika Restaurant.

Text and images by Dr Vera Katalinic-JankovicCroatian Microbiological Society

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I N I T I AT I V E S

Leipzig is one of the two largest cities in the federal state of Saxony, Germany. It is located south of Berlin, west of Dresden, east of Gotti-ngen and far north of Munich.

Included in the list of top 100 most liveable cities in the world, Leipzig has a population of just a bit more than half a million people. Its university is one of Europe’s most established and its botanical garden, one of Germany’s oldest. Big companies such as BMW, DHL, Porsche and Siemens have set-up their businesses in Leipzig.

Bachfest Leipzig is one of the city’s most celebrated annual events in memory of Johann Sebastian Bach who worked there as musical di-rector and choirmaster for many years in the 18th century. In 2013, the 5th FEMS Congress will join this event as one of the year’s most important.

The 5th FEMS Congress will take place in Congress Center Leipzig (CCL). It is part of Leipziger Messe’s new exhibition and convention centre which was opened in April 1996 and belongs to the Leipzig Trade Fair Group.

CCL boasts of state-of-the-art facilities and mod-ern communication systems. Blending these with exciting architecture and stylish design, it sets the stage for an unforgettable event.

More than the facilities, the CCL is also very ac-cessible with the Leipzig Messe station which is just a 4-minute walk.

Along with this magnif-icent congress area are hotels where you can stay during the 5-day FEMS Congress (21-25 July 2013).

About 15 minutes drive south of the CCL is the cultural center of Leipzig wrapped around the market northeast of St. Thomas Church where the famed St. Thomas Boys’ Choir practice their music.

Other popular sights include St. Nicholas Church, Old Town Hall, Battle of the Nations Monument, New Town Hall, City-Hochhaus Leipzig, Leipzig Botanical Garden and Auerbachs Keller where the young Goethe ate and drank during his student days. The restaurant also provided the setting in one of the scenes in his play “Faust”.

The FEMS Congress will be held in a top-of-the-line venue located in a city of culture and music next summer. If you have not decided to go yet, think about this: the weather will be great too. So why wait? Register now.

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The voice of microbiology in Europe.We advance and unify microbiology knowledge.

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The FEMS Affi liates Letter is a production of FEMS Central Offi ce

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DEADLINES1 December 2012

15 June 2013FEMS Research Fellowships

15 December 2012 1 June 2013

FEMS National & RegionalCongresses Grants

1 March 2013 FEMS Meeting Grants

(for meetings to be held in 2014)

1 April 20131 September 2013

FEMS Meeting Attendance Grants

1 0 M a r c h 2 0 1 3International Conference on MicrobiologyBremen, Germany

2 4 A p r i l 2 0 1 3Biodeterioration of Wood and Wood Products, BWWP 2013 | Tartu, Estonia

2 6 A p r i l 2 0 1 34th Microbial Genome Maintenance Meeting Oslo, Norway

2 5 M a y 2 0 1 3Molecular Mechanisms of Host -Pathogen Interactions and Virulence in Human Fungal Pathogens - HFP2013 | Paris, France

FEMS-Sponsored Meetings, Spring 2013

MICROBIOLOGY TIDBITS

Bacteria Talk to Each Other and Our Cells in the Same Way, Via MoleculesBacteria can talk to each other via molecules they themselves produce. The phenomenon is called quorum sensing, and is important when an infec-tion propagates. Now, researchers at Linköping University in Sweden are showing how bacteria control processes in human cells the same way.

Source: Linköping University

Strange Diet for Methane-Consuming Microor-ganismsMethane is formed under the absence of oxygen by natural biological and physical processes, e.g. in the sea fl oor. It is a much more powerful green-house gas than carbon dioxide. Thanks to the activity of microorganisms, this gas is inactivated before it reaches the atmosphere and unfolds its harmful effects on Earth’s climate. Researchers from Bremen have now demonstrated that these microorganisms are quite picky about their diet.

Source: Max-Planck-Gesellschaft

Unexpected Bottleneck Identifi ed in Spread of Herpes Simplex VirusNew research suggests that just one or two indi-vidual herpes virus particles attack a skin cell in the fi rst stage of an outbreak, resulting in a bottle-neck in which the infection may be vulnerable to medical treatment.

Source: Princeton University

Tiger Mosquito, Vector of Chikungunya Virus and Dengue Fever, Is More Flighty Than First ThoughtFemale tiger mosquitoes, vectors of the chikungu-nya virus and of dengue fever, had been thought to mate only once during their short few weeks of life. They are apparently much less faithful than imagined, however.

Source: Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD)