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Dear Reader,
With our twelfth NFDI4Microbiota newsletter, we would like to share news about
conferences, training courses, services and publications.
If you are interested in other topics we should cover, please let us know. We are happy to
hear from you!<https://nfdi4microbiota.de/contact-form.html> And now: Enjoy reading
the newsletter!
Community engagement – calls, events and conferences
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The 2026 Flex Funds call is open
The NFDI4Microbiota consortium aims to realize the dynamic adaptation of services and
support of further data types, development of new training programs, and improvement of
the ability to react to unforeseen technical challenges. Therefore, within the
NFDI4Microbiota project work, flexible funding (so called ‘Flex Funds’) for small projects
within the research community are available for the years 2023 to 2026. To implement a
dynamic system that stays on track with new trends in the field, the Flex Funds will
support small projects and active Use Cases from the community as they arise over time.
The Flex Funds call for 2026 project proposals is now open. Detailed information on
eligibility criteria, funding requirements, and the application process is available on
our web portal.<https://nfdi4microbiota.de/newsroom/flexfunds.html>
Register for the NFDI4Microbiota Annual Conference 2025
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We’re excited to announce that the NFDI4Microbiota Annual Conference “From Lab to
Publication – Bridging the Gap with Best Practices” will take place in Cologne from 30
September to 2 October 2025. This free, open-to-all event will feature hands-on workshop
sessions covering everything from microbiome analysis without coding skills to best
practices in research data management, alongside scientific talks that explore the latest
tools and FAIR data practices. Whether you’re working at the bench as a wet-lab scientist,
developing pipelines as a bioinformatician, or ensuring FAIR compliance as a data steward,
you’ll find practical training, inspiring presentations, and ample networking
opportunities. Program details and registration information can be found
here<https://events.hifis.net/event/2654>.
International Virus Bioinformatics Meeting (ViBioM), 13–15 May 2025, Lisbon, Portugal
NFDI4Microbiota was represented at the international ViBioM, Virus Bioinformatics Meeting,
in Lisbon. Many members of this vibrant microbial sub-community were very interested in
the general infrastructure services, RDM training, and especially databases like VirJenDB.
We also strengthened our existing connections to our international partner consortia at
GSC, NMDC, and ICTV. Our consortium presented posters that sparked engaging discussions
around data management best practices and microbial data integration. Additionally, an
outlook talk highlighted our strategic vision for advancing FAIR principles and enhancing
data interoperability within microbiome research. We also had a outlook talk by Noriko
Cassman from the Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena at the RdRp summit, the satellite
event of ViBiom about sharing best practices on RdRp-based virus discovery.
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NFDI4Microbiota booth at ViBioM 2025: Clemens Thölken, Paul Klemm and Marlina Indrayani
from Philipps-Universität Marburg.
Recap on the 7th NFDI4Microbiota Community Workshop
The 7th edition of the NFDI4Microbiota Community Workshop took place in May, offering an
important opportunity for exchange as the consortium prepares its renewal proposal for the
next funding phase. The workshop focused on gathering direct feedback from the community
to help align future work with actual needs. Key discussion points revealed a strong
demand for improved communication, targeted training, and better support for workflow
development. Participants emphasized the need for real-time communication platforms to
strengthen collaboration and knowledge sharing. There was a clear call for more
accessible, self-paced training materials—particularly on FAIR data management practices.
Wet-lab researchers highlighted the need for hands-on support in implementing FAIR
protocols, suggesting initiatives like “Do-a-thons” and the use of standardized templates
via platforms such as protocols.io<https://protocols.io/>. Infrastructure
developments like ARUNA are progressing, yet participants noted that improved
interoperability and alignment on metadata standards across systems are essential.
Additionally, community-driven development of analysis pipelines (e.g., via nf-core) and
the use of flexible platforms like Galaxy were seen as key opportunities to better support
research workflows. Looking ahead, NFDI4Microbiota will further explore real-time
communication tools, expand training offerings, and continue to engage with the community
to identify priorities. Community members are warmly invited to share ideas, feedback, and
needs to help shape the next phase of NFDI4Microbiota’s journey.
Upcoming Events
We will attend different events this year - find some of them below - and are looking
forward to meet you there:
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* Conference on Research Data Infrastructure (CoRDI) 2025, 26-28 August in Aachen
* GMDS 2025, 7-11 September in Jena<https://gmds2025.de/>
* DGHM 2025, 22 -24 September in Jena<https://dghm-kongress.de/en/>
* 4th Annual NFDI4Microbiota Conference, 30 Sep - 2 Oct in
Cologne<https://events.hifis.net/event/2654>
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Join the ambassador meetings
Do you know our Ambassador Program? The mission of the NFDI4Microbiota consortium is to
serve as the central hub in Germany, providing essential support to the microbiology
community by facilitating access to data, analysis services, data/meta-data standards, and
training. To fulfill this mission, we are running the NFDI4Microbiota Ambassador Program,
dedicated to connecting and training (early career) researchers within the microbiology
community. As part of our commitment, we aim to assist young scientists in expanding their
research networks and disseminating knowledge on data handling, metadata standards,
standardized bioinformatics workflows and further related topics. Join us in our
Ambassador Program for networking and spreading FAIR principles and openness in microbiome
research! For our Ambassadors, we host bimonthly Ambassador meetings with interesting
topics. The next meeting will be announced soon! Get your updates and more information on
the program here<https://nfdi4microbiota.de/community/ambassador.html>.
Take a break and join our Coffee Talks
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The Coffee Talk meetings provide an opportunity to learn more about NFDI4Microbiota’s
services and mission from within and around the NFD4Microbiota community. These bimonthly
meetings take place online and are open to all who are interested in staying informed
about current developments and topics related to data in microbiology research. Get your
updates and more information on the schedule and registration information
here<https://nfdi4microbiota.de/newsroom/news/2025-02-04-nfdi4microbiota-coffee-talks-2025.html>.
Services
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Ask your questions to our Helpdesk!
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The NFDI4Microbiota Helpdesk is the point of contact for the microbiology research
community for all questions related to microbial (omics) data and associated metadata. We
welcome questions from anyone - students, researchers, data stewards and more - working
with this type of data, regardless of organism (bacteria, archaea, eukaryotic
microorganisms, viruses), environment (e.g. soil, plants, host-associated and water) or
data type (e.g. nucleic acid sequences, functional genomics, image data). You can contact
us either by filling in our contact
form<https://nfdi4microbiota.de/contact-form.html> or by email:
helpdesk@nfdi4microbiota.de<mailto:helpdesk@nfdi4microbiota.de>.
Training announcements
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We updated the Training section on our website! Now you get a more comfortable view on the
interesting training events, courses and workshops to come. Check it
out<https://nfdi4microbiota.de/services/trainings.html>!
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The next courses are
* Microbiota profiling by 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing: Data analysis
Workshop<https://nfdi4microbiota.de/services/training_view.html?docid=682f050c08a308d765bb>
* Hands-on Biometadata: How to describe biological data? Primer to a FAIR approach for
now and
future<https://nfdi4microbiota.de/services/training_view.html?docid=67dd67f7e68a14a1219f>
Recent Publications
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Advances in Anaerobic Cultivation for Functional Microbiome Research
This perspective highlights cutting-edge biotechnological advances that usher in a new era
of anaerobic cultivation and propel functional microbiome research forward. It covers
high-throughput isolation and characterization methods, genetic engineering approaches,
parallel continuous culture systems, and multiplex molecular profiling techniques. The
focus is on gut microbial communities dominated by strict anaerobes that play crucial
roles in human health. Technical and infrastructural challenges involved in deploying
these advanced cultivation workflows are also discussed. DOI: 10.1038/s41587-025-02660-6
The Human Intestinal Bacteria Collection (HiBC)
Introducing HiBC: a publicly accessible library of 340 bacterial strains isolated from the
human gut. This collection spans 198 species across seven phyla and includes 29 newly
described and named taxa. The study also sheds light on plasmid prevalence and diversity
within the gut microbiome as nearly half (46 %) of the strains harbor plasmids, including
common pBAC elements and large “megaplasmids” such as pMMCAT. Additionally, butyrate
production was profiled across various Faecalibacterium strains, revealing substantial
strain-specific variation. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-59229-9
The CAMI Benchmarking Portal for Metagenomic Software
Choosing the right tools and their optimal settings for shotgun metagenome analysis is
critical but often daunting. Since 2015, the community-driven Critical Assessment of
Metagenome Interpretation (CAMI) initiative has set standards, provided gold-standard
datasets, and organized benchmarking challenges. Until now, however, evaluations were
performed offline, demanding significant time, expertise, and leaving gaps between
challenge rounds.
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The new CAMI Benchmarking
Portal<https://cami-challenge.org/> has been launched, a
web-based, FAIR-compliant repository and evaluation server. Users can upload assembly,
binning, or taxonomic profiling results and instantly compare them against 28,675 existing
submissions including a live demo on the marine dataset from the CAMI II challenge using
rich metrics and interactive visualizations. This streamlined platform democratizes
benchmarking, accelerates best-practice adoption, and keeps metagenomic tool development
moving forward. DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkaf369
Social Links and Contact
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This newsletter is brought to you by NFDI4Microbiota
Mail: contact@nfdi4microbiota.de<mailto:contact@nfdi4microbiota.de>
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www.nfdi4microbiota.de<https://www.nfdi4microbiota.de/>
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Helmholtz-Zentrum für Infektionsforschung GmbH | Inhoffenstraße 7 | 38124 Braunschweig |
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