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the bioinformatics lab
The Bioinformatics Lab
67 episodes
1 day ago
In this episode of the Bioinformatics Lab Podcast, Mxolisi Nene shares his journey from a curious kid “scanning soil” with a stick and a broken Pentium II in rural KwaZulu-Natal to a bioinformatician and PhD candidate at the Agricultural Research Council in Pretoria. He walks through his path from animal science into bioinformatics, profiling the gut microbiomes of indigenous village chickens using 16S and metagenomic sequencing, and how wrestling with messy real-world data led him into multi-omics integration and machine learning. Mxolisi explains concepts like feature engineering, neural networks, and ecological “tipping points” in soil ecosystems—showing how combining metagenomic, metabolomic, proteomic, and genomic layers can help predict when an environment is on the brink of collapse, with implications for agriculture, food security, and even disease research. We also dig into the philosophical side of his work: why the explosion of public omics data makes it almost a moral obligation to use these tools for better outbreak prevention and environmental stewardship, how conferences like PHA4GE in Cape Town and the AI working group are quietly seeding a new generation of multi-omics scientists, and what it feels like to realize that the five-year-old kid obsessed with dirt grew up to do exactly what he was pretending to do—only now with HPC clusters, neural nets, and GitHub.
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Science
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In this episode of the Bioinformatics Lab Podcast, Mxolisi Nene shares his journey from a curious kid “scanning soil” with a stick and a broken Pentium II in rural KwaZulu-Natal to a bioinformatician and PhD candidate at the Agricultural Research Council in Pretoria. He walks through his path from animal science into bioinformatics, profiling the gut microbiomes of indigenous village chickens using 16S and metagenomic sequencing, and how wrestling with messy real-world data led him into multi-omics integration and machine learning. Mxolisi explains concepts like feature engineering, neural networks, and ecological “tipping points” in soil ecosystems—showing how combining metagenomic, metabolomic, proteomic, and genomic layers can help predict when an environment is on the brink of collapse, with implications for agriculture, food security, and even disease research. We also dig into the philosophical side of his work: why the explosion of public omics data makes it almost a moral obligation to use these tools for better outbreak prevention and environmental stewardship, how conferences like PHA4GE in Cape Town and the AI working group are quietly seeding a new generation of multi-omics scientists, and what it feels like to realize that the five-year-old kid obsessed with dirt grew up to do exactly what he was pretending to do—only now with HPC clusters, neural nets, and GitHub.
Show more...
Science
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Ep 44: Career Focus:Julian Paganini & Olinto Linares-Perdomo
the bioinformatics lab
25 minutes 13 seconds
1 year ago
Ep 44: Career Focus:Julian Paganini & Olinto Linares-Perdomo
Note: This episode was recorded in Spanish. A video of this recording with AI-generated, English subtitles is available on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FNjUbtcm9Z4 Summary In this episode of the Bioinformatics Lab Podcast, Kevin Libuit hosts Julian and Olinto in a special Spanish-language episode. They discuss their journeys in bioinformatics, the importance of collaboration in science, and their experiences at a hackathon. The conversation highlights the barriers of language in accessing scientific resources and the significance of community in learning and sharing knowledge. Takeaways The podcast aims to provide resources in Spanish for the scientific community. Julian's journey began in Argentina, focusing on bioinformatics and data fusion. Olento's background includes mathematical modeling and pharmacokinetics. Collaboration is key in scientific research and development. Hackathons provide excellent opportunities for networking and learning. Cultural exchange enriches the scientific community. Free online resources like Coursera are valuable for learning. The importance of community in overcoming learning barriers. Experiences at hackathons can lead to significant collaborations. Creating resources in Spanish is essential for inclusivity in science.
the bioinformatics lab
In this episode of the Bioinformatics Lab Podcast, Mxolisi Nene shares his journey from a curious kid “scanning soil” with a stick and a broken Pentium II in rural KwaZulu-Natal to a bioinformatician and PhD candidate at the Agricultural Research Council in Pretoria. He walks through his path from animal science into bioinformatics, profiling the gut microbiomes of indigenous village chickens using 16S and metagenomic sequencing, and how wrestling with messy real-world data led him into multi-omics integration and machine learning. Mxolisi explains concepts like feature engineering, neural networks, and ecological “tipping points” in soil ecosystems—showing how combining metagenomic, metabolomic, proteomic, and genomic layers can help predict when an environment is on the brink of collapse, with implications for agriculture, food security, and even disease research. We also dig into the philosophical side of his work: why the explosion of public omics data makes it almost a moral obligation to use these tools for better outbreak prevention and environmental stewardship, how conferences like PHA4GE in Cape Town and the AI working group are quietly seeding a new generation of multi-omics scientists, and what it feels like to realize that the five-year-old kid obsessed with dirt grew up to do exactly what he was pretending to do—only now with HPC clusters, neural nets, and GitHub.