“Using Data Analytics to Discover the 100 Trillion Bacteria Living Within Each of Us” Invited Talk New Applications of Computer Analysis to Biomedical.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
A Systems Approach to Personalized Medicine Talk and Discussion NASA Ames Mountain View, CA March 28, 2013 Dr. Larry Smarr Director, California Institute.
Advertisements

The Quantified Self: Personal Monitoring and the Control of Health Interview by Andre de Fusco Future in Review 2011 Laguna Beach, CA May 26, 2011 Dr.
Reading Out the State of the Body and How it Changes Under Therapy Guest Lecture Pharmacy Informatics 2013 University of California San Diego June 7, 2013.
Large Memory High Performance Computing Enables Comparison Across Human Gut Microbiome of Patients with Autoimmune Diseases and Healthy Subjects XSEDE.
Deep Self - Quantifying the State of Your Body Invited Talk NextMed / MMVR20 San Diego February 21, 2013 Dr. Larry Smarr Director, California Institute.
“Tracking Immune Biomarkers and the Human Gut Microbiome: Inflammation, Crohn's Disease, and Colon Cancer” USC Monthly Seminar Series Physical Sciences.
Exploring Our Inner Universe Using Supercomputers and Gene Sequencers Physics Department Colloquium UC San Diego October 24, 2013 Dr. Larry Smarr Director,
An MRI Showed My Sigmoid Colon Wall Was Thickened and Inflamed.
Discussion Janssen La Jolla Research and Development La Jolla, CA
“Integrating Healthcare Informatics, Imaging, and Systems Biology-A Personal Example” Plenary Lecture 2nd IEEE Conference on Healthcare Informatics, Imaging,
Leveraging Biomedical Big Data: Quantified Self & Beyond Invited Talk FutureMed Singularity University NASA Ames Campus February 5, 2013 Dr. Larry Smarr.
Personal Data Tracking and the Digital Transformation of Healthcare Invited Talk University of Illinois Silicon Valley Round Table Palo Alto, CA December.
“The Systems Biology Dynamics of the Human Immune System and Gut Microbiome” Invited Talk UCI Systems Biology Seminar Series Irvine, CA October 14, 2013.
“Finding the Patterns in the Big Data From Human Microbiome Ecology” Invited Talk Exponential Medicine November 10, 2014 Dr. Larry Smarr Director, California.
“Personalized Medicine, Colorectal Cancer and Gut Bacteria”
The Microbiome and Metagenomics
Correlation Between Bacteria and Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
Introduction to metagenomics Agnieszka S. Juncker Center for Biological Sequence Analysis Technical University of Denmark.
“Quantifying Your Superorganism Body Using Big Data Supercomputing” Ken Kennedy Institute Distinguished Lecture Rice University Houston, TX November 12,
Building a Community Cyberinfrastructure to Support Marine Microbial Ecology Metagenomics Center for Earth Observations and Applications Advisory Committee.
“The Quantified Self Movement: The Technologies That Are Revolutionizing Health and Fitness” Panel Discussion MIT Enterprise Forum San Diego UC San Diego.
“Discovering the Other 90% of our Human Superorganism” Remote Video Lecture to The eResearch Australasia Conference 2014 Melbourne, Australia October 28,
“Inflammation, Gut Microbiome, Bacteriophages, and the Initiation of Colorectal Cancer” Seminar Lecture City of Hope Pasadena, CA October 20, 2014 Dr.
My N=1 Experience Pioneer Session: "N=1: Pioneers of Self-Tracking“ Panel at the Genomes, Environment, and Traits Conference Harvard Medical School Cambridge,
“Mapping the Human Gut Microbiome in Health and Disease Using Sequencing, Supercomputing, and Data Analysis” Invited Talk Delivered by Mehrdad Yazdani,
“The Quantified Self: From Idiosyncratic Hobby to an Emerging Growth Industry” Invited Lecture Science & Technology Discovery Series Technology Alliance.
“Measuring the Human Brain-Gut Microbiome-Immune System Dynamics: a Big Data Challenge” Plenary Talk 45 th Annual Meeting of the Behavior Genetics Association.
“The Digital Transformation of Healthcare”
Inflammatory Bowel Disease Francisco A. Sylvester, MD Associate Professor of Pediatrics.
“Big Data and Superorganism Genomics – Microbial Metagenomics Meets Human Genomics” NGS and the Future of Medicine Illumina Headquarters La Jolla, CA February.
H = -Σp i log 2 p i. SCOPI Each one of the many microbial communities has its own structure and ecosystem, depending on the body environment it exists.
“Quantifying The Dynamics of Your Superorganism Body Using Big Data Supercomputing” Distinguished Lecturer Series Computer Science and Engineering.
“The Deeply Quantified Self: A Case Study” Future Technology Keynote Minimally Invasive Surgery Week 2015 Society of Laparoendoscopic Surgeons New York.
“Quantified Health and Disease” Lecture for the Osher Lifetime Learning Institute UCSD Extension Calit2’s Qualcomm Institute, UCSD La Jolla, CA February.
“Using Data Analytics to Discover the 100 Trillion Bacteria Living Within Each of Us” Invited Talk Ayasdi Menlo Park, CA December 5, 2014 Dr. Larry Smarr.
“Toward Novel Human Microbiome Surveillance Diagnostics to Support Public Health” Invited Talk Institute for Public Health University of California San.
“Tracking Large Variations in My Immune Biomarkers and My Gut Microbiome: Inflammation, Crohn's Disease, and Colon Cancer” IBD Conference Speaker Series.
“Quantified Self- On Being a Personal Genomic Observatory” Keynote in the “Humans as Genomic Observatories” Meeting Session in the Genomics Standards Consortium.
“The Human Microbiome and the Revolution in Digital Health” The Florida Institute for Human and Machine Cognition Pensacola Evening Lecture Series Pensacola,
“Using Supercomputing & Advanced Analytic Software to Discover Radical Changes in the Human Microbiome in Health and Disease” Invited Remote Presentation.
“Creating a High Performance Cyberinfrastructure to Support Analysis of Illumina Metagenomic Data” DNA Day Department of Computer Science and Engineering.
“Comparative Human Microbiome Analysis” Remote Video Talk to CICESE Big Data, Big Network Workshop Ensenada, Mexico October 10, 2013 Dr. Larry Smarr Director,
The Human Microbiome: PSC, IBD, and the Gut-Liver Axis
“Individual, Consumer-Driven Care of the Future -- Taking Wellness One Step Further” Closing Keynote Address The World Congress 2 nd Annual Leadership.
713 Lecture 15 Host metagenomics. Progression of techniques Culture based –Use phenotypes and genotypes to ID Non-culture based, focused on 16S rDNA –Clone.
“Inspired by Carl: Exploring the Microbial Dynamics Within” Invited Talk Looking in the Right Direction: Carl Woese and the New Biology University of Illinois,
“Living in a Microbial World” Global Health Program Council on Foreign Relations New York, NY April 10, 2014 Dr. Larry Smarr Director, California Institute.
“How Studying Astrophysics and Coral Reefs Enabled Me to Become an Empowered, Engaged Patient” Invited Talk FutureMed at the Hotel Del Coronado, CA November.
“Frontiers of Self-Tracking” Plenary Talk Quantified Self Conference 2012 Stanford University September 15, 2012 Dr. Larry Smarr Director, California Institute.
“Deciphering the Dynamic Coupling of the Human Immune System and the Gut Microbiome” Overview Data-Enabled Life Sciences Research (DELSA) DELSA Workshop.
“Observing the Dynamics of the Human Immune System Coupled to the Microbiome in Health and Disease” CASIS Workshop on Biomedical Research Aboard the ISS.
“Quantifying Your Superorganism Body Using Big Data Supercomputing” ACM International Workshop on Big Data in Life Sciences BigLS 2014 Newport Beach, CA.
“Assay Lab Within Your Body: Biometrics and Biomes” Invited Lecture TSensors Summit La Jolla, CA November 12, 2014 Dr. Larry Smarr Director, California.
“Discovering the Other 90% of our Human Superorganism” Remote Video Lecture to The eResearch Australasia Conference 2014 Melbourne, Australia October 28,
“Quantifying the Time Progression of the Interaction of the Human Immune System with the Gut Microbiome” Research Council Presentation UC San Diego Health.
“CAMERA Goes Live!" Presentation with Craig Venter National Press Club Washington, DC March 13, 2007 Dr. Larry Smarr Director, California Institute for.
“The UCSD Big Data Freeway System” Invited Short Talk Workshop on “Enriching Human Life and Society” UC San Diego February 6, 2014 Dr. Larry Smarr Director,
Lecture Science & Entertainment Exchange National Academy of Sciences Los Angeles June 13, 2013 Dr. Larry Smarr Director, California Institute for Telecommunications.
“Know Thyself: Quantifying Your Human Body and Its One Hundred Trillion Microbes” Understanding Cultures and Addressing Disparities in Society: Degrees.
“Using Genetic Sequencing to Unravel the Dynamics of Your Superorganism Body” Weekly Bioinformatics Seminar Series UC San Diego La Jolla, CA October 17,
“Adding Consumer-Generated and Microbiome Data to the Electronic Medical Record” Using Big Data to Advance Healthcare Panel National Health Policy Conference.
“Quantifying Your Dynamic Human Body (Including Its Microbiome), Will Move Us From a Sickcare System to a Healthcare System” Invited Presentation Microbiology.
Keynote Presentation Cavendish Global Health Impact Forum
“Connecting Body Time Series to Macro Body Changes”
“Analyzing the Human Gut Microbiome Dynamics in Health and Disease Using Supercomputers and Supernetworks” Invited Presentation ESnet CrossConnects Bioinformatics.
“Linking Phenotype Changes to Internal/External Longitudinal Time Series in a Single Human” Invited Presentation at EMBC ‘16 38th International Conference.
“Machine Learning in Healthcare Diagnostics”
Briefing for Dell Analytics Team Calit2’s Qualcomm Institute
Invited Presentation Machine Learning in Healthcare
H = -Σpi log2 pi.
Presentation transcript:

“Using Data Analytics to Discover the 100 Trillion Bacteria Living Within Each of Us” Invited Talk New Applications of Computer Analysis to Biomedical Data Sets QB3 Seminar San Francisco, CA May 28, 2015 Dr. Larry Smarr Director, California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology Harry E. Gruber Professor, Dept. of Computer Science and Engineering Jacobs School of Engineering, UCSD 1

I Have Turned My Body into a Genomic and Biomarker Observatory One Blood Draw For Me Calit2 64 Megapixel VROOM Over 100 Blood and Stool Biomarker Time Series

Only One of My Blood Measurements Was Far Out of Range--Indicating Chronic Inflammation Normal Range <1 mg/L 27x Upper Limit Complex Reactive Protein (CRP) is a Blood Biomarker for Detecting Presence of Inflammation Episodic Peaks in Inflammation Followed by Spontaneous Drops

Adding Stool Tests Revealed Oscillatory Behavior in an Immune Variable Which is Antibacterial Normal Range <7.3 µg/mL 124x Upper Limit Lactoferrin is a Protein Shed from Neutrophils - An Antibacterial that Sequesters Iron Typical Lactoferrin Value for Active Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD)

Dynamical Innate and Adaptive Immune Oscillations From Stool Samples Normal <600 Innate Immune System Normal 50 to 200 Adaptive Immune System

Methods Needed for Biomarker Time Series Correlations - Adding 40 Microbial Ecology Time Series Immune & Inflammation Variables Weekly Symptoms Pharma Therapies Stool Samples

How Will Detailed Knowledge of Microbiome Ecology Radically Change Medicine and Wellness? 99% of Your DNA Genes Are in Microbe Cells Not Human Cells Your Body Has 10 Times As Many Microbe Cells As Human Cells Challenge: Map Out Microbial Ecology and Function in Health and Disease States

For Deep Analysis of Changes in the Gut Microbiome Ecology Our Team Compared a Healthy Population to Patients with Disease 5 Ileal Crohn’s Patients, 3 Points in Time 2 Ulcerative Colitis Patients, 6 Points in Time “Healthy” Individuals Source: Jerry Sheehan, Calit2 Weizhong Li, Sitao Wu, CRBS, UCSD Total of 2.7 Trillion DNA Bases Inflammatory Bowel Disease Patients 250 Subjects 1 Point in Time 7 Points in Time Larry Smarr (Colonic Crohn’s) Example: Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD)

To Map Out the Dynamics of Autoimmune Microbiome Ecology Couples Next Generation Genome Sequencers to Big Data Supercomputers Source: Weizhong Li, UCSD Our team used 25 CPU-years to compute comparative gut microbiomes starting from 2.7 trillion DNA bases of my samples and healthy and IBD controls Illumina HiSeq 2000 at JCVI SDSC Gordon Data Supercomputer

We Found Major State Shifts in Microbial Ecology Phyla Between Healthy and Two Forms of IBD Most Common Microbial Phyla Average Healthy Average Ulcerative Colitis Average Colonic Crohn’s Disease Average Ileal Crohn’s Disease Collapse of Bacteroidetes Explosion of Actinobacteria Explosion of Proteobacteria Hybrid of UC and CD High Level of Archaea Based on ~10,000 Bacteria, Archaea, Viruses Whose Genomes are Known

Dell Analytics Separates The 4 Patient Types in Our Data Using Our Microbiome Species Data Source: Thomas Hill, Ph.D. Executive Director Analytics Dell | Information Management Group, Dell Software Healthy Ulcerative Colitis Colonic Crohn’s Ileal Crohn’s

I Built on Dell Analytics to Show Dynamic Evolution of My Microbiome Toward and Away from Healthy State – Colonic Crohn’s Source: Thomas Hill, Ph.D. Executive Director Analytics Dell | Information Management Group, Dell Software

I Built on Dell Analytics to Show Dynamic Evolution of My Microbiome Toward and Away from Healthy State – Colonic Crohn’s Healthy Ileal Crohn’s Seven Time Samples Over 1.5 Years Colonic Crohn’s Now Extending 7 to 40 Time Samples

Large Changes in Genus Relative Abundances Observed Over the Seven Smarr Samples (1.5 Years)-Clearly Not Healthy!

Can We Extend These Approaches from Hundreds to Thousands by Using Crowdsourcing Gut Microbiome Sequencing? Source: Ubiome provided kits and taxonomic analysis Graph by Larry Smarr Three Years of Larry Smarr’s Gut Microbiome (38 Samples) Phyla Distribution Analyzed Using Ubiome

Applying Ayasdi to Ubiome Gut Microbiome Genus Relative Abundance Time Series Analysis by Mehrdad Yazdani, Calit2; Devi Ramanan, Ubiome Metric: Variance Normalized Euclidean with PCA Lens of Ecology Change Over All Time Pairs

Sorted by KS stat Apply Ayasdi Statistical Tests Using Ayasdi to Discover Abrupt Changes in Time in Gut Microbiome Ecology Large Ecology Change In Short Time Interval Analysis by Mehrdad Yazdani, Calit2; Devi Ramanan, Ubiome

Abrupt Changes Discovered in Genus Faecalibacterium Relative Abundance Time Series Source: Ubiome provided kits and taxonomic analysis Graph by Larry Smarr 35x

Genetic Sequencing of Humans and Their Microbes Is a Huge Growth Area and the Future Foundation of Medicine Twitter 9/27/2014

Thanks to Our Great Team! UCSD Metagenomics Team Weizhong Li Sitao Wu Future Patient Team Jerry Sheehan Tom DeFanti Kevin Patrick Jurgen Schulze Andrew Prudhomme Philip Weber Fred Raab Joe Keefe Ernesto Ramirez JCVI Team Karen Nelson Shibu Yooseph Manolito Torralba SDSC Team Michael Norman Ilkay Altintas Shweta Purawat Mahidhar Tatineni Robert Sinkovits UCSD Health Sciences Team William J. Sandborn Elisabeth Evans John Chang Brigid Boland David Brenner Dell/R Systems and Dell Analytics Brian Kucic John Thompson Tom Hill