meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
Finding Genius Podcast

Microbial Musings—Adam Arkin, Ph.D.—Senior Faculty Scientist, University of California, Berkeley

Finding Genius Podcast

Richard Jacobs

Medicine, Health & Fitness

4.41K Ratings

🗓️ 1 April 2020

⏱️ 34 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Dr. Adam Arkin's research focuses on the synthetic biology of microorganisms, environmental genomics, and molecular ecosystems biology.

On today's episode, you will learn:

  • How many microbes exist in a single gram of soil, and how scientists conduct research in the lab to try to identify how all of these microbes interact and function as a community
  • What bacteriocin is and how it can utilize a partial phage to kill other bacteria directly
  • How to understand the longitudinal dynamic between viruses and bacteria

At the University of California, Berkeley, Adam Arkin, Ph.D. is researching one of his primary interests, which is how microbes (i.e. bacteria, archaea, viruses) transform the environment and impact various processes, including the processes that occur in our own bodies.

He is working on how to track and characterize groups of microbes, understand how they operate together, and determine the ways in which we may be able to intervene in order to get microbes to do things that are beneficial to us.

The largest projects he's working on involve terrestrial environments, such as the subsurface of a watershed. In particular, Dr. Arkin and his team are researching the microbes in a field behind the Oak Ridge National Lab, where the soil is contaminated with uranium and has the highest level of nitrates on Earth.

In that location, microbes breathe in the metals and transform them to immobile and relatively harmless substances. Dr. Arkin explain how this may be applied to the agricultural arena in order to use microbes that mobilize nutrients for crops, protect them from pathogens, increase resilience to drought, and improve their ability to sequester carbon, thereby reducing greenhouse gasses.

He continues by discussing the potential of a human microbiome that is resistant to invasion by pathogens and allows us to make better use of nutrients. What's stopping the development of this? Dr. Arkin explains that despite the growing amount of data being gathered in the field, there are still huge gaps in basic data about the composition and function of microbial genes in a wide range of conditions.

Consider, for example, that a single gram of soil contains one million microbes and about 10,000 different species of microbes, and that the human gut contains just as many, if not more. He explains the approach that has allowed his research and the research of others to show that most large community microbial dynamics can be described by much smaller numbers of pairwise interactions. In other words, predictions about a large community of microbes can be made based on observations of smaller number of pairwise interactions among community members.

In addition to all of this, Dr. Arkin takes a look at viruses and phages, bacteriocin, mechanisms of cell sensing, the various uses of phages (including those in the therapeutic realm), in what ways his research relies on machine learning and computational biology, and so much more.

Tune in for the full conversation and visit http://genomics.lbl.gov/ and http://enigma.lbl.gov/ to learn more.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Forget frequently asked questions.

0:02.0

Common sense, common knowledge, or Google.

0:05.0

How about advice from a real genius?

0:07.0

95% of people in any profession are good enough to be qualified and licensed.

0:11.0

5% go above and beyond. They become very good at what they do, but only 0.1% are real Jesus.

0:18.0

Richard Jacobs has made it his life's mission to find them for you. He hunts down and interviews geniuses in every field,

0:25.0

sleep science, cancer, stem cells, ketogenic diets, and more. Here come the geniuses.

0:30.3

This is the Finding Genius Podcast.

0:33.0

That is Richard Jacobs.

0:35.0

Hello, this is Richard Jacobs with the Finding Genius Podcast.

0:41.0

My goal here is to find the exceptional people in their field,

0:44.4

interview them asking questions and hopefully get them to say that's a good

0:48.6

question. It means I ask them something that stirs up some new thoughts or some interesting angle they may not have covered.

0:55.0

So my guest today is Adam Arkin, is a senior faculty scientist at University of California Berkeley.

1:01.0

We're going to be talking about environmental genomics and

1:03.7

molecular ecosystem's biology. So Adam, welcome, thanks for coming. My pleasure. Thank you

1:08.5

about me. So I just spoke a couple of compound words here, environmental genomics and molecular ecosystem biology, but what does that mean? How do you define those terms?

1:18.0

Yeah, so my interest has always been in how microbes, so bacteria, their archaeo, which is another kingdom of life, on how viruses

1:29.7

transform our environment and impact their processes. And those policies include ourselves. from our

1:35.0

own environment and impact their processes and those policies include ourselves our own health and the like.

1:36.0

So the type of work that I do is about how do we track

1:40.0

and characterize the groups of these microbes and how they operate together to get their jobs done and how can we intervene to have them do things that they would not do otherwise that were beneficial for us?

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Richard Jacobs, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of Richard Jacobs and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2026.