MVIF 36 - with keynote talk by Prof. Ruixin Liu

MVIF 36 - with keynote talk by Prof. Ruixin Liu

Microbiome Virtual International Forum

Microbiome Virtual International Forum (MVIF) is a recurring bite-sized alternative to multi-day microbiome conferences: Regular short-format (~3 hours) conferences that provide all the key elements of a traditional conference.

Forum n. 36 is a Pacific-first event, with live talks starting 18th February 2025, 9:30 am Tokyo time (see what time it is where you are here and add to your calendar here ). Professor Ruixin Liu will be the keynote speaker for this event.

For Atlantic time zones, recorded talks with live hosting and discussion will start on 19th February at 8:30 am New York time (see what time and date it is where you are here and add to your calendar here ).


MVIF is a non-profit association registered in Italy

If you'd like to support MVIF, you can donate to our crowdfunding campaign .

Thanks to our co-organizing non-commercial partners the Seerave Foundation and CUNY Graduate School of Public Health & Health Policy and our Gold Sponsor Roche for their support.

Matanu!

DatesMonday, February 17 to Tuesday, February 18 2025
Speakers
Community
Patsy Tasyana Fitri
Maria Kardakova
Dr Samuel Aroney
Ms. Nodoka Chiba
Ruixin Liu
Dr Theo Portlock
Ruixin Liu
Dr. Petar Ozretić Ph.D.
Ms. Nodoka Chiba
Maria Kardakova
Dr Samuel Aroney
Dr Theo Portlock
Divine Aleru
Svetlana Ugarcina Perovic
+273
Bandung Institute of Technology

Gut microbiome diversity analysis of Indonesian healthy and stunted children

Patsy Tasyana Fitri, Bandung Institute of Technology
University of Surrey

From microbes to mind and actions: Uncovering the gut-brain connection in major depressive disorder and its implications for human health and lifestyle

Maria Kardakova, University of Surrey
Queensland University of Technology

Bin Chicken: targeted metagenomic coassembly for the efficient recovery of novel genomes

Samuel Aroney, Queensland University of Technology

Succinic semialdehyde derived from the gut microbiota can promote the proliferation of adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma cells

Nodoka Chiba, Institute of Science Tokyo

Gut Microbiota and Obesity, Metabolic Regulation

Ruixin Liu, Ruijin Hospital, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicin
University of Auckland

Interconnected pathways link faecal microbiota plasma lipids and brain activity to childhood malnutrition related cognition

Theo Portlock, University of Auckland