Center for Pathogen Genomics and Microbial Evolution
Providing specialized expertise in pathogen-specific sequence analysis and bioinformatics for emerging and ongoing infectious disease threats.
The development of next generation DNA sequencing approaches has revolutionized genomics. As these technologies have become more affordable, easier to use and widely available, there has been an explosion of genomic sequence generated with hundreds of thousands of bacterial, viral and fungal genome sequences currently available through public databases. The wealth of microbial sequence data available, however, has far outpaced expertise and tools for analysis of these data. Owing in part to the considerable biological diversity among microbes - including bacteria, fungi and viruses - microbial genome sequence analysis has been difficult to standardize. Often, analysis approaches are not “one-size-fits-all” and a technique that is successful for studying one organism may not be directly applicable to another. To fully leverage the power of these tools, diverse expertise is required across several fields including microbiology, infectious disease clinical care, epidemiology and computational bioinformatics.
When properly harnessed through an integrated pipeline from sample acquisition to sequencing and bioinformatic analysis, pathogen genomics and molecular epidemiology can define the determinants of pathogen transmission, pathogenesis and evolution and so inform best practices in clinical care and public health. Indeed, the essentiality of rapid and effective microbial sequence analysis has been underscored by the global COVID-19 pandemic. Novel and creative approaches to SARS-CoV-2 viral sequencing and analysis have been central to important discoveries throughout the pandemic that have dictated diagnostic paradigms, facilitated drug discovery, charted routes of transmission and helped define best public health practices.
Northwestern has unmatched abilities in this field that is critical to the national and global efforts to track and study infectious disease threats. Implementing and expanding microbial genomic sequencing and innovative analysis capabilities pays dividends in infections prevented and lives saved.”
–Egon A. Ozer, MD, PhD, Director, Center for Pathogen Genomics and Microbial Evolution
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Our Mission and Vision
Why It's Important
Microbial genomics: the study of the complete genetic code of pathogenic organisms
4th Annual Pathogen Genomics Symposium
The 4th Annual Pathogen Genomics Symposium, hosted by the Robert J. Havey, MD Institute for Global Health’s Center for Pathogen Genomics and Microbial Evolution, will include a day of scholarly events, including research talks, flash talks, keynote address, poster session, and reception. A full agenda will be shared soon.
The Pathogen Genomics Symposium will be held on Monday, April 7th, 2025 in the Simpson Querrey Biomedical Research Center.
Featuring the Keynote Address, “Bug Bytes: How Malaria Parasite & Vector Data Are Being Applied in Global Health,” by Jennifer Gardy, Gates Foundation
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Center Leadership
Services
Featured Projects
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Successful Clinical Response in Pneumonia Therapy (SCRIPT)
Northwestern PIs: Richard Wunderink, MD; Alan Hauser, MD, PhD
This U19 systems biology center funded by the NIAID investigates host/pathogen interactions that result in unsuccessful responses to therapy in severe pneumonia. The study combines clinical phenomics, host transcriptomics and epigenomics, pathogen genomics and alveolar metagenomics to model disease dynamics during ventilator-associated pneumonia.