Summer course in Microbial Metagenomics directed by Drs. Thomas Schmidt and
Jay Lennon at the Kellogg Biological Station (KBS), Michigan State
University (MSU). This hands-on inquiry-based course exposes participants to
state-of-the-art genomic methods to address questions about the structure
and function of microbial communities. The nucleic acid based data generated
during the course are integrated with the expansive information from the KBS
Long Term Ecological Research site (LTER), which ranges from greenhouse gas
fluxes to metagenome databases. The ultimate goal of the course is to
uncover relationships between changes in microbial communities and ecosystem
functioning.  Morning lectures address pertinent ecological theories and
principles underlying experiments that are conducted during the afternoon.
The afternoon laboratory sessions focus on molecular and bioinformatic
methods, including purification of DNA from environmental samples, PCR
amplification, construction of clone libraries, sequence alignment,
phylogenetic-based statistical analyses, quantitative PCR of functional
genes, and mining of soil metagenomes. This is an intensive 2-week course
modeled after the longer and internationally acclaimed MBL Microbial
Diversity Course that Dr. Schmidt has directed.  Participants will arrive on
June 13th and depart June 26th.  During this time, the course meets Monday
through Friday from 9am-5pm. Housing and meals are available at KBS.  The
course is open to individuals of all academic backgrounds, but admission to
the class (MMG 490/MMG 890 Section 432) is by application only with an April
1, 2010 deadline. An electronic application can be accessed and submitted
here https://kbsmsu.wufoo.com/forms/kbs-summer-course-application/. 
Additional information about KBS summer courses can be found here
http://www.kbs.msu.edu/education/summer-courses. Scholarship support is
available.

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