Biography

Dr John-Sebastian Eden is Research Scientist in Bioinformatics and Genomics based at The Westmead Insitute for Medical Research and Senior Research Fellow in the Sydney Medical School. Dr Eden is a Virologist, who joined the University of Sydney in 2013 with a post-doctoral position in the research group of Professor Eddie Holmes and supported by an NHMRC early career fellowship. Dr Eden has a strong background in viral genome sequencing and analysis, including the application of next-generation sequencing protocols and state-of-the-art bioinformatics methods.

Keywords

Bioinformatics, Virology, Computational biology

Themes

Infection and Immunological Conditions

Research Focus

The evolutionary mechanisms that drive pathogen emergence and spread. This work combines high-throughput sequencing and comparative genomics to explore the patterns of genetic variation, evolution and molecular epidemiology of clinically important viruses including norovirus, influenza virus and respiratory syncytial virus, as well as, other zoonotic and vector-borne diseases such as ross river virus. The aim of this research is to provide insights into the sources and mechanisms of how viral pathogens emerge, spread and evolve, not only at population scales but also within individual hosts, particularly in the context of infections in immunocompromised hosts. Another important focus of this research has been to better define the link between virus genetics (genotype) and infection outcome (phenotype) including the evolution of important traits such as virulence, drug-resistance and host range.

Unbiased sequencing for pathogen discovery. Recent work has focused on the application of meta-transcriptomics (total RNA sequencing) for pathogen discovery particularly in complex, undiagnosed human infections and in neglected wildlife disease outbreaks. The aim of this research is to develop robust sampling, sequencing and analytical approaches that can provide an unbiased snapshot of all microorganisms (virus, bacteria, fungi or parasite) present in a sample to aid in the diagnoses of infectious diseases, better understand microbial interactions and discovery new microbial diversity. A priority for this work is in the development of novel computational approaches to sort and annotate complex metagenomic datasets, so keen and interested bioinformatics students are encouraged to get in touch about joining the group.

Associations

  • Centre for Virus Research at the Westmead Institute for Medical Reseach
  • Marie Bashir Institute for Infectious Diseases and Biosecurity
  • Biology Domain at the Charles Perkins Centre
  • Professional member of the Australian Society for Microbiology

Awards and Recognition

NHMRC Peter Doherty Early Career Fellowship (2014-18)