Panome Bio at the Front Range Microbiome Symposium: Bringing Functional Insight to Microbiome Research
Panome Bio was proud to sponsor the Front Range Microbiome Symposium for the first time this year, held at the scenic Colorado State University Spur Campus in Denver, CO. This dynamic event brought together academic, clinical, and industry researchers focused on one of the fastest-growing areas in life sciences: the microbiome.
The symposium served as an ideal venue to highlight Panome Bio’s Microbiome Function Analysis, a unique three-pronged approach that gives researchers the ability to move beyond microbial composition and explore what the microbiome is actually doing at the molecular level.
Poster Presentation Highlights Functional Disruption
Poster Title: Investigating Systemic Consequences Following the Depletion of Native Murine Intestinal Flora
Presenter: David Hill, Panome Bio
David Hill presented data from a recent study that used untargeted metabolomics to examine the widespread metabolic consequences of microbiome depletion in a mouse model. The results demonstrated how Panome Bio’s platform can uncover both local and systemic functional disruptions, offering new dimensions of insight for microbiome researchers looking to link microbial dynamics to host physiology.
Enabling the Next Generation of Microbiome Research
Attendees expressed strong interest in how Panome Bio’s Microbiome Function Analysis can complement sequencing-based approaches, providing a functional readout of microbiome activity through real biochemical data. From gut health to immunology and chronic disease, the ability to integrate functional metabolomics is increasingly critical for understanding the true role of the microbiome in health and disease.
We were thrilled to connect with the vibrant Front Range research community and look forward to supporting microbiome scientists as they move from who’s there to what’s happening in their studies.