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2020

Genomics

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Articles 1 - 26 of 26

Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Genomic Adaptations And Evolutionary History Of The Extinct Scimitar-Toothed Cat, Homotherium Latidens, Ross Barnett, Michael V. Westbury, Marcela Sandoval-Velasco, Filipe Garrett Vieira, Sungwon Jeon, Grant Zazula, Michael D. Martin, Simon Y.W. Ho, Niklas Mather, Shyam Gopalakrishnan, Jazmín Ramos-Madrigal, Marc De Manuel, M. Lisandra Zepeda-Mendoza, Agostinho Antunes, Aldo Carmona Baez, Binia De Cahsan, Greger Larson, Stephen J. O'Brien, Eduardo Eizirik, Warren E. Johnson, Klaus Peter Koepfli, Andreas Wilting, Jörns Fickel, Love Dalén, Eline D. Lorenzen, Tomas Marques-Bonet, Anders J. Hansen, Guojie Zhang, Jong Bhak Dec 2020

Genomic Adaptations And Evolutionary History Of The Extinct Scimitar-Toothed Cat, Homotherium Latidens, Ross Barnett, Michael V. Westbury, Marcela Sandoval-Velasco, Filipe Garrett Vieira, Sungwon Jeon, Grant Zazula, Michael D. Martin, Simon Y.W. Ho, Niklas Mather, Shyam Gopalakrishnan, Jazmín Ramos-Madrigal, Marc De Manuel, M. Lisandra Zepeda-Mendoza, Agostinho Antunes, Aldo Carmona Baez, Binia De Cahsan, Greger Larson, Stephen J. O'Brien, Eduardo Eizirik, Warren E. Johnson, Klaus Peter Koepfli, Andreas Wilting, Jörns Fickel, Love Dalén, Eline D. Lorenzen, Tomas Marques-Bonet, Anders J. Hansen, Guojie Zhang, Jong Bhak

Biology Faculty Articles

Homotherium was a genus of large-bodied scimitar-toothed cats, morphologically distinct from any extant felid species, that went extinct at the end of the Pleistocene [1–4]. They possessed large, saber-form serrated canine teeth, powerful forelimbs, a sloping back, and an enlarged optic bulb, all of which were key characteristics for predation on Pleistocene megafauna [5]. Previous mitochondrial DNA phylogenies suggested that it was a highly divergent sister lineage to all extant cat species [6–8]. However, mitochondrial phylogenies can be misled by hybridization [9], incomplete lineage sorting (ILS), or sex-biased dispersal patterns [10], which might be especially relevant for Homotherium since widespread …


Genomics Education Partnership F Element Annotation Report, Amanda Moy Dec 2020

Genomics Education Partnership F Element Annotation Report, Amanda Moy

Honors Projects

The Genomics Education Partnership (GEP), headquartered at the University of Alabama, is a collection of over 100 universities that provide training and resources in order to provide students experiential learning in bioinformatics and genomics. The GEP hosts numerous research projects, including the F element project. The F element project has the main focus of annotating the F element genes of the fruit fly species D. ananassae, D. bipectinata, D. kikkawai, and D. takahashii. The Muller F element is the smallest chromosome in Drosophila species. However, the four species listed above have a notably larger F element than other …


A Primary Human T-Cell Spectral Library To Facilitate Large Scale Quantitative T-Cell Proteomics., Harshi Weerakoon, Jeremy Potriquet, Alok K Shah, Sarah Reed, Buddhika Jayakody, Charu Kapil, Mukul K Midha, Robert L Moritz, Ailin Lepletier, Jason Mulvenna, John J Miles, Michelle M Hill Nov 2020

A Primary Human T-Cell Spectral Library To Facilitate Large Scale Quantitative T-Cell Proteomics., Harshi Weerakoon, Jeremy Potriquet, Alok K Shah, Sarah Reed, Buddhika Jayakody, Charu Kapil, Mukul K Midha, Robert L Moritz, Ailin Lepletier, Jason Mulvenna, John J Miles, Michelle M Hill

Articles, Abstracts, and Reports

Data independent analysis (DIA) exemplified by sequential window acquisition of all theoretical mass spectra (SWATH-MS) provides robust quantitative proteomics data, but the lack of a public primary human T-cell spectral library is a current resource gap. Here, we report the generation of a high-quality spectral library containing data for 4,833 distinct proteins from human T-cells across genetically unrelated donors, covering ~24% proteins of the UniProt/SwissProt reviewed human proteome. SWATH-MS analysis of 18 primary T-cell samples using the new human T-cell spectral library reliably identified and quantified 2,850 proteins at 1% false discovery rate (FDR). In comparison, the larger Pan-human spectral …


A Pilot Study Comparing The Efficacy Of Lactate Dehydrogenase Levels Versus Circulating Cell-Free Micrornas In Monitoring Responses To Checkpoint Inhibitor Immunotherapy In Metastatic Melanoma Patients., Matias A Bustos, Rebecca Gross, Negin Rahimzadeh, Hunter Cole, Linh T Tran, Kevin Tran, Ling Takeshima, Stacey L Stern, Steven O'Day, Dave Hoon Nov 2020

A Pilot Study Comparing The Efficacy Of Lactate Dehydrogenase Levels Versus Circulating Cell-Free Micrornas In Monitoring Responses To Checkpoint Inhibitor Immunotherapy In Metastatic Melanoma Patients., Matias A Bustos, Rebecca Gross, Negin Rahimzadeh, Hunter Cole, Linh T Tran, Kevin Tran, Ling Takeshima, Stacey L Stern, Steven O'Day, Dave Hoon

Articles, Abstracts, and Reports

Serum lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) is a standard prognostic biomarker for stage IV melanoma patients. Often, LDH levels do not provide real-time information about the metastatic melanoma patients' disease status and treatment response. Therefore, there is a need to find reliable blood biomarkers for improved monitoring of metastatic melanoma patients who are undergoing checkpoint inhibitor immunotherapy (CII). The objective in this prospective pilot study was to discover circulating cell-free microRNA (cfmiR) signatures in the plasma that could assess melanoma patients' responses during CII. The cfmiRs were evaluated by the next-generation sequencing (NGS) HTG EdgeSeq microRNA (miR) Whole Transcriptome Assay (WTA; 2083 …


Connections In The Underworld: A Morphological And Molecular Study Of Diversity And Connectivity Among Anchialine Shrimp., Robert Eugene Ditter Nov 2020

Connections In The Underworld: A Morphological And Molecular Study Of Diversity And Connectivity Among Anchialine Shrimp., Robert Eugene Ditter

FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations

This research investigates the distribution and population structure of crustaceans, endemic to anchialine systems in the tropical western Atlantic focusing on cave-dwelling shrimp from the family Barbouriidae. Taxonomic and molecular tools (genetic and genomic) are utilized to examine population dynamics and the presence of phenotypic hypervariation (PhyV) of the critically endangered species Barbouria cubensis (von Martens, 1872). The presence of PhyV and its geographic distribution is investigated among anchialine populations of B. cubensis from 34 sites on Abaco, Eleuthera, and San Salvador, Bahamas. Examination of 54 informative morphological characters revealed PhyV present in nearly 90% (n=463) of specimens with no …


Genomic Evidence Suggests Further Changes Of Butterfly Names, Jing Zhang, Qian Cong, Jinhui Shen, Pal A. Opler, Nick V. Grishin Nov 2020

Genomic Evidence Suggests Further Changes Of Butterfly Names, Jing Zhang, Qian Cong, Jinhui Shen, Pal A. Opler, Nick V. Grishin

The Taxonomic Report of the International Lepidoptera Survey

Further genomic sequencing of butterflies by our research group expanding the coverage of species and specimens from different localities, coupled with genome-scale phylogenetic analysis and complemented by phenotypic considerations, suggests a number of changes to the names of butterflies, mostly those recorded from the United States and Canada. Here, we present evidence to support these changes. The changes are intended to make butterfly classification more internally consistent at the genus, subgenus and species levels. That is, considering all available evidence, we attempt to assign similar taxonomic ranks to the clades of comparable genetic differentiation, which on average is correlated with …


A High-Stringency Blueprint Of The Human Proteome., Subash Adhikari, Edouard C Nice, Eric W Deutsch, Lydie Lane, Gilbert S Omenn, Stephen R Pennington, Young-Ki Paik, Christopher M Overall, Fernando J Corrales, Ileana M Cristea, Jennifer E Van Eyk, Mathias Uhlén, Cecilia Lindskog, Daniel W Chan, Amos Bairoch, James C Waddington, Joshua L Justice, Joshua Labaer, Henry Rodriguez, Fuchu He, Markus Kostrzewa, Peipei Ping, Rebekah L Gundry, Peter Stewart, Sanjeeva Srivastava, Sudhir Srivastava, Fabio C S Nogueira, Gilberto B Domont, Yves Vandenbrouck, Maggie P Y Lam, Sara Wennersten, Juan Antonio Vizcaino, Marc Wilkins, Jochen M Schwenk, Emma Lundberg, Nuno Bandeira, Gyorgy Marko-Varga, Susan T Weintraub, Charles Pineau, Ulrike Kusebauch, Robert L Moritz, Seong Beom Ahn, Magnus Palmblad, Michael P Snyder, Ruedi Aebersold, Mark S Baker Oct 2020

A High-Stringency Blueprint Of The Human Proteome., Subash Adhikari, Edouard C Nice, Eric W Deutsch, Lydie Lane, Gilbert S Omenn, Stephen R Pennington, Young-Ki Paik, Christopher M Overall, Fernando J Corrales, Ileana M Cristea, Jennifer E Van Eyk, Mathias Uhlén, Cecilia Lindskog, Daniel W Chan, Amos Bairoch, James C Waddington, Joshua L Justice, Joshua Labaer, Henry Rodriguez, Fuchu He, Markus Kostrzewa, Peipei Ping, Rebekah L Gundry, Peter Stewart, Sanjeeva Srivastava, Sudhir Srivastava, Fabio C S Nogueira, Gilberto B Domont, Yves Vandenbrouck, Maggie P Y Lam, Sara Wennersten, Juan Antonio Vizcaino, Marc Wilkins, Jochen M Schwenk, Emma Lundberg, Nuno Bandeira, Gyorgy Marko-Varga, Susan T Weintraub, Charles Pineau, Ulrike Kusebauch, Robert L Moritz, Seong Beom Ahn, Magnus Palmblad, Michael P Snyder, Ruedi Aebersold, Mark S Baker

Articles, Abstracts, and Reports

The Human Proteome Organization (HUPO) launched the Human Proteome Project (HPP) in 2010, creating an international framework for global collaboration, data sharing, quality assurance and enhancing accurate annotation of the genome-encoded proteome. During the subsequent decade, the HPP established collaborations, developed guidelines and metrics, and undertook reanalysis of previously deposited community data, continuously increasing the coverage of the human proteome. On the occasion of the HPP's tenth anniversary, we here report a 90.4% complete high-stringency human proteome blueprint. This knowledge is essential for discerning molecular processes in health and disease, as we demonstrate by highlighting potential roles the human proteome …


Brainstem Ischemic Syndrome In Juvenile Nf2., John W Henson, Tara Benkers, Connor Mccormick Aug 2020

Brainstem Ischemic Syndrome In Juvenile Nf2., John W Henson, Tara Benkers, Connor Mccormick

Articles, Abstracts, and Reports

Objective: A new case of brainstem ischemic necrosis in a young woman with de novo neurofibromatosis type 2 (NF2) is reported, and given notable similarities to 7 prior cases of brainstem stroke in the literature, features defining a possible syndrome were sought.

Methods: Case review including detailed clinical assessment, neuroimaging analysis, genetic testing, and brain biopsy, followed by a multicase analysis.

Results: Brainstem ischemia in juvenile NF2 typically occurs in teenagers without previously known NF2 as an acute, monophasic presentation with restricted diffusion in the midbrain or pons following a recent hypoperfusion event, normal vascular imaging, obvious intracranial imaging features …


Machine Learning Approaches For Fracture Risk Assessment: A Comparative Analysis Of Genomic And Phenotypic Data In 5130 Older Men, Qing Wu, Fatma Nasoz, Jongyun Jung, Bibek Bhattarai, Mira V. Han Jul 2020

Machine Learning Approaches For Fracture Risk Assessment: A Comparative Analysis Of Genomic And Phenotypic Data In 5130 Older Men, Qing Wu, Fatma Nasoz, Jongyun Jung, Bibek Bhattarai, Mira V. Han

Public Health Faculty Publications

The study aims were to develop fracture prediction models by using machine learning approaches and genomic data, as well as to identify the best modeling approach for fracture prediction. The genomic data of Osteoporotic Fractures in Men, cohort Study (n = 5130), were analyzed. After a comprehensive genotype imputation, genetic risk score (GRS) was calculated from 1103 associated Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms for each participant. Data were normalized and split into a training set (80%) and a validation set (20%) for analysis. Random forest, gradient boosting, neural network, and logistic regression were used to develop prediction models for major osteoporotic fractures …


Meta-Analysis Of The Alzheimer's Disease Human Brain Transcriptome And Functional Dissection In Mouse Models., Ying-Wooi Wan, Rami Al-Ouran, Carl G Mangleburg, Thanneer M Perumal, Tom V Lee, Katherine Allison, Vivek Swarup, Cory C Funk, Chris Gaiteri, Mariet Allen, Minghui Wang, Sarah M Neuner, Catherine C Kaczorowski, Vivek M Philip, Gareth R Howell, Heidi Martini-Stoica, Hui Zheng, Hongkang Mei, Xiaoyan Zhong, Jungwoo Wren Kim, Valina L Dawson, Ted M Dawson, Ping-Chieh Pao, Li-Huei Tsai, Jean-Vianney Haure-Mirande, Michelle E Ehrlich, Paramita Chakrabarty, Yona Levites, Xue Wang, Eric B Dammer, Gyan Srivastava, Sumit Mukherjee, Solveig K Sieberts, Larsson Omberg, Kristen D Dang, James A Eddy, Phil Snyder, Yooree Chae, Sandeep Amberkar, Wenbin Wei, Winston Hide, Christoph Preuss, Ayla Ergun, Phillip J Ebert, David C Airey, Sara Mostafavi, Lei Yu, Hans-Ulrich Klein, Accelerating Medicines Partnership, Alzheimer’S Disease Consortium, Gregory W Carter, David A Collier, Todd E Golde, Allan I Levey, David A Bennett, Karol Estrada, T Matthew Townsend, Bin Zhang, Eric Schadt, Philip L De Jager, Nathan D Price, Nilüfer Ertekin-Taner, Zhandong Liu, Joshua M Shulman, Lara M Mangravite, Benjamin A Logsdon Jul 2020

Meta-Analysis Of The Alzheimer's Disease Human Brain Transcriptome And Functional Dissection In Mouse Models., Ying-Wooi Wan, Rami Al-Ouran, Carl G Mangleburg, Thanneer M Perumal, Tom V Lee, Katherine Allison, Vivek Swarup, Cory C Funk, Chris Gaiteri, Mariet Allen, Minghui Wang, Sarah M Neuner, Catherine C Kaczorowski, Vivek M Philip, Gareth R Howell, Heidi Martini-Stoica, Hui Zheng, Hongkang Mei, Xiaoyan Zhong, Jungwoo Wren Kim, Valina L Dawson, Ted M Dawson, Ping-Chieh Pao, Li-Huei Tsai, Jean-Vianney Haure-Mirande, Michelle E Ehrlich, Paramita Chakrabarty, Yona Levites, Xue Wang, Eric B Dammer, Gyan Srivastava, Sumit Mukherjee, Solveig K Sieberts, Larsson Omberg, Kristen D Dang, James A Eddy, Phil Snyder, Yooree Chae, Sandeep Amberkar, Wenbin Wei, Winston Hide, Christoph Preuss, Ayla Ergun, Phillip J Ebert, David C Airey, Sara Mostafavi, Lei Yu, Hans-Ulrich Klein, Accelerating Medicines Partnership, Alzheimer’S Disease Consortium, Gregory W Carter, David A Collier, Todd E Golde, Allan I Levey, David A Bennett, Karol Estrada, T Matthew Townsend, Bin Zhang, Eric Schadt, Philip L De Jager, Nathan D Price, Nilüfer Ertekin-Taner, Zhandong Liu, Joshua M Shulman, Lara M Mangravite, Benjamin A Logsdon

Articles, Abstracts, and Reports

We present a consensus atlas of the human brain transcriptome in Alzheimer's disease (AD), based on meta-analysis of differential gene expression in 2,114 postmortem samples. We discover 30 brain coexpression modules from seven regions as the major source of AD transcriptional perturbations. We next examine overlap with 251 brain differentially expressed gene sets from mouse models of AD and other neurodegenerative disorders. Human-mouse overlaps highlight responses to amyloid versus tau pathology and reveal age- and sex-dependent expression signatures for disease progression. Human coexpression modules enriched for neuronal and/or microglial genes broadly overlap with mouse models of AD, Huntington's disease, amyotrophic …


Inter-Tumor Heterogeneity-Melanomas Respond Differently To Gm-Csf-Mediated Activation., Adi Moshe, Sivan Izraely, Orit Sagi-Assif, Sapir Malka, Shlomit Ben-Menachem, Tsipi Meshel, Metsada Pasmanik-Chor, Dave Hoon, Isaac P Witz Jul 2020

Inter-Tumor Heterogeneity-Melanomas Respond Differently To Gm-Csf-Mediated Activation., Adi Moshe, Sivan Izraely, Orit Sagi-Assif, Sapir Malka, Shlomit Ben-Menachem, Tsipi Meshel, Metsada Pasmanik-Chor, Dave Hoon, Isaac P Witz

Articles, Abstracts, and Reports

Granulocyte-monocyte colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF) is used as an adjuvant in various clinical and preclinical studies with contradictory results. These were attributed to opposing effects of GM-CSF on the immune or myeloid systems of the treated patients or to lack of optimal dosing regimens. The results of the present study point to inter-tumor heterogeneity as a possible mechanism accounting for the contrasting responses to GM-CSF incorporating therapies. Employing xenograft models of human melanomas in nude mice developed in our lab, we detected differential functional responses of melanomas from different patients to GM-CSF both in vitro as well as in vivo. …


Integrating Gwas And Transcriptomics To Identify The Molecular Underpinnings Of Thermal Stress Responses In Drosophila Melanogaster, Melise C. Lecheta, David N. Awde, Thomas S. O’Leary, Laura N. Unfried, Nicholas A. Jacobs, Miles H. Whitlock, Eleanor Mccabe, Beck Powers, Katie Bora, James S. Waters, Heather J. Axen, Seth Frietze, Brent L. Lockwood, Nicholas M. Teets, Sara H. Cahan Jun 2020

Integrating Gwas And Transcriptomics To Identify The Molecular Underpinnings Of Thermal Stress Responses In Drosophila Melanogaster, Melise C. Lecheta, David N. Awde, Thomas S. O’Leary, Laura N. Unfried, Nicholas A. Jacobs, Miles H. Whitlock, Eleanor Mccabe, Beck Powers, Katie Bora, James S. Waters, Heather J. Axen, Seth Frietze, Brent L. Lockwood, Nicholas M. Teets, Sara H. Cahan

Entomology Faculty Publications

Thermal tolerance of an organism depends on both the ability to dynamically adjust to a thermal stress and preparatory developmental processes that enhance thermal resistance. However, the extent to which standing genetic variation in thermal tolerance alleles influence dynamic stress responses vs. preparatory processes is unknown. Here, using the model species Drosophila melanogaster, we used a combination of Genome Wide Association mapping (GWAS) and transcriptomic profiling to characterize whether genes associated with thermal tolerance are primarily involved in dynamic stress responses or preparatory processes that influence physiological condition at the time of thermal stress. To test our hypotheses, we …


Advancing Human Health In The Decade Ahead: Pregnancy As A Key Window For Discovery: A Burroughs Wellcome Fund Pregnancy Think Tank., Yoel Sadovsky, Sam Mesiano, Graham J Burton, Michelle Lampl, Jeffrey C Murray, Rachel M Freathy, Anita Mahadevan-Jansen, Ashley Moffett, Nathan D Price, Paul H Wise, Derek E Wildman, Ralph Snyderman, Nigel Paneth, John Anthony Capra, Marcelo A Nobrega, Yaacov Barak, Louis J Muglia Jun 2020

Advancing Human Health In The Decade Ahead: Pregnancy As A Key Window For Discovery: A Burroughs Wellcome Fund Pregnancy Think Tank., Yoel Sadovsky, Sam Mesiano, Graham J Burton, Michelle Lampl, Jeffrey C Murray, Rachel M Freathy, Anita Mahadevan-Jansen, Ashley Moffett, Nathan D Price, Paul H Wise, Derek E Wildman, Ralph Snyderman, Nigel Paneth, John Anthony Capra, Marcelo A Nobrega, Yaacov Barak, Louis J Muglia

Articles, Abstracts, and Reports

Recent revolutionary advances at the intersection of medicine, omics, data sciences, computing, epidemiology, and related technologies inspire us to ponder their impact on health. Their potential impact is particularly germane to the biology of pregnancy and perinatal medicine, where limited improvement in health outcomes for women and children has remained a global challenge. We assembled a group of experts to establish a Pregnancy Think Tank to discuss a broad spectrum of major gestational disorders and adverse pregnancy outcomes that affect maternal-infant lifelong health and should serve as targets for leveraging the many recent advances. This report reflects avenues for future …


Introducing Lu-1, A Novel Lactobacillus Jensenii Phage Abundant In The Urogenital Tract, Taylor Miller-Ensminger, Rita Mormando, Laura Maskeri, Jason W. Shapiro, Alan J. Wolfe, Catherine Putonti Jun 2020

Introducing Lu-1, A Novel Lactobacillus Jensenii Phage Abundant In The Urogenital Tract, Taylor Miller-Ensminger, Rita Mormando, Laura Maskeri, Jason W. Shapiro, Alan J. Wolfe, Catherine Putonti

Bioinformatics Faculty Publications

Bacteriophages (phages) play a key role in shaping microbial communities, including those of the human body. Phages are abundant members of the urogenital tract, most often persisting through the lysogenic life cycle as prophages integrated within the genomes of their bacterial hosts. While numerous studies of the urogenital microbiota have focused on the most abundant bacterial member of this niche–Lactobacillus species–very little is known about Lactobacillus phages. Focusing on Lactobacillus jensenii strains from the urinary tract, we identified numerous prophages related to the previously characterized Lv-1 phage from a vaginal L. jensenii strain. Furthermore, we identified a new L. jensenii …


Genomic Diversity Of Bacteriophages Infecting Microbacterium Spp, Deborah Jacobs-Sera, Nathan S. Reyna, Lawrence A. Abad, Richard M. Alvey, Kirk R. Anders, Haley G. Aull, Suparna S. Bhalla, Lawrence S. Blumer, David W. Bollivar, J. Alfred Bonilla, Kristen A. Butela, Roy J. Coomans, Steven G. Cresawn, Tom D'Elia, Arturo Diaz, Ashley M. Divens, Nicholas P. Edgington, Gregory D. Frederick, Maria D. Gainey, Rebecca A. Garlena, Kenneth W. Grant, Susan M.R. Gurney, Heather L. Hendrickson, Lee E. Hughes, Margaret A. Kenna, Karen K. Klyczek, Hari Kotturi, Travis N. Mavrich, Angela L. Mckinney, Evan C. Merkhofer, Jordan Moberg Parker, Sally D. Molloy, Denise L. Monti, Dana A. Pape-Zambito Jun 2020

Genomic Diversity Of Bacteriophages Infecting Microbacterium Spp, Deborah Jacobs-Sera, Nathan S. Reyna, Lawrence A. Abad, Richard M. Alvey, Kirk R. Anders, Haley G. Aull, Suparna S. Bhalla, Lawrence S. Blumer, David W. Bollivar, J. Alfred Bonilla, Kristen A. Butela, Roy J. Coomans, Steven G. Cresawn, Tom D'Elia, Arturo Diaz, Ashley M. Divens, Nicholas P. Edgington, Gregory D. Frederick, Maria D. Gainey, Rebecca A. Garlena, Kenneth W. Grant, Susan M.R. Gurney, Heather L. Hendrickson, Lee E. Hughes, Margaret A. Kenna, Karen K. Klyczek, Hari Kotturi, Travis N. Mavrich, Angela L. Mckinney, Evan C. Merkhofer, Jordan Moberg Parker, Sally D. Molloy, Denise L. Monti, Dana A. Pape-Zambito

Articles

The bacteriophage population is vast, dynamic, old, and genetically diverse. The genomics of phages that infect bacterial hosts in the phylum Actinobacteria show them to not only be diverse but also pervasively mosaic, and replete with genes of unknown function. To further explore this broad group of bacteriophages, we describe here the isolation and genomic characterization of 116 phages that infect Microbacterium spp. Most of the phages are lytic, and can be grouped into twelve clusters according to their overall relatedness; seven of the phages are singletons with no close relatives. Genome sizes vary from 17.3 kbp to 97.7 kbp, …


Genome Skimming And Microsatellite Analysis Reveal Contrasting Patterns Of Genetic Diversity In A Rare Sandhill Endemic (Erysimum Teretifolium, Brassicaceae), José Carlos Del Valle, Julie A. Herman, Justen B. Whittall May 2020

Genome Skimming And Microsatellite Analysis Reveal Contrasting Patterns Of Genetic Diversity In A Rare Sandhill Endemic (Erysimum Teretifolium, Brassicaceae), José Carlos Del Valle, Julie A. Herman, Justen B. Whittall

Biology

Barriers between islands often inhibit gene flow creating patterns of isolation by distance. In island species, the majority of genetic diversity should be distributed among isolated populations. However, a self-incompatible mating system leads to higher genetic variation within populations and very little between-population subdivision. We examine these two contrasting predictions in Erysimum teretifolium, a rare self-incompatible plant endemic to island-like sandhill habitats in Santa Cruz County, California. We used genome skimming and nuclear microsatellites to assess the distribution of genetic diversity within and among eight of the 13 remaining populations. Phylogenetic analyses of the chloroplast genomes revealed a deep …


Multi-Omic Single-Cell Snapshots Reveal Multiple Independent Trajectories To Drug Tolerance In A Melanoma Cell Line., Yapeng Su, Melissa E Ko, Hanjun Cheng, Ronghui Zhu, Min Xue, Jessica Wang, Jihoon W Lee, Luke Frankiw, Alexander Xu, Stephanie Wong, Lidia Robert, Kaitlyn Takata, Dan Yuan, Yue Lu, Sui Huang, Antoni Ribas, Raphael Levine, Garry P Nolan, Wei Wei, Sylvia K Plevritis, Guideng Li, David Baltimore, James R Heath May 2020

Multi-Omic Single-Cell Snapshots Reveal Multiple Independent Trajectories To Drug Tolerance In A Melanoma Cell Line., Yapeng Su, Melissa E Ko, Hanjun Cheng, Ronghui Zhu, Min Xue, Jessica Wang, Jihoon W Lee, Luke Frankiw, Alexander Xu, Stephanie Wong, Lidia Robert, Kaitlyn Takata, Dan Yuan, Yue Lu, Sui Huang, Antoni Ribas, Raphael Levine, Garry P Nolan, Wei Wei, Sylvia K Plevritis, Guideng Li, David Baltimore, James R Heath

Articles, Abstracts, and Reports

The determination of individual cell trajectories through a high-dimensional cell-state space is an outstanding challenge for understanding biological changes ranging from cellular differentiation to epigenetic responses of diseased cells upon drugging. We integrate experiments and theory to determine the trajectories that single BRAFV600E mutant melanoma cancer cells take between drug-naive and drug-tolerant states. Although single-cell omics tools can yield snapshots of the cell-state landscape, the determination of individual cell trajectories through that space can be confounded by stochastic cell-state switching. We assayed for a panel of signaling, phenotypic, and metabolic regulators at points across 5 days of drug treatment to …


Legume Genetics And Biology: From Mendel’S Pea To Legume Genomics, Petr Smýkal, Eric J.B. Von Wettberg, Kevin Mcphee May 2020

Legume Genetics And Biology: From Mendel’S Pea To Legume Genomics, Petr Smýkal, Eric J.B. Von Wettberg, Kevin Mcphee

College of Agriculture and Life Sciences Faculty Publications

Legumes have played an important part in cropping systems since the dawn of agriculture, both as human food and as animal feed. The legume family is arguably one of the most abundantly domesticated crop plant families. Their ability to symbiotically fix nitrogen and improve soil fertility has been rewarded since antiquity and makes them a key protein source. The pea was the original model organism used in Mendel’s discovery of the laws of inheritance, making it the foundation of modern plant genetics. This Special Issue provides up-to-date information on legume biology, genetic advances, and the legacy of Mendel.


Scalable Profiling And Visualization For Characterizing Microbiomes, Camilo Valdes Mar 2020

Scalable Profiling And Visualization For Characterizing Microbiomes, Camilo Valdes

FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Metagenomics is the study of the combined genetic material found in microbiome samples, and it serves as an instrument for studying microbial communities, their biodiversities, and the relationships to their host environments. Creating, interpreting, and understanding microbial community profiles produced from microbiome samples is a challenging task as it requires large computational resources along with innovative techniques to process and analyze datasets that can contain terabytes of information.

The community profiles are critical because they provide information about what microorganisms are present in the sample, and in what proportions. This is particularly important as many human diseases and environmental disasters …


Deep Multilayer Brain Proteomics Identifies Molecular Networks In Alzheimer's Disease Progression, Bing Bai, Xusheng Wang, Yuxin Li, Ping-Chung Chen, Kaiwen Yu, Kaushik Kumar Dey, Jay M. Yarbro, Xian Han, Brianna M. Lutz, Shuquan Rao, Yun Jiao, Jeffrey M. Sifford, Jonghee Han, Minghui Wang, Haiyan Tan, Timothy I. Shaw, Ji-Hoon Cho, Suiping Zhou, Hong Wang, Mingming Niu, Ariana Mancieri, Kaitlynn A. Messler, Xiaojun Sun, Zhiping Wu, Vishwajeeth Pagala, Anthony A. High, Wenjian Bi, Hui Zhang, Hongbo Chi, Vahram Haroutunian, Bin Zhang, Thomas G. Beach, Gang Yu, Junmin Peng Mar 2020

Deep Multilayer Brain Proteomics Identifies Molecular Networks In Alzheimer's Disease Progression, Bing Bai, Xusheng Wang, Yuxin Li, Ping-Chung Chen, Kaiwen Yu, Kaushik Kumar Dey, Jay M. Yarbro, Xian Han, Brianna M. Lutz, Shuquan Rao, Yun Jiao, Jeffrey M. Sifford, Jonghee Han, Minghui Wang, Haiyan Tan, Timothy I. Shaw, Ji-Hoon Cho, Suiping Zhou, Hong Wang, Mingming Niu, Ariana Mancieri, Kaitlynn A. Messler, Xiaojun Sun, Zhiping Wu, Vishwajeeth Pagala, Anthony A. High, Wenjian Bi, Hui Zhang, Hongbo Chi, Vahram Haroutunian, Bin Zhang, Thomas G. Beach, Gang Yu, Junmin Peng

Biology Faculty Publications

Alzheimer's disease (AD) displays a long asymptomatic stage before dementia. We characterize AD stage-associated molecular networks by profiling 14,513 proteins and 34,173 phosphosites in the human brain with mass spectrometry, highlighting 173 protein changes in 17 pathways. The altered proteins are validated in two independent cohorts, showing partial RNA dependency. Comparisons of brain tissue and cerebrospinal fluid proteomes reveal biomarker candidates. Combining with 5xFAD mouse analysis, we determine 15 Aβ-correlated proteins (e.g., MDK, NTN1, SMOC1, SLIT2, and HTRA1). 5xFAD shows a proteomic signature similar to symptomatic AD but exhibits activation of autophagy and interferon response and lacks human-specific deleterious events, …


Genetic Diversity Among Mycobacterium Avium Subspecies Revealed By Analysis Of Complete Genome Sequences, John Bannantine, Cyril Conde, Darrell O. Bayles, Maxime Branger, Franck Biet Jan 2020

Genetic Diversity Among Mycobacterium Avium Subspecies Revealed By Analysis Of Complete Genome Sequences, John Bannantine, Cyril Conde, Darrell O. Bayles, Maxime Branger, Franck Biet

United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service / University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Faculty Publications

Mycobacterium avium comprises four subspecies that contain both human and veterinary pathogens. At the inception of this study, twenty-eight M. avium genomes had been annotated as RefSeq genomes, facilitating direct comparisons. These genomes represent strains from around the world and provided a unique opportunity to examine genome dynamics in this species. Each genome was confirmed to be classified correctly based on SNP genotyping, nucleotide identity and presence/absence of repetitive elements or other typing methods. The Mycobacterium avium subspeciesparatuberculosis (Map) genome size and organization was remarkably consistent, averaging 4.8 Mb with a variance of only 29.6 kb among the 13 strains. …


Identifying Essential Viral Genes Through Genomic Engineering, Amber Carroll Jan 2020

Identifying Essential Viral Genes Through Genomic Engineering, Amber Carroll

Mahurin Honors College Capstone Experience/Thesis Projects

Bacteria developed resistance to penicillin a mere four years after the groundbreaking antibiotic was first mass produced (Casadevall, 2010). Since then, the development of antibiotic-resistant bacteria has steadily risen, causing millions of difficult to treat infections annually. The challenge is to identify ways to combat these menacing microbes. Bacteriophages are viruses that infect bacteria and can potentially be used to eliminate deadly antibiotic-resistant bacteria. The number of sequenced bacteriophage genomes has increased tremendously over the past 10 years, but little is known about the function of most bacteriophage genes. The purpose of this study was to expand our understanding of …


Leveraging Genome-Enabled Growth Models To Study Shoot Growth Responses To Water Deficit In Rice, Malachy T. Campbell, Alexandre Grondin, Harkamal Walia, Gota Morota Jan 2020

Leveraging Genome-Enabled Growth Models To Study Shoot Growth Responses To Water Deficit In Rice, Malachy T. Campbell, Alexandre Grondin, Harkamal Walia, Gota Morota

Department of Agronomy and Horticulture: Faculty Publications

lucidating genotype-by-environment interactions and partitioning its contribution to phenotypic variation remains a challenge for plant scientists. We propose a framework that utilizes genome-wide markers to model genotype-specific shoot growth trajectories as a function of time and soil water availability. A rice diversity panel was phenotyped daily for 21 d using an automated, high-throughput image-based, phenotyping platform that enabled estimation of daily shoot biomass and soil water content. Using these data, we modeled shoot growth as a function of time and soil water content, and were able to determine the time point where an inflection in the growth trajectory occurred. We …


Genome-Wide Identification And Analysis Of Heterotic Loci In Three Maize Hybrids, Hongjun Liu, Qin Wang, Mengjiao Chen, Yahui Ding, Xuerong Yang, Jie Liu, Xiaohan Li, Congcong Zhou, Qilin Tian, Yiqi Lu, Danlin Fan, Junpeng Shi, Lin Zhang, Congbin Kang, Mingfei Mingfei Sun, Fangyuan Li, Yujian Wu, Yongzhong Zhang, Baoshen Liu, Xiang Yu Zhao, Qi Feng, Jinliang Yang, Bin Han, Jinsheng Lai, Xian Sheng Zhang, Xuehui Huang Jan 2020

Genome-Wide Identification And Analysis Of Heterotic Loci In Three Maize Hybrids, Hongjun Liu, Qin Wang, Mengjiao Chen, Yahui Ding, Xuerong Yang, Jie Liu, Xiaohan Li, Congcong Zhou, Qilin Tian, Yiqi Lu, Danlin Fan, Junpeng Shi, Lin Zhang, Congbin Kang, Mingfei Mingfei Sun, Fangyuan Li, Yujian Wu, Yongzhong Zhang, Baoshen Liu, Xiang Yu Zhao, Qi Feng, Jinliang Yang, Bin Han, Jinsheng Lai, Xian Sheng Zhang, Xuehui Huang

Department of Agronomy and Horticulture: Faculty Publications

Heterosis, or hybrid vigour, is a predominant phenomenon in plant genetics, serving as the basis of crop hybrid breeding, but the causative loci and genes underlying heterosis remain unclear in many crops. Here, we present a large-scale genetic analysis using 5360 offsprings from three elite maize hybrids, which identifies 628 loci underlying 19 yield-related traits with relatively high mapping resolutions. Heterotic pattern investigations of the 628 loci show that numerous loci, mostly with complete–incomplete dominance (the major one) or overdominance effects (the secondary one) for heterozygous genotypes and nearly equal proportion of advantageous alleles from both parental lines, are the …


Hiding In Plain Sight: The Globally Distributed Bacterial Candidate Phylum Pauc34f, Michael L. Chen, Eric D. Becraft, Maria Pachiadaki, Julia M. Brown, Jessica K. Jarett, Josep M. Gasol, Nikolai V. Ravin, Duane P. Moser, Takuro Nunoura, Gerhard J. Herndl, Tanja Woyke, Ramunas Stepanauskas Jan 2020

Hiding In Plain Sight: The Globally Distributed Bacterial Candidate Phylum Pauc34f, Michael L. Chen, Eric D. Becraft, Maria Pachiadaki, Julia M. Brown, Jessica K. Jarett, Josep M. Gasol, Nikolai V. Ravin, Duane P. Moser, Takuro Nunoura, Gerhard J. Herndl, Tanja Woyke, Ramunas Stepanauskas

Research outputs 2014 to 2021

Bacterial candidate phylum PAUC34f was originally discovered in marine sponges and is widely considered to be composed of sponge symbionts. Here, we report 21 single amplified genomes (SAGs) of PAUC34f from a variety of environments, including the dark ocean, lake sediments, and a terrestrial aquifer. The diverse origins of the SAGs and the results of metagenome fragment recruitment suggest that some PAUC34f lineages represent relatively abundant, free-living cells in environments other than sponge microbiomes, including the deep ocean. Both phylogenetic and biogeographic patterns, as well as genome content analyses suggest that PAUC34f associations with hosts evolved independently multiple times, while …


Characterization Of A Novel Compound That Stimulates Sting-Mediated Innate Immune Activity In An Allele-Specific Manner., Jinu Abraham, Sara Botto, Nobuyo Mizuno, Kara Pryke, Bryan Gall, Dylan Boehm, Tina M Sali, Haihong Jin, Aaron Nilsen, Michael J. Gough, Jason R Baird, Marita Chakhtoura, Caroline Subra, Lydie Trautmann, Elias K Haddad, Victor R Defilippis Jan 2020

Characterization Of A Novel Compound That Stimulates Sting-Mediated Innate Immune Activity In An Allele-Specific Manner., Jinu Abraham, Sara Botto, Nobuyo Mizuno, Kara Pryke, Bryan Gall, Dylan Boehm, Tina M Sali, Haihong Jin, Aaron Nilsen, Michael J. Gough, Jason R Baird, Marita Chakhtoura, Caroline Subra, Lydie Trautmann, Elias K Haddad, Victor R Defilippis

Articles, Abstracts, and Reports

The innate immune response to cytosolic DNA involves transcriptional activation of type I interferons (IFN-I) and proinflammatory cytokines. This represents the culmination of intracellular signaling pathways that are initiated by pattern recognition receptors that engage DNA and require the adaptor protein Stimulator of Interferon Genes (STING). These responses lead to the generation of cellular and tissue states that impair microbial replication and facilitate the establishment of long-lived, antigen-specific adaptive immunity. Ultimately this can lead to immune-mediated protection from infection but also to the cytotoxic T cell-mediated clearance of tumor cells. Intriguingly, pharmacologic activation of STING-dependent phenotypes is known to enhance …