Institution
J. Craig Venter Institute
Nonprofit•La Jolla, California, United States•
About: J. Craig Venter Institute is a nonprofit organization based out in La Jolla, California, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Genome & Gene. The organization has 1268 authors who have published 2300 publications receiving 304083 citations. The organization is also known as: JCVI & The Institute for Genomic Research.
Topics: Genome, Gene, Genomics, Population, Microbiome
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The pDEST22/pDEST32 vectors produce a higher fraction of interactions that are conserved and that are biologically relevant when compared with the pGBKT7/pGADT7‐related vectors, but the latter appear to be more sensitive and thus detect more interactions overall.
Abstract: Yeast two-hybrid screens often produce vastly non-overlapping interaction data when the screens are conducted in different laboratories, or use different vectors, strains, or reporter genes. Here we investigate the underlying reasons for such inconsistencies and compare the effect of seven different vectors and their yeast two-hybrid interactions. Genome-wide array screens with 49 motility-related baits from Treponema pallidum yielded 77 and 165 interactions with bait vectors pLP-GBKT7 and pAS1-LP, respectively, including 21 overlapping interactions. In addition, 90 motility-related proteins from Escherichia coli were tested in all pairwise combinations and yielded 140 interactions when tested with pGBKT7g/pGADT7g vectors but only 47 when tested with pDEST32/pDEST22. We discuss the factors that determine these effects, including copy number, the nature of the fusion protein, and species-specific differences that explain non-conserved interactions among species. The pDEST22/pDEST32 vectors produce a higher fraction of interactions that are conserved and that are biologically relevant when compared with the pGBKT7/pGADT7-related vectors, but the latter appear to be more sensitive and thus detect more interactions overall.
56 citations
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TL;DR: The phylogeny of the Enterobacter genus, particularly the cloacae complex, was re-evaluated based on the type strain genome sequences and all other available Enterobacteria genomes in RefSeq.
Abstract: Background: The predominant species in clinical Enterobacter isolates is E. hormaechei . Many articles, clinicians, and GenBank submissions misname these strains as E. cloacae . The lack of sequenced type strains or named species/subspecies for some clades in the E. cloacae complex complicate the issue. Methods: The genomes of the type strains for Enterobacter hormaechei subsp. oharae , E . hormaechei subsp. steigerwaltii , and E. xiangfangensis , and two strains from Hoffmann clusters III and IV of the E. cloacae complex were sequenced. These genomes, the E . hormaechei subsp. hormaechei type strain, and other available Enterobacter type strains were analysed in conjunction with all extant Enterobacter genomes in NCBI’s RefSeq using Average Nucleotide Identity (ANI). Results: There were five recognizable subspecies of E. hormaechei : E. hormaechei subsp. hoffmannii subsp. nov., E. hormaechei subsp. xiangfangensis comb. nov., and the three previously known subspecies. One of the strains sequenced from the E. cloacae complex was not a novel E. hormaechei subspecies but rather a member of a clade of a novel species: E. roggenkampii sp. nov.. E. muelleri was determined to be a later heterotypic synonym of E. asburiae which should take precedence. Conclusion: The phylogeny of the Enterobacter genus, particularly the cloacae complex, was re-evaluated based on the type strain genome sequences and all other available Enterobacter genomes in RefSeq.
56 citations
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TL;DR: The results suggest that both reproductive mode and genetic differentiation contribute to the structure of Dutch A. fumigatus populations and are probably shaping the evolutionary dynamics of drug resistance in this potentially deadly pathogen.
Abstract: As the frequency of antifungal drug resistance continues to increase, understanding the genetic structure of fungal populations, where resistant isolates have emerged and spread, is of major importance. Aspergillus fumigatus is an ubiquitously distributed fungus and the primary causative agent of invasive aspergillosis (IA), a potentially lethal infection in immunocompromised individuals. In the last few years, an increasing number of A. fumigatus isolates has evolved resistance to triazoles, the primary drugs for treating IA infections. In most isolates, this multiple-triazole-resistance (MTR) phenotype is caused by mutations in the cyp51A gene, which encodes the protein targeted by the triazoles. We investigated the genetic differentiation and reproductive mode of A. fumigatus in the Netherlands, the country where the MTR phenotype probably originated, to determine their role in facilitating the emergence and distribution of resistance genotypes. Using 20 genome-wide neutral markers, we genotyped 255 Dutch isolates including 25 isolates with the MTR phenotype. In contrast to previous reports, our results show that Dutch A. fumigatus genotypes are genetically differentiated into five distinct populations. Four of the five populations show significant linkage disequilibrium, indicative of an asexual reproductive mode, whereas the fifth population is in linkage equilibrium, indicative of a sexual reproductive mode. Notably, the observed genetic differentiation among Dutch isolates does not correlate with geography, although all isolates with the MTR phenotype nest within a single, predominantly asexual, population. These results suggest that both reproductive mode and genetic differentiation contribute to the structure of Dutch A. fumigatus populations and are probably shaping the evolutionary dynamics of drug resistance in this potentially deadly pathogen.
56 citations
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TL;DR: The draft genome sequence of Turicibacter sanguinis PC909 is described, isolated from a pooled healthy human fecal sample as part of the Australian Human Gut Microbiome Project.
Abstract: While the microbiota resident in the human gut is now known to provide a range of functions relevant to host health, many of the microbial members of the community have not yet been cultured or are represented by a limited number of isolates. We describe here the draft genome sequence of Turicibacter sanguinis PC909, isolated from a pooled healthy human fecal sample as part of the Australian Human Gut Microbiome Project.
55 citations
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TL;DR: A microbial plankton community that is shaped by recycled production and tightly controlled by Fe-limitation and viral activity is revealed.
Abstract: Phytoplankton and associated microbial communities provide organic carbon to oceanic food webs and drive ecosystem dynamics. However, capturing those dynamics is challenging. Here, an in situ, semi-Lagrangian, robotic sampler profiled pelagic microbes at 4 h intervals over ~2.6 days in North Pacific high-nutrient, low-chlorophyll waters. We report on the community structure and transcriptional dynamics of microbes in an operationally large size class (>5 μm) predominantly populated by dinoflagellates, ciliates, haptophytes, pelagophytes, diatoms, cyanobacteria (chiefly Synechococcus), prasinophytes (chiefly Ostreococcus), fungi, archaea, and proteobacteria. Apart from fungi and archaea, all groups exhibited 24-h periodicity in some transcripts, but larger portions of the transcriptome oscillated in phototrophs. Periodic photosynthesis-related transcripts exhibited a temporal cascade across the morning hours, conserved across diverse phototrophic lineages. Pronounced silica:nitrate drawdown, a high flavodoxin to ferredoxin transcript ratio, and elevated expression of other Fe-stress markers indicated Fe-limitation. Fe-stress markers peaked during a photoperiodically adaptive time window that could modulate phytoplankton response to seasonal Fe-limitation. Remarkably, we observed viruses that infect the majority of abundant taxa, often with total transcriptional activity synchronized with putative hosts. Taken together, these data reveal a microbial plankton community that is shaped by recycled production and tightly controlled by Fe-limitation and viral activity.
55 citations
Authors
Showing all 1274 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
John R. Yates | 177 | 1036 | 129029 |
Anders M. Dale | 156 | 823 | 133891 |
Ronald W. Davis | 155 | 644 | 151276 |
Steven L. Salzberg | 147 | 407 | 231756 |
Mark Raymond Adams | 147 | 1187 | 135038 |
Nicholas J. Schork | 125 | 587 | 62131 |
William R. Jacobs | 118 | 490 | 48638 |
Ian T. Paulsen | 112 | 354 | 69460 |
Michael B. Brenner | 111 | 393 | 44771 |
Kenneth H. Nealson | 108 | 483 | 51100 |
Claire M. Fraser | 108 | 352 | 76292 |
Stephen L. Hoffman | 104 | 458 | 38597 |
Michael J. Brownstein | 102 | 274 | 47929 |
Amalio Telenti | 102 | 421 | 40509 |
John Quackenbush | 99 | 427 | 67029 |