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Institution

J. Craig Venter Institute

NonprofitLa 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
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Journal ArticleDOI
20 Mar 2009-Science
TL;DR: This paper found that a fermentative bacterium used its flagellum for interaction with a specific methanogenic archaeon, which activated its metabolism (methanogenesis) and showed that a substantial number of genes in the archaeon including those involved in the methanogenesis pathway were up-regulated after the contact with the protein.
Abstract: We report here molecular mechanisms underlying a bacteria-archaeon symbiosis. We found that a fermentative bacterium used its flagellum for interaction with a specific methanogenic archaeon. The archaeon perceived a bacterial flagellum protein and activated its metabolism (methanogenesis). Transcriptome analyses showed that a substantial number of genes in the archaeon, including those involved in the methanogenesis pathway, were up-regulated after the contact with the flagellum protein. These findings suggest that the bacterium communicates with the archaeon by using its flagellum.

125 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A map of sequence constraint in humans based on 11,257 whole-genome sequences and 16,384 heptamers is presented and identifies regulatory elements among the most constrained regions of the genome and will aid interpretation of noncoding variants.
Abstract: Understanding the significance of genetic variants in the noncoding genome is emerging as the next challenge in human genomics. We used the power of 11,257 whole-genome sequences and 16,384 heptamers (7-nt motifs) to build a map of sequence constraint for the human species. This build differed substantially from traditional maps of interspecies conservation and identified regulatory elements among the most constrained regions of the genome. Using new Hi-C experimental data, we describe a strong pattern of coordination over 2 Mb where the most constrained regulatory elements associate with the most essential genes. Constrained regions of the noncoding genome are up to 52-fold enriched for known pathogenic variants as compared to unconstrained regions (21-fold when compared to the genome average). This map of sequence constraint across thousands of individuals is an asset to help interpret noncoding elements in the human genome, prioritize variants and reconsider gene units at a larger scale.

125 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: It is suggested that the flagellar apparatus was the evolutionary precursor of Type III protein secretion systems, and phylogenetic analyses of currently sequenced constituents of these systems and their homologues show that they evolved with little or no exchange of constituents between systems.
Abstract: Multicomponent Type III protein secretion systems transfer Gram-negative bacterial virulence factors directly from the bacterial cytoplasm to the cytoplasm of a host eukaryotic cell in a process that may involve a single energy-coupled step. Extensive evidence supports the conclusion that the genetic apparatuses that encode these systems have been acquired independently by different Gram-negative bacteria, presumably by lateral transfer. In this paper we conduct phylogenetic analyses of currently sequenced constituents of these systems and their homologues. The results reveal the relative relatedness of these systems and show that they evolved with little or no exchange of constituents between systems. This fact suggests that horizontal transmission of the genes encoding these systems always occurred as a unit without the formation of hybrid gene clusters. Moreover, homologous flagellar proteins show phylogenetic clustering that suggests that the flagellar systems and Type III protein secretory systems diverged from each other following very early duplication of a gene cluster sharing many (but not all) genes. Phylogenies of most or all of the flagellar proteins follow those of the source organisms with little or no lateral gene transfer suggesting that homologous flagellar proteins are true orthologues. We suggest that the flagellar apparatus was the evolutionary precursor of Type III protein secretion systems.

125 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Haplotype phasing, structural variant analysis and de novo pan-genomics are the emerging frontiers in plant genome assembly.

125 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
24 Sep 2008-PLOS ONE
TL;DR: The genome analysis has revealed several physiological features that would provide P. tunicata with competitive advantage against other members of the surface-associated community and the prevalence of recognised virulence genes suggests that P. Tunicata maintains a carefully regulated balance between beneficial and detrimental interactions with a range of host surfaces.
Abstract: Background: Colonisation of sessile eukaryotic host surfaces (e.g. invertebrates and seaweeds) by bacteria is common in the marine environment and is expected to create significant inter-species competition and other interactions. The bacterium Pseudoalteromonas tunicata is a successful competitor on marine surfaces owing primarily to its ability to produce a number of inhibitory molecules. As such P. tunicata has become a model organism for the studies into processes of surface colonisation and eukaryotic host-bacteria interactions. Methodology/Principal Findings: To gain a broader understanding into the adaptation to a surface-associated life-style, we have sequenced and analysed the genome of P. tunicata and compared it to the genomes of closely related strains. We found that the P. tunicata genome contains several genes and gene clusters that are involved in the production of inhibitory compounds against surface competitors and secondary colonisers. Features of P. tunicata’s oxidative stress response, iron scavenging and nutrient acquisition show that the organism is well adapted to high-density communities on surfaces. Variation of the P. tunicata genome is suggested by several landmarks of genetic rearrangements and mobile genetic elements (e.g. transposons, CRISPRs, phage). Surface attachment is likely to be mediated by curli, novel pili, a number of extracellular polymers and potentially other unexpected cell surface proteins. The P. tunicata genome also shows a utilisation pattern of extracellular polymers that would avoid a degradation of its recognised hosts, while potentially causing detrimental effects on other host types. In addition, the prevalence of recognised virulence genes suggests that P. tunicata has the potential for pathogenic interactions. Conclusions/Significance: The genome analysis has revealed several physiological features that would provide P. tunciata with competitive advantage against other members of the surface-associated community. We have also identified properties that could mediate interactions with surfaces other than its currently recognised hosts. This together with the detection of known virulence genes leads to the hypothesis that P. tunicata maintains a carefully regulated balance between beneficial and detrimental interactions with a range of host surfaces.

125 citations


Authors

Showing all 1274 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
John R. Yates1771036129029
Anders M. Dale156823133891
Ronald W. Davis155644151276
Steven L. Salzberg147407231756
Mark Raymond Adams1471187135038
Nicholas J. Schork12558762131
William R. Jacobs11849048638
Ian T. Paulsen11235469460
Michael B. Brenner11139344771
Kenneth H. Nealson10848351100
Claire M. Fraser10835276292
Stephen L. Hoffman10445838597
Michael J. Brownstein10227447929
Amalio Telenti10242140509
John Quackenbush9942767029
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20233
202211
2021116
2020141
2019154
2018157