March 2022 archive

Fatal affairs – conjugational transfer of a dinoflagellate-killing plasmid between marine Rhodobacterales

The roseobacter group of marine bacteria is characterized by a mosaic distribution of ecologically important phenotypes. These are often encoded on mobile extrachromosomal replicons. So far, conjugation had only been experimentally proven between the two model organisms Phaeobacter inhibens and Dinoroseobacter shibae. Here, we show that two large natural RepABC-type plasmids from D. shibae can be transferred into representatives of all known major Rhodobacterales lineages. Complete genome…

Fatal affairs – conjugational transfer of a dinoflagellate-killing plasmid between marine Rhodobacterales

The roseobacter group of marine bacteria is characterized by a mosaic distribution of ecologically important phenotypes. These are often encoded on mobile extrachromosomal replicons. So far, conjugation had only been experimentally proven between the two model organisms Phaeobacter inhibens and Dinoroseobacter shibae. Here, we show that two large natural RepABC-type plasmids from D. shibae can be transferred into representatives of all known major Rhodobacterales lineages. Complete genome…

TreeTuner: A pipeline for minimizing redundancy and complexity in large phylogenetic datasets

STAR Protoc. 2022 Feb 15;3(1):101175. doi: 10.1016/j.xpro.2022.101175. eCollection 2022 Mar 18. ABSTRACT Various bioinformatics protocols have been developed for trimming the number of operational taxonomic units (OTUs) in phylogenetic datasets, but they typically require significant manual intervention. Here we present TreeTuner, a semiautomated pipeline that allows both coarse and fine-scale tuning of large protein sequence …

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Genome-powered classification of microbial eukaryotes: focus on coral algal symbionts

Modern microbial taxonomy generally relies on the use of single marker genes or sets of concatenated genes to generate a framework for the delineation and classification of organisms at different taxonomic levels. However, given that DNA is the ‘blueprint of life’, and hence the ultimate arbiter of taxonomy, classification systems should attempt to use as much of the blueprint as possible to capture a comprehensive phylogenetic signal. Recent analysis of whole-genome sequences from coral reef…

Genome-powered classification of microbial eukaryotes: focus on coral algal symbionts

Modern microbial taxonomy generally relies on the use of single marker genes or sets of concatenated genes to generate a framework for the delineation and classification of organisms at different taxonomic levels. However, given that DNA is the ‘blueprint of life’, and hence the ultimate arbiter of taxonomy, classification systems should attempt to use as much of the blueprint as possible to capture a comprehensive phylogenetic signal. Recent analysis of whole-genome sequences from coral reef…