Author's posts
Apr 24
Comparative genomic analysis and phylogenetic position of Theileria equi.
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Comparative genomic analysis and phylogenetic position of Theileria equi.
BMC Genomics. 2012;13:603
Authors: Kappmeyer LS, Thiagarajan M, Herndon DR, Ramsay JD, Caler E, Djikeng A, Gillespie JJ, Lau AO, Roa…
Apr 14
Nucleomorph genome sequence of the cryptophyte alga Chroomonas mesostigmatica CCMP1168 reveals lineage-specific gene loss and genome complexity.
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Nucleomorph genome sequence of the cryptophyte alga Chroomonas mesostigmatica CCMP1168 reveals lineage-specific gene loss and genome complexity.
Genome Biol Evol. 2012;4(11):1162-75
Authors: Moore CE, Curtis B, Mills T, Tanifuji G, Archibald JM
Abstract
Cryptophytes are a diverse lineage of marine and freshwater, photosynthetic and secondarily nonphotosynthetic algae that acquired their plastids (chloroplasts) by “secondary” (i.e., eukaryote-eukaryote) endosymbiosis. Consequently, they are among the most genetically complex cells known and have four genomes: a mitochondrial, plastid, “master” nuclear, and residual nuclear genome of secondary endosymbiotic origin, the so-called “nucleomorph” genome. Sequenced nucleomorph genomes are ∼1,000-kilobase pairs (Kbp) or less in size and are comprised of three linear, compositionally biased chromosomes. Although most functionally annotated nucleomorph genes encode proteins involved in core eukaryotic processes, up to 40% of the genes in these genomes remain unidentifiable. To gain insight into the function and evolutionary fate of nucleomorph genomes, we used 454 and Illumina technologies to completely sequence the nucleomorph genome of the cryptophyte Chroomonas mesostigmatica CCMP1168. At 702.9 Kbp in size, the C. mesostigmatica nucleomorph genome is the largest and the most complex nucleomorph genome sequenced to date. Our comparative analyses reveal the existence of a highly conserved core set of genes required for maintenance of the cryptophyte nucleomorph and plastid, as well as examples of lineage-specific gene loss resulting in differential loss of typical eukaryotic functions, e.g., proteasome-mediated protein degradation, in the four cryptophyte lineages examined.
PMID: 23042551 [PubMed – indexed for MEDLINE]
Apr 10
Measuring community similarity with phylogenetic networks.
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Measuring community similarity with phylogenetic networks.
Mol Biol Evol. 2012 Dec;29(12):3947-58
Authors: Parks DH, Beiko RG
Abstract
Environmental drivers of biodiversity can be identified by relating patterns of community similarity to ecological factors. Community variation has traditionally been assessed by considering changes in species composition and more recently by incorporating phylogenetic information to account for the relative similarity of taxa. Here, we describe how an important class of measures including Bray-Curtis, Canberra, and UniFrac can be extended to allow community variation to be computed on a phylogenetic network. We focus on phylogenetic split systems, networks that are produced by the widely used median network and neighbor-net methods, which can represent incongruence in the evolutionary history of a set of taxa. Calculating β diversity over a split system provides a measure of community similarity averaged over uncertainty or conflict in the available phylogenetic signal. Our freely available software, Network Diversity, provides 11 qualitative (presence-absence, unweighted) and 14 quantitative (weighted) network-based measures of community similarity that model different aspects of community richness and evenness. We demonstrate the broad applicability of network-based diversity approaches by applying them to three distinct data sets: pneumococcal isolates from distinct geographic regions, human mitochondrial DNA data from the Indonesian island of Nias, and proteorhodopsin sequences from the Sargasso and Mediterranean Seas. Our results show that major expected patterns of variation for these data sets are recovered using network-based measures, which indicates that these patterns are robust to phylogenetic uncertainty and conflict. Nonetheless, network-based measures of community similarity can differ substantially from measures ignoring phylogenetic relationships or from tree-based measures when incongruent signals are present in the underlying data. Network-based measures provide a methodology for assessing the robustness of β-diversity results in light of incongruent phylogenetic signal and allow β diversity to be calculated over widely used network structures such as median networks.
PMID: 22915830 [PubMed – indexed for MEDLINE]
Apr 09
Genomics, population genetics and evolutionary history of Plasmodium vivax.
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Genomics, population genetics and evolutionary history of Plasmodium vivax.
Adv Parasitol. 2013;81:203-22
Authors: Carlton JM, Das A, Escalante AA
Abstract
Plasmodium vivax is part of a highl…
Apr 02
Problems with estimation of ancestral frequencies under stationary models.
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Problems with estimation of ancestral frequencies under stationary models.
Syst Biol. 2013 Mar;62(2):330-8
Authors: Susko E, Roger AJ
PMID: 22949482 [PubMed – indexed for MEDLINE]
Mar 23
Reconstruction of the feeding apparatus in Postgaardi mariagerensis provides evidence for character evolution within the Symbiontida (Euglenozoa).
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Reconstruction of the feeding apparatus in Postgaardi mariagerensis provides evidence for character evolution within the Symbiontida (Euglenozoa).
Eur J Protistol. 2013 Jan;49(1):32-9
Authors: Yubuki N, Simp…
Feb 27
A widespread and unusual RNA trans-splicing type in dinoflagellate mitochondria.
A widespread and unusual RNA trans-splicing type in dinoflagellate mitochondria.
PLoS One. 2013;8(2):e56777
Authors: Jackson CJ, Waller RF
Abstract
Cytochrome oxidase subunit 3 (Cox3) is a mitochondrion-enco…
Feb 26
Tier I Canada Research Chair in Environmental Biochemistry in Concordia University
The Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry invites applications for one Tier I Canada Research Chair (CRC) in Environmental Biochemistry. This position is directly linked to priority areas in Concordia University’s Strategic Research Plan (2008-12): http://oor.concordia.ca/formsandreferencedocuments/strategicresearchplan/ The successful candidate will have established a highly visible, internationally recognized, innovative research program in environmental biochemistry, as demonstrated by …
Feb 13
A broad phylogenetic survey unveils the diversity and evolution of telomeres in eukaryotes.
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A broad phylogenetic survey unveils the diversity and evolution of telomeres in eukaryotes.
Genome Biol Evol. 2013 Feb 9;
Authors: Fulnecková J, Sevcíková T, Fajkus J, Lukesová A, Lukes M, Vlcek C, Lang BF, Kim E, Eliás M, Sykorová E
Abstract
Telomeres, ubiquitous and essential structures of eukaryotic chromosomes, are known to come in a variety of forms, but knowledge about their actual diversity and evolution across the whole phylogenetic breadth of the eukaryotic life remains fragmentary. To fill this gap we employed a complex experimental approach to probe telomeric minisatellites in various phylogenetically diverse groups of algae. Our most remarkable results include the following findings: (1) algae of the streptophyte class Klebsormidiophyceae possess the Chlamydomonas-type telomeric repeat (TTTTAGGG) or, in at least one species, a novel TTTTAGG repeat, indicating an evolutionary transition from the Arabidopsis-type repeat (TTTAGGG) ancestral for Chloroplastida; (2) the Arabidopsis-type repeat is also present in telomeres of Xanthophyceae, in contrast to the presence of the human-type repeat (TTAGGG) in other ochrophytes studied, and of the photosynthetic alveolate Chromera velia, consistent with its phylogenetic position close to apicomplexans and dinoflagellates; (3) glaucophytes and haptophytes exhibit the human-type repeat in their telomeres; (4) ulvophytes and rhodophytes have unusual telomere structures recalcitrant to standard analysis. To obtain additional details on the distribution of different telomere types in eukaryotes, we performed in silico analyses of genomic data from major eukaryotic lineages, utilizing also genome assemblies from our on-going genome projects for representatives of three hitherto unsampled lineages (jakobids, malawimonads, and goniomonads). These analyses confirm the human-type repeat as the most common and possibly ancestral in eukaryotes, but alternative motifs replaced it along the phylogeny of diverse eukaryotic lineages, some of them several times independently.
PMID: 23395982 [PubMed – as supplied by publisher]
Feb 07
Comparative metagenomics of three Dehalococcoides-containing enrichment cultures: the role of the non-dechlorinating community.
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Comparative metagenomics of three Dehalococcoides-containing enrichment cultures: the role of the non-dechlorinating community.
BMC Genomics. 2012;13:327
Authors: Hug LA, Beiko RG, Rowe AR, Richardson RE, Edwards EA
Abstract
UNLABELLED: ABSTRACT:
BACKGROUND: The Dehalococcoides are strictly anaerobic bacteria that gain metabolic energy via the oxidation of H2 coupled to the reduction of halogenated organic compounds. Dehalococcoides spp. grow best in mixed microbial consortia, relying on non-dechlorinating members to provide essential nutrients and maintain anaerobic conditions.A metagenome sequence was generated for the dechlorinating mixed microbial consortium KB-1. A comparative metagenomic study utilizing two additional metagenome sequences for Dehalococcoides-containing dechlorinating microbial consortia was undertaken to identify common features that are provided by the non-dechlorinating community and are potentially essential to Dehalococcoides growth.
RESULTS: The KB-1 metagenome contained eighteen novel homologs to reductive dehalogenase genes. The metagenomes obtained from the three consortia were automatically annotated using the MG-RAST server, from which statistically significant differences in community composition and metabolic profiles were determined. Examination of specific metabolic pathways, including corrinoid synthesis, methionine synthesis, oxygen scavenging, and electron-donor metabolism identified the Firmicutes, methanogenic Archaea, and the ∂-Proteobacteria as key organisms encoding these pathways, and thus potentially producing metabolites required for Dehalococcoides growth.
CONCLUSIONS: Comparative metagenomics of the three Dehalococcoides-containing consortia identified that similarities across the three consortia are more apparent at the functional level than at the taxonomic level, indicating the non-dechlorinating organisms’ identities can vary provided they fill the same niche within a consortium. Functional redundancy was identified in each metabolic pathway of interest, with key processes encoded by multiple taxonomic groups. This redundancy likely contributes to the robust growth and dechlorination rates in dechlorinating enrichment cultures.
PMID: 22823523 [PubMed – indexed for MEDLINE]

