1,531 research outputs found
The replication of DNA in Escherichia coli
Studies of bacterial transformation and bacteriaphage infection (1-5) strongly indicate that deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) can carry and transmit hereditary information and can direct its own replication. Hypotheses for the mechanism of DNA replication differ in the predictions they make concerning the distribution among progeny molecules of atoms derived from parental molecules.(6
Henri Temianka Correspondence; (meselson)
https://digitalcommons.chapman.edu/temianka_correspondence/2496/thumbnail.jp
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Massive Horizontal Gene Transfer in Bdelloid Rotifers
Horizontal gene transfer in metazoans has been documented in only a few species and is usually associated with endosymbiosis or parasitism. By contrast, in bdelloid rotifers we found many genes that appear to have originated in bacteria, fungi, and plants, concentrated in telomeric regions along with diverse mobile genetic elements. Bdelloid proximal gene-rich regions, however, appeared to lack foreign genes, thereby resembling those of model metazoan organisms. Some of the foreign genes were defective, whereas others were intact and transcribed; some of the latter contained functional spliceosomal introns. One such gene, apparently of bacterial origin, was overexpressed in Escherichia coli and yielded an active enzyme. The capture and functional assimilation of exogenous genes may represent an important force in bdelloid evolution.Molecular and Cellular Biolog
Biodiversity and ecosystem function in soil
1. Soils are one of the last great frontiers for biodiversity research and are home to an extraordinary range of microbial and animal groups. Biological activities in soils drive many of the key ecosystem processes that govern the global system, especially in the cycling of elements such as carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus. 2. We cannot currently make firm statements about the scale of biodiversity in soils, or about the roles played by soil organisms in the transformations of organic materials that underlie those cycles. The recent UK Soil Biodiversity Programme (SBP) has brought a unique concentration of researchers to bear on a single soil in Scotland, and has generated a large amount of data concerning biodiversity, carbon flux and resilience in the soil ecosystem. 3. One of the key discoveries of the SBP was the extreme diversity of small organisms: researchers in the programme identified over 100 species of bacteria, 350 protozoa, 140 nematodes and 24 distinct types of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi. Statistical analysis of these results suggests a much greater 'hidden diversity'. In contrast, there was no unusual richness in other organisms, such as higher fungi, mites, collembola and annelids. 4. Stable-isotope (C-13) technology was used to measure carbon fluxes and map the path of carbon through the food web. A novel finding was the rapidity with which carbon moves through the soil biota, revealing an extraordinarily dynamic soil ecosystem. 5. The combination of taxonomic diversity and rapid carbon flux makes the soil ecosystem highly resistant to perturbation through either changing soil structure or removing selected groups of organisms
A deep-branching clade of retrovirus-like retrotransposons in bdelloid rotifers
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2006. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier B.V. for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Gene 390 (2007): 136-145, doi:10.1016/j.gene.2006.09.025.Rotifers of class Bdelloidea, a group of aquatic invertebrates in which males and meiosis
have never been documented, are also unusual in their lack of multicopy LINE-like and
gypsy-like retrotransposons, groups inhabiting the genomes of nearly all other
metazoans. Bdelloids do contain numerous DNA transposons, both intact and decayed,
and domesticated Penelope-like retroelements Athena, concentrated at telomeric
regions. Here we describe two LTR retrotransposons, each found at low copy number in
a different bdelloid species, which define a clade different from previously known clades
of LTR retrotransposons. Like bdelloid DNA transposons and Athena, these elements
have been found preferentially in telomeric regions. Unlike bdelloid DNA transposons,
many of which are decayed, the newly described elements, named Vesta and Juno,
inhabiting the genomes of Philodina roseola and Adineta vaga, respectively, appear to
be intact and to represent recent insertions, possibly from an exogenous source. We
describe the retrovirus-like structure of the new elements, containing gag, pol, and env-like
open reading frames, and discuss their possible origins, transmission, and behavior
in bdelloid genomes.We thank the US National Science Foundation (MCB-0614142) and the National
Institutes of Health (5R01GM072708-02) for financial support
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Degenerate Tetraploidy Was Established Before Bdelloid Rotifer Families Diverged
Rotifers of Class Bdelloidea are abundant freshwater invertebrates known for their remarkable ability to survive desiccation and their lack of males and meiosis. Sequencing and annotation of approximately 50-kb regions containing the four hsp82 heat shock genes of the bdelloid Philodina roseola, each located on a separate chromosome, have suggested that its genome is that of a degenerate tetraploid. In order to determine whether a similar structure exists in a bdelloid distantly related to P. roseola and if degenerate tetraploidy was established before the two species separated, we sequenced regions containing the hsp82 genes of a bdelloid belonging to a different family, Adineta vaga, and the histone gene clusters of P. roseola and A. vaga. Our findings are entirely consistent with degenerate tetraploidy and show that it was established before the two bdelloid families diverged and therefore probably before the bdelloid radiation.Molecular and Cellular BiologyOrganismic and Evolutionary Biolog
Some observations on the cofactor requirement for partially purified DNA ligase from Escherichia coli
Farrando Sicilia, Jordi; Fuente Fuente, Carlo
Three rare cases of anthrax arising from the same source
Anthrax is an acute bacterial infection caused by Bacillus anthracis. Humans become infected under natural conditions by contact with infected animals or contaminated animal products. About 95% of human anthrax is cutaneous and 5% respiratory. Gastrointestinal anthrax is very rare, and has been reported in less than 1% of all cases. Anthrax meningitis is a rare complication of any of the other three forms of disease. We report three rare cases of anthrax (gastrointestinal, oropharyngeal and meningitis) arising from the same source. The three patients were from a single family and were admitted with different clinical pictures after the ingestion of half-cooked meat from a sick sheep. These cases emphasize the need for awareness of anthrax in the differential diagnosis in areas where the disease remains endemic
Use of high throughput sequencing to observe genome dynamics at a single cell level
With the development of high throughput sequencing technology, it becomes
possible to directly analyze mutation distribution in a genome-wide fashion,
dissociating mutation rate measurements from the traditional underlying
assumptions. Here, we sequenced several genomes of Escherichia coli from
colonies obtained after chemical mutagenesis and observed a strikingly
nonrandom distribution of the induced mutations. These include long stretches
of exclusively G to A or C to T transitions along the genome and orders of
magnitude intra- and inter-genomic differences in mutation density. Whereas
most of these observations can be explained by the known features of enzymatic
processes, the others could reflect stochasticity in the molecular processes at
the single-cell level. Our results demonstrate how analysis of the molecular
records left in the genomes of the descendants of an individual mutagenized
cell allows for genome-scale observations of fixation and segregation of
mutations, as well as recombination events, in the single genome of their
progenitor.Comment: 22 pages, 9 figures (including 5 supplementary), one tabl
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