20 results on '"Raymond-Bouchard I"'
Search Results
2. Novel Antarctic yeast adapts to cold by switching energy metabolism and increasing small RNA synthesis
- Author
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Touchette, D., primary, Altshuler, I., additional, Gostinčar, C., additional, Zalar, P., additional, Raymond-Bouchard, I., additional, Zajc, J., additional, McKay, C. P., additional, Gunde-Cimerman, N., additional, and Whyte, L. G., additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Polar Cryoenvironments as Mars Analogues and the Development of a Micro Life Detection Platform.
- Author
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Raymond-Bouchard, I., Maggiori, C., Touchette, D., Magnuson, E., Goordial, J., Ricco, A. J., and Whyte, L. G.
- Subjects
MARS (Planet) ,SPACE exploration ,SUBGLACIAL lakes ,PLANETARY exploration ,GALE Crater (Mars) ,PERMAFROST ecosystems - Published
- 2019
4. Optical Genome Mapping Reveals the Complex Genetic Landscape of Myeloma.
- Author
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Giguère A, Raymond-Bouchard I, Collin V, Claveau JS, Hébert J, and LeBlanc R
- Abstract
Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) on enriched CD138 plasma cells is the standard method for identification of clinically relevant genetic abnormalities in multiple myeloma. However, FISH is a targeted analysis that can be challenging due to the genetic complexity of myeloma. The aim of this study was to evaluate the potential of optical genome mapping (OGM) to detect clinically significant cytogenetic abnormalities in myeloma and to provide larger pangenomic information. OGM and FISH analyses were performed on CD138-purified cells of 20 myeloma patients. OGM successfully detected structural variants (SVs) ( IGH and MYC rearrangements), copy number variants (CNVs) (17p/ TP53 deletion, 1p deletion and 1q gain/amplification) and aneuploidy (gains of odd-numbered chromosomes, monosomy 13) classically expected with myeloma and led to a 30% increase in prognosis yield at our institution when compared to FISH. Despite challenges in the interpretation of OGM calls for CNV and aneuploidy losses in non-diploid genomes, OGM has the potential to replace FISH as the standard of care analysis in clinical settings and to efficiently change how we identify prognostic and predictive markers for therapies in the future. To our knowledge, this is the first study highlighting the feasibility and clinical utility of OGM in myeloma.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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5. Microbial Characterization of Arctic Glacial Ice Cores with a Semiautomated Life Detection System.
- Author
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Touchette D, Maggiori C, Altshuler I, Tettenborn A, Bourdages LJ, Magnuson E, Blenner-Hassett O, Raymond-Bouchard I, Ellery A, and Whyte LG
- Subjects
- Canada, Arctic Regions, Exobiology, Ice Cover
- Abstract
The search for extant microbial life will be a major focus of future astrobiology missions; however, no direct extant life detection instrumentation is included in current missions to Mars. In this study, we developed the semiautomated MicroLife detection platform that collects and processes environmental samples, detects biosignatures, and characterizes microbial activity. This platform is composed of a drill for sample collection, a redox dye colorimetric system for microbial metabolic activity detection and assessment (μMAMA [microfluidics Microbial Activity MicroAssay]), and a MinION sequencer for biosignature detection and characterization of microbial communities. The MicroLife platform was field-tested on White Glacier on Axel Heiberg Island in the Canadian high Arctic, with two extracted ice cores. The μMAMA successfully detected microbial metabolism from the ice cores within 1 day of incubation. The MinION sequencing of the ice cores and the positive μMAMA card identified a microbial community consistent with cold and oligotrophic environments. Furthermore, isolation and identification of microbial isolates from the μMAMA card corroborated the MinION sequencing. Together, these analyses support the MicroLife platform's efficacy in identifying microbes natively present in cryoenvironments and detecting their metabolic activity. Given our MicroLife platform's size and low energy requirements, it could be incorporated into a future landed platform or rovers for life detection.
- Published
- 2023
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6. Microfluidics Microbial Activity MicroAssay: An Automated In Situ Microbial Metabolic Detection System.
- Author
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Touchette D, Altshuler I, Raymond-Bouchard I, Fernández-Martínez MÁ, Bourdages LJ, O'Connor B, Ricco AJ, and Whyte LG
- Subjects
- Exobiology, Extraterrestrial Environment, Planets, Mars, Microfluidics
- Abstract
With no direct extant-life detection instrumentation included in a space mission since the 1970s, the advancement of new technologies to be included in future space missions is imperative. We developed, optimized, and tested a semi-automated prototype, the microfluidics Microbial Activity MicroAssay (μMAMA). This system metabolically characterizes and detects extant microbial life by way of metabolism-indicator redox dyes. We first evaluated the robustness and sensitivity of six redox dye/buffer combinations, and we then tested their responses to metabolic activity in astrobiological analog high-Arctic samples. We determined that the Biolog Inoculating Fluid (IF)-C and AlamarBlue buffered in IF-0a (aB-IF0a) dye/buffer combinations were optimal, as they detected metabolic activity from the fewest microbial cells (10
2 cells/mL) while maintaining efficacy over a broad physiochemical range of pH (0-13), temperature (-10°C to 37°C), salinity and perchlorate (tested up to 30%), and in the presence of a Mars regolith simulant (MMS-2). The μMAMA, which incorporated these redox dyes, detected extant active cold-adapted microbial life from high Arctic analog sites, including samples amended with substrates targeting chemolithoautotrophic metabolisms. Given μMAMA's small size (we estimate a complete planetary instrument could occupy as little as 3 L) and potential for automation, it could easily be incorporated into almost any landed platform for life detection missions.- Published
- 2022
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7. Unique high Arctic methane metabolizing community revealed through in situ 13 CH 4 -DNA-SIP enrichment in concert with genome binning.
- Author
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Altshuler I, Raymond-Bouchard I, Magnuson E, Tremblay J, Greer CW, and Whyte LG
- Subjects
- Arctic Regions, Carbon Isotopes, Genome, Bacterial, Methane chemistry, Methane isolation & purification, Carbon Cycle, Greenhouse Gases metabolism, Methane metabolism, Microbiota genetics, Permafrost microbiology
- Abstract
Greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from Arctic permafrost soils create a positive feedback loop of climate warming and further GHG emissions. Active methane uptake in these soils can reduce the impact of GHG on future Arctic warming potential. Aerobic methane oxidizers are thought to be responsible for this apparent methane sink, though Arctic representatives of these organisms have resisted culturing efforts. Here, we first used in situ gas flux measurements and qPCR to identify relative methane sink hotspots at a high Arctic cytosol site, we then labeled the active microbiome in situ using DNA Stable Isotope Probing (SIP) with heavy
13 CH4 (at 100 ppm and 1000 ppm). This was followed by amplicon and metagenome sequencing to identify active organisms involved in CH4 metabolism in these high Arctic cryosols. Sequencing of13 C-labeled pmoA genes demonstrated that type II methanotrophs (Methylocapsa) were overall the dominant active methane oxidizers in these mineral cryosols, while type I methanotrophs (Methylomarinovum) were only detected in the 100 ppm SIP treatment. From the SIP-13 C-labeled DNA, we retrieved nine high to intermediate quality metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) belonging to the Proteobacteria, Gemmatimonadetes, and Chloroflexi, with three of these MAGs containing genes associated with methanotrophy. A novel Chloroflexi MAG contained a mmoX gene along with other methane oxidation pathway genes, identifying it as a potential uncultured methane oxidizer. This MAG also contained genes for copper import, synthesis of biopolymers, mercury detoxification, and ammonia uptake, indicating that this bacterium is strongly adapted to conditions in active layer permafrost and providing new insights into methane biogeochemical cycling. In addition, Betaproteobacterial MAGs were also identified as potential cross-feeders with methanotrophs in these Arctic cryosols. Overall, in situ SIP labeling combined with metagenomics and genome binning demonstrated to be a useful tool for discovering and characterizing novel organisms related to specific microbial functions or biogeochemical cycles of interest. Our findings reveal a unique and active Arctic cryosol microbial community potentially involved in CH4 cycling., (© 2022. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2022
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8. Assessment of Automated Nucleic Acid Extraction Systems in Combination with MinION Sequencing As Potential Tools for the Detection of Microbial Biosignatures.
- Author
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Raymond-Bouchard I, Maggiori C, Brennan L, Altshuler I, Manchado JM, Parro V, and Whyte LG
- Subjects
- Canada, Exobiology, Sequence Analysis, DNA methods, Nanopore Sequencing, Nanopores, Nucleic Acids
- Abstract
The utilization of nanopore technologies for the detection of organic biogenic compounds has garnered significant focus in recent years. Oxford Nanopore Technologies' (ONT) MinION instrument, which can detect and sequence nucleic acids (NAs), is one such example. These technologies have much promise for unambiguous life detection but require significant development in terms of methods for extraction and preparation of NAs for biosignature detection and their feasibility for use in astrobiology-focused field missions. In this study, we tested pre-existing, automated, or semiautomated NA extraction technologies, coupled with automated ONT VolTRAX NA sample preparation, and verification with Nanopore MinION sequencing. All of the extraction systems tested (SuperFastPrep2, ClaremontX1, and SOLID-Sample Preparation Unit) showed potential for extracting DNA from Canadian High Arctic environments analogous to Mars, Europa, and Enceladus, which could subsequently be detected and sequenced with the MinION. However, they differed with regard to efficacy, yield, purity, and sequencing and annotation quality. Overall, bead beating-based systems performed the best for these parameters. In addition, we showed that the MinION could sequence unpurified DNA contained in crude cell lysates. This is valuable from an astrobiology perspective because purification steps are time-consuming and complicate the requirements for an automated extraction and life detection system. Our results indicate that semiautomated NA extraction and preparation technologies hold much promise, and with increased optimization and automation could be coupled to a larger platform incorporating nanopore detection and sequencing of NAs for life detection applications.
- Published
- 2022
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9. MinION sequencing from sea ice cryoconites leads to de novo genome reconstruction from metagenomes.
- Author
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Maggiori C, Raymond-Bouchard I, Brennan L, Touchette D, and Whyte L
- Subjects
- Ice Cover microbiology, Metagenome, Metagenomics, Microbiota genetics
- Abstract
Genome reconstruction from metagenomes enables detailed study of individual community members, their metabolisms, and their survival strategies. Obtaining high quality metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) is particularly valuable in extreme environments like sea ice cryoconites, where the native consortia are recalcitrant to culture and strong astrobiology analogues. We evaluated three separate approaches for MAG generation from Allen Bay, Nunavut sea ice cryoconites-HiSeq-only, MinION-only, and hybrid (HiSeq + MinION)-where field MinION sequencing yielded a reliable metagenome. The hybrid assembly produced longer contigs, more coding sequences, and more total MAGs, revealing a microbial community dominated by Bacteroidetes. The hybrid MAGs also had the highest completeness, lowest contamination, and highest N50. A putatively novel species of Octadecabacter is among the hybrid MAGs produced, containing the genus's only known instances of genomic potential for nitrate reduction, denitrification, sulfate reduction, and fermentation. This study shows that the inclusion of MinION reads in traditional short read datasets leads to higher quality metagenomes and MAGs for more accurate descriptions of novel microorganisms in this extreme, transient habitat and has produced the first hybrid MAGs from an extreme environment., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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10. A Multiplex Immunosensor for Detecting Perchlorate-Reducing Bacteria for Environmental Monitoring and Planetary Exploration.
- Author
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Gallardo-Carreño I, Moreno-Paz M, Aguirre J, Blanco Y, Alonso-Pintado E, Raymond-Bouchard I, Maggiori C, Rivas LA, Engelbrektson A, Whyte L, and Parro V
- Abstract
Perchlorate anions are produced by chemical industries and are important contaminants in certain natural ecosystems. Perchlorate also occurs in some natural and uncontaminated environments such as the Atacama Desert, the high Arctic or the Antarctic Dry Valleys, and is especially abundant on the surface of Mars. As some bacterial strains are capable of using perchlorate as an electron acceptor under anaerobic conditions, their detection is relevant for environmental monitoring on Earth as well as for the search for life on Mars. We have developed an antibody microarray with 20 polyclonal antibodies to detect perchlorate-reducing bacteria (PRB) strains and two crucial and highly conserved enzymes involved in perchlorate respiration: perchlorate reductase and chlorite dismutase. We determined the cross-reactivity, the working concentration, and the limit of detection of each antibody individually and in a multiplex format by Fluorescent Sandwich Microarray Immunoassay. Although most of them exhibited relatively high sensitivity and specificity, we applied a deconvolution method based on graph theory to discriminate between specific signals and cross-reactions from related microorganisms. We validated the system by analyzing multiple bacterial isolates, crude extracts from contaminated reactors and salt-rich natural samples from the high Arctic. The PRB detecting chip (PRBCHIP) allowed us to detect and classify environmental isolates as well as to detect similar strains by using crude extracts obtained from 0.5 g even from soils with low organic-matter levels (<10
3 cells/g of soil). Our results demonstrated that PRBCHIP is a valuable tool for sensitive and reliable detection of perchlorate-reducing bacteria for research purposes, environmental monitoring and planetary exploration., Competing Interests: LA was employed by company Inmunología y Genética Aplicada, S.A. (INGENASA). The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2020 Gallardo-Carreño, Moreno-Paz, Aguirre, Blanco, Alonso-Pintado, Raymond-Bouchard, Maggiori, Rivas, Engelbrektson, Whyte and Parro.)- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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11. Comparative Transcriptomics of Cold Growth and Adaptive Features of a Eury- and Steno-Psychrophile.
- Author
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Raymond-Bouchard I, Tremblay J, Altshuler I, Greer CW, and Whyte LG
- Abstract
Permafrost subzero environments harbor diverse, active communities of microorganisms. However, our understanding of the subzero growth, metabolisms, and adaptive properties of these microbes remains very limited. We performed transcriptomic analyses on two subzero-growing permafrost isolates with different growth profiles in order to characterize and compare their cold temperature growth and cold-adaptive strategies. The two organisms, Rhodococcus sp. JG3 (-5 to 30°C) and Polaromonas sp. Eur3 1.2.1 (-5 to 22°C), shared several common responses during low temperature growth, including induction of translation and ribosomal processes, upregulation of nutrient transport, increased oxidative and osmotic stress responses, and stimulation of polysaccharide capsule synthesis. Recombination appeared to be an important adaptive strategy for both isolates at low temperatures, likely as a mechanism to increase genetic diversity and the potential for survival in cold systems. While Rhodococcus sp. JG3 favored upregulating iron and amino acid transport, sustaining redox potential, and modulating fatty acid synthesis and composition during growth at -5°C compared to 25°C, Polaromonas sp. Eur3 1.2.1 increased the relative abundance of transcripts involved in primary energy metabolism and the electron transport chain, in addition to signal transduction and peptidoglycan synthesis at 0°C compared to 20°C. The increase in energy metabolism may explain why Polaromonas sp. Eur3 1.2.1 is able to sustain growth rates at 0°C comparable to those at higher temperatures. For Rhodococcus sp. JG3, flexibility in use of carbon sources, iron acquisition, control of membrane fatty acid composition, and modulating redox and co-factor potential may be ways in which this organism is able to sustain growth over a wider range of temperatures. Increasing our understanding of the microbes in these habitats helps us better understand active pathways and metabolisms in extreme environments. Identifying novel, thermolabile, and cold-active enzymes from studies such as this is also of great interest to the biotechnology and food industries.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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12. Conserved genomic and amino acid traits of cold adaptation in subzero-growing Arctic permafrost bacteria.
- Author
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Raymond-Bouchard I, Goordial J, Zolotarov Y, Ronholm J, Stromvik M, Bakermans C, and Whyte LG
- Subjects
- Acclimatization physiology, Amino Acids analysis, Amino Acids genetics, Arctic Regions, Base Sequence, Carotenoids biosynthesis, Carotenoids genetics, Cold Temperature, Genome, Bacterial genetics, Genomics, Microbiota genetics, Oxidative Stress genetics, RNA Helicases genetics, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Soil, Soil Microbiology, Acclimatization genetics, Bacteria enzymology, Bacteria genetics, Bacteria metabolism, Cold Shock Proteins and Peptides genetics, Microbiota physiology, Permafrost microbiology
- Abstract
Permafrost accounts for 27% of all soil ecosystems and harbors diverse microbial communities. Our understanding of microorganisms in permafrost, their activities and adaptations, remains limited. Using five subzero-growing (cryophilic) permafrost bacteria, we examined features of cold adaptation through comparative genomic analyses with mesophilic relatives. The cryophiles possess genes associated with cold adaptation, including cold shock proteins, RNA helicases, and oxidative stress and carotenoid synthesis enzymes. Higher abundances of genes associated with compatible solutes were observed, important for osmoregulation in permafrost brine veins. Most cryophiles in our study have higher transposase copy numbers than mesophiles. We investigated amino acid (AA) modifications in the cryophiles favoring increased protein flexibility at cold temperatures. Although overall there were few differences with the mesophiles, we found evidence of cold adaptation, with significant differences in proline, serine, glycine and aromaticity, in several cryophiles. The use of cold/hot AA ratios of >1, used in previous studies to indicate cold adaptation, was found to be inadequate on its own. Comparing the average of all cryophiles to all mesophiles, we found that overall cryophiles had a higher ratio of cold adapted proteins for serine (more serine), and to a lesser extent, proline and acidic residues (fewer prolines/acidic residues).
- Published
- 2018
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13. Biological Characterization of Microenvironments in a Hypersaline Cold Spring Mars Analog.
- Author
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Sapers HM, Ronholm J, Raymond-Bouchard I, Comrey R, Osinski GR, and Whyte LG
- Abstract
While many habitable niches on Earth are characterized by permanently cold conditions, little is known about the spatial structure of seasonal communities and the importance of substrate-cell associations in terrestrial cyroenvironments. Here we use the 16S rRNA gene as a marker for genetic diversity to compare two visually distinct but spatially integrated surface microbial mats on Axel Heiberg Island, Canadian high arctic, proximal to a perennial saline spring. This is the first study to describe the bacterial diversity in microbial mats on Axel Heiberg Island. The hypersaline springs on Axel Heiberg represent a unique analog to putative subsurface aquifers on Mars. The Martian subsurface represents the longest-lived potentially habitable environment on Mars and a better understanding of the microbial communities on Earth that thrive in analog conditions will help direct future life detection missions. The microbial mats sampled on Axel Heiberg are only visible during the summer months in seasonal flood plains formed by melt water and run-off from the proximal spring. Targeted-amplicon sequencing revealed that not only does the bacterial composition of the two mat communities differ substantially from the sediment community of the proximal cold spring, but that the mat communities are distinct from any other microbial community in proximity to the Arctic springs studied to date. All samples are dominated by Gammaproteobacteria: Thiotichales is dominant within the spring samples while Alteromonadales comprises a significant component of the mat communities. The two mat samples differ in their Thiotichales:Alteromonadales ratio and contribution of Bacteroidetes to overall diversity. The red mats have a greater proportion of Alteromonadales and Bacteroidetes reads. The distinct bacterial composition of the mat bacterial communities suggests that the spring communities are not sourced from the surface, and that seasonal melt events create ephemerally habitable niches with distinct microbial communities in the Canadian high arctic. The finding that these surficial complex microbial communities exist in close proximity to perennial springs demonstrates the existence of a transiently habitable niche in an important Mars analog site.
- Published
- 2017
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14. Mechanisms of subzero growth in the cryophile Planococcus halocryophilus determined through proteomic analysis.
- Author
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Raymond-Bouchard I, Chourey K, Altshuler I, Iyer R, Hettich RL, and Whyte LG
- Subjects
- Cold Temperature, DNA Repair genetics, Proteomics, Acclimatization physiology, Bacterial Proteins analysis, Planococcus Bacteria growth & development, Planococcus Bacteria metabolism
- Abstract
The eurypsychrophilic bacterium Planococcus halocryophilus is capable of growth down to -15°C, making it ideal for studying adaptations to subzero growth. To increase our understanding of the mechanisms and pathways important for subzero growth, we performed proteomics on P. halocryophilus grown at 23°C, 23°C with 12% w/v NaCl and -10°C with 12% w/v NaCl. Many proteins with increased abundances at -10°C versus 23°C also increased at 23C-salt versus 23°C, indicating a closely tied relationship between salt and cold stress adaptation. Processes which displayed the largest changes in protein abundance were peptidoglycan and fatty acid (FA) synthesis, translation processes, methylglyoxal metabolism, DNA repair and recombination, and protein and nucleotide turnover. We identified intriguing targets for further research at -10°C, including PlsX and KASII (FA metabolism), DD-transpeptidase and MurB (peptidoglycan synthesis), glyoxalase family proteins (reactive electrophile response) and ribosome modifying enzymes (translation turnover). PemK/MazF may have a crucial role in translational reprogramming under cold conditions. At -10°C P. halocryophilus induces stress responses, uses resources efficiently, and carefully controls its growth and metabolism to maximize subzero survival. The present study identifies several mechanisms involved in subzero growth and enhances our understanding of cold adaptation., (© 2017 Society for Applied Microbiology and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2017
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15. Viral Induced Microbial Mortality in Arctic Hypersaline Spring Sediments.
- Author
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Colangelo-Lillis J, Wing BA, Raymond-Bouchard I, and Whyte LG
- Abstract
Viruses are a primary influence on microbial mortality in the global ocean. The impacts of viruses on their microbial hosts in low-energy environments are poorly explored and are the focus of this study. To investigate the role of viruses in mediating mortality in low-energy environments where contacts between viruses and microbes are infrequent, we conducted a set of in situ time series incubations in the outlet and channel sediments of two cold, hypersaline springs of the Canadian High Arctic. We found microbial and viral populations in dynamic equilibrium, indicating approximately equal birth and death rates for each population. In situ rates of microbial growth were low (0.5-50 × 10
3 cells cm-3 h-1 ) as were rates of viral decay (0.09-170 × 104 virions cm-3 h-1 ). A large fraction of the springs' viral communities (49-100%) were refractory to decay over the timescales of our experiments. Microcosms amended with lactate or acetate exhibited increased microbial growth rates (up to three-fold) indicating organic carbon as one limiting resource for the microbial communities in these environments. A substantial fraction (15-71%) of the microbial populations contained inducible proviruses that were released- occasionally in multiple pulses- over the eight monitored days following chemical induction. Our findings indicate that viruses in low-energy systems maintain low rates of production and activity, have a small but notable impact on microbial mortality (8-29% attenuation of growth) and that successful viral replication may primarily proceed by non-lethal strategies. In cold, low biomass marine systems of similar character (e.g., subsurface sediments), viruses may be a relatively minor driver of community mortality compared to less energy-limited environments such as the marine water column or surface sediments.- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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16. Improved High-Quality Draft Genome Sequence of the Eurypsychrophile Rhodotorula sp. JG1b, Isolated from Permafrost in the Hyperarid Upper-Elevation McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica.
- Author
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Goordial J, Raymond-Bouchard I, Riley R, Ronholm J, Shapiro N, Woyke T, LaButti KM, Tice H, Amirebrahimi M, Grigoriev IV, Greer C, Bakermans C, and Whyte L
- Abstract
Here, we report the draft genome sequence of Rhodotorula sp. strain JG1b, a yeast that was isolated from ice-cemented permafrost in the upper-elevation McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica. The sequenced genome size is 19.39 Mb, consisting of 156 scaffolds and containing a total of 5,625 predicted genes. This is the first known cold-adapted Rhodotorula sp. sequenced to date., (Copyright © 2016 Goordial et al.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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17. Cold adaptive traits revealed by comparative genomic analysis of the eurypsychrophile Rhodococcus sp. JG3 isolated from high elevation McMurdo Dry Valley permafrost, Antarctica.
- Author
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Goordial J, Raymond-Bouchard I, Zolotarov Y, de Bethencourt L, Ronholm J, Shapiro N, Woyke T, Stromvik M, Greer CW, Bakermans C, and Whyte L
- Subjects
- Antarctic Regions, Base Sequence, Cold Temperature, Genomics, Osmotic Pressure, Oxidative Stress genetics, Rhodococcus growth & development, Rhodococcus isolation & purification, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Temperature, Acclimatization genetics, Cold-Shock Response genetics, DNA, Bacterial genetics, Genome, Bacterial genetics, Permafrost microbiology, Rhodococcus genetics
- Abstract
The permafrost soils of the high elevation McMurdo Dry Valleys are the most cold, desiccating and oligotrophic on Earth. Rhodococcus sp. JG3 is one of very few bacterial isolates from Antarctic Dry Valley permafrost, and displays subzero growth down to -5°C. To understand how Rhodococcus sp. JG3 is able to survive extreme permafrost conditions and be metabolically active at subzero temperatures, we sequenced its genome and compared it to the genomes of 14 mesophilic rhodococci. Rhodococcus sp. JG3 possessed a higher copy number of genes for general stress response, UV protection and protection from cold shock, osmotic stress and oxidative stress. We characterized genome wide molecular adaptations to cold, and identified genes that had amino acid compositions favourable for increased flexibility and functionality at low temperatures. Rhodococcus sp. JG3 possesses multiple complimentary strategies which may enable its survival in some of the harshest permafrost on Earth., (© FEMS 2015. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2016
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18. Improved-high-quality draft genome sequence of Rhodococcus sp. JG-3, a eurypsychrophilic Actinobacteria from Antarctic Dry Valley permafrost.
- Author
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Goordial J, Raymond-Bouchard I, Ronholm J, Shapiro N, Woyke T, Whyte L, and Bakermans C
- Abstract
The actinobacterium Rhodococcus sp. JG-3 is an aerobic, eurypsychrophilic, soil bacterium isolated from permafrost in the hyper arid Upper Dry Valleys of Antarctica. It is yellow pigmented, gram positive, moderately halotolerant and capable of growth from 30 °C down to at least -5 °C. The 5.28 Mb high-quality-draft genome is arranged into 6 scaffolds, containing 9 contigs and 4998 protein coding genes, with 64 % GC content. Increasing the availability of genome sequences from cold-adapted species is crucial to gaining a better understanding of the molecular traits of cold adaptation in microbes.
- Published
- 2015
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19. Characterizing the surface-exposed proteome of Planococcus halocryophilus during cryophilic growth.
- Author
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Ronholm J, Raymond-Bouchard I, Creskey M, Cyr T, Cloutis EA, and Whyte LG
- Subjects
- Membrane Proteins genetics, Proteome genetics, Adaptation, Physiological, Cold Temperature, Membrane Proteins metabolism, Planococcus Bacteria metabolism, Proteome metabolism
- Abstract
Planococcus halocryophilus OR1 is a bacterial isolate capable of growth at temperatures ranging from -15 to +37 °C. During sub-zero (cryophilic) growth, nodular features appear on its cell surface; however, the biochemical compositions of these features as well as any cold-adaptive benefits they may offer are not understood. This study aimed to identify differences in the cell surface proteome (surfaceome) of P. halocryophilus cells grown under optimal (24 °C, no added salt), low- and mid-salt (5 and 12 % NaCl, respectively) at 24 °C, and low- and mid-salt sub-zero (5 % NaCl at -5 °C and 12 % NaCl at -10 °C) culture conditions, for the purpose of gaining insight into cold-adapted proteomic traits at the cell surface. Mid-log cells were harvested, treated briefly with trypsin and the resultant peptides were purified followed by identification by LC-MS/MS analysis. One hundred and forty-four proteins were subsequently identified in at least one culture condition. Statistically significant differences in amino acid usage, a known indicator of cold adaptation, were identified through in silico analysis. Two proteins with roles in peptidoglycan (PG) metabolism, an N-acetyl-L-alanine amidase and a multimodular transpeptidase-transglycosylase, were detected, though each was only detected under optimal conditions, indicating that high-salt and high-cold stress each affect PG metabolism. Two iron transport-binding proteins, associated with two different iron transport strategies, were identified, indicating that P. halocryophilus uses a different iron acquisition strategy at very low temperatures. Here we present the first set of data that describes bacterial adaptations at the cellular surface that occur as a cryophilic bacterium is transitioned from optimal to near-inhibitory sub-zero culture conditions.
- Published
- 2015
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20. Structural requirements for the activity of the MirB ferrisiderophore transporter of Aspergillus fumigatus.
- Author
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Raymond-Bouchard I, Carroll CS, Nesbitt JR, Henry KA, Pinto LJ, Moinzadeh M, Scott JK, and Moore MM
- Subjects
- Amino Acids metabolism, Aspergillus fumigatus genetics, Aspergillus fumigatus growth & development, Biological Transport, Blotting, Western, Cell Membrane genetics, Cell Membrane metabolism, Computational Biology methods, Cytoplasm genetics, Cytoplasm metabolism, Ferric Compounds isolation & purification, Ferric Compounds metabolism, Ferrichrome analogs & derivatives, Ferrichrome metabolism, Fungal Proteins genetics, Hydroxamic Acids isolation & purification, Hydroxamic Acids metabolism, Hyphae metabolism, Iron metabolism, Membrane Transport Proteins genetics, Microscopy, Fluorescence, Mutagenesis, Site-Directed, Proteolysis, Saccharomyces cerevisiae genetics, Saccharomyces cerevisiae metabolism, Siderophores genetics, Siderophores isolation & purification, Aspergillus fumigatus metabolism, Fungal Proteins metabolism, Membrane Transport Proteins metabolism, Siderophores metabolism
- Abstract
Siderophores have been identified as virulence factors in the opportunistic fungal pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus. The 14-pass transmembrane protein MirB is postulated to function as a siderophore transporter, responsible for uptake of the hydroxamate siderophore N,N',N″-triacetylfusarinine C (TAFC). Our aim was to identify amino acids of A. fumigatus MirB that are crucial for uptake of TAFC. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to create MirB mutants. Expression of wild-type and mutant proteins in the Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain PHY14, which lacks endogenous siderophore transporters, was confirmed by Western blotting. TAFC transport assays using (55)Fe-labeled TAFC and growth assays with Fe-TAFC as the sole iron source identified alanine 125, tyrosine 577, loop 3, and the second half of loop 7 (Loop7Del2) as crucial for function, since their substitution or deletion abrogated uptake completely. Wild-type MirB transported ferricrocin and coprogen as well as TAFC but not ferrichrysin. MirB was localized by fluorescence microscopy using antisera raised against a MirB extracellular loop peptide. Immunofluorescence microscopy showed that in yeast, wild-type MirB had a punctate distribution under the plasma membrane, as did the A125D and Y577A strains, indicating that the defect in transport of these mutants was unlikely to be due to mislocalization or degradation. MirB immunolocalization in A. fumigatus showed that the transporter was found in vesicles which cycled between the cytoplasm and the plasma membrane and was concentrated at the hyphal tips. The location of MirB was not influenced by the presence of the siderophore TAFC but was sensitive to internal iron stores.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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