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Featured researches published by Adam Kuspa.


Nature | 2005

The genome of the social amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum

Ludwig Eichinger; J. A. Pachebat; G. Glöckner; Marie-Adele Rajandream; Richard Sucgang; Matthew Berriman; J. Song; Rolf Olsen; Karol Szafranski; Qikai Xu; Budi Tunggal; Sarah K. Kummerfeld; B. A. Konfortov; Francisco Rivero; Alan Thomas Bankier; R. Lehmann; N. Hamlin; Robert Davies; Pascale Gaudet; Petra Fey; Karen E Pilcher; Guokai Chen; David L. Saunders; Erica Sodergren; Paul Davis; Arnaud Kerhornou; X. Nie; Neil Hall; Christophe Anjard; Lisa Hemphill

The social amoebae are exceptional in their ability to alternate between unicellular and multicellular forms. Here we describe the genome of the best-studied member of this group, Dictyostelium discoideum. The gene-dense chromosomes of this organism encode approximately 12,500 predicted proteins, a high proportion of which have long, repetitive amino acid tracts. There are many genes for polyketide synthases and ABC transporters, suggesting an extensive secondary metabolism for producing and exporting small molecules. The genome is rich in complex repeats, one class of which is clustered and may serve as centromeres. Partial copies of the extrachromosomal ribosomal DNA (rDNA) element are found at the ends of each chromosome, suggesting a novel telomere structure and the use of a common mechanism to maintain both the rDNA and chromosomal termini. A proteome-based phylogeny shows that the amoebozoa diverged from the animal–fungal lineage after the plant–animal split, but Dictyostelium seems to have retained more of the diversity of the ancestral genome than have plants, animals or fungi.


Developmental Biology | 1986

A global analysis of developmentally regulated genes in Myxococcus xanthus

Lee Kroos; Adam Kuspa; Dale Kaiser

Tn5 lac is a transposon that fuses the transcription of lacZ to exogenous promoters. We generated 2374 Tn5 lac insertion-containing strains of Myxococcus xanthus, a soil bacterium that undergoes multicellular development which culminates in the formation of spores. Thirty-six strains were identified that specifically increase beta-galactosidase expression at some particular time during development and these expression times range from minutes after starvation initiates development to 24 hr, when sporulation begins. Different maximum levels of beta-galactosidase expression were also observed and the maximum for many strains that begin beta-galactosidase expression late in development was observed only if spores were disrupted. Seven of the 36 strains display mild to severe defects in aggregation and/or sporulation, as did an additional five strains whose beta-galactosidase expression was not developmentally regulated. Restriction maps of the DNA adjacent to the Tn5 lac insertions that are developmentally regulated and/or cause developmental defects show that most of the 41 insertions are in different regions of the Myxococcus genome. The developmentally regulated Tn5 lac insertions described here provide a set of at least 29 new developmental markers for Myxococcus.


Nature | 2002

Sequence and analysis of chromosome 2 of Dictyostelium discoideum

Gernot Glöckner; Ludwig Eichinger; Karol Szafranski; Justin A. Pachebat; Alan T. Bankier; Paul H. Dear; Rüdiger Lehmann; Cornelia Baumgart; Genís Parra; Josep F. Abril; Roderic Guigó; Kai Kumpf; Budi Tunggal; Edward C. Cox; Michael A. Quail; Matthias Platzer; André Rosenthal; Angelika A. Noegel; Bart Barrell; Marie-Adèle Rajandream; Jeffrey G. Williams; Robert R. Kay; Adam Kuspa; Richard A. Gibbs; Richard Sucgang; Donna Muzny; Brian Desany; Kathy Zeng; Baoli Zhu; Pieter J. de Jong

The genome of the lower eukaryote Dictyostelium discoideum comprises six chromosomes. Here we report the sequence of the largest, chromosome 2, which at 8 megabases (Mb) represents about 25% of the genome. Despite an A + T content of nearly 80%, the chromosome codes for 2,799 predicted protein coding genes and 73 transfer RNA genes. This gene density, about 1 gene per 2.6 kilobases (kb), is surpassed only by Saccharomyces cerevisiae (one per 2 kb) and is similar to that of Schizosaccharomyces pombe (one per 2.5 kb). If we assume that the other chromosomes have a similar gene density, we can expect around 11,000 genes in the D. discoideum genome. A significant number of the genes show higher similarities to genes of vertebrates than to those of other fully sequenced eukaryotes. This analysis strengthens the view that the evolutionary position of D. discoideum is located before the branching of metazoa and fungi but after the divergence of the plant kingdom, placing it close to the base of metazoan evolution.


Science | 2004

Periodic Signaling Controlled by an Oscillatory Circuit That Includes Protein Kinases ERK2 and PKA

Mineko Maeda; Sijie Lu; Gad Shaulsky; Yuji Miyazaki; Hidekazu Kuwayama; Yoshimasa Tanaka; Adam Kuspa; William F. Loomis

Self-regulating systems often use robust oscillatory circuits. One such system controls the chemotactic signaling mechanism of Dictyostelium, where pulses of adenosine 3′,5′-monophosphate (cAMP) are generated with a periodicity of 7 minutes. We have observed spontaneous oscillations in activation of the mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase ERK2 that occur in phase with peaks of cAMP, and we show that ERK2 modulates cAMP levels through the phosphodiesterase RegA. Computer modeling and simulations of the underlying circuit faithfully account for the ability of the cells to spontaneously generate periodic pulses during specific stages of development. Similar oscillatory processes may occur in cells of many different species.


Genome Biology | 2010

Conserved developmental transcriptomes in evolutionarily divergent species

Anup Parikh; Edward Roshan Miranda; Mariko Katoh-Kurasawa; Danny Fuller; Gregor Rot; Lan Zagar; Tomaz Curk; Richard Sucgang; Rui Chen; Blaz Zupan; William F. Loomis; Adam Kuspa; Gad Shaulsky

BackgroundEvolutionarily divergent organisms often share developmental anatomies despite vast differences between their genome sequences. The social amoebae Dictyostelium discoideum and Dictyostelium purpureum have similar developmental morphologies although their genomes are as divergent as those of man and jawed fish.ResultsHere we show that the anatomical similarities are accompanied by extensive transcriptome conservation. Using RNA sequencing we compared the abundance and developmental regulation of all the transcripts in the two species. In both species, most genes are developmentally regulated and the greatest expression changes occur during the transition from unicellularity to multicellularity. The developmental regulation of transcription is highly conserved between orthologs in the two species. In addition to timing of expression, the level of mRNA production is also conserved between orthologs and is consistent with the intuitive notion that transcript abundance correlates with the amount of protein required. Furthermore, the conservation of transcriptomes extends to cell-type specific expression.ConclusionsThese findings suggest that developmental programs are remarkably conserved at the transcriptome level, considering the great evolutionary distance between the genomes. Moreover, this transcriptional conservation may be responsible for the similar developmental anatomies of Dictyostelium discoideum and Dictyostelium purpureum.


Current Biology | 2009

Polymorphic members of the lag gene family mediate kin discrimination in Dictyostelium.

Rocio Benabentos; Shigenori Hirose; Richard Sucgang; Tomaz Curk; Mariko Katoh; Elizabeth A. Ostrowski; Joan E. Strassmann; David C. Queller; Blaz Zupan; Gad Shaulsky; Adam Kuspa

Self and kin discrimination are observed in most kingdoms of life and are mediated by highly polymorphic plasma membrane proteins. Sequence polymorphism, which is essential for effective recognition, is maintained by balancing selection. Dictyostelium discoideum are social amoebas that propagate as unicellular organisms but aggregate upon starvation and form fruiting bodies with viable spores and dead stalk cells. Aggregative development exposes Dictyostelium to the perils of chimerism, including cheating, which raises questions about how the victims survive in nature and how social cooperation persists. Dictyostelids can minimize the cost of chimerism by preferential cooperation with kin, but the mechanisms of kin discrimination are largely unknown. Dictyostelium lag genes encode transmembrane proteins with multiple immunoglobulin (Ig) repeats that participate in cell adhesion and signaling. Here, we describe their role in kin discrimination. We show that lagB1 and lagC1 are highly polymorphic in natural populations and that their sequence dissimilarity correlates well with wild-strain segregation. Deleting lagB1 and lagC1 results in strain segregation in chimeras with wild-type cells, whereas elimination of the nearly invariant homolog lagD1 has no such consequences. These findings reveal an early evolutionary origin of kin discrimination and provide insight into the mechanism of social recognition and immunity.


Developmental Biology | 1986

Intercellular signaling is required for developmental gene expression in Myxococcus xanthus

Adam Kuspa; Lee Kroos; Dale Kaiser

Certain developmental mutants of Myxococcus xanthus can be complemented (extracellularly) by wild-type cells. Insertions of Tn5 lac (a transposon which couples beta-galactosidase expression to exogenous promoters) into developmentally regulated genes were used to investigate extracellular complementation of the A group mutations. A- mutations reduced developmental beta-galactosidase expression from 18 of 21 Tn5 lac insertions tested and that expression was restored to A- Tn5 lac cells by adding wild-type cells. The earliest A-dependent Tn5 lac normally expresses beta-galactosidase at 1.5 hr of development indicating a developmental block at 1-2 hr in A- mutants. A substance which can rescue the expression of this early Tn5 lac is released by wild-type (A+) but not by A- cells. This substance appears in a cell-free wash of wild-type cells or in starvation buffer conditioned by wild-type cells 1-2 hr after development is initiated. The conditioned starvation buffer also restores normal morphological development to an A- mutant.


Nature | 2008

Facultative cheater mutants reveal the genetic complexity of cooperation in social amoebae

Lorenzo A. Santorelli; Christopher R. L. Thompson; Elizabeth Villegas; Jessica Svetz; Christopher Dinh; Anup Parikh; Richard Sucgang; Adam Kuspa; Joan E. Strassmann; David C. Queller; Gad Shaulsky

Cooperation is central to many major transitions in evolution, including the emergence of eukaryotic cells, multicellularity and eusociality. Cooperation can be destroyed by the spread of cheater mutants that do not cooperate but gain the benefits of cooperation from others. However, cooperation can be preserved if cheaters are facultative, cheating others but cooperating among themselves. Several cheater mutants have been studied before, but no study has attempted a genome-scale investigation of the genetic opportunities for cheating. Here we describe such a screen in a social amoeba and show that cheating is multifaceted by revealing cheater mutations in well over 100 genes of diverse types. Many of these mutants cheat facultatively, producing more than their fair share of spores in chimaeras, but cooperating normally when clonal. These findings indicate that phenotypically stable cooperative systems may nevertheless harbour genetic conflicts. The opportunities for evolutionary moves and countermoves in such conflicts may select for the involvement of multiple pathways and numerous genes.


Nature Genetics | 2005

Epistasis analysis with global transcriptional phenotypes

Nancy Van Driessche; Janez Demšar; Ezgi O. Booth; Paul Hill; Peter Juvan; Blaz Zupan; Adam Kuspa; Gad Shaulsky

Classical epistasis analysis can determine the order of function of genes in pathways using morphological, biochemical and other phenotypes. It requires knowledge of the pathways phenotypic output and a variety of experimental expertise and so is unsuitable for genome-scale analysis. Here we used microarray profiles of mutants as phenotypes for epistasis analysis. Considering genes that regulate activity of protein kinase A in Dictyostelium, we identified known and unknown epistatic relationships and reconstructed a genetic network with microarray phenotypes alone. This work shows that microarray data can provide a uniform, quantitative tool for large-scale genetic network analysis.


Genome Biology | 2011

Comparative genomics of the social amoebae Dictyostelium discoideum and Dictyostelium purpureum

Richard Sucgang; Alan Kuo; Xiangjun Tian; William Salerno; Anup Parikh; Christa L. Feasley; Eileen Dalin; Hank Tu; Eryong Huang; Kerrie Barry; Erika Lindquist; Harris Shapiro; David Bruce; Jeremy Schmutz; Asaf Salamov; Petra Fey; Pascale Gaudet; Christophe Anjard; M. Madan Babu; Siddhartha Basu; Yulia A. Bushmanova; Hanke van der Wel; Mariko Katoh-Kurasawa; Christopher Dinh; Pedro M. Coutinho; Tamao Saito; Marek Eliáš; Pauline Schaap; Robert R. Kay; Bernard Henrissat

BackgroundThe social amoebae (Dictyostelia) are a diverse group of Amoebozoa that achieve multicellularity by aggregation and undergo morphogenesis into fruiting bodies with terminally differentiated spores and stalk cells. There are four groups of dictyostelids, with the most derived being a group that contains the model species Dictyostelium discoideum.ResultsWe have produced a draft genome sequence of another group dictyostelid, Dictyosteliumpurpureum, and compare it to the D. discoideum genome. The assembly (8.41 × coverage) comprises 799 scaffolds totaling 33.0 Mb, comparable to the D. discoideum genome size. Sequence comparisons suggest that these two dictyostelids shared a common ancestor approximately 400 million years ago. In spite of this divergence, most orthologs reside in small clusters of conserved synteny. Comparative analyses revealed a core set of orthologous genes that illuminate dictyostelid physiology, as well as differences in gene family content. Interesting patterns of gene conservation and divergence are also evident, suggesting function differences; some protein families, such as the histidine kinases, have undergone little functional change, whereas others, such as the polyketide synthases, have undergone extensive diversification. The abundant amino acid homopolymers encoded in both genomes are generally not found in homologous positions within proteins, so they are unlikely to derive from ancestral DNA triplet repeats. Genes involved in the social stage evolved more rapidly than others, consistent with either relaxed selection or accelerated evolution due to social conflict.ConclusionsThe findings from this new genome sequence and comparative analysis shed light on the biology and evolution of the Dictyostelia.

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Gad Shaulsky

Baylor College of Medicine

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Richard Sucgang

Baylor College of Medicine

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Blaz Zupan

University of Ljubljana

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Shigenori Hirose

Baylor College of Medicine

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Christopher Dinh

Baylor College of Medicine

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Guokai Chen

National Institutes of Health

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Anup Parikh

Baylor College of Medicine

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