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Dive into the research topics where Andrew Cree is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrew Cree.


Science | 2010

A catalog of reference genomes from the human microbiome.

Karen E. Nelson; George M. Weinstock; Sarah K. Highlander; Kim C. Worley; Heather Huot Creasy; Jennifer R. Wortman; Douglas B. Rusch; Makedonka Mitreva; Erica Sodergren; Asif T. Chinwalla; Michael Feldgarden; Dirk Gevers; Brian J. Haas; Ramana Madupu; Doyle V. Ward; Bruce Birren; Richard A. Gibbs; Barbara A. Methé; Joseph F. Petrosino; Robert L. Strausberg; Granger Sutton; Owen White; Richard Wilson; Scott Durkin; Michelle G. Giglio; Sharvari Gujja; Clint Howarth; Chinnappa D. Kodira; Nikos C. Kyrpides; Teena Mehta

News from the Inner Tube of Life A major initiative by the U.S. National Institutes of Health to sequence 900 genomes of microorganisms that live on the surfaces and orifices of the human body has established standardized protocols and methods for such large-scale reference sequencing. By combining previously accumulated data with new data, Nelson et al. (p. 994) present an initial analysis of 178 bacterial genomes. The sampling so far barely scratches the surface of the microbial diversity found on humans, but the work provides an important baseline for future analyses. Standardized protocols and methods are being established for large-scale sequencing of the microorganisms living on humans. The human microbiome refers to the community of microorganisms, including prokaryotes, viruses, and microbial eukaryotes, that populate the human body. The National Institutes of Health launched an initiative that focuses on describing the diversity of microbial species that are associated with health and disease. The first phase of this initiative includes the sequencing of hundreds of microbial reference genomes, coupled to metagenomic sequencing from multiple body sites. Here we present results from an initial reference genome sequencing of 178 microbial genomes. From 547,968 predicted polypeptides that correspond to the gene complement of these strains, previously unidentified (“novel”) polypeptides that had both unmasked sequence length greater than 100 amino acids and no BLASTP match to any nonreference entry in the nonredundant subset were defined. This analysis resulted in a set of 30,867 polypeptides, of which 29,987 (~97%) were unique. In addition, this set of microbial genomes allows for ~40% of random sequences from the microbiome of the gastrointestinal tract to be associated with organisms based on the match criteria used. Insights into pan-genome analysis suggest that we are still far from saturating microbial species genetic data sets. In addition, the associated metrics and standards used by our group for quality assurance are presented.


Nature Communications | 2010

Deep resequencing reveals excess rare recent variants consistent with explosive population growth

Alex Coventry; Lara M. Bull-Otterson; Xiaoming Liu; Andrew G. Clark; Taylor J. Maxwell; Jacy R. Crosby; James E. Hixson; Thomas J. Rea; Donna M. Muzny; Lora Lewis; David A. Wheeler; Aniko Sabo; Christine M. Lusk; Kenneth G. Weiss; Humeira Akbar; Andrew Cree; Alicia Hawes; Irene Newsham; Robin Varghese; Donna Villasana; Shannon Gross; Vandita Joshi; Jireh Santibanez; Margaret Morgan; Kyle Chang; Walker Hale; Alan R. Templeton; Eric Boerwinkle; Richard A. Gibbs; Charles F. Sing

Accurately determining the distribution of rare variants is an important goal of human genetics, but resequencing of a sample large enough for this purpose has been unfeasible until now. Here, we applied Sanger sequencing of genomic PCR amplicons to resequence the diabetes-associated genes KCNJ11 and HHEX in 13,715 people (10,422 European Americans and 3,293 African Americans) and validated amplicons potentially harbouring rare variants using 454 pyrosequencing. We observed far more variation (expected variant-site count ∼578) than would have been predicted on the basis of earlier surveys, which could only capture the distribution of common variants. By comparison with earlier estimates based on common variants, our model shows a clear genetic signal of accelerating population growth, suggesting that humanity harbours a myriad of rare, deleterious variants, and that disease risk and the burden of disease in contemporary populations may be heavily influenced by the distribution of rare variants.


Nature | 2012

Strict evolutionary conservation followed rapid gene loss on human and rhesus Y chromosomes

Jennifer F. Hughes; Helen Skaletsky; Laura G. Brown; Tina Graves; Robert S. Fulton; Shannon Dugan; Yan Ding; Christian Buhay; Colin Kremitzki; Qiaoyan Wang; Hua Shen; Michael Holder; Donna Villasana; Lynne V. Nazareth; Andrew Cree; Laura Courtney; Joelle Veizer; Holland Kotkiewicz; Ting-Jan Cho; Natalia Koutseva; Steve Rozen; Donna M. Muzny; Wesley C. Warren; Richard A. Gibbs; Richard Wilson; David C. Page

The human X and Y chromosomes evolved from an ordinary pair of autosomes during the past 200–300 million years. The human MSY (male-specific region of Y chromosome) retains only three percent of the ancestral autosomes’ genes owing to genetic decay. This evolutionary decay was driven by a series of five ‘stratification’ events. Each event suppressed X–Y crossing over within a chromosome segment or ‘stratum’, incorporated that segment into the MSY and subjected its genes to the erosive forces that attend the absence of crossing over. The last of these events occurred 30 million years ago, 5 million years before the human and Old World monkey lineages diverged. Although speculation abounds regarding ongoing decay and looming extinction of the human Y chromosome, remarkably little is known about how many MSY genes were lost in the human lineage in the 25 million years that have followed its separation from the Old World monkey lineage. To investigate this question, we sequenced the MSY of the rhesus macaque, an Old World monkey, and compared it to the human MSY. We discovered that during the last 25 million years MSY gene loss in the human lineage was limited to the youngest stratum (stratum 5), which comprises three percent of the human MSY. In the older strata, which collectively comprise the bulk of the human MSY, gene loss evidently ceased more than 25 million years ago. Likewise, the rhesus MSY has not lost any older genes (from strata 1–4) during the past 25 million years, despite its major structural differences to the human MSY. The rhesus MSY is simpler, with few amplified gene families or palindromes that might enable intrachromosomal recombination and repair. We present an empirical reconstruction of human MSY evolution in which each stratum transitioned from rapid, exponential loss of ancestral genes to strict conservation through purifying selection.


Nature | 2014

Gibbon genome and the fast karyotype evolution of small apes.

Lucia Carbone; R. Alan Harris; Sante Gnerre; Krishna R. Veeramah; Belen Lorente-Galdos; John Huddleston; Thomas J. Meyer; Javier Herrero; Christian Roos; Bronwen Aken; Fabio Anaclerio; Nicoletta Archidiacono; Carl Baker; Daniel Barrell; Mark A. Batzer; Kathryn Beal; Antoine Blancher; Craig Bohrson; Markus Brameier; Michael S. Campbell; Claudio Casola; Giorgia Chiatante; Andrew Cree; Annette Damert; Pieter J. de Jong; Laura Dumas; Marcos Fernandez-Callejo; Paul Flicek; Nina V. Fuchs; Ivo Gut

Gibbons are small arboreal apes that display an accelerated rate of evolutionary chromosomal rearrangement and occupy a key node in the primate phylogeny between Old World monkeys and great apes. Here we present the assembly and analysis of a northern white-cheeked gibbon (Nomascus leucogenys) genome. We describe the propensity for a gibbon-specific retrotransposon (LAVA) to insert into chromosome segregation genes and alter transcription by providing a premature termination site, suggesting a possible molecular mechanism for the genome plasticity of the gibbon lineage. We further show that the gibbon genera (Nomascus, Hylobates, Hoolock and Symphalangus) experienced a near-instantaneous radiation ∼5 million years ago, coincident with major geographical changes in southeast Asia that caused cycles of habitat compression and expansion. Finally, we identify signatures of positive selection in genes important for forelimb development (TBX5) and connective tissues (COL1A1) that may have been involved in the adaptation of gibbons to their arboreal habitat.


Nature | 2015

Hemichordate genomes and deuterostome origins

Oleg Simakov; Takeshi Kawashima; Ferdinand Marlétaz; Jerry Jenkins; Ryo Koyanagi; Therese Mitros; Kanako Hisata; Jessen Bredeson; Eiichi Shoguchi; Fuki Gyoja; Jia-Xing Yue; Yi-Chih Chen; Robert M. Freeman; Akane Sasaki; Tomoe Hikosaka-Katayama; Atsuko Sato; Manabu Fujie; Kenneth W. Baughman; Judith Levine; Paul Gonzalez; Christopher B. Cameron; Jens H. Fritzenwanker; Ariel M. Pani; Hiroki Goto; Miyuki Kanda; Nana Arakaki; Shinichi Yamasaki; Jiaxin Qu; Andrew Cree; Yan Ding

Acorn worms, also known as enteropneust (literally, ‘gut-breathing’) hemichordates, are marine invertebrates that share features with echinoderms and chordates. Together, these three phyla comprise the deuterostomes. Here we report the draft genome sequences of two acorn worms, Saccoglossus kowalevskii and Ptychodera flava. By comparing them with diverse bilaterian genomes, we identify shared traits that were probably inherited from the last common deuterostome ancestor, and then explore evolutionary trajectories leading from this ancestor to hemichordates, echinoderms and chordates. The hemichordate genomes exhibit extensive conserved synteny with amphioxus and other bilaterians, and deeply conserved non-coding sequences that are candidates for conserved gene-regulatory elements. Notably, hemichordates possess a deuterostome-specific genomic cluster of four ordered transcription factor genes, the expression of which is associated with the development of pharyngeal ‘gill’ slits, the foremost morphological innovation of early deuterostomes, and is probably central to their filter-feeding lifestyle. Comparative analysis reveals numerous deuterostome-specific gene novelties, including genes found in deuterostomes and marine microbes, but not other animals. The putative functions of these genes can be linked to physiological, metabolic and developmental specializations of the filter-feeding ancestor.


Nature | 2006

The finished DNA sequence of human chromosome 12

Steven E. Scherer; Donna M. Muzny; Christian Buhay; Rui Chen; Andrew Cree; Yan Ding; Shannon Dugan-Rocha; Rachel Gill; Preethi H. Gunaratne; R. Alan Harris; Alicia Hawes; Judith Hernandez; Anne Hodgson; Jennifer Hume; Andrew R. Jackson; Ziad Khan; Christie Kovar-Smith; Lora Lewis; Ryan J. Lozado; Michael L. Metzker; Aleksandar Milosavljevic; George Miner; Kate Montgomery; Margaret Morgan; Lynne V. Nazareth; Graham Scott; Erica Sodergren; Xing Zhi Song; David Steffen; Ruth C. Lovering

Human chromosome 12 contains more than 1,400 coding genes and 487 loci that have been directly implicated in human disease. The q arm of chromosome 12 contains one of the largest blocks of linkage disequilibrium found in the human genome. Here we present the finished sequence of human chromosome 12, which has been finished to high quality and spans approximately 132 megabases, representing ∼4.5% of the human genome. Alignment of the human chromosome 12 sequence across vertebrates reveals the origin of individual segments in chicken, and a unique history of rearrangement through rodent and primate lineages. The rate of base substitutions in recent evolutionary history shows an overall slowing in hominids compared with primates and rodents.


Insect Molecular Biology | 2010

A full-length cDNA resource for the pea aphid, Acyrthosiphon pisum.

Shuji Shigenobu; Stephen Richards; Andrew Cree; Mizue Morioka; Takema Fukatsu; Toshiaki Kudo; Shin-ya Miyagishima; Richard A. Gibbs; David L. Stern; Atsushi Nakabachi

Large collections of full‐length cDNAs are important resources for genome annotation and functional genomics. We report the creation of a collection of 50 599 full‐length cDNA clones from the pea aphid, Acyrthosiphon pisum. Sequencing from 5′ and 3′ ends of the clones generated 97 828 high‐quality expressed sequence tags, representing approximately 9000 genes. These sequences were imported to AphidBase and are shown to play crucial roles in both automatic gene prediction and manual annotation. Our detailed analyses demonstrated that the full‐length cDNAs can further improve gene models and can even identify novel genes that are not included in the current version of the official gene set. This full‐length cDNA collection can be utilized for a wide variety of functional studies, serving as a community resource for the study of the functional genomics of the pea aphid.


Genome Research | 2005

Pooled genomic indexing of rhesus macaque.

Aleksandar Milosavljevic; Ronald A. Harris; Erica Sodergren; Andrew R. Jackson; Ken J. Kalafus; Anne Hodgson; Andrew Cree; Weilie Dai; Miklos Csuros; Baoli Zhu; Pieter J. de Jong; George M. Weinstock; Richard A. Gibbs


pp. 949-955. (2008) | 2008

The genome of the model beetle and pest Tribolium castaneum

Stephen Richards; Richard A. Gibbs; George M. Weinstock; Susan J. Brown; Robin E. Denell; Richard W. Beeman; Richard A.L. Gibbs; Gregor Bucher; Markus Friedrich; Cornelis J. P. Grimmelikhuijzen; Martin Klingler; Marcé D. Lorenzen; Siegfried Roth; Reinhard Schröder; Diethard Tautz; Evgeny M. Zdobnov; Donna M. Muzny; Tony Attaway; Stephanie Bell; Christian Buhay; Mimi N. Chandrabose; Dean Chavez; Kp Clerk-Blankenburg; Andrew Cree; Marvin Diep Dao; Clay Davis; Joseph Chacko; Huyen Dinh; Shannon Dugan-Rocha; Gerald Fowler

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Richard A. Gibbs

Baylor College of Medicine

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Christian Buhay

Baylor College of Medicine

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Donna M. Muzny

Baylor College of Medicine

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Erica Sodergren

Baylor College of Medicine

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George M. Weinstock

Washington University in St. Louis

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Alicia Hawes

Baylor College of Medicine

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Andrew R. Jackson

Baylor College of Medicine

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Anne Hodgson

Baylor College of Medicine

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Donna Villasana

Baylor College of Medicine

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