Angela Lord
Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute
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Featured researches published by Angela Lord.
Nature | 2005
William C. Nierman; Arnab Pain; Michael J. Anderson; Jennifer R. Wortman; H. Stanley Kim; Javier Arroyo; Matthew Berriman; Keietsu Abe; David B. Archer; Clara Bermejo; Joan W. Bennett; Paul Bowyer; Dan Chen; Matthew Collins; Richard Coulsen; Robert Davies; Paul S. Dyer; Mark L. Farman; Nadia Fedorova; Natalie D. Fedorova; Tamara V. Feldblyum; Reinhard Fischer; Nigel Fosker; Audrey Fraser; José Luis García; María José García; Ariette Goble; Gustavo H. Goldman; Katsuya Gomi; Sam Griffith-Jones
Aspergillus fumigatus is exceptional among microorganisms in being both a primary and opportunistic pathogen as well as a major allergen. Its conidia production is prolific, and so human respiratory tract exposure is almost constant. A. fumigatus is isolated from human habitats and vegetable compost heaps. In immunocompromised individuals, the incidence of invasive infection can be as high as 50% and the mortality rate is often about 50% (ref. 2). The interaction of A. fumigatus and other airborne fungi with the immune system is increasingly linked to severe asthma and sinusitis. Although the burden of invasive disease caused by A. fumigatus is substantial, the basic biology of the organism is mostly obscure. Here we show the complete 29.4-megabase genome sequence of the clinical isolate Af293, which consists of eight chromosomes containing 9,926 predicted genes. Microarray analysis revealed temperature-dependent expression of distinct sets of genes, as well as 700 A. fumigatus genes not present or significantly diverged in the closely related sexual species Neosartorya fischeri, many of which may have roles in the pathogenicity phenotype. The Af293 genome sequence provides an unparalleled resource for the future understanding of this remarkable fungus.
Genome Research | 2008
Timothy P. Stinear; Torsten Seemann; Paul F. Harrison; Grant A. Jenkin; John K. Davies; Paul D. R. Johnson; Zahra Abdellah; Claire Arrowsmith; Tracey Chillingworth; Carol Churcher; Kay Clarke; Ann Cronin; Paul Davis; Ian Goodhead; Nancy Holroyd; Kay Jagels; Angela Lord; Sharon Moule; Karen Mungall; Halina Norbertczak; Michael A. Quail; Ester Rabbinowitsch; Danielle Walker; Brian R. White; Sally Whitehead; Pamela L. C. Small; Roland Brosch; Lalita Ramakrishnan; Michael A. Fischbach; Julian Parkhill
Mycobacterium marinum, a ubiquitous pathogen of fish and amphibia, is a near relative of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the etiologic agent of tuberculosis in humans. The genome of the M strain of M. marinum comprises a 6,636,827-bp circular chromosome with 5424 CDS, 10 prophages, and a 23-kb mercury-resistance plasmid. Prominent features are the very large number of genes (57) encoding polyketide synthases (PKSs) and nonribosomal peptide synthases (NRPSs) and the most extensive repertoire yet reported of the mycobacteria-restricted PE and PPE proteins, and related-ESX secretion systems. Some of the NRPS genes comprise a novel family and seem to have been acquired horizontally. M. marinum is used widely as a model organism to study M. tuberculosis pathogenesis, and genome comparisons confirmed the close genetic relationship between these two species, as they share 3000 orthologs with an average amino acid identity of 85%. Comparisons with the more distantly related Mycobacterium avium subspecies paratuberculosis and Mycobacterium smegmatis reveal how an ancestral generalist mycobacterium evolved into M. tuberculosis and M. marinum. M. tuberculosis has undergone genome downsizing and extensive lateral gene transfer to become a specialized pathogen of humans and other primates without retaining an environmental niche. M. marinum has maintained a large genome so as to retain the capacity for environmental survival while becoming a broad host range pathogen that produces disease strikingly similar to M. tuberculosis. The work described herein provides a foundation for using M. marinum to better understand the determinants of pathogenesis of tuberculosis.
Genome Biology | 2008
Lisa Crossman; Virginia C. Gould; J. Maxwell Dow; Georgios S. Vernikos; Aki Okazaki; Mohammed Sebaihia; David L. Saunders; Claire Arrowsmith; Tim Carver; Nicholas Peters; Ellen Adlem; Arnaud Kerhornou; Angela Lord; Lee Murphy; Katharine Seeger; R. Squares; Simon Rutter; Michael A. Quail; Mari Adele Rajandream; David Harris; Carol Churcher; Stephen D. Bentley; Julian Parkhill; Nicholas R. Thomson; Matthew B. Avison
BackgroundStenotrophomonas maltophilia is a nosocomial opportunistic pathogen of the Xanthomonadaceae. The organism has been isolated from both clinical and soil environments in addition to the sputum of cystic fibrosis patients and the immunocompromised. Whilst relatively distant phylogenetically, the closest sequenced relatives of S. maltophilia are the plant pathogenic xanthomonads.ResultsThe genome of the bacteremia-associated isolate S. maltophilia K279a is 4,851,126 bp and of high G+C content. The sequence reveals an organism with a remarkable capacity for drug and heavy metal resistance. In addition to a number of genes conferring resistance to antimicrobial drugs of different classes via alternative mechanisms, nine resistance-nodulation-division (RND)-type putative antimicrobial efflux systems are present. Functional genomic analysis confirms a role in drug resistance for several of the novel RND efflux pumps. S. maltophilia possesses potentially mobile regions of DNA and encodes a number of pili and fimbriae likely to be involved in adhesion and biofilm formation that may also contribute to increased antimicrobial drug resistance.ConclusionThe panoply of antimicrobial drug resistance genes and mobile genetic elements found suggests that the organism can act as a reservoir of antimicrobial drug resistance determinants in a clinical environment, which is an issue of considerable concern.
Genome Research | 2008
Nicholas R. Thomson; Debra J. Clayton; Daniel Windhorst; Georgios S. Vernikos; Susanne Davidson; Carol Churcher; Michael A. Quail; Mark P. Stevens; Michael Jones; Michael Watson; Andy Barron; Abigail N. Layton; Derek Pickard; Robert A. Kingsley; Alex Bignell; Louise Clark; Barbara Harris; Doug Ormond; Zahra Abdellah; Karen Brooks; Inna Cherevach; Tracey Chillingworth; John Woodward; Halina Norberczak; Angela Lord; Claire Arrowsmith; Kay Jagels; Sharon Moule; Karen Mungall; Mandy Sanders
We have determined the complete genome sequences of a host-promiscuous Salmonella enterica serovar Enteritidis PT4 isolate P125109 and a chicken-restricted Salmonella enterica serovar Gallinarum isolate 287/91. Genome comparisons between these and other Salmonella isolates indicate that S. Gallinarum 287/91 is a recently evolved descendent of S. Enteritidis. Significantly, the genome of S. Gallinarum has undergone extensive degradation through deletion and pseudogene formation. Comparison of the pseudogenes in S. Gallinarum with those identified previously in other host-adapted bacteria reveals the loss of many common functional traits and provides insights into possible mechanisms of host and tissue adaptation. We propose that experimental analysis in chickens and mice of S. Enteritidis-harboring mutations in functional homologs of the pseudogenes present in S. Gallinarum could provide an experimentally tractable route toward unraveling the genetic basis of host adaptation in S. enterica.
Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2008
Lisa Klasson; Tom Walker; Mohammed Sebaihia; Mandy Sanders; Michael A. Quail; Angela Lord; Susanne Sanders; Julie Earl; Scott L. O'Neill; Nicholas R. Thomson; Steven P. Sinkins; Julian Parkhill
The obligate intracellular bacterium Wolbachia pipientis strain wPip induces cytoplasmic incompatibility (CI), patterns of crossing sterility, in the Culex pipiens group of mosquitoes. The complete sequence is presented of the 1.48-Mbp genome of wPip which encodes 1386 coding sequences (CDSs), representing the first genome sequence of a B-supergroup Wolbachia. Comparisons were made with the smaller genomes of Wolbachia strains wMel of Drosophila melanogaster, an A-supergroup Wolbachia that is also a CI inducer, and wBm, a mutualist of Brugia malayi nematodes that belongs to the D-supergroup of Wolbachia. Despite extensive gene order rearrangement, a core set of Wolbachia genes shared between the 3 genomes can be identified and contrasts with a flexible gene pool where rapid evolution has taken place. There are much more extensive prophage and ankyrin repeat encoding (ANK) gene components of the wPip genome compared with wMel and wBm, and both are likely to be of considerable importance in wPip biology. Five WO-B–like prophage regions are present and contain some genes that are identical or highly similar in multiple prophage copies, whereas other genes are unique, and it is likely that extensive recombination, duplication, and insertion have occurred between copies. A much larger number of genes encode ankyrin repeat (ANK) proteins in wPip, with 60 present compared with 23 in wMel, many of which are within or close to the prophage regions. It is likely that this pattern is partly a result of expansions in the wPip lineage, due for example to gene duplication, but their presence is in some cases more ancient. The wPip genome underlines the considerable evolutionary flexibility of Wolbachia, providing clear evidence for the rapid evolution of ANK-encoding genes and of prophage regions. This host–Wolbachia system, with its complex patterns of sterility induced between populations, now provides an excellent model for unraveling the molecular systems underlying host reproductive manipulation.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2006
Mohammed Sebaihia; Andrew Preston; Duncan J. Maskell; Holly Kuzmiak; Terry D. Connell; Natalie D. King; Paul E. Orndorff; David M. Miyamoto; Nicholas R. Thomson; David J. Harris; Arlette Goble; Angela Lord; Lee Murphy; Michael A. Quail; Simon Rutter; R. Squares; Steven Squares; John Woodward; Julian Parkhill; Louise M. Temple
Bordetella avium is a pathogen of poultry and is phylogenetically distinct from Bordetella bronchiseptica, Bordetella pertussis, and Bordetella parapertussis, which are other species in the Bordetella genus that infect mammals. In order to understand the evolutionary relatedness of Bordetella species and further the understanding of pathogenesis, we obtained the complete genome sequence of B. avium strain 197N, a pathogenic strain that has been extensively studied. With 3,732,255 base pairs of DNA and 3,417 predicted coding sequences, it has the smallest genome and gene complement of the sequenced bordetellae. In this study, the presence or absence of previously reported virulence factors from B. avium was confirmed, and the genetic bases for growth characteristics were elucidated. Over 1,100 genes present in B. avium but not in B. bronchiseptica were identified, and most were predicted to encode surface or secreted proteins that are likely to define an organism adapted to the avian rather than the mammalian respiratory tracts. These include genes coding for the synthesis of a polysaccharide capsule, hemagglutinins, a type I secretion system adjacent to two very large genes for secreted proteins, and unique genes for both lipopolysaccharide and fimbrial biogenesis. Three apparently complete prophages are also present. The BvgAS virulence regulatory system appears to have polymorphisms at a poly(C) tract that is involved in phase variation in other bordetellae. A number of putative iron-regulated outer membrane proteins were predicted from the sequence, and this regulation was confirmed experimentally for five of these.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2005
Miles R. Armstrong; Stephen C. Whisson; Leighton Pritchard; Jorunn I. B. Bos; Eduard Venter; Anna O. Avrova; Anne P. Rehmany; Ulrike Böhme; Karen Brooks; Inna Cherevach; N. Hamlin; Brian R. White; Audrey Fraser; Angela Lord; Michael A. Quail; Carol Churcher; Neil Hall; Matthew Berriman; Sanwen Huang; Sophien Kamoun; Jim Beynon; Paul R. J. Birch
Science | 2005
Arnab Pain; Hubert Renauld; Matthew Berriman; Lee Murphy; Corin Yeats; William Weir; Arnaud Kerhornou; Martin Aslett; Richard P. Bishop; Christiane Bouchier; Madeleine Cochet; Richard M. R. Coulson; Ann Cronin; Etienne P. de Villiers; Audrey Fraser; Nigel Fosker; Malcolm J. Gardner; Arlette Goble; Sam Griffiths-Jones; David Harris; Frank Katzer; Natasha Larke; Angela Lord; Pascal Mäser; Sue McKellar; Paul Mooney; Fraser R. Morton; Vishvanath Nene; Susan O'Neil; Claire Price
Science | 2005
Ana Cerdeño-Tárraga; Sheila Patrick; Lisa Crossman; Garry W. Blakely; Val Abratt; Nicola Lennard; Ian Poxton; Brian Ion Duerden; Barbara Harris; Michael A. Quail; Andrew B. Barron; Louise Clark; Craig Corton; Jonathan Doggett; Matthew T. G. Holden; Natasha Larke; Alexandra Line; Angela Lord; Halina Norbertczak; Doug Ormond; Claire Price; Ester Rabbinowitsch; John Woodward; Bart Barrell; Julian Parkhill
Nature | 2006
William C. Nierman; Arnab Pain; Michael J. Anderson; Jennifer R. Wortman; H. Stanley Kim; Javier Arroyo; Matthew Berriman; Keietsu Abe; David B. Archer; Clara Bermejo; Joan W. Bennett; Paul Bowyer; Dan Chen; Matthew D. Collins; Richard Coulsen; Robert Davies; Paul S. Dyer; Mark L. Farman; Nadia Fedorova; Natalie D. Fedorova; Tamara Feldblyum; Reinhard Fischer; Nigel Fosker; Audrey Fraser; José Luis García; María José García; Arlette Goble; Gustavo H. Goldman; Katsuya Gomi; Sam Griffith-Jones