Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Ben J. Ward is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Ben J. Ward.


Nature | 2017

Evolutionary genomics of the cold-adapted diatom Fragilariopsis cylindrus

Thomas Mock; Robert Otillar; Jan Strauss; Mark McMullan; Pirita Paajanen; Jeremy Schmutz; Asaf Salamov; Remo Sanges; Andrew Toseland; Ben J. Ward; Andrew E. Allen; Christopher L. Dupont; Stephan Frickenhaus; Florian Maumus; Alaguraj Veluchamy; Taoyang Wu; Kerrie Barry; Angela Falciatore; Maria Immacolata Ferrante; Antonio Emidio Fortunato; Gernot Glöckner; Ansgar Gruber; Rachel Hipkin; Michael G. Janech; Peter G. Kroth; Florian Leese; Erika Lindquist; Barbara R. Lyon; Joel W. Martin; Christoph Mayer

The Southern Ocean houses a diverse and productive community of organisms. Unicellular eukaryotic diatoms are the main primary producers in this environment, where photosynthesis is limited by low concentrations of dissolved iron and large seasonal fluctuations in light, temperature and the extent of sea ice. How diatoms have adapted to this extreme environment is largely unknown. Here we present insights into the genome evolution of a cold-adapted diatom from the Southern Ocean, Fragilariopsis cylindrus, based on a comparison with temperate diatoms. We find that approximately 24.7 per cent of the diploid F. cylindrus genome consists of genetic loci with alleles that are highly divergent (15.1 megabases of the total genome size of 61.1 megabases). These divergent alleles were differentially expressed across environmental conditions, including darkness, low iron, freezing, elevated temperature and increased CO2. Alleles with the largest ratio of non-synonymous to synonymous nucleotide substitutions also show the most pronounced condition-dependent expression, suggesting a correlation between diversifying selection and allelic differentiation. Divergent alleles may be involved in adaptation to environmental fluctuations in the Southern Ocean.


eLife | 2015

Evidence for suppression of immunity as a driver for genomic introgressions and host range expansion in races of Albugo candida, a generalist parasite

Mark McMullan; Anastasia Gardiner; Kate Bailey; Eric Kemen; Ben J. Ward; Volkan Cevik; Alexandre Robert-Seilaniantz; Torsten Schultz-Larsen; Alexi Balmuth; Eric B. Holub; Cock van Oosterhout; Jonathan D. G. Jones

How generalist parasites with wide host ranges can evolve is a central question in parasite evolution. Albugo candida is an obligate biotrophic parasite that consists of many physiological races that each specialize on distinct Brassicaceae host species. By analyzing genome sequence assemblies of five isolates, we show they represent three races that are genetically diverged by ∼1%. Despite this divergence, their genomes are mosaic-like, with ∼25% being introgressed from other races. Sequential infection experiments show that infection by adapted races enables subsequent infection of hosts by normally non-infecting races. This facilitates introgression and the exchange of effector repertoires, and may enable the evolution of novel races that can undergo clonal population expansion on new hosts. We discuss recent studies on hybridization in other eukaryotes such as yeast, Heliconius butterflies, Darwins finches, sunflowers and cichlid fishes, and the implications of introgression for pathogen evolution in an agro-ecological environment. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.04550.001


Molecular Ecology Resources | 2016

HYBRIDCHECK: software for the rapid detection, visualization and dating of recombinant regions in genome sequence data.

Ben J. Ward; Cock van Oosterhout

hybridcheck is a software package to visualize the recombination signal in large DNA sequence data set, and it can be used to analyse recombination, genetic introgression, hybridization and horizontal gene transfer. It can scan large (multiple kb) contigs and whole‐genome sequences of three or more individuals. hybridcheck is written in the r software for OS X, Linux and Windows operating systems, and it has a simple graphical user interface. In addition, the r code can be readily incorporated in scripts and analysis pipelines. hybridcheck implements several ABBA–BABA tests and visualizes the effects of hybridization and the resulting mosaic‐like genome structure in high‐density graphics. The package also reports the following: (i) the breakpoint positions, (ii) the number of mutations in each introgressed block, (iii) the probability that the identified region is not caused by recombination and (iv) the estimated age of each recombination event. The divergence times between the donor and recombinant sequence are calculated using a JC, K80, F81, HKY or GTR correction, and the dating algorithm is exceedingly fast. By estimating the coalescence time of introgressed blocks, it is possible to distinguish between hybridization and incomplete lineage sorting. hybridcheck is libré software and it and its manual are free to download from http://ward9250.github.io/HybridCheck/.


Royal Society Open Science | 2016

Adaptive phenotypic response to climate enabled by epigenetics in a K-strategy species, the fish Leucoraja ocellata (Rajidae)

Jackie Lighten; Danny Incarnato; Ben J. Ward; Cock van Oosterhout; Ian R. Bradbury; Mark Hanson; Paul Bentzen

The relative importance of genetic versus epigenetic changes in adaptive evolution is a hotly debated topic, with studies showing that some species appear to be able to adapt rapidly without significant genetic change. Epigenetic mechanisms may be particularly important for the evolutionary potential of species with long maturation times and low reproductive potential (‘K-strategists’), particularly when faced with rapidly changing environmental conditions. Here we study the transcriptome of two populations of the winter skate (Leucoraja ocellata), a typical ‘K-strategist’, in Atlantic Canada; an endemic population in the southern Gulf of St Lawrence and a large population on the Scotian Shelf. The endemic population has been able to adapt to a 10°C higher water temperature over short evolutionary time (7000 years), dramatically reducing its body size (by 45%) significantly below the minimum maturation size of Scotian Shelf and other populations of winter skate, as well as exhibiting other adaptations in life history and physiology. We demonstrate that the adaptive response to selection has an epigenetic basis, cataloguing 3653 changes in gene expression that may have enabled this species to rapidly respond to the novel environment. We argue that the epigenetic augmentation of species evolutionary potential (its regulation though gene expression) can enable K-strategists to survive and adapt to different environments, and this mechanism may be particularly important for the persistence of sharks, skates and rays in the light of future climate change.


Genome Research | 2018

Repeat associated mechanisms of genome evolution and function revealed by the Mus caroli and Mus pahari genomes

David Thybert; Maša Roller; Fabio C. P. Navarro; Ian T Fiddes; Ian Streeter; Christine Feig; David Martín-Gálvez; Mikhail Kolmogorov; Václav Janoušek; Wasiu Akanni; Bronwen Aken; Sarah Aldridge; Varshith Chakrapani; William Chow; Laura Clarke; Carla Cummins; Anthony G. Doran; Matthew Dunn; Leo Goodstadt; Kerstin Howe; Matthew Howell; Ambre Aurore Josselin; Robert C. Karn; Lilue Jingtao; Fergal Martin; Matthieu Muffato; Stefanie Nachtweide; Michael A. Quail; Cristina Sisu; Mario Stanke

Understanding the mechanisms driving lineage-specific evolution in both primates and rodents has been hindered by the lack of sister clades with a similar phylogenetic structure having high-quality genome assemblies. Here, we have created chromosome-level assemblies of the Mus caroli and Mus pahari genomes. Together with the Mus musculus and Rattus norvegicus genomes, this set of rodent genomes is similar in divergence times to the Hominidae (human-chimpanzee-gorilla-orangutan). By comparing the evolutionary dynamics between the Muridae and Hominidae, we identified punctate events of chromosome reshuffling that shaped the ancestral karyotype of Mus musculus and Mus caroli between 3 and 6 million yr ago, but that are absent in the Hominidae. Hominidae show between four- and sevenfold lower rates of nucleotide change and feature turnover in both neutral and functional sequences, suggesting an underlying coherence to the Muridae acceleration. Our system of matched, high-quality genome assemblies revealed how specific classes of repeats can play lineage-specific roles in related species. Recent LINE activity has remodeled protein-coding loci to a greater extent across the Muridae than the Hominidae, with functional consequences at the species level such as reproductive isolation. Furthermore, we charted a Muridae-specific retrotransposon expansion at unprecedented resolution, revealing how a single nucleotide mutation transformed a specific SINE element into an active CTCF binding site carrier specifically in Mus caroli, which resulted in thousands of novel, species-specific CTCF binding sites. Our results show that the comparison of matched phylogenetic sets of genomes will be an increasingly powerful strategy for understanding mammalian biology.


Nature Communications | 2017

Evolutionary genetics of immunological supertypes reveals two faces of the Red Queen

Jackie Lighten; Alexander S. T. Papadopulos; Ryan S. Mohammed; Ben J. Ward; Ian G. Paterson; Lyndsey Baillie; Ian R. Bradbury; Andrew P. Hendry; Paul Bentzen; Cock van Oosterhout

Red Queen host–parasite co-evolution can drive adaptations of immune genes by positive selection that erodes genetic variation (Red Queen arms race) or results in a balanced polymorphism (Red Queen dynamics) and long-term preservation of genetic variation (trans-species polymorphism). These two Red Queen processes are opposite extremes of the co-evolutionary spectrum. Here we show that both Red Queen processes can operate simultaneously by analysing the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) in guppies (Poecilia reticulata and P. obscura) and swamp guppies (Micropoecilia picta). Sub-functionalisation of MHC alleles into ‘supertypes’ explains how polymorphisms persist during rapid host–parasite co-evolution. Simulations show the maintenance of supertypes as balanced polymorphisms, consistent with Red Queen dynamics, whereas alleles within supertypes are subject to positive selection in a Red Queen arms race. Building on the divergent allele advantage hypothesis, we show that functional aspects of allelic diversity help to elucidate the evolution of polymorphic genes involved in Red Queen co-evolution.Host-parasite coevolution can lead to arms races favouring novel immunogenetic alleles or the maintenance of diversity in a balanced polymorphism. Here, Lighten et al. combine data on MHC diversity across three guppy species and simulations to show that polymorphisms of immunogenetic supertypes may persist even as alleles within supertypes are involved in an arms race.


New Phytologist | 2018

Pathogen enrichment sequencing (PenSeq) enables population genomic studies in oomycetes

Gaetan J. A. Thilliez; Miles R. Armstrong; Tze-Yin Lim; Katie Baker; Agathe Jouet; Ben J. Ward; Cock van Oosterhout; Jonathan D. G. Jones; Edgar Huitema; Paul R. J. Birch; Ingo Hein

Summary The oomycete pathogens Phytophthora infestans and P. capsici cause significant crop losses world‐wide, threatening food security. In each case, pathogenicity factors, called RXLR effectors, contribute to virulence. Some RXLRs are perceived by resistance proteins to trigger host immunity, but our understanding of the demographic processes and adaptive evolution of pathogen virulence remains poor. Here, we describe PenSeq, a highly efficient enrichment sequencing approach for genes encoding pathogenicity determinants which, as shown for the infamous potato blight pathogen Phytophthora infestans, make up < 1% of the entire genome. PenSeq facilitates the characterization of allelic diversity in pathogen effectors, enabling evolutionary and population genomic analyses of Phytophthora species. Furthermore, PenSeq enables the massively parallel identification of presence/absence variations and sequence polymorphisms in key pathogen genes, which is a prerequisite for the efficient deployment of host resistance genes. PenSeq represents a cost‐effective alternative to whole‐genome sequencing and addresses crucial limitations of current plant pathogen population studies, which are often based on selectively neutral markers and consequently have limited utility in the analysis of adaptive evolution. The approach can be adapted to diverse microbes and pathogens.


Nature Ecology and Evolution | 2018

The ash dieback invasion of Europe was founded by two genetically divergent individuals

Mark McMullan; Maryam Rafiqi; Gemy Kaithakottil; Bernardo Clavijo; Lorelei Bilham; Elizabeth Orton; Lawrence Percival-Alwyn; Ben J. Ward; Anne Edwards; Diane G. O. Saunders; Gonzalo Garcia Accinelli; Jonathan Wright; Walter Verweij; Georgios Koutsovoulos; Kentaro Yoshida; Tsuyoshi Hosoya; Louisa Williamson; Philip Jennings; Renaud Ioos; Claude Husson; Ari M. Hietala; Adam Vivian-Smith; Halvor Solheim; Daniel MacLean; Christine Fosker; Neil Hall; J. K. M. Brown; David Swarbreck; Mark Blaxter; J. Allan Downie

Accelerating international trade and climate change make pathogen spread an increasing concern. Hymenoscyphus fraxineus, the causal agent of ash dieback, is a fungal pathogen that has been moving across continents and hosts from Asian to European ash. Most European common ash trees (Fraxinus excelsior) are highly susceptible to H. fraxineus, although a minority (~5%) have partial resistance to dieback. Here, we assemble and annotate a H. fraxineus draft genome, which approaches chromosome scale. Pathogen genetic diversity across Europe and in Japan, reveals a strong bottleneck in Europe, though a signal of adaptive diversity remains in key host interaction genes. We find that the European population was founded by two divergent haploid individuals. Divergence between these haplotypes represents the ancestral polymorphism within a large source population. Subsequent introduction from this source would greatly increase adaptive potential of the pathogen. Thus, further introgression of H. fraxineus into Europe represents a potential threat and Europe-wide biological security measures are needed to manage this disease.The fungal pathogen Hymenoscyphus fraxineus is killing European common ash trees. Here, the authors sequence the genome of H. fraxineus and show that European populations were founded by two divergent haploid individuals introduced from Asia.


bioRxiv | 2017

The ash dieback invasion of Europe was founded by two individuals from a native population with huge adaptive potential

Mark McMullan; Maryam Rafiqi; Gemy Kaithakottil; Bernardo Clavijo; Lorelei Bilham; Elizabeth Orton; Lawrence Percival-Alwyn; Ben J. Ward; Anne Edwards; Diane G. O. Saunders; Gonzalo Garcia; Jon Wright; Walter Verweij; Georgios Koutsovoulos; Kentaro Yoshida; Tsuyoshi Hosoya; Louisa Williamson; Philip Jennings; Renaud Ioos; Claude Husson; Ari M. Hietala; Adam Vivian-Smith; Halvor Solheim; Daniel MacLean; Christine Fosker; Neil Hall; J. K. M. Brown; David Swarbreck; Mark Blaxter; Allan Downie


New Phytologist | 2018

Albugo candida race diversity, ploidy and host-associated microbes revealed using DNA sequence capture on diseased plants in the field

Agathe Jouet; Diane G. O. Saunders; Mark McMullan; Ben J. Ward; Oliver Furzer; Florian Jupe; Volkan Cevik; Ingo Hein; Gaetan J. A. Thilliez; Eric B. Holub; Cock van Oosterhout; Jonathan D. G. Jones

Collaboration


Dive into the Ben J. Ward's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mark McMullan

University of East Anglia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jackie Lighten

University of East Anglia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ian R. Bradbury

Fisheries and Oceans Canada

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Agathe Jouet

University of East Anglia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrew Toseland

University of East Anglia

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge