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Featured researches published by Bethany D. Jenkins.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2005

Temporal Patterns of Nitrogenase Gene (nifH) Expression in the Oligotrophic North Pacific Ocean

Matthew J. Church; Cindy M. Short; Bethany D. Jenkins; David M. Karl; Jonathan P. Zehr

ABSTRACT Dinitrogen (N2)-fixing microorganisms (diazotrophs) play important roles in ocean biogeochemistry and plankton productivity. In this study, we examined the presence and expression of specific planktonic nitrogenase genes (nifH) in the upper ocean (0 to 175 m) at Station ALOHA in the oligotrophic North Pacific Ocean. Clone libraries constructed from reverse-transcribed PCR-amplified mRNA revealed six unique phylotypes. Five of the nifH phylotypes grouped with sequences from unicellular and filamentous cyanobacteria, and one of the phylotypes clustered with γ-proteobacteria. The cyanobacterial nifH phylotypes retrieved included two sequence types that phylogenetically grouped with unicellular cyanobacteria (termed groups A and B), several sequences closely related (97 to 99%) to Trichodesmium spp. and Katagnymene spiralis, and two previously unreported phylotypes clustering with heterocyst-forming nifH cyanobacteria. Temporal patterns of nifH expression were evaluated using reverse-transcribed quantitative PCR amplification of nifH gene transcripts. The filamentous and presumed unicellular group A cyanobacterial phylotypes exhibited elevated nifH transcription during the day, while members of the group B (closely related to Crocosphaera watsonii) unicellular phylotype displayed greater nifH transcription at night. In situ nifH expression by all of the cyanobacterial phylotypes exhibited pronounced diel periodicity. The γ-proteobacterial phylotype had low transcript abundance and did not exhibit a clear diurnal periodicity in nifH expression. The temporal separation of nifH expression by the various phylotypes suggests that open ocean diazotrophic cyanobacteria have unique in situ physiological responses to daily fluctuations of light in the upper ocean.


The Plant Cell | 1997

Nuclear mutations that block group II RNA splicing in maize chloroplasts reveal several intron classes with distinct requirements for splicing factors.

Bethany D. Jenkins; Doris J. Kulhanek; Alice Barkan

To elucidate mechanisms that regulate chloroplast RNA splicing in multicellular plants, we sought nuclear mutations in maize that result in chloroplast splicing defects. Evidence is presented for two nuclear genes whose function is required for the splicing of group II introns in maize chloroplasts. A mutation in the crs1 (for chloroplast RNA splicing 1) gene blocks the splicing of only the atpF intron, whereas a mutation in the crs2 gene blocks the splicing of many chloroplast introns. In addition, a correlation was observed between the absence of plastid ribosomes and the failure to splice several chloroplast introns. Our results suggest that a chloroplast-encoded factor and a nuclear-encoded factor whose activity requires crs2 function facilitate the splicing of distinct sets of group II introns. These two genetically defined intron sets also differ with regard to intron structure: one set consists of only subgroup IIA introns and the other of only subgroup IIB introns. Therefore, it is likely that distinct splicing factors recognize subgroup-specific features of intron structure or facilitate subgroup-specific aspects of the splicing reaction. Of the 12 pre-mRNA introns in the maize chloroplast genome, only one is normally spliced in both crs2 mutants and in mutants lacking plastid ribosomes, indicating that few, if any, of the group II introns in the chloroplast genome undergo autocatalytic splicing in vivo.


Trends in Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2001

Novel glucocorticoid receptor coactivator effector mechanisms

Bethany D. Jenkins; Christian B Pullen; Beatrice D. Darimont

Glucocorticoids regulate numerous distinct physiological processes, most of which rely on the ability of the hormone-bound glucocorticoid receptor (GR) to change the expression of target genes in a cell- and promoter-dependent manner. The transcriptional activity of GR depends on coactivators that regulate transcription by remodeling chromatin or by facilitating the recruitment of the basal transcriptional machinery. Coactivators are often part of multiprotein complexes that are not specific for GR but also mediate the activity of other nuclear receptors (NRs) and unrelated transcription factors. Surprisingly, recent results reveal that the activity of coactivators might contribute to the receptor, promoter and cell specificity of NR action. The emerging picture shows coactivators as flexible, but precise, coordinators of complex and dynamic networks, in which transcriptional regulation by GR and other NRs is linked to other signaling pathways.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2004

Development and Testing of a DNA Macroarray To Assess Nitrogenase (nifH) Gene Diversity

Grieg F. Steward; Bethany D. Jenkins; Bess B. Ward; Jonathan P. Zehr

ABSTRACT A DNA macroarray was developed and evaluated for its potential to distinguish variants of the dinitrogenase reductase (nifH) gene. Diverse nifH gene fragments amplified from a clone library were spotted onto nylon membranes. Amplified, biotinylated nifH fragments from individual clones or a natural picoplankton community were hybridized to the array and detected by chemiluminescence. A hybridization test with six individual targets mixed in equal proportions resulted in comparable relative signal intensities for the corresponding probes (standard deviation, 14%). When the targets were mixed in unequal concentrations, there was a predictable, but nonlinear, relationship between target concentration and relative signal intensity. Results implied a detection limit of roughly 13 pg of target ml−1, a half-saturation of signal at 0.26 ng ml−1, and a dynamic range of about 2 orders of magnitude. The threshold for cross-hybridization varied between 78 and 88% sequence identity. Hybridization patterns were reproducible with significant correlations between signal intensities of duplicate probes (r = 0.98, P < 0.0001, n = 88). A mixed nifH target amplified from a natural Chesapeake Bay water sample hybridized strongly to 6 of 88 total probes and weakly to 17 additional probes. The natural community results were well simulated (r = 0.941, P < 0.0001, n = 88) by hybridizing a defined mixture of six individual targets corresponding to the strongly hybridizing probes. Our results indicate that macroarray hybridization can be a highly reproducible, semiquantitative method for assessing the diversity of functional genes represented in mixed pools of PCR products amplified from the environment.


The EMBO Journal | 2001

Recruitment of a peptidyl‐tRNA hydrolase as a facilitator of group II intron splicing in chloroplasts

Bethany D. Jenkins; Alice Barkan

Group II introns are catalytic RNAs that have been proposed to be the evolutionary precursors to the spliceosome. Most group II introns require accessory factors to splice efficiently in vivo, but few such factors have been identified. We have cloned the maize nuclear gene crs2, which is required for the splicing of nine group II introns in chloroplasts. CRS2 is related to peptidyl‐tRNA hydrolase enzymes. However, CRS2 expression failed to rescue an Escherichia coli pthts mutant and CRS2 lacks several conserved amino acids that are important for the activity of the E.coli enzyme, indicating that it may lack peptidyl‐tRNA hydrolase activity. CRS2 is localized to the chloroplast stroma, where it is found in a large salt‐stable complex that contains RNA. CRS2 co‐sediments with group II intron RNA during centrifugation of stroma through sucrose gradients, suggesting that CRS2 facilitates splicing via direct interaction with intron RNA. Sequence comparisons indicate how evolutionary tinkering may have allowed an enzyme that interacts with peptidyl‐tRNAs to acquire a function in group II intron splicing.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2004

Fingerprinting Diazotroph Communities in the Chesapeake Bay by Using a DNA Macroarray

Bethany D. Jenkins; Grieg F. Steward; Steven M. Short; Bess B. Ward; Jonathan P. Zehr

ABSTRACT Investigations of the distribution and diversity of nitrogen-fixing microorganisms in natural environments have often relied on PCR amplification and sequence analysis of a portion of one of the key enzymes in nitrogen fixation, dinitrogenase reductase, encoded by nifH. Recent work has suggested that DNA macroarrays provide semiquantitative fingerprints of diversity within mixtures of nifH amplicons (G. F. Steward, B. D. Jenkins, B. B. Ward, and J. P. Zehr, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 70:1455-1465, 2004). Here we report the application of macroarrays for a study in the Chesapeake Bay. Samples from different locations in the bay yielded distinct fingerprints. Analysis of replicates and samples from different locations by cluster analysis showed that replicates clustered together, whereas different samples formed distinct clusters. There was a correspondence between the hybridization pattern observed and that predicted from the distribution of sequence types in a corresponding clone library. Some discrepancies between the methods were observed which are likely a result of the high nifH sequence diversity in the Chesapeake Bay and the limited number of sequences represented on this version of the array. Analyses of sequences in the clone library indicate that the Chesapeake Bay harbors unique, phylogenetically diverse diazotrophs. The macroarray hybridization patterns suggest that there are spatially variable communities of diazotrophs, which have been confirmed by quantitative PCR methods (S. M. Short, B. D. Jenkins, and J. P. Zehr, Appl. Environ. Microbiol., in press). The results show that DNA macroarrays have great potential for mapping the spatial and temporal variability of functional gene diversity in the environment.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2004

Spatial and Temporal Distribution of Two Diazotrophic Bacteria in the Chesapeake Bay

Steven M. Short; Bethany D. Jenkins; Jonathan P. Zehr

ABSTRACT The aim of this study was to initiate autecological studies on uncultivated natural populations of diazotrophic bacteria by examining the distribution of specific diazotrophs in the Chesapeake Bay. By use of quantitative PCR, the abundance of two nifH sequences (907h22 and 912h4) was quantified in water samples collected along a transect from the head to the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay during cruises in April and October 2001 and 2002. Standard curves for the quantitative PCR assays demonstrated that the relationship between gene copies and cycle threshold was linear and highly reproducible from 1 to 107 gene copies. The maximum number of 907h22 gene copies detected was approximately 140 ml−1 and the maximum number of 912h4 gene copies detected was approximately 340 ml−1. Sequence 912h4 was most abundant at the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay, and in general, its abundance increased with increasing salinity, with the highest abundances observed in April 2002. Overall, the 907h22 phylotype was most abundant at the mid-bay station. Additionally, 907h22 was most abundant in the April samples from the mid-bay and mouth of the Chesapeake Bay. Despite the fact that the Chesapeake Bay is rarely nitrogen limited, our results show that individual nitrogen-fixing bacteria have distinct nonrandom spatial and seasonal distributions in the Chesapeake Bay and are either distributed by specific physical processes or adapted to different environmental niches.


Science | 2004

The genome of the diatom thalassiosira pseudonana: ecology, evolution, and metabolism.

E.V. Ambrust; John A. Berges; Chris Bowler; Beverley R. Green; Diego Martinez; Nik Putnam; Shiguo Zhou; Andrew E. Allen; Kirk E. Apt; Mike Bechner; Mark A. Brzezinski; Balbir K. Chaal; Aubrey K. Davis; David Goodstein; Masood Z. Hadi; Uffe Hellsten; Mark Hildebrand; Bethany D. Jenkins; Jerzy Jurka; Vladimir V. Kapitonov; N. Kroger; W. Lau; Todd W. Lane; Frank W. Larimer; J. Lippmeier; Susan Lucas; Mónica Medina; M. Obornik; M. Schnitzler Parker; Brian Palenik


Environmental Microbiology | 2003

Nitrogenase gene diversity and microbial community structure: a cross-system comparison.

Jonathan P. Zehr; Bethany D. Jenkins; Steven M. Short; Grieg F. Steward


Aquatic Microbial Ecology | 2005

Vertical distributions of nitrogen-fixing phylotypes at Stn Aloha in the oligotrophic North Pacific Ocean

Matthew J. Church; Bethany D. Jenkins; David M. Karl; Jonathan P. Zehr

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Grieg F. Steward

University of Hawaii at Manoa

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Cindy M. Short

University of California

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