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Dive into the research topics where Chien-Chi Lo is active.

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Featured researches published by Chien-Chi Lo.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Transmission of Single HIV-1 Genomes and Dynamics of Early Immune Escape Revealed by Ultra-Deep Sequencing

Will Fischer; Vitaly V. Ganusov; Elena E. Giorgi; Peter Hraber; Brandon F. Keele; Thomas Leitner; Cliff Han; Cheryl D. Gleasner; Lance D. Green; Chien-Chi Lo; Ambarish Nag; Timothy C. Wallstrom; Shuyi Wang; Andrew J. McMichael; Barton F. Haynes; Beatrice H. Hahn; Alan S. Perelson; Persephone Borrow; George M. Shaw; Tanmoy Bhattacharya; Bette T. Korber

We used ultra-deep sequencing to obtain tens of thousands of HIV-1 sequences from regions targeted by CD8+ T lymphocytes from longitudinal samples from three acutely infected subjects, and modeled viral evolution during the critical first weeks of infection. Previous studies suggested that a single virus established productive infection, but these conclusions were tempered because of limited sampling; now, we have greatly increased our confidence in this observation through modeling the observed earliest sample diversity based on vastly more extensive sampling. Conventional sequencing of HIV-1 from acute/early infection has shown different patterns of escape at different epitopes; we investigated the earliest escapes in exquisite detail. Over 3–6 weeks, ultradeep sequencing revealed that the virus explored an extraordinary array of potential escape routes in the process of evading the earliest CD8 T-lymphocyte responses – using 454 sequencing, we identified over 50 variant forms of each targeted epitope during early immune escape, while only 2–7 variants were detected in the same samples via conventional sequencing. In contrast to the diversity seen within epitopes, non-epitope regions, including the Envelope V3 region, which was sequenced as a control in each subject, displayed very low levels of variation. In early infection, in the regions sequenced, the consensus forms did not have a fitness advantage large enough to trigger reversion to consensus amino acids in the absence of immune pressure. In one subject, a genetic bottleneck was observed, with extensive diversity at the second time point narrowing to two dominant escape forms by the third time point, all within two months of infection. Traces of immune escape were observed in the earliest samples, suggesting that immune pressure is present and effective earlier than previously reported; quantifying the loss rate of the founder virus suggests a direct role for CD8 T-lymphocyte responses in viral containment after peak viremia. Dramatic shifts in the frequencies of epitope variants during the first weeks of infection revealed a complex interplay between viral fitness and immune escape.


Current Opinion in Biotechnology | 2012

Next generation sequencing and bioinformatic bottlenecks: the current state of metagenomic data analysis

M. B. Scholz; Chien-Chi Lo; Patrick Chain

The recent technological advances in next generation sequencing have brought the field closer to the goal of reconstructing all genomes within a community by presenting high throughput sequencing at much lower costs. While these next-generation sequencing technologies have allowed a massive increase in available raw sequence data, there are a number of new informatics challenges and difficulties that must be addressed to improve the current state, and fulfill the promise of, metagenomics.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Quantitative deep sequencing reveals dynamic HIV-1 escape and large population shifts during CCR5 antagonist therapy in vivo.

Athe M. N. Tsibris; Bette T. Korber; Ramy Arnaout; Carsten Russ; Chien-Chi Lo; Thomas Leitner; Brian Gaschen; James Theiler; Roger Paredes; Zhaohui Su; Michael D. Hughes; Roy M. Gulick; Wayne Greaves; Eoin Coakley; Charles Flexner; Chad Nusbaum; Daniel R. Kuritzkes

High-throughput sequencing platforms provide an approach for detecting rare HIV-1 variants and documenting more fully quasispecies diversity. We applied this technology to the V3 loop-coding region of env in samples collected from 4 chronically HIV-infected subjects in whom CCR5 antagonist (vicriviroc [VVC]) therapy failed. Between 25,000–140,000 amplified sequences were obtained per sample. Profound baseline V3 loop sequence heterogeneity existed; predicted CXCR4-using populations were identified in a largely CCR5-using population. The V3 loop forms associated with subsequent virologic failure, either through CXCR4 use or the emergence of high-level VVC resistance, were present as minor variants at 0.8–2.8% of baseline samples. Extreme, rapid shifts in population frequencies toward these forms occurred, and deep sequencing provided a detailed view of the rapid evolutionary impact of VVC selection. Greater V3 diversity was observed post-selection. This previously unreported degree of V3 loop sequence diversity has implications for viral pathogenesis, vaccine design, and the optimal use of HIV-1 CCR5 antagonists.


The ISME Journal | 2012

Saliva microbiomes distinguish caries-active from healthy human-populations

Fang Yang; Xiaowei Zeng; Kang Ning; Kuan-Liang Liu; Chien-Chi Lo; Wei Wang; Jie Chen; Dongmei Wang; Ranran Huang; Xingzhi Chang; Patrick S Chain; Gary Xie; Junqi Ling; Jian Xu

The etiology of dental caries remains elusive because of our limited understanding of the complex oral microbiomes. The current methodologies have been limited by insufficient depth and breadth of microbial sampling, paucity of data for diseased hosts particularly at the population level, inconsistency of sampled sites and the inability to distinguish the underlying microbial factors. By cross-validating 16S rRNA gene amplicon-based and whole-genome-based deep-sequencing technologies, we report the most in-depth, comprehensive and collaborated view to date of the adult saliva microbiomes in pilot populations of 19 caries-active and 26 healthy human hosts. We found that: first, saliva microbiomes in human population were featured by a vast phylogenetic diversity yet a minimal organismal core; second, caries microbiomes were significantly more variable in community structure whereas the healthy ones were relatively conserved; third, abundance changes of certain taxa such as overabundance of Prevotella Genus distinguished caries microbiota from healthy ones, and furthermore, caries-active and normal individuals carried different arrays of Prevotella species; and finally, no ‘caries-specific’ operational taxonomic units (OTUs) were detected, yet 147 OTUs were ‘caries associated’, that is, differentially distributed yet present in both healthy and caries-active populations. These findings underscored the necessity of species- and strain-level resolution for caries prognosis, and were consistent with the ecological hypothesis where the shifts in community structure, instead of the presence or absence of particular groups of microbes, underlie the cariogenesis.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

A programmable droplet-based microfluidic device applied to multiparameter analysis of single microbes and microbial communities.

Kaston Leung; Hans Zahn; Timothy Leaver; Kishori M. Konwar; Niels W. Hanson; Antoine P. Pagé; Chien-Chi Lo; Patrick Chain; Steven J. Hallam; Carl L. Hansen

We present a programmable droplet-based microfluidic device that combines the reconfigurable flow-routing capabilities of integrated microvalve technology with the sample compartmentalization and dispersion-free transport that is inherent to droplets. The device allows for the execution of user-defined multistep reaction protocols in 95 individually addressable nanoliter-volume storage chambers by consecutively merging programmable sequences of picoliter-volume droplets containing reagents or cells. This functionality is enabled by “flow-controlled wetting,” a droplet docking and merging mechanism that exploits the physics of droplet flow through a channel to control the precise location of droplet wetting. The device also allows for automated cross-contamination-free recovery of reaction products from individual chambers into standard microfuge tubes for downstream analysis. The combined features of programmability, addressability, and selective recovery provide a general hardware platform that can be reprogrammed for multiple applications. We demonstrate this versatility by implementing multiple single-cell experiment types with this device: bacterial cell sorting and cultivation, taxonomic gene identification, and high-throughput single-cell whole genome amplification and sequencing using common laboratory strains. Finally, we apply the device to genome analysis of single cells and microbial consortia from diverse environmental samples including a marine enrichment culture, deep-sea sediments, and the human oral cavity. The resulting datasets capture genotypic properties of individual cells and illuminate known and potentially unique partnerships between microbial community members.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Genomic comparison of Escherichia coli O104:H4 isolates from 2009 and 2011 reveals plasmid, and prophage heterogeneity, including shiga toxin encoding phage stx2.

Sanaa Ahmed; Joy Awosika; Carson Baldwin; Kimberly A. Bishop-Lilly; Biswajit Biswas; S. M. Broomall; Patrick Chain; Olga Chertkov; Otar Chokoshvili; Susan R. Coyne; Karen W. Davenport; J. Chris Detter; William Dorman; Tracy Erkkila; Jason P. Folster; K. G. Frey; Matroner George; Cheryl D. Gleasner; Matthew Henry; Karen K. Hill; Kyle S. Hubbard; Joseph Insalaco; Shannon L. Johnson; Aaron Kitzmiller; Michael Krepps; Chien-Chi Lo; Truong Luu; Lauren McNew; Timothy D. Minogue; Christine Munk

In May of 2011, an enteroaggregative Escherichia coli O104:H4 strain that had acquired a Shiga toxin 2-converting phage caused a large outbreak of bloody diarrhea in Europe which was notable for its high prevalence of hemolytic uremic syndrome cases. Several studies have described the genomic inventory and phylogenies of strains associated with the outbreak and a collection of historical E. coli O104:H4 isolates using draft genome assemblies. We present the complete, closed genome sequences of an isolate from the 2011 outbreak (2011C–3493) and two isolates from cases of bloody diarrhea that occurred in the Republic of Georgia in 2009 (2009EL–2050 and 2009EL–2071). Comparative genome analysis indicates that, while the Georgian strains are the nearest neighbors to the 2011 outbreak isolates sequenced to date, structural and nucleotide-level differences are evident in the Stx2 phage genomes, the mer/tet antibiotic resistance island, and in the prophage and plasmid profiles of the strains, including a previously undescribed plasmid with homology to the pMT virulence plasmid of Yersinia pestis. In addition, multiphenotype analysis showed that 2009EL–2071 possessed higher resistance to polymyxin and membrane-disrupting agents. Finally, we show evidence by electron microscopy of the presence of a common phage morphotype among the European and Georgian strains and a second phage morphotype among the Georgian strains. The presence of at least two stx2 phage genotypes in host genetic backgrounds that may derive from a recent common ancestor of the 2011 outbreak isolates indicates that the emergence of stx2 phage-containing E. coli O104:H4 strains probably occurred more than once, or that the current outbreak isolates may be the result of a recent transfer of a new stx2 phage element into a pre-existing stx2-positive genetic background.


Genome Research | 2013

Nearly finished genomes produced using gel microdroplet culturing reveal substantial intraspecies genomic diversity within the human microbiome

Michael S. Fitzsimons; Mark Novotny; Chien-Chi Lo; Armand E. K. Dichosa; Joyclyn Yee-Greenbaum; Jeremy P. Snook; Wei Gu; Olga Chertkov; Karen W. Davenport; Kim McMurry; Krista G. Reitenga; Ashlynn R. Daughton; Jian He; Shannon L. Johnson; Cheryl D. Gleasner; Patti L. Wills; B. Parson-Quintana; Patrick Chain; John C. Detter; Roger S. Lasken; Cliff Han

The majority of microbial genomic diversity remains unexplored. This is largely due to our inability to culture most microorganisms in isolation, which is a prerequisite for traditional genome sequencing. Single-cell sequencing has allowed researchers to circumvent this limitation. DNA is amplified directly from a single cell using the whole-genome amplification technique of multiple displacement amplification (MDA). However, MDA from a single chromosome copy suffers from amplification bias and a large loss of specificity from even very small amounts of DNA contamination, which makes assembling a genome difficult and completely finishing a genome impossible except in extraordinary circumstances. Gel microdrop cultivation allows culturing of a diverse microbial community and provides hundreds to thousands of genetically identical cells as input for an MDA reaction. We demonstrate the utility of this approach by comparing sequencing results of gel microdroplets and single cells following MDA. Bias is reduced in the MDA reaction and genome sequencing, and assembly is greatly improved when using gel microdroplets. We acquired multiple near-complete genomes for two bacterial species from human oral and stool microbiome samples. A significant amount of genome diversity, including single nucleotide polymorphisms and genome recombination, is discovered. Gel microdroplets offer a powerful and high-throughput technology for assembling whole genomes from complex samples and for probing the pan-genome of naturally occurring populations.


Briefings in Functional Genomics | 2011

Pathogen comparative genomics in the next-generation sequencing era: genome alignments, pangenomics and metagenomics

Bin Hu; Gary Xie; Chien-Chi Lo; Shawn R. Starkenburg; Patrick Chain

As soon as whole-genome sequencing entered the scene in the mid-1990s and demonstrated its use in revealing the entire genetic potential of any given microbial organism, this technique immediately revolutionized the way pathogen (and many other fields of) research was carried out. The ability to perform whole-genome comparisons further transformed the field and allowed scientists to obtain information linking phenotypic dissimilarities among closely related organisms and their underlying genetic mechanisms. Such comparisons have become commonplace in examining strain-to-strain variability, as well as comparing pathogens to less, or nonpathogenic near neighbors. In recent years, a bloom in novel sequencing technologies along with continuous increases in throughput has occurred, inundating the field with various types of massively parallel sequencing data and further transforming comparative genomics research. Here, we review the evolution of comparative genomics, its impact in understanding pathogen evolution and physiology and the opportunities and challenges presented by next-generation sequencing as applied to pathogen genome comparisons.


Genome Announcements | 2013

Draft Genome Sequence of Methylomicrobium buryatense Strain 5G, a Haloalkaline-Tolerant Methanotrophic Bacterium

V. N. Khmelenina; David A. C. Beck; Christine Munk; Karen W. Davenport; Hajnalka E. Daligault; Tracy Erkkila; Lynne Goodwin; Wei Gu; Chien-Chi Lo; M. B. Scholz; Hazuki Teshima; Yan Xu; Patrick Chain; Françoise Bringel; Stéphane Vuilleumier; Alan A. DiSpirito; Peter F. Dunfield; Mike S. M. Jetten; Martin G. Klotz; Claudia Knief; J. Colin Murrell; Huub J. M. Op den Camp; Yasuyoshi Sakai; Jeremy D. Semrau; Mette M. Svenning; Lisa Y. Stein; Yuri A. Trotsenko; Marina G. Kalyuzhnaya

ABSTRACT Robust growth of the gammaproteobacterium Methylomicrobium buryatense strain 5G on methane makes it an attractive system for CH4-based biocatalysis. Here we present a draft genome sequence of the strain that will provide a valuable framework for metabolic engineering of the core pathways for the production of valuable chemicals from methane.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Artificial Polyploidy Improves Bacterial Single Cell Genome Recovery

Armand E. K. Dichosa; Michael S. Fitzsimons; Chien-Chi Lo; Lea L. Weston; Lara G. Preteska; Jeremy P. Snook; Xiaojing Zhang; Wei Gu; Kim McMurry; Lance D. Green; Patrick Chain; J. Chris Detter; Cliff Han

Background Single cell genomics (SCG) is a combination of methods whose goal is to decipher the complete genomic sequence from a single cell and has been applied mostly to organisms with smaller genomes, such as bacteria and archaea. Prior single cell studies showed that a significant portion of a genome could be obtained. However, breakages of genomic DNA and amplification bias have made it very challenging to acquire a complete genome with single cells. We investigated an artificial method to induce polyploidy in Bacillus subtilis ATCC 6633 by blocking cell division and have shown that we can significantly improve the performance of genomic sequencing from a single cell. Methodology/Principal Findings We inhibited the bacterial cytoskeleton protein FtsZ in B. subtilis with an FtsZ-inhibiting compound, PC190723, resulting in larger undivided single cells with multiple copies of its genome. qPCR assays of these larger, sorted cells showed higher DNA content, have less amplification bias, and greater genomic recovery than untreated cells. Significance The method presented here shows the potential to obtain a nearly complete genome sequence from a single bacterial cell. With millions of uncultured bacterial species in nature, this method holds tremendous promise to provide insight into the genomic novelty of yet-to-be discovered species, and given the temporary effects of artificial polyploidy coupled with the ability to sort and distinguish differences in cell size and genomic DNA content, may allow recovery of specific organisms in addition to their genomes.

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Patrick Chain

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Karen W. Davenport

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Shannon L. Johnson

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Hajnalka E. Daligault

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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K. G. Frey

Naval Medical Research Center

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C. L. Redden

Naval Medical Research Center

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David Bruce

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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M. B. Scholz

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Gustavo Palacios

United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases

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