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Dive into the research topics where Christopher L. Hemme is active.

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Featured researches published by Christopher L. Hemme.


The ISME Journal | 2010

GeoChip 3.0 as a high-throughput tool for analyzing microbial community composition, structure and functional activity.

Zhili He; Ye Deng; Joy D. Van Nostrand; Qichao Tu; Meiying Xu; Christopher L. Hemme; Xingyuan Li; Liyou Wu; Terry J. Gentry; Yifeng Yin; Jost Liebich; Terry C. Hazen; Jizhong Zhou

A new generation of functional gene arrays (FGAs; GeoChip 3.0) has been developed, with ∼28 000 probes covering approximately 57 000 gene variants from 292 functional gene families involved in carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus and sulfur cycles, energy metabolism, antibiotic resistance, metal resistance and organic contaminant degradation. GeoChip 3.0 also has several other distinct features, such as a common oligo reference standard (CORS) for data normalization and comparison, a software package for data management and future updating and the gyrB gene for phylogenetic analysis. Computational evaluation of probe specificity indicated that all designed probes would have a high specificity to their corresponding targets. Experimental analysis with synthesized oligonucleotides and genomic DNAs showed that only 0.0036–0.025% false-positive rates were observed, suggesting that the designed probes are highly specific under the experimental conditions examined. In addition, GeoChip 3.0 was applied to analyze soil microbial communities in a multifactor grassland ecosystem in Minnesota, USA, which showed that the structure, composition and potential activity of soil microbial communities significantly changed with the plant species diversity. As expected, GeoChip 3.0 is a high-throughput powerful tool for studying microbial community functional structure, and linking microbial communities to ecosystem processes and functioning.


The ISME Journal | 2010

Metagenomic Insights into Evolution of a Heavy Metal-Contaminated Groundwater Microbial Community

Christopher L. Hemme; Ye Deng; Terry J. Gentry; Matthew W. Fields; Liyou Wu; Soumitra Barua; Kerrie Barry; Susannah G. Tringe; David B. Watson; Zhili He; Terry C. Hazen; James M. Tiedje; Edward M. Rubin; Jizhong Zhou

Understanding adaptation of biological communities to environmental change is a central issue in ecology and evolution. Metagenomic analysis of a stressed groundwater microbial community reveals that prolonged exposure to high concentrations of heavy metals, nitric acid and organic solvents (∼50 years) has resulted in a massive decrease in species and allelic diversity as well as a significant loss of metabolic diversity. Although the surviving microbial community possesses all metabolic pathways necessary for survival and growth in such an extreme environment, its structure is very simple, primarily composed of clonal denitrifying γ- and β-proteobacterial populations. The resulting community is overabundant in key genes conferring resistance to specific stresses including nitrate, heavy metals and acetone. Evolutionary analysis indicates that lateral gene transfer could have a key function in rapid response and adaptation to environmental contamination. The results presented in this study have important implications in understanding, assessing and predicting the impacts of human-induced activities on microbial communities ranging from human health to agriculture to environmental management, and their responses to environmental changes.


Molecular Ecology Resources | 2014

GeoChip 4: a functional gene‐array‐based high‐throughput environmental technology for microbial community analysis

Qichao Tu; Hao Yu; Zhili He; Ye Deng; Liyou Wu; Joy D. Van Nostrand; Aifen Zhou; James W. Voordeckers; Yong-Jin Lee; Yujia Qin; Christopher L. Hemme; Zhou Shi; Kai Xue; Tong Yuan; Aijie Wang; Jizhong Zhou

Micro‐organisms play critical roles in many important biogeochemical processes in the Earths biosphere. However, understanding and characterizing the functional capacity of microbial communities are still difficult due to the extremely diverse and often uncultivable nature of most micro‐organisms. In this study, we developed a new functional gene array, GeoChip 4, for analysing the functional diversity, composition, structure, metabolic potential/activity and dynamics of microbial communities. GeoChip 4 contained approximately 82 000 probes covering 141 995 coding sequences from 410 functional gene families related to microbial carbon (C), nitrogen (N), sulphur (S), and phosphorus (P) cycling, energy metabolism, antibiotic resistance, metal resistance/reduction, organic remediation, stress responses, bacteriophage and virulence. A total of 173 archaeal, 4138 bacterial, 404 eukaryotic and 252 viral strains were targeted, providing the ability to analyse targeted functional gene families of micro‐organisms included in all four domains. Experimental assessment using different amounts of DNA suggested that as little as 500 ng environmental DNA was required for good hybridization, and the signal intensities detected were well correlated with the DNA amount used. GeoChip 4 was then applied to study the effect of long‐term warming on soil microbial communities at a Central Oklahoma site, with results indicating that microbial communities respond to long‐term warming by enriching carbon degradation, nutrient cycling (nitrogen and phosphorous) and stress response gene families. To the best of our knowledge, GeoChip 4 is the most comprehensive functional gene array for microbial community analysis.


Nature Reviews Microbiology | 2011

How sulphate-reducing microorganisms cope with stress: lessons from systems biology

Jizhong Zhou; Qiang He; Christopher L. Hemme; Aindrila Mukhopadhyay; Kristina L. Hillesland; Aifen Zhou; Zhili He; Joy D. Van Nostrand; Terry C. Hazen; David A. Stahl; Judy D. Wall; Adam P. Arkin

Sulphate-reducing microorganisms (SRMs) are a phylogenetically diverse group of anaerobes encompassing distinct physiologies with a broad ecological distribution. As SRMs have important roles in the biogeochemical cycling of carbon, nitrogen, sulphur and various metals, an understanding of how these organisms respond to environmental stresses is of fundamental and practical importance. In this Review, we highlight recent applications of systems biology tools in studying the stress responses of SRMs, particularly Desulfovibrio spp., at the cell, population, community and ecosystem levels. The syntrophic lifestyle of SRMs is also discussed, with a focus on system-level analyses of adaptive mechanisms. Such information is important for understanding the microbiology of the global sulphur cycle and for developing biotechnological applications of SRMs for environmental remediation, energy production, biocorrosion control, wastewater treatment and mineral recovery.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2015

Efficient Genome Editing in Clostridium cellulolyticum via CRISPR-Cas9 Nickase

Tao Xu; Yongchao Li; Zhou Shi; Christopher L. Hemme; Yuan Li; Yonghua Zhu; Joy D. Van Nostrand; Zhili He; Jizhong Zhou

ABSTRACT The CRISPR-Cas9 system is a powerful and revolutionary genome-editing tool for eukaryotic genomes, but its use in bacterial genomes is very limited. Here, we investigated the use of the Streptococcus pyogenes CRISPR-Cas9 system in editing the genome of Clostridium cellulolyticum, a model microorganism for bioenergy research. Wild-type Cas9-induced double-strand breaks were lethal to C. cellulolyticum due to the minimal expression of nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ) components in this strain. To circumvent this lethality, Cas9 nickase was applied to develop a single-nick-triggered homologous recombination strategy, which allows precise one-step editing at intended genomic loci by transforming a single vector. This strategy has a high editing efficiency (>95%) even using short homologous arms (0.2 kb), is able to deliver foreign genes into the genome in a single step without a marker, enables precise editing even at two very similar target sites differing by two bases preceding the seed region, and has a very high target site density (median interval distance of 9 bp and 95.7% gene coverage in C. cellulolyticum). Together, these results establish a simple and robust methodology for genome editing in NHEJ-ineffective prokaryotes.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2010

Sequencing of Multiple Clostridial Genomes Related to Biomass Conversion and Biofuel Production

Christopher L. Hemme; Housna Mouttaki; Yong Jin Lee; Gengxin Zhang; Lynne Goodwin; Susan Lucas; Alex Copeland; Alla Lapidus; Tijana Glavina del Rio; Hope Tice; Elizabeth Saunders; Thomas Brettin; John C. Detter; Cliff Han; Sam Pitluck; Miriam Land; Loren Hauser; Nikos C. Kyrpides; Natalia Mikhailova; Zhili He; Liyou Wu; Joy D. Van Nostrand; Bernard Henrissat; Qiang He; Paul A. Lawson; Ralph S. Tanner; Lee R. Lynd; Juergen Wiegel; Matthew W. Fields; Adam P. Arkin

Modern methods to develop microbe-based biomass conversion processes require a system-level understanding of the microbes involved. Clostridium species have long been recognized as ideal candidates for processes involving biomass conversion and production of various biofuels and other industrial products. To expand the knowledge base for clostridial species relevant to current biofuel production efforts, we have sequenced the genomes of 20 species spanning multiple genera. The majority of species sequenced fall within the class III cellulosome-encoding Clostridium and the class V saccharolytic Thermoanaerobacteraceae. Species were chosen based on representation in the experimental literature as model organisms, ability to degrade cellulosic biomass either by free enzymes or by cellulosomes, ability to rapidly ferment hexose and pentose sugars to ethanol, and ability to ferment synthesis gas to ethanol. The sequenced strains significantly increase the number of noncommensal/nonpathogenic clostridial species and provide a key foundation for future studies of biomass conversion, cellulosome composition, and clostridial systems biology.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2007

Analysis of a Ferric Uptake Regulator (Fur) Mutant of Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough

Kelly S. Bender; Huei-Che Bill Yen; Christopher L. Hemme; Zamin K. Yang; Zhili He; Qiang He; Jizhong Zhou; Katherine H. Huang; Eric J. Alm; Terry C. Hazen; Adam P. Arkin; Judy D. Wall

ABSTRACT Previous experiments examining the transcriptional profile of the anaerobe Desulfovibrio vulgaris demonstrated up-regulation of the Fur regulon in response to various environmental stressors. To test the involvement of Fur in the growth response and transcriptional regulation of D. vulgaris, a targeted mutagenesis procedure was used for deleting the fur gene. Growth of the resulting Δfur mutant (JW707) was not affected by iron availability, but the mutant did exhibit increased sensitivity to nitrite and osmotic stresses compared to the wild type. Transcriptional profiling of JW707 indicated that iron-bound Fur acts as a traditional repressor for ferrous iron uptake genes (feoAB) and other genes containing a predicted Fur binding site within their promoter. Despite the apparent lack of siderophore biosynthesis genes within the D. vulgaris genome, a large 12-gene operon encoding orthologs to TonB and TolQR also appeared to be repressed by iron-bound Fur. While other genes predicted to be involved in iron homeostasis were unaffected by the presence or absence of Fur, alternative expression patterns that could be interpreted as repression or activation by iron-free Fur were observed. Both the physiological and transcriptional data implicate a global regulatory role for Fur in the sulfate-reducing bacterium D. vulgaris.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2009

Characterization of the Central Metabolic Pathways in Thermoanaerobacter sp. Strain X514 via Isotopomer-Assisted Metabolite Analysis

Xueyang Feng; Housna Mouttaki; Lu Lin; Rick Huang; Bing Wu; Christopher L. Hemme; Zhili He; Baichen Zhang; Leslie M. Hicks; Jian Xu; Jizhong Zhou; Yinjie J. Tang

ABSTRACT Thermoanaerobacter sp. strain X514 has great potential in biotechnology due to its capacity to ferment a range of C5 and C6 sugars to ethanol and other metabolites under thermophilic conditions. This study investigated the central metabolism of strain X514 via 13C-labeled tracer experiments using either glucose or pyruvate as both carbon and energy sources. X514 grew on minimal medium and thus contains complete biosynthesis pathways for all macromolecule building blocks. Based on genome annotation and isotopic analysis of amino acids, three observations can be obtained about the central metabolic pathways in X514. First, the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway in X514 is not functional, and the tricarboxylic acid cycle is incomplete under fermentative growth conditions. Second, X514 contains (Re)-type citrate synthase activity, although no gene homologous to the recently characterized (Re)-type citrate synthase of Clostridium kluyveri was found. Third, the isoleucine in X514 is derived from acetyl coenzyme A and pyruvate via the citramalate pathway rather than being synthesized from threonine via threonine ammonia-lyase. The functionality of the citramalate synthase gene (cimA [Teth514_1204]) has been confirmed by enzymatic activity assays, while the presence of intracellular citramalate has been detected by mass spectrometry. This study demonstrates the merits of combining 13C-assisted metabolite analysis, enzyme assays, and metabolite detection not only to examine genome sequence annotations but also to discover novel enzyme activities.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2010

Global Transcriptional, Physiological, and Metabolite Analyses of the Responses of Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough to Salt Adaptation

Zhili He; Aifen Zhou; Edward E. K. Baidoo; Qiang He; Marcin P. Joachimiak; Peter I. Benke; Richard Phan; Aindrila Mukhopadhyay; Christopher L. Hemme; Katherine H. Huang; Eric J. Alm; Matthew W. Fields; Judy D. Wall; David A. Stahl; Terry C. Hazen; Jay D. Keasling; Adam P. Arkin; Jizhong Zhou

ABSTRACT The response of Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough to salt adaptation (long-term NaCl exposure) was examined by performing physiological, global transcriptional, and metabolite analyses. Salt adaptation was reflected by increased expression of genes involved in amino acid biosynthesis and transport, electron transfer, hydrogen oxidation, and general stress responses (e.g., heat shock proteins, phage shock proteins, and oxidative stress response proteins). The expression of genes involved in carbon metabolism, cell growth, and phage structures was decreased. Transcriptome profiles of D. vulgaris responses to salt adaptation were compared with transcriptome profiles of D. vulgaris responses to salt shock (short-term NaCl exposure). Metabolite assays showed that glutamate and alanine accumulated under salt adaptation conditions, suggesting that these amino acids may be used as osmoprotectants in D. vulgaris. Addition of amino acids (glutamate, alanine, and tryptophan) or yeast extract to the growth medium relieved salt-related growth inhibition. A conceptual model that links the observed results to currently available knowledge is proposed to increase our understanding of the mechanisms of D. vulgaris adaptation to elevated NaCl levels.


The ISME Journal | 2010

Impact of elevated nitrate on sulfate-reducing bacteria: a comparative study of Desulfovibrio vulgaris.

Qiang He; Zhili He; Dominique Joyner; Marcin P. Joachimiak; Morgan N. Price; Zamin K. Yang; Huei-Che Bill Yen; Christopher L. Hemme; Wenqiong Chen; Matthew M Fields; David Stahl; Jay D. Keasling; Martin Keller; Adam P. Arkin; Terry C. Hazen; Judy D. Wall; J. Zhou

Sulfate-reducing bacteria have been extensively studied for their potential in heavy-metal bioremediation. However, the occurrence of elevated nitrate in contaminated environments has been shown to inhibit sulfate reduction activity. Although the inhibition has been suggested to result from the competition with nitrate-reducing bacteria, the possibility of direct inhibition of sulfate reducers by elevated nitrate needs to be explored. Using Desulfovibrio vulgaris as a model sulfate-reducing bacterium, functional genomics analysis reveals that osmotic stress contributed to growth inhibition by nitrate as shown by the upregulation of the glycine/betaine transporter genes and the relief of nitrate inhibition by osmoprotectants. The observation that significant growth inhibition was effected by 70 mM NaNO3 but not by 70 mM NaCl suggests the presence of inhibitory mechanisms in addition to osmotic stress. The differential expression of genes characteristic of nitrite stress responses, such as the hybrid cluster protein gene, under nitrate stress condition further indicates that nitrate stress response by D. vulgaris was linked to components of both osmotic and nitrite stress responses. The involvement of the oxidative stress response pathway, however, might be the result of a more general stress response. Given the low similarities between the response profiles to nitrate and other stresses, less-defined stress response pathways could also be important in nitrate stress, which might involve the shift in energy metabolism. The involvement of nitrite stress response upon exposure to nitrate may provide detoxification mechanisms for nitrite, which is inhibitory to sulfate-reducing bacteria, produced by microbial nitrate reduction as a metabolic intermediate and may enhance the survival of sulfate-reducing bacteria in environments with elevated nitrate level.

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Zhili He

University of Oklahoma

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Liyou Wu

University of Oklahoma

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Adam P. Arkin

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Ye Deng

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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