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Dive into the research topics where Cliff Han is active.

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Featured researches published by Cliff Han.


Nature Biotechnology | 2008

Genome sequencing and analysis of the biomass-degrading fungus Trichoderma reesei (syn. Hypocrea jecorina).

Diego Martinez; Randy M. Berka; Bernard Henrissat; Markku Saloheimo; Mikko Arvas; Scott E. Baker; Jarod Chapman; Olga Chertkov; Pedro M. Coutinho; Dan Cullen; Etienne Danchin; Igor V. Grigoriev; Paul Harris; Melissa Jackson; Christian P. Kubicek; Cliff Han; Isaac Ho; Luis F. Larrondo; Alfredo Lopez de Leon; Jon K. Magnuson; Sandy Merino; Monica Misra; Beth Nelson; Nicholas H. Putnam; Barbara Robbertse; Asaf Salamov; Monika Schmoll; Astrid Terry; Nina Thayer; Ann Westerholm-Parvinen

Trichoderma reesei is the main industrial source of cellulases and hemicellulases used to depolymerize biomass to simple sugars that are converted to chemical intermediates and biofuels, such as ethanol. We assembled 89 scaffolds (sets of ordered and oriented contigs) to generate 34 Mbp of nearly contiguous T. reesei genome sequence comprising 9,129 predicted gene models. Unexpectedly, considering the industrial utility and effectiveness of the carbohydrate-active enzymes of T. reesei, its genome encodes fewer cellulases and hemicellulases than any other sequenced fungus able to hydrolyze plant cell wall polysaccharides. Many T. reesei genes encoding carbohydrate-active enzymes are distributed nonrandomly in clusters that lie between regions of synteny with other Sordariomycetes. Numerous genes encoding biosynthetic pathways for secondary metabolites may promote survival of T. reesei in its competitive soil habitat, but genome analysis provided little mechanistic insight into its extraordinary capacity for protein secretion. Our analysis, coupled with the genome sequence data, provides a roadmap for constructing enhanced T. reesei strains for industrial applications such as biofuel production.


Nature | 2009

A phylogeny-driven genomic encyclopaedia of Bacteria and Archaea.

Dongying Wu; Philip Hugenholtz; Konstantinos Mavromatis; Rüdiger Pukall; Eileen Dalin; Natalia Ivanova; Victor Kunin; Lynne Goodwin; Martin Wu; Brian J. Tindall; Sean D. Hooper; Amrita Pati; Athanasios Lykidis; Stefan Spring; Iain Anderson; Patrik D’haeseleer; Adam Zemla; Alla Lapidus; Matt Nolan; Alex Copeland; Cliff Han; Feng Chen; Jan-Fang Cheng; Susan Lucas; Cheryl A. Kerfeld; Elke Lang; Sabine Gronow; Patrick Chain; David Bruce; Edward M. Rubin

Sequencing of bacterial and archaeal genomes has revolutionized our understanding of the many roles played by microorganisms. There are now nearly 1,000 completed bacterial and archaeal genomes available, most of which were chosen for sequencing on the basis of their physiology. As a result, the perspective provided by the currently available genomes is limited by a highly biased phylogenetic distribution. To explore the value added by choosing microbial genomes for sequencing on the basis of their evolutionary relationships, we have sequenced and analysed the genomes of 56 culturable species of Bacteria and Archaea selected to maximize phylogenetic coverage. Analysis of these genomes demonstrated pronounced benefits (compared to an equivalent set of genomes randomly selected from the existing database) in diverse areas including the reconstruction of phylogenetic history, the discovery of new protein families and biological properties, and the prediction of functions for known genes from other organisms. Our results strongly support the need for systematic ‘phylogenomic’ efforts to compile a phylogeny-driven ‘Genomic Encyclopedia of Bacteria and Archaea’ in order to derive maximum knowledge from existing microbial genome data as well as from genome sequences to come.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2009

Three Genomes from the Phylum Acidobacteria Provide Insight into the Lifestyles of These Microorganisms in Soils

Naomi L. Ward; Jean F. Challacombe; Peter H. Janssen; Bernard Henrissat; Pedro M. Coutinho; Martin Wu; Gary Xie; Daniel H. Haft; Michelle Sait; Jonathan H. Badger; Ravi D. Barabote; Brent Bradley; Thomas Brettin; Lauren M. Brinkac; David Bruce; Todd Creasy; Sean C. Daugherty; Tanja Davidsen; Robert T. DeBoy; J. Chris Detter; Robert J. Dodson; A. Scott Durkin; Anuradha Ganapathy; Michelle Gwinn-Giglio; Cliff Han; Hoda Khouri; Hajnalka Kiss; Sagar Kothari; Ramana Madupu; Karen E. Nelson

ABSTRACT The complete genomes of three strains from the phylum Acidobacteria were compared. Phylogenetic analysis placed them as a unique phylum. They share genomic traits with members of the Proteobacteria, the Cyanobacteria, and the Fungi. The three strains appear to be versatile heterotrophs. Genomic and culture traits indicate the use of carbon sources that span simple sugars to more complex substrates such as hemicellulose, cellulose, and chitin. The genomes encode low-specificity major facilitator superfamily transporters and high-affinity ABC transporters for sugars, suggesting that they are best suited to low-nutrient conditions. They appear capable of nitrate and nitrite reduction but not N2 fixation or denitrification. The genomes contained numerous genes that encode siderophore receptors, but no evidence of siderophore production was found, suggesting that they may obtain iron via interaction with other microorganisms. The presence of cellulose synthesis genes and a large class of novel high-molecular-weight excreted proteins suggests potential traits for desiccation resistance, biofilm formation, and/or contribution to soil structure. Polyketide synthase and macrolide glycosylation genes suggest the production of novel antimicrobial compounds. Genes that encode a variety of novel proteins were also identified. The abundance of acidobacteria in soils worldwide and the breadth of potential carbon use by the sequenced strains suggest significant and previously unrecognized contributions to the terrestrial carbon cycle. Combining our genomic evidence with available culture traits, we postulate that cells of these isolates are long-lived, divide slowly, exhibit slow metabolic rates under low-nutrient conditions, and are well equipped to tolerate fluctuations in soil hydration.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Improving the coverage of the cyanobacterial phylum using diversity-driven genome sequencing

Patrick M. Shih; Dongying Wu; Amel Latifi; Seth D. Axen; David P. Fewer; Emmanuel Talla; Alexandra Calteau; Fei Cai; Nicole Tandeau de Marsac; Rosmarie Rippka; Michael Herdman; Kaarina Sivonen; Thérèse Coursin; Lynne Goodwin; Matt Nolan; Karen W. Davenport; Cliff Han; Edward M. Rubin; Jonathan A. Eisen; Tanja Woyke; Muriel Gugger; Cheryl A. Kerfeld

The cyanobacterial phylum encompasses oxygenic photosynthetic prokaryotes of a great breadth of morphologies and ecologies; they play key roles in global carbon and nitrogen cycles. The chloroplasts of all photosynthetic eukaryotes can trace their ancestry to cyanobacteria. Cyanobacteria also attract considerable interest as platforms for “green” biotechnology and biofuels. To explore the molecular basis of their different phenotypes and biochemical capabilities, we sequenced the genomes of 54 phylogenetically and phenotypically diverse cyanobacterial strains. Comparison of cyanobacterial genomes reveals the molecular basis for many aspects of cyanobacterial ecophysiological diversity, as well as the convergence of complex morphologies without the acquisition of novel proteins. This phylum-wide study highlights the benefits of diversity-driven genome sequencing, identifying more than 21,000 cyanobacterial proteins with no detectable similarity to known proteins, and foregrounds the diversity of light-harvesting proteins and gene clusters for secondary metabolite biosynthesis. Additionally, our results provide insight into the distribution of genes of cyanobacterial origin in eukaryotic nuclear genomes. Moreover, this study doubles both the amount and the phylogenetic diversity of cyanobacterial genome sequence data. Given the exponentially growing number of sequenced genomes, this diversity-driven study demonstrates the perspective gained by comparing disparate yet related genomes in a phylum-wide context and the insights that are gained from it.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

The genomic basis of trophic strategy in marine bacteria

Federico M. Lauro; Diane McDougald; Torsten Thomas; Timothy J. Williams; Suhelen Egan; Scott A. Rice; Matthew Z. DeMaere; Lily Ting; Haluk Ertan; Justin Johnson; Steven Ferriera; Alla Lapidus; Iain Anderson; Nikos C. Kyrpides; A. Christine Munk; Chris Detter; Cliff Han; Mark V. Brown; Frank T. Robb; Staffan Kjelleberg; Ricardo Cavicchioli

Many marine bacteria have evolved to grow optimally at either high (copiotrophic) or low (oligotrophic) nutrient concentrations, enabling different species to colonize distinct trophic habitats in the oceans. Here, we compare the genome sequences of two bacteria, Photobacterium angustum S14 and Sphingopyxis alaskensis RB2256, that serve as useful model organisms for copiotrophic and oligotrophic modes of life and specifically relate the genomic features to trophic strategy for these organisms and define their molecular mechanisms of adaptation. We developed a model for predicting trophic lifestyle from genome sequence data and tested >400,000 proteins representing >500 million nucleotides of sequence data from 126 genome sequences with metagenome data of whole environmental samples. When applied to available oceanic metagenome data (e.g., the Global Ocean Survey data) the model demonstrated that oligotrophs, and not the more readily isolatable copiotrophs, dominate the oceans free-living microbial populations. Using our model, it is now possible to define the types of bacteria that specific ocean niches are capable of sustaining.


Science | 2009

Genome Project Standards in a New Era of Sequencing

Patrick Chain; Darren Grafham; Robert S. Fulton; Michael Fitzgerald; Jessica B. Hostetler; Donna M. Muzny; J. Ali; Bruce W. Birren; David Bruce; Christian Buhay; James R. Cole; Yan Ding; Shannon Dugan; Dawn Field; George M Garrity; Richard A. Gibbs; Tina Graves; Cliff Han; Scott H. Harrison; Sarah K. Highlander; Philip Hugenholtz; H. M. Khouri; Chinnappa D. Kodira; Eugene Kolker; Nikos C. Kyrpides; D. Lang; Alla Lapidus; S. A. Malfatti; Victor Markowitz; T. Metha

More detailed sequence standards that keep up with revolutionary sequencing technologies will aid the research community in evaluating data. For over a decade, genome sequences have adhered to only two standards that are relied on for purposes of sequence analysis by interested third parties (1, 2). However, ongoing developments in revolutionary sequencing technologies have resulted in a redefinition of traditional whole-genome sequencing that requires reevaluation of such standards. With commercially available 454 pyrosequencing (followed by Illumina, SOLiD, and now Helicos), there has been an explosion of genomes sequenced under the moniker “draft”; however, these can be very poor quality genomes (due to inherent errors in the sequencing technologies, and the inability of assembly programs to fully address these errors). Further, one can only infer that such draft genomes may be of poor quality by navigating through the databases to find the number and type of reads deposited in sequence trace repositories (and not all genomes have this available), or to identify the number of contigs or genome fragments deposited to the database. The difficulty in assessing the quality of such deposited genomes has created some havoc for genome analysis pipelines and has contributed to many wasted hours. Exponential leaps in raw sequencing capability and greatly reduced prices have further skewed the time- and cost-ratios of draft data generation versus the painstaking process of improving and finishing a genome. The result is an ever-widening gap between drafted and finished genomes that only promises to continue (see the figure, page 236); hence, there is an urgent need to distinguish good from poor data sets.


Genome Biology | 2011

Comparative genome sequence analysis underscores mycoparasitism as the ancestral life style of Trichoderma

Christian P. Kubicek; Alfredo Herrera-Estrella; Diego Martinez; Irina S. Druzhinina; Michael R. Thon; Susanne Zeilinger; Sergio Casas-Flores; Benjamin A. Horwitz; Prasun K. Mukherjee; Mala Mukherjee; László Kredics; Luis David Alcaraz; Andrea Aerts; Zsuzsanna Antal; Lea Atanasova; Mayte Guadalupe Cervantes-Badillo; Jean F. Challacombe; Olga Chertkov; Kevin McCluskey; Fanny Coulpier; Nandan Deshpande; Hans von Döhren; Daniel J. Ebbole; Edgardo U. Esquivel-Naranjo; Erzsébet Fekete; Michel Flipphi; Fabian Glaser; Elida Yazmín Gómez-Rodríguez; Sabine Gruber; Cliff Han

BackgroundMycoparasitism, a lifestyle where one fungus is parasitic on another fungus, has special relevance when the prey is a plant pathogen, providing a strategy for biological control of pests for plant protection. Probably, the most studied biocontrol agents are species of the genus Hypocrea/Trichoderma.ResultsHere we report an analysis of the genome sequences of the two biocontrol species Trichoderma atroviride (teleomorph Hypocrea atroviridis) and Trichoderma virens (formerly Gliocladium virens, teleomorph Hypocrea virens), and a comparison with Trichoderma reesei (teleomorph Hypocrea jecorina). These three Trichoderma species display a remarkable conservation of gene order (78 to 96%), and a lack of active mobile elements probably due to repeat-induced point mutation. Several gene families are expanded in the two mycoparasitic species relative to T. reesei or other ascomycetes, and are overrepresented in non-syntenic genome regions. A phylogenetic analysis shows that T. reesei and T. virens are derived relative to T. atroviride. The mycoparasitism-specific genes thus arose in a common Trichoderma ancestor but were subsequently lost in T. reesei.ConclusionsThe data offer a better understanding of mycoparasitism, and thus enforce the development of improved biocontrol strains for efficient and environmentally friendly protection of plants.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Assembling the Marine Metagenome, One Cell at a Time

Tanja Woyke; Gary Xie; Alex Copeland; José M. González; Cliff Han; Hajnalka Kiss; Jimmy Hw Saw; Pavel Senin; Chi Yang; Sourav Chatterji; Jan Fang Cheng; Jonathan A. Eisen; Michael E. Sieracki; Ramunas Stepanauskas

The difficulty associated with the cultivation of most microorganisms and the complexity of natural microbial assemblages, such as marine plankton or human microbiome, hinder genome reconstruction of representative taxa using cultivation or metagenomic approaches. Here we used an alternative, single cell sequencing approach to obtain high-quality genome assemblies of two uncultured, numerically significant marine microorganisms. We employed fluorescence-activated cell sorting and multiple displacement amplification to obtain hundreds of micrograms of genomic DNA from individual, uncultured cells of two marine flavobacteria from the Gulf of Maine that were phylogenetically distant from existing cultured strains. Shotgun sequencing and genome finishing yielded 1.9 Mbp in 17 contigs and 1.5 Mbp in 21 contigs for the two flavobacteria, with estimated genome recoveries of about 91% and 78%, respectively. Only 0.24% of the assembling sequences were contaminants and were removed from further analysis using rigorous quality control. In contrast to all cultured strains of marine flavobacteria, the two single cell genomes were excellent Global Ocean Sampling (GOS) metagenome fragment recruiters, demonstrating their numerical significance in the ocean. The geographic distribution of GOS recruits along the Northwest Atlantic coast coincided with ocean surface currents. Metabolic reconstruction indicated diverse potential energy sources, including biopolymer degradation, proteorhodopsin photometabolism, and hydrogen oxidation. Compared to cultured relatives, the two uncultured flavobacteria have small genome sizes, few non-coding nucleotides, and few paralogous genes, suggesting adaptations to narrow ecological niches. These features may have contributed to the abundance of the two taxa in specific regions of the ocean, and may have hindered their cultivation. We demonstrate the power of single cell DNA sequencing to generate reference genomes of uncultured taxa from a complex microbial community of marine bacterioplankton. A combination of single cell genomics and metagenomics enabled us to analyze the genome content, metabolic adaptations, and biogeography of these taxa.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Comparative genomics reveals mechanism for short-term and long-term clonal transitions in pandemic Vibrio cholerae

Jongsik Chun; Christopher J. Grim; Nur A. Hasan; Je Hee Lee; Seon Young Choi; Bradd J. Haley; Elisa Taviani; Yoon-Seong Jeon; Dong-Wook Kim; Jae-Hak Lee; Thomas Brettin; David Bruce; Jean F. Challacombe; J. Chris Detter; Cliff Han; A. Christine Munk; Olga Chertkov; Linda Meincke; Elizabeth Saunders; Ronald A. Walters; Anwar Huq; G. Balakrish Nair; Rita R. Colwell

Vibrio cholerae, the causative agent of cholera, is a bacterium autochthonous to the aquatic environment, and a serious public health threat. V. cholerae serogroup O1 is responsible for the previous two cholera pandemics, in which classical and El Tor biotypes were dominant in the sixth and the current seventh pandemics, respectively. Cholera researchers continually face newly emerging and reemerging pathogenic clones carrying diverse combinations of phenotypic and genotypic properties, which significantly hampered control of the disease. To elucidate evolutionary mechanisms governing genetic diversity of pandemic V. cholerae, we compared the genome sequences of 23 V. cholerae strains isolated from a variety of sources over the past 98 years. The genome-based phylogeny revealed 12 distinct V. cholerae lineages, of which one comprises both O1 classical and El Tor biotypes. All seventh pandemic clones share nearly identical gene content. Using analogy to influenza virology, we define the transition from sixth to seventh pandemic strains as a “shift” between pathogenic clones belonging to the same O1 serogroup, but from significantly different phyletic lineages. In contrast, transition among clones during the present pandemic period is characterized as a “drift” between clones, differentiated mainly by varying composition of laterally transferred genomic islands, resulting in emergence of variants, exemplified by V. cholerae O139 and V. cholerae O1 El Tor hybrid clones. Based on the comparative genomics it is concluded that V. cholerae undergoes extensive genetic recombination via lateral gene transfer, and, therefore, genome assortment, not serogroup, should be used to define pathogenic V. cholerae clones.


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.

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Dive into the Cliff Han's collaboration.

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Lynne Goodwin

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Miriam Land

University of California

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Susan Lucas

United States Department of Energy

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Natalia Ivanova

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Sam Pitluck

Joint Genome Institute

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Amrita Pati

Joint Genome Institute

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Loren Hauser

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Alla Lapidus

Saint Petersburg State University

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Matt Nolan

Joint Genome Institute

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Amy Chen

Joint Genome Institute

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