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Dive into the research topics where Dominique Joyner is active.

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Featured researches published by Dominique Joyner.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2006

Application of a High-Density Oligonucleotide Microarray Approach To Study Bacterial Population Dynamics during Uranium Reduction and Reoxidation

Eoin L. Brodie; Todd Z. DeSantis; Dominique Joyner; Seung M. Baek; Joern T. Larsen; Gary L. Andersen; Terry C. Hazen; Paul M. Richardson; Donald J. Herman; Tetsu K. Tokunaga; JiaminM.M. Wan; Mary K. Firestone

ABSTRACT Reduction of soluble uranium U(VI) to less-soluble uranium U(IV) is a promising approach to minimize migration from contaminated aquifers. It is generally assumed that, under constant reducing conditions, U(IV) is stable and immobile; however, in a previous study, we documented reoxidation of U(IV) under continuous reducing conditions (Wan et al., Environ. Sci. Technol. 2005, 39:6162-6169). To determine if changes in microbial community composition were a factor in U(IV) reoxidation, we employed a high-density phylogenetic DNA microarray (16S microarray) containing 500,000 probes to monitor changes in bacterial populations during this remediation process. Comparison of the 16S microarray with clone libraries demonstrated successful detection and classification of most clone groups. Analysis of the most dynamic groups of 16S rRNA gene amplicons detected by the 16S microarray identified five clusters of bacterial subfamilies responding in a similar manner. This approach demonstrated that amplicons of known metal-reducing bacteria such as Geothrix fermentans (confirmed by quantitative PCR) and those within the Geobacteraceae were abundant during U(VI) reduction and did not decline during the U(IV) reoxidation phase. Significantly, it appears that the observed reoxidation of uranium under reducing conditions occurred despite elevated microbial activity and the consistent presence of metal-reducing bacteria. High-density phylogenetic microarrays constitute a powerful tool, enabling the detection and monitoring of a substantial portion of the microbial population in a routine, accurate, and reproducible manner.


The ISME Journal | 2014

Metagenomics reveals sediment microbial community response to Deepwater Horizon oil spill

Olivia U. Mason; Nicole M. Scott; Antonio Gonzalez; Adam Robbins-Pianka; Jacob Bælum; Jeffrey Kimbrel; Nicholas J. Bouskill; Emmanuel Prestat; Sharon E. Borglin; Dominique Joyner; Julian L. Fortney; Diogo Jurelevicius; William T. Stringfellow; Lisa Alvarez-Cohen; Terry C. Hazen; Rob Knight; Jack A. Gilbert; Janet K. Jansson

The Deepwater Horizon (DWH) oil spill in the spring of 2010 resulted in an input of ∼4.1 million barrels of oil to the Gulf of Mexico; >22% of this oil is unaccounted for, with unknown environmental consequences. Here we investigated the impact of oil deposition on microbial communities in surface sediments collected at 64 sites by targeted sequencing of 16S rRNA genes, shotgun metagenomic sequencing of 14 of these samples and mineralization experiments using 14C-labeled model substrates. The 16S rRNA gene data indicated that the most heavily oil-impacted sediments were enriched in an uncultured Gammaproteobacterium and a Colwellia species, both of which were highly similar to sequences in the DWH deep-sea hydrocarbon plume. The primary drivers in structuring the microbial community were nitrogen and hydrocarbons. Annotation of unassembled metagenomic data revealed the most abundant hydrocarbon degradation pathway encoded genes involved in degrading aliphatic and simple aromatics via butane monooxygenase. The activity of key hydrocarbon degradation pathways by sediment microbes was confirmed by determining the mineralization of 14C-labeled model substrates in the following order: propylene glycol, dodecane, toluene and phenanthrene. Further, analysis of metagenomic sequence data revealed an increase in abundance of genes involved in denitrification pathways in samples that exceeded the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)’s benchmarks for polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) compared with those that did not. Importantly, these data demonstrate that the indigenous sediment microbiota contributed an important ecosystem service for remediation of oil in the Gulf. However, PAHs were more recalcitrant to degradation, and their persistence could have deleterious impacts on the sediment ecosystem.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2006

Salt Stress in Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough: an Integrated Genomics Approach

Aindrila Mukhopadhyay; Zhili He; Eric J. Alm; Adam P. Arkin; Edward E. K. Baidoo; Sharon C. Borglin; Wenqiong Chen; Terry C. Hazen; Qiang He; Hoi-Ying N. Holman; Katherine H. Huang; Rick Huang; Dominique Joyner; Natalie Katz; Martin Keller; Paul Oeller; Alyssa M. Redding; Jun Sun; Judy D. Wall; Jing Wei; Zamin Yang; Huei-Che Yen; Jizhong Zhou; Jay D. Keasling

The ability of Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough to reduce, and therefore contain, toxic and radioactive metal waste has made all factors that affect the physiology of this organism of great interest. Increased salinity is an important and frequent fluctuation faced by D. vulgaris in its natural habitat. In liquid culture, exposure to excess salt resulted in striking elongation of D. vulgaris cells. Using data from transcriptomics, proteomics, metabolite assays, phospholipid fatty acid profiling, and electron microscopy, we used a systems approach to explore the effects of excess NaCl on D. vulgaris. In this study we demonstrated that import of osmoprotectants, such as glycine betaine and ectoine, is the primary mechanism used by D. vulgaris to counter hyperionic stress. Several efflux systems were also highly up-regulated, as was the ATP synthesis pathway. Increases in the levels of both RNA and DNA helicases suggested that salt stress affected the stability of nucleic acid base pairing. An overall increase in the level of branched fatty acids indicated that there were changes in cell wall fluidity. The immediate response to salt stress included up-regulation of chemotaxis genes, although flagellar biosynthesis was down-regulated. Other down-regulated systems included lactate uptake permeases and ABC transport systems. The results of an extensive NaCl stress analysis were compared with microarray data from a KCl stress analysis, and unlike many other bacteria, D. vulgaris responded similarly to the two stresses. Integration of data from multiple methods allowed us to develop a conceptual model for the salt stress response in D. vulgaris that can be compared to those in other microorganisms.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2007

Cell-Wide Responses to Low-Oxygen Exposure in Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough

Aindrila Mukhopadhyay; Alyssa M. Redding; Marcin P. Joachimiak; Adam P. Arkin; Sharon E. Borglin; Paramvir Dehal; Romy Chakraborty; Jil T. Geller; Terry C. Hazen; Qiang He; Dominique Joyner; Vincent J.J. Martin; Judy D. Wall; Zamin Koo Yang; Jizhong Zhou; Jay D. Keasling

The responses of the anaerobic, sulfate-reducing organism Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough to low-oxygen exposure (0.1% O(2)) were monitored via transcriptomics and proteomics. Exposure to 0.1% O(2) caused a decrease in the growth rate without affecting viability. Concerted upregulation of the predicted peroxide stress response regulon (PerR) genes was observed in response to the 0.1% O(2) exposure. Several of the candidates also showed increases in protein abundance. Among the remaining small number of transcript changes was the upregulation of the predicted transmembrane tetraheme cytochrome c(3) complex. Other known oxidative stress response candidates remained unchanged during the low-O(2) exposure. To fully understand the results of the 0.1% O(2) exposure, transcriptomics and proteomics data were collected for exposure to air using a similar experimental protocol. In contrast to the 0.1% O(2) exposure, air exposure was detrimental to both the growth rate and viability and caused dramatic changes at both the transcriptome and proteome levels. Interestingly, the transcripts of the predicted PerR regulon genes were downregulated during air exposure. Our results highlight the differences in the cell-wide responses to low and high O(2) levels in D. vulgaris and suggest that while exposure to air is highly detrimental to D. vulgaris, this bacterium can successfully cope with periodic exposure to low O(2) levels in its environment.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2007

Response of Desulfovibrio vulgaris to Alkaline Stress

Sergey Stolyar; Qiang He; Marcin P. Joachimiak; Zhili He; Zamin Koo Yang; Sharon E. Borglin; Dominique Joyner; Katherine H. Huang; Eric J. Alm; Terry C. Hazen; Jizhong Zhou; Judy D. Wall; Adam P. Arkin; David A. Stahl

The response of exponentially growing Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough to pH 10 stress was studied using oligonucleotide microarrays and a study set of mutants with genes suggested by microarray data to be involved in the alkaline stress response deleted. The data showed that the response of D. vulgaris to increased pH is generally similar to that of Escherichia coli but is apparently controlled by unique regulatory circuits since the alternative sigma factors (sigma S and sigma E) contributing to this stress response in E. coli appear to be absent in D. vulgaris. Genes previously reported to be up-regulated in E. coli were up-regulated in D. vulgaris; these genes included three ATPase genes and a tryptophan synthase gene. Transcription of chaperone and protease genes (encoding ATP-dependent Clp and La proteases and DnaK) was also elevated in D. vulgaris. As in E. coli, genes involved in flagellum synthesis were down-regulated. The transcriptional data also identified regulators, distinct from sigma S and sigma E, that are likely part of a D. vulgaris Hildenborough-specific stress response system. Characterization of a study set of mutants with genes implicated in alkaline stress response deleted confirmed that there was protective involvement of the sodium/proton antiporter NhaC-2, tryptophanase A, and two putative regulators/histidine kinases (DVU0331 and DVU2580).


Mbio | 2015

Natural Bacterial Communities Serve as Quantitative Geochemical Biosensors

Mark B. Smith; Andrea M. Rocha; Chris S. Smillie; Scott W. Olesen; Charles J. Paradis; Liyou Wu; James H. Campbell; Julian L. Fortney; Tonia L. Mehlhorn; Kenneth Lowe; Jennifer E. Earles; Jana Randolph Phillips; Steve M. Techtmann; Dominique Joyner; Dwayne A. Elias; Kathryn L. Bailey; Richard A. Hurt; Sarah P. Preheim; Matthew C. Sanders; Joy Yang; Marcella A. Mueller; Scott C. Brooks; David B. Watson; Ping Zhang; Zhili He; Eric A. Dubinsky; Paul D. Adams; Adam P. Arkin; Matthew W. Fields; Jizhong Zhou

ABSTRACT Biological sensors can be engineered to measure a wide range of environmental conditions. Here we show that statistical analysis of DNA from natural microbial communities can be used to accurately identify environmental contaminants, including uranium and nitrate at a nuclear waste site. In addition to contamination, sequence data from the 16S rRNA gene alone can quantitatively predict a rich catalogue of 26 geochemical features collected from 93 wells with highly differing geochemistry characteristics. We extend this approach to identify sites contaminated with hydrocarbons from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, finding that altered bacterial communities encode a memory of prior contamination, even after the contaminants themselves have been fully degraded. We show that the bacterial strains that are most useful for detecting oil and uranium are known to interact with these substrates, indicating that this statistical approach uncovers ecologically meaningful interactions consistent with previous experimental observations. Future efforts should focus on evaluating the geographical generalizability of these associations. Taken as a whole, these results indicate that ubiquitous, natural bacterial communities can be used as in situ environmental sensors that respond to and capture perturbations caused by human impacts. These in situ biosensors rely on environmental selection rather than directed engineering, and so this approach could be rapidly deployed and scaled as sequencing technology continues to become faster, simpler, and less expensive. IMPORTANCE Here we show that DNA from natural bacterial communities can be used as a quantitative biosensor to accurately distinguish unpolluted sites from those contaminated with uranium, nitrate, or oil. These results indicate that bacterial communities can be used as environmental sensors that respond to and capture perturbations caused by human impacts. Here we show that DNA from natural bacterial communities can be used as a quantitative biosensor to accurately distinguish unpolluted sites from those contaminated with uranium, nitrate, or oil. These results indicate that bacterial communities can be used as environmental sensors that respond to and capture perturbations caused by human impacts.


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.


Current Opinion in Biotechnology | 2012

Application of phenotypic microarrays to environmental microbiology

Sharon E. Borglin; Dominique Joyner; Kristen M. DeAngelis; Jane Khudyakov; Patrik D’haeseleer; Marcin P. Joachimiak; Terry C. Hazen

Environmental organisms are extremely diverse and only a small fraction has been successfully cultured in the laboratory. Culture in micro wells provides a method for rapid screening of a wide variety of growth conditions and commercially available plates contain a large number of substrates, nutrient sources, and inhibitors, which can provide an assessment of the phenotype of an organism. This review describes applications of phenotype arrays to anaerobic and thermophilic microorganisms, use of the plates in stress response studies, in development of culture media for newly discovered strains, and for assessment of phenotype of environmental communities. Also discussed are considerations and challenges in data interpretation and visualization, including data normalization, statistics, and curve fitting.


FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2015

Microbial community composition and diversity in Caspian Sea sediments

Nagissa Mahmoudi; Michael S. Robeson; Hector F. Castro; Julian L. Fortney; Stephen M. Techtmann; Dominique Joyner; Charles J. Paradis; Susan M. Pfiffner; Terry C. Hazen

The Caspian Sea is heavily polluted due to industrial and agricultural effluents as well as extraction of oil and gas reserves. Microbial communities can influence the fate of contaminants and nutrients. However, insight into the microbial ecology of the Caspian Sea significantly lags behind other marine systems. Here we describe microbial biomass, diversity and composition in sediments collected from three sampling stations in the Caspian Sea. Illumina sequencing of 16S rRNA genes revealed the presence of a number of known bacterial and archaeal heterotrophs suggesting that organic carbon is a primary factor shaping microbial communities. Surface sediments collected from bottom waters with low oxygen levels were dominated by Gammaproteobacteria while surface sediments collected from bottom waters under hypoxic conditions were dominated by Deltaproteobacteria, specifically sulfate-reducing bacteria. Thaumarchaeota was dominant across all surface sediments indicating that nitrogen cycling in this system is strongly influenced by ammonia-oxidizing archaea. This study provides a baseline assessment that may serve as a point of reference as this system changes or as the efficacy of new remediation efforts are implemented.


Chemosphere | 2011

Microbial community response to addition of polylactate compounds to stimulate hexavalent chromium reduction in groundwater.

Eoin L. Brodie; Dominique Joyner; Boris Faybishenko; Mark E. Conrad; Carlos Rios-Velazquez; Josue Malave; Ramon Martinez; Benjamin V. Mork; Anna Willett; Steven Koenigsberg; Donald J. Herman; Mary K. Firestone; Terry C. Hazen

To evaluate the efficacy of bioimmobilization of Cr(VI) in groundwater at the Department of Energy Hanford site, we conducted a series of microcosm experiments using a range of commercial electron donors with varying degrees of lactate polymerization (polylactate). These experiments were conducted using Hanford Formation sediments (coarse sand and gravel) immersed in Hanford groundwater, which were amended with Cr(VI) and several types of lactate-based electron donors (Hydrogen Release Compound, HRC; primer-HRC, pHRC; extended release HRC) and the polylactate-cysteine form (Metal Remediation Compound, MRC). The results showed that polylactate compounds stimulated an increase in bacterial biomass and activity to a greater extent than sodium lactate when applied at equivalent carbon concentrations. At the same time, concentrations of headspace hydrogen and methane increased and correlated with changes in the microbial community structure. Enrichment of Pseudomonas spp. occurred with all lactate additions, and enrichment of sulfate-reducing Desulfosporosinus spp. occurred with almost complete sulfate reduction. The results of these experiments demonstrate that amendment with the pHRC and MRC forms result in effective removal of Cr(VI) from solution most likely by both direct (enzymatic) and indirect (microbially generated reductant) mechanisms.

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Sharon E. Borglin

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Eoin L. Brodie

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Adam P. Arkin

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Boris Faybishenko

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Aindrila Mukhopadhyay

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Judy D. Wall

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Marcin P. Joachimiak

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Darrell R. Newcomer

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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