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Dive into the research topics where Elizabeth Bent is active.

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Featured researches published by Elizabeth Bent.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2006

Abundant and Diverse Fungal Microbiota in the Murine Intestine

Alexandra J. Scupham; Laura L. Presley; Bo Wei; Elizabeth Bent; Natasha Griffith; Michael McPherson; Feilin Zhu; Oluwadayo Oluwadara; Nagesh Rao; Jonathan Braun; James Borneman

ABSTRACT Enteric microbiota play a variety of roles in intestinal health and disease. While bacteria in the intestine have been broadly characterized, little is known about the abundance or diversity of enteric fungi. This study utilized a culture-independent method termed oligonucleotide fingerprinting of rRNA genes (OFRG) to describe the compositions of fungal and bacterial rRNA genes from small and large intestines (tissue and luminal contents) of restricted-flora and specific-pathogen-free mice. OFRG analysis identified rRNA genes from all four major fungal phyla: Ascomycota, Basidiomycota, Chytridiomycota, and Zygomycota. The largest assemblages of fungal rRNA sequences were related to the genera Acremonium, Monilinia, Fusarium, Cryptococcus/Filobasidium, Scleroderma, Catenomyces, Spizellomyces, Neocallimastix, Powellomyces, Entophlyctis, Mortierella, and Smittium and the order Mucorales. The majority of bacterial rRNA gene clones were affiliated with the taxa Bacteroidetes, Firmicutes, Acinetobacter, and Lactobacillus. Sequence-selective PCR analyses also detected several of these bacterial and fungal rRNA genes in the mouse chow. Fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis with a fungal small-subunit rRNA probe revealed morphologically diverse microorganisms resident in the mucus biofilm adjacent to the cecal and proximal colonic epithelium. Hybridizing organisms comprised about 2% of the DAPI (4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole, dihydrochloride)-positive organisms in the mucus biofilm, but their abundance in fecal material may be much lower. These data indicate that diverse fungal taxa are present in the intestinal microbial community. Their abundance suggests that they may play significant roles in enteric microbial functions.


Ecology | 2010

Functional diversity in resource use by fungi

Krista L. McGuire; Elizabeth Bent; James Borneman; Arundhati Majumder; Steven D. Allison; Kathleen K. Treseder

Fungi influence nutrient cycling in terrestrial ecosystems, as they are major regulators of decomposition and soil respiration. However, little is known about the substrate preferences of individual fungal species outside of laboratory culture studies. If active fungi differ in their substrate preferences in situ, then changes in fungal diversity due to global change may dramatically influence nutrient cycling in ecosystems. To test the responses of individual fungal taxa to specific substrates, we used a nucleotide-analogue procedure in the boreal forest of Alaska (USA). Specifically, we added four organic N compounds commonly found in plant litter (arginine, glutamate, lignocellulose, and tannin-protein) to litterbags filled with decomposed leaf litter (black spruce and aspen) and assessed the responses of active fungal species using qPCR (quantitative polymerase chain reaction), oligonucleotide fingerprinting of rRNA genes, and sequencing. We also compared the sequences from our experiment with a concurrent warming experiment to see if active fungi that targeted more recalcitrant compounds would respond more positively to soil warming. We found that individual fungal taxa responded differently to substrate additions and that active fungal communities were different across litter types (spruce vs. aspen). Active fungi that targeted lignocellulose also responded positively to experimental warming. Additionally, resource-use patterns in different fungal taxa were genetically correlated, suggesting that it may be possible to predict the ecological function of active fungal communities based on genetic information. Together, these results imply that fungi are functionally diverse and that reductions in fungal diversity may have consequences for ecosystem functioning.


Inflammatory Bowel Diseases | 2008

Bacteria and Bacterial rRNA Genes Associated with the Development of Colitis in IL-10-/-Mice

Jingxiao Ye; Jimmy W. Lee; Laura L. Presley; Elizabeth Bent; Bo Wei; Jonathan Braun; Neal L. Schiller; Daniel S. Straus; James Borneman

Background: Microorganisms appear to play important yet ill‐defined roles in the etiology of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). This study utilized a novel population‐based approach to identify bacteria and bacterial rRNA genes associated with the development of colitis in IL‐10−/− mice. Methods: Mice were housed in 2 environments: a community mouse facility where the mice were fed nonsterile chow (Room 3) and a limited access facility where the mice were fed sterile chow (Room 4). Every month the disease activity levels were assessed and fecal bacterial compositions were analyzed. At the end of the experiments histological and bacterial analyses were performed on intestinal tissue. Results: Although disease activity increased over time in both environments, it progressed at a faster rate in Room 3 than Room 4. Culture and culture‐independent bacterial analyses identified several isolates and phylotypes associated with colitis. Two phylotypes (GpC2 and Gp66) were distinguished by their negative associations with disease activity in fecal and tissue samples. Notably, rRNA genes from these phylotypes had high sequence identity (99%) to an rRNA gene from a previously described flagellated Clostridium (Lachnospiraceae bacterium A4). Conclusions: The negative associations of these 2 phylotypes (GpC2 and Gp66) suggest that these bacteria were being immunologically targeted, consistent with prior findings that the Lachnospiraceae bacterium A4 bears a prevalent flagellar antigen for disease‐associated immunity in murine immune colitis and human Crohns disease. Identification of these associations suggests that the experimental approach used in this study will have considerable utility in elucidating the host–microbe interactions underlying IBD.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2002

Potential for Misidentification of a Spore-Forming Paenibacillus polymyxa Isolate as an Endophyte by Using Culture-Based Methods

Elizabeth Bent; C. P. Chanway

ABSTRACT While Paenibacillus polymyxa strain Pw-2 has been identified as an endophyte of lodgepole pine (M. Shishido, B. M. Loeb, and C. P. Chanway, Can. J. Microbiol. 41:707-713, 1995), P. polymyxa strain L6 has not, a distinction that could be explained by the differential abilities of these isolates to form spores, rather than the differential abilities to colonize the interior tissues of lodgepole pine. Chemical disinfection was used to destroy bacteria on the root exterior, but bacterial endospores are known for their ability to withstand chemical disinfection, and strain Pw-2 was found to produce 300 to 11,000 times more germinating endospores than strain L6 under the experimental conditions used by Shishido et al. (Can. J. Microbiol. 41:707-713, 1995). Attempts to identify strain Pw-2 within lodgepole pine root tissues by using confocal microscopy techniques failed. We discuss the possibility that spore-forming bacteria can be mistakenly identified as endophytes when culture-based methods alone are used.


Plant and Soil | 2002

Surface colonization of lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta var. latifolia [Dougl. engelm.]) roots by Pseudomonas fluorescens and Paenibacillus polymyxa under gnotobiotic conditions

Elizabeth Bent; Colette Breuil; Scott A. Enebak; C. P. Chanway

Indirect immunofluorescence techniques and confocal scanning laser microscopy were used to identify rhizobacterial strains on the root surfaces of pine seedlings, which were grown from seeds under gnotobiotic conditions. Conifer plant growth promoting rhizobacterial strains Paenibacillus polymyxa L6 and Pw-2, and the forest soil isolate Pseudomonas fluorescens M20, were inoculated onto surface-disinfested pine seeds, singly, or in dual combinations: strains L6 + M20, or strains Pw-2 + M20. Segments containing particular root microsites (root tip, root hair zone, or areas of lateral root emergence) were sampled randomly from roots 7 or 13 weeks after inoculation, and the colonization of roots by each bacterium was observed. Root segments were also sampled from individual roots at six different points along the length of the root, and the qualitative colonization of younger areas, closer to the root tip, contrasted with that of older areas, closer to the root base. The ability of strain M20 to colonize root areas adjacent to sites of lateral root emergence improves in the presence of either P. polymyxa strain, while the ability of the P. polymyxa strains to colonize these areas was not affected. More rhizobacteria were also generally observed on younger root tissues than on areas closer to the root base.


FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2009

Investigations into peach seedling stunting caused by a replant soil.

Elizabeth Bent; Angelo Loffredo; Jiue-in Yang; Michael V. McKenry; J. O. Becker; James Borneman

Replant diseases often occur when pome and stone fruits are grown in soil that had previously been planted with the same or similar plant species. They typically lead to reductions in plant growth, crop yield and production duration. In this project, greenhouse assays were used to identify a peach orchard soil that caused replant disease symptoms. Biocidal treatments of this soil led to growth increases of Nemaguard peach seedlings. In addition, plants grown in as little as 1% of the replant soil exhibited reduced plant growth. These results suggest that the disease etiology has a biological component. Analysis of roots from plants exhibiting various levels of replant disease symptoms showed little difference in the amounts of PCR-amplified bacterial or fungal rRNA genes. However, analysis using a stramenopile-selective PCR assay showed that rRNA genes from this taxon were generally more abundant in plants with the smallest top weights. Nucleotide sequence analysis of these genes identified several phylotypes belonging to Bacillariophyta, Chrysophyceae, Eustigmatophyceae, Labyrinthulida, Oomycetes, Phaeophyceae and Synurophyceae. Sequence-selective quantitative PCR assays targeting four of the most abundant phylotypes showed that both diatoms (Sellaphora spp.) and an oomycete (Pythium ultimum) were negatively associated with plant top weights.


PLOS ONE | 2012

The Role of Coral-Associated Bacterial Communities in Australian Subtropical White Syndrome of Turbinaria mesenterina

Scott Godwin; Elizabeth Bent; James Borneman; Lily Pereg

Australian Subtropical White Syndrome (ASWS) is an infectious, temperature dependent disease of the subtropical coral Turbinaria mesenterina involving a hitherto unknown transmissible causative agent. This report describes significant changes in the coral associated bacterial community as the disease progresses from the apparently healthy tissue of ASWS affected coral colonies, to areas of the colony affected by ASWS lesions, to the dead coral skeleton exposed by ASWS. In an effort to better understand the potential roles of bacteria in the formation of disease lesions, the effect of antibacterials on the rate of lesion progression was tested, and both culture based and culture independent techniques were used to investigate the bacterial communities associated with colonies of T. mesenterina. Culture-independent analysis was performed using the Oligonucleotide Fingerprinting of Ribosomal Genes (OFRG) technique, which allowed a library of 8094 cloned bacterial 16S ribosomal genes to be analysed. Interestingly, the bacterial communities associated with both healthy and disease affected corals were very diverse and ASWS associated communities were not characterized by a single dominant organism. Treatment with antibacterials had a significant effect on the rate of progress of disease lesions (p = 0.006), suggesting that bacteria may play direct roles as the causative agents of ASWS. A number of potential aetiological agents of ASWS were identified in both the culture-based and culture-independent studies. In the culture-independent study an Alphaproteobacterium closely related to Roseovarius crassostreae, the apparent aetiological agent of juvenile oyster disease, was found to be significantly associated with disease lesions. In the culture-based study Vibrio harveyi was consistently associated with ASWS affected coral colonies and was not isolated from any healthy colonies. The differing results of the culture based and culture-independent studies highlight the importance of using both approaches in the investigation of microbial communities.


Communications in Statistics-theory and Methods | 2007

Classification Rules that Include Neutral Zones and Their Application to Microbial Community Profiling

Daniel R. Jeske; Zheng Liu; Elizabeth Bent; James Borneman

We extend the classical one-dimensional Bayes binary classifier to create a new classification rule that has a region of neutrality to account for cases where the implied weight of evidence is too weak for a confident classification. Our proposed rule allows a “No Prediction” when the observation is too ambiguous to have confidence in a definite prediction. The motivation for making “No Prediction” is that in our microbial community profiling application, a wrong prediction can be worse than making no prediction at all. On the other hand, too many “No Predictions” have adverse implications as well. Consequently, our proposed rule incorporates this trade-off using a cost structure that weighs the penalty for not making a definite prediction against the penalty for making an incorrect definite prediction. We demonstrate that our proposed rule outperforms a naive neutral-zone rule that has been routinely used in biological applications similar to ours.


Journal of Environmental Quality | 2016

Metagenomic Comparison of Antibiotic Resistance Genes Associated with Liquid and Dewatered Biosolids.

Crystal A. McCall; Elizabeth Bent; Tue Sparholt Jørgensen; Kari E. Dunfield; Marc B. Habash

Municipal biosolids (MBs) that are land-applied in North America are known to possess an active microbial population that can include human pathogens. Activated sludge is a hotspot for the accumulation of antibiotics and has been shown to be a selective environment for microorganisms that contain antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs); however, the prevalence of ARGs in MBs is not well characterized. In this study, we enriched the plasmid metagenome from raw sewage sludge and two CP2 MBs, a mesophilic anaerobic digestate and a dewatered digestate, to evaluate the presence of ARGs in mobile genetic elements. The CP2-class biosolids are similar to Class B biosolids in the United States. The CP2 biosolids must meet a microbiological cut off of 2 × 10 colony-forming units (CFU) per dry gram or 100 mL of biosolids. The enriched plasmid DNA was sequenced (Illumina MiSeq). Sequence matching against databases, including the Comprehensive Antibiotic Resistance Database (CARD), MG-RAST, and INTEGRALL, identified potential genes of interest related to ARGs and their ability to transfer. The presence and abundance of different ARGs varied between treatments with heterogeneity observed among the same sample types. The MBs plasmid-enriched metagenomes contained ARGs associated with resistance to a variety of antibiotics, including β-lactams, rifampicin, quinolone, and tetracycline as well as the detection of extended spectrum β-lactamase genes. Cultured bacteria from CP2 MBs possessed antibiotic resistances consistent with the MBs metagenome data including multiantibiotic-resistant isolates. The results from this study provide a better understanding of the ARG and MGE profile of the plasmid-enriched metagenome of CP2 MBs.


international conference of the ieee engineering in medicine and biology society | 2008

Robust spots finding in microarray images with distortions

Andres Figueroa; Ping-Sing Tsai; Elizabeth Bent; Rongkai Guo

Microarray images, which allow the analysis of hybridization expressions of genes, have been one of the most widely used high-throughput technologies with many different applications. Accurate and automatic microarray image analysis is very important since researchers trust the information provided in these experiments and construct conclusions based on the results produced by the software responsible in analyzing the hybridized arrays. Every microarray image contains thousands of spots, so how to do the spots finding in microarray images accurately and automatically is very meaningful. There are always some problems, such as rotation and distortion, in a microarray image caused by mechanical errors and/or optical errors in the system. All these problems will hinder doing analysis automatically. Early research has worked out several algorithms to deal with the rotation problem, but those algorithms can not handle microarray images with distortions. In this paper, we propose a robust spots finding method to deal with both rotation and/or distortion in microarray images. The proposed method provides automatic gridding and can handle a microarray image with different type of rotation (global or sub-array rotation) and optical distortions.

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James Borneman

University of California

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Bei Yin

University of California

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Alexandra J. Scupham

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Qi Fu

University of California

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Tao Jiang

University of California

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Zheng Liu

University of California

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Jonathan Braun

University of California

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