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Featured researches published by Elizabeth H. Harris.


Plant Physiology | 2003

Chlamydomonas reinhardtii Genome Project. A Guide to the Generation and Use of the cDNA Information

Jeff Shrager; Charles Hauser; Chiung-Wen Chang; Elizabeth H. Harris; John P. Davies; Jeff McDermott; Raquel Tamse; Zhaodou Zhang; Arthur R. Grossman

The National Science Foundation-funded Chlamydomonas reinhardtii genome project involves (a) construction and sequencing of cDNAs isolated from cells exposed to various environmental conditions, (b) construction of a high-density cDNA microarray, (c) generation of genomic contigs that are nucleated around specific physical and genetic markers, (d) generation of a complete chloroplast genome sequence and analyses of chloroplast gene expression, and (e) the creation of a Web-based resource that allows for easy access of the information in a format that can be readily queried. Phases of the project performed by the groups at the Carnegie Institution and Duke University involve the generation of normalized cDNA libraries, sequencing of cDNAs, analysis and assembly of these sequences to generate contigs and a set of predicted unique genes, and the use of this information to construct a high-density DNA microarray. In this paper, we discuss techniques involved in obtaining cDNA end-sequence information and the ways in which this information is assembled and analyzed. Descriptions of protocols for preparing cDNA libraries, assembling cDNA sequences and annotating the sequence information are provided (the reader is directed to Web sites for more detailed descriptions of these methods). We also discuss preliminary results in which the different cDNA libraries are used to identify genes that are potentially differentially expressed.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1993

Further characterization of the respiratory deficient dum-1 mutation of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and its use as a recipient for mitochondrial transformation

Barbara L. Randolph-Anderson; John E. Boynton; Nicholas W. Gillham; Elizabeth H. Harris; Anita Johnson; Marie-Pierre Dorthu; René F. Matagne

SummaryThe respiratory deficient dum-1 mutant of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii fails to grow in the dark because of a terminal 1.5 kb deletion in the linear 15.8 kb mitochondrial genome, which affects the apocytochrome b (CYB) gene. In contrast to the wild type where only mitochondrial genomes of monomer length are observed, the dum-1 genomes are present as a mixture of monomer and dimer length molecules. The mutant dimers appear to result from head-to-head fusions of two deleted molecules. Furthermore, mitochondrial genomes of dum-1 were also found to be unstable, with the extent of the deletion varying among single cell clones from the original mutant population. The dum-1 mutant also segregates, at a frequency of ca. 4% per generation, lethal minute colonies in which the original deletion now extends at least into the adjacent gene encoding subunit four of NAD dehydrogenase (ND4). We have used the dum-1 mutant as a recipient to demonstrate stable mitochondrial transformation in C. reinhardtii employing the biolistic method. After 4 to 8 weeks dark incubation, a total of 22 respiratory competent colonies were isolated from plates of dum-1 cells bombarded with C. reinhardtii mitochondrial DNA (frequency 7.3 × 10−7) and a single colony was isolated from plates bombarded with C. smithii mitochondrial DNA (frequency 0.8 × 10−7). No colonies were seen on control plates (frequency < 0.96 × 10−9). All transformants grew normally in the dark on acetate media; 22 transformants were homoplasmic for the wild-type mitochondrial genome typical of the C. reinhardtii donor. The single transformant obtained from the C. smithii donor had a recombinant mitochondrial genome containing the donor CYB gene and the diagnostic HpaI and XbaI restriction sites in the gene encoding subunit I of cytochrome oxidase (COI) from the C. reinhardtii recipient. The characteristic deletion fragments of the dum-1 recipient were not detected in any of the transformants.


Plant Molecular Biology | 1998

Isolation and characterization of a mutant protoporphyrinogen oxidase gene from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii conferring resistance to porphyric herbicides

Barbara L. Randolph-Anderson; Ryo Sato; Anita Johnson; Elizabeth H. Harris; Charles R. Hauser; Kenji Oeda; Fumiharu Ishige; Shoichi Nishio; Nicholas W. Gillham; John E. Boynton

In plant and algal cells, inhibition of the enzyme protoporphyrinogen oxidase (Protox) by the N-phenyl heterocyclic herbicide S-23142 causes massive protoporphyrin IX accumulation, resulting in membrane deterioration and cell lethality in the light. We have identified a 40.4 kb genomic fragment encoding S-23142 resistance by using transformation to screen an indexed cosmid library made from nuclear DNA of the dominant rs-3 mutant of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. A 10.0 kb HindIII subclone (Hind10) of this insert yields a high frequency of herbicide-resistant transformants, consistent with frequent non-homologous integration of the complete RS-3 gene. A 3.4 kb XhoI subfragment (Xho3.4) yields rare herbicide-resistant transformants, suggestive of homologous integration of a portion of the coding sequence containing the mutation. Molecular and genetic analysis of the transformants localized the rs-3 mutation conferring S-23142 resistance to the Xho3.4 fragment, which was found to contain five putative exons encoding a protein with identity to the C-terminus of the Arabidopsis Protox enzyme. A cDNA clone containing a 1698 bp ORF that encodes a 563 amino acid peptide with 51% and 53% identity to Arabidopsis and tobacco Protox I, respectively, was isolated from a wild-type C. reinhardtii library. Comparison of the wild-type cDNA sequence with the putative exon sequences present in the mutant Xho3.4 fragment revealed a G→A change at 291 in the first putative exon, resulting in a Val→Met substitution at a conserved position equivalent to Val-389 of the wild-type C. reinhardtii cDNA. A sequence comparison of genomic Hind10 fragments from C. reinhardtii rs-3 and its wild-type progenitor CC-407 showed this G→A change at the equivalent position (5751) within exon 10.


Trends in Plant Science | 2014

The Chlamydomonas genome project: a decade on

Ian K. Blaby; Crysten E. Blaby-Haas; Nicolas J. Tourasse; Erik F. Y. Hom; David Lopez; Munevver Aksoy; Arthur R. Grossman; James G. Umen; Susan K. Dutcher; Mary E. Porter; Stephen M. King; George B. Witman; Mario Stanke; Elizabeth H. Harris; David Goodstein; Jane Grimwood; Jeremy Schmutz; Olivier Vallon; Sabeeha S. Merchant; Simon Prochnik

The green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is a popular unicellular organism for studying photosynthesis, cilia biogenesis, and micronutrient homeostasis. Ten years since its genome project was initiated an iterative process of improvements to the genome and gene predictions has propelled this organism to the forefront of the omics era. Housed at Phytozome, the plant genomics portal of the Joint Genome Institute (JGI), the most up-to-date genomic data include a genome arranged on chromosomes and high-quality gene models with alternative splice forms supported by an abundance of whole transcriptome sequencing (RNA-Seq) data. We present here the past, present, and future of Chlamydomonas genomics. Specifically, we detail progress on genome assembly and gene model refinement, discuss resources for gene annotations, functional predictions, and locus ID mapping between versions and, importantly, outline a standardized framework for naming genes.


Plant Molecular Biology | 1984

Molecular and genetic analysis of the chloroplast ATPase of chlamydomonas

Jeffrey P. Woessner; Arlette Masson; Elizabeth H. Harris; Pierre Bennoun; Nicholas W. Gillham; John E. Boynton

We have carried out a molecular and genetic analysis of the chloroplast ATPase in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Recombination and complementation studies on 16 independently isolated chloroplast mutations affecting this complex demonstrated that they represent alleles in five distinct chloroplast genes. One of these five, the ac-u-c locus, has been positioned on the physical map of the chloroplast DNA by deletion mutations. The use of cloned spinach chloroplast ATPase genes in heterologous hybridizations to Chlamydomonas chloroplast DNA has allowed us to localize three or possibly four of the ATPase genes on the physical map. The beta and probably the epsilon subunit genes of Chlamydomonas CF1 lie within the same region of chloroplast DNA as the ac-u-c locus, while the alpha and proteolipid subunit genes appear to map adjacent to one another approximately 20 kbp away. Unlike the arrangement in higher plants, these two pairs of genes are separated from each other by an inverted repeat.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1991

Targeted disruption of chloroplast genes in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii

Scott M. Newman; Nicholas W. Gillham; Elizabeth H. Harris; Anita Johnson; John E. Boynton

SummaryWe have developed an efficient procedure for the disruption of Chlamydomonas chloroplast genes. Wild-type C. reinhardtii cells were bombarded with microprojectiles coated with a mixture of two plasmids, one encoding selectable, antibiotic-resistance mutations in the 16S ribosomal RNA gene and the other containing either the atpB or rbcL photosynthetic gene inactivated by an insertion of 0.48 kb of yeast DNA in the coding sequence. Antibiotic-resistant transformants were selected under conditions permissive for growth of nonphotosynthetic mutants. Approximately half of these transformants were initially heteroplasmic for copies of the disrupted atpB or rbcL genes integrated into the recipient chloroplast genome but still retained photosynthetic competence. A small fraction of the transformants (1.1% for atpB; 4.3% for rbcL) were nonphotosynthetic and homoplasmic for the disrupted gene at the time they were isolated. Single cell cloning of the initially heteroplasmic transformants also yielded nonphotosynthetic segregants that were homoplasmic for the disrupted gene. Polypeptide products of the disrupted atpB and rbcL genes could not be detected using immunoblotting techniques. We believe that any nonessential Chlamydomonas chloroplast gene, such as those involved in photosynthesis, should be amenable to gene disruption by cotransformation. The method should prove useful for the introduction of site-specific mutations into chloroplast genes and flanking regulatory sequences with a view to elucidating their function.


Plasmid | 1982

Mutants of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii with physical alterations in their chloroplast DNA

Alan M. Myers; D.M. Grant; Douglas K. Rabert; Elizabeth H. Harris; John E. Boynton; Nicholas W. Gillham

Abstract We have isolated nonphotosynthetic (acetate-requiring) mutants with physical alterations in chloroplast DNA following growth of haploid cells in the chloroplast specific mutagen 5-fluorodeoxyuridine (FdUrd) or treatment of FdUrd-grown diploid cells with X rays. About one-third of the nonphotosynthetic mutations resulting from FdUrd treatment alone show simple deletions. All eight of the mutants examined so far which were obtained with FdUrd plus X rays have deletions that are accompanied by rearrangements, including inversions or duplications. All the alterations extend into one of the two inverted repeat regions of the chloroplast genome which contain the ribosomal RNA cistrons. However, Southern hybridization experiments reveal that the rRNA cistrons are not deleted but instead are contained in new fragments. The relocated rRNA cistrons appear to be functional, since the mutants have normal levels of chloroplast ribosomes. In most cases the deletions and rearrangements are symmetrical and affect both inverted repeats in a similar fashion. An exception is the mutant ac-u-c-2–43, which lacks one inverted repeat region almost completely, including an entire set of rRNA genes. Three additional mutants, which fail to recombine with ac-u-c-2–43 to give photosynthetically competent cells, have smaller deletions in the same region of the genome. These physical mapping studies have allowed us to place the ac-u-c locus itself in a region of unique sequence DNA in a fragment, Ba10, which also includes the right-hand end of one inverted repeat.


Cytoskeleton | 2011

A Unified Taxonomy for Ciliary Dyneins

Erik F. Y. Hom; George B. Witman; Elizabeth H. Harris; Susan K. Dutcher; Ritsu Kamiya; David R. Mitchell; Gregory J. Pazour; Mary E. Porter; Winfield S. Sale; Maureen Wirschell; Toshiki Yagi; Stephen M. King

The formation and function of eukaryotic cilia/flagella require the action of a large array of dynein microtubule motor complexes. Due to genetic, biochemical, and microscopic tractability, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii has become the premier model system in which to dissect the role of dyneins in flagellar assembly, motility, and signaling. Currently, 54 proteins have been described as components of various Chlamydomonas flagellar dyneins or as factors required for their assembly in the cytoplasm and/or transport into the flagellum; orthologs of nearly all these components are present in other ciliated organisms including humans. For historical reasons, the nomenclature of these diverse dynein components and their corresponding genes, mutant alleles, and orthologs has become extraordinarily confusing. Here, we unify Chlamydomonas dynein gene nomenclature and establish a systematic classification scheme based on structural properties of the encoded proteins. Furthermore, we provide detailed tabulations of the various mutant alleles and protein aliases that have been used and explicitly define the correspondence with orthologous components in other model organisms and humans.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1975

Chloroplast genes in Chlamydomonas affecting organelle ribosomes

Mary F. Conde; John E. Boynton; Nicholas W. Gillham; Elizabeth H. Harris; Constance L. Tingle; Wenan L. Wang

SummarySix chloroplast gene mutants of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii resistant to spectinomycin, erythromycin, or streptomycin have been assessed for antibiotic resistance of their chloroplast ribosomes. Four of these mutations clearly confer high levels of antibiotic resistance on the chloroplast ribosomes both in vivo and in vitro. Although one mutant resistant to streptomycin and one resistant to spectinomycin have chloroplast ribosomes as sensitive to antibiotics as those of wild type in vivo, these mutations can be shown to alter the wildtype sensitivity of chloroplast ribosomes in polynucleotide-directed amino acid incorporation in vitro. Genetic analysis of these six chloroplast mutants and three similar mutants (Sager, 1972), two of which have been shown to affect chloroplast ribosomes (Mets and Bogorad, 1972; Schlanger and Sager, 1974), indicates that in Chlamydomonas at least three chloroplast gene loci can affect streptomycin resistance of chloroplast ribosomes and that two can affect erythromycin resistance. The three spectinomycin-resistant mutants examined appear to be alleles at a single chloroplast gene locus, but may represent mutations at two different sites within the same gene.Unlike wild type, the streptomycin and spectinomycin resistant mutants which have chloroplast ribosomes sensitive to antibiotics in vivo, grow well in the presence of antibiotic by respiring exogenously supplied acetate as a carbon source, and have normal levels of cytochrome oxidase activity and cyanide-sensitive respiration. We conclude that mitochondrial protein synthesis in these mutants is resistant to these antibiotics, whereas in wild type it is sensitive. To explain the behavior of these two chloroplast gene mutants as well as other one-step mutants which are resistant both photosynthetically and when respiring acetate in the dark, we have postulated that a mutation in a single chloroplast gene may result in alteration of both chloroplast and mitochondrial ribosomes. Mitochondrial resistance would appear to be the minimal necessary condition for survival of all such mutants, and antibioticresistant chloroplast ribosomes would be necessary for survival only under photosynthetic conditions.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1977

Mapping of chloroplast genes involved in chloroplast ribosome biogenesis in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii

Elizabeth H. Harris; John E. Boynton; Nicholas W. Gillham; Constance L. Tingle; Sue B. Fox

SummaryChloroplast gene mutations which confer antibiotic resistance on chloroplast ribosomes of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii have been tested for allelism and mapped by recombination analysis of progeny from biparental zygote clones. Thirty-one independently isolated streptomycin resistant mutants have chloroplast ribosomes which are resistant to this drug in an assay based on misreading of isoleucine in response to a poly U template, and comprise one nuclear and four chloroplast gene loci. Four mutants resistant to spectinomycin, and three mutants resistant to neamine and kanamycin, which have chloroplast ribosomes resistant to their respective antibiotics in poly U directed phenylalanine incorporation, appear to map in a single chloroplast gene locus. Representative alleles of this nr/spr locus, the four streptomycin resistance loci, and two chloroplast gene loci for erythromycin resistance, have been analyzed in a series of parallel crosses to establish the following map order for these seven genes in the chloroplast genome: er-u-la-er-u-37-nr-u-2-1/spr-u-1-H-4-sr-u-2-23-sr-u-2-60-sr-u-sm3-sr-u-sm2. These seven genes may constitute a ribosomal region within the chloroplast genome of Chlamydomonas comparable to the ribosomal gene clusters in bacteria.

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George B. Witman

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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