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Dive into the research topics where Eric J. Mathur is active.

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Featured researches published by Eric J. Mathur.


Nature | 2007

Metagenomic and functional analysis of hindgut microbiota of a wood-feeding higher termite

Falk Warnecke; Peter Luginbühl; Natalia Ivanova; Majid Ghassemian; Toby Richardson; Justin T. Stege; Michelle Cayouette; Alice C. McHardy; Gordana Djordjevic; Nahla Aboushadi; Rotem Sorek; Susannah G. Tringe; Mircea Podar; Hector Garcia Martin; Victor Kunin; Daniel Dalevi; Julita Madejska; Edward Kirton; Darren Platt; Ernest Szeto; Asaf Salamov; Kerrie Barry; Natalia Mikhailova; Nikos C. Kyrpides; Eric G. Matson; Elizabeth A. Ottesen; Xinning Zhang; Myriam Hernández; Catalina Murillo; Luis G. Acosta

From the standpoints of both basic research and biotechnology, there is considerable interest in reaching a clearer understanding of the diversity of biological mechanisms employed during lignocellulose degradation. Globally, termites are an extremely successful group of wood-degrading organisms and are therefore important both for their roles in carbon turnover in the environment and as potential sources of biochemical catalysts for efforts aimed at converting wood into biofuels. Only recently have data supported any direct role for the symbiotic bacteria in the gut of the termite in cellulose and xylan hydrolysis. Here we use a metagenomic analysis of the bacterial community resident in the hindgut paunch of a wood-feeding ‘higher’ Nasutitermes species (which do not contain cellulose-fermenting protozoa) to show the presence of a large, diverse set of bacterial genes for cellulose and xylan hydrolysis. Many of these genes were expressed in vivo or had cellulase activity in vitro, and further analyses implicate spirochete and fibrobacter species in gut lignocellulose degradation. New insights into other important symbiotic functions including H2 metabolism, CO2-reductive acetogenesis and N2 fixation are also provided by this first system-wide gene analysis of a microbial community specialized towards plant lignocellulose degradation. Our results underscore how complex even a 1-μl environment can be.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Cultivating the uncultured

Karsten Zengler; Gerardo Vicente Toledo; Michael S. Rappé; James G. Elkins; Eric J. Mathur; Jay M. Short; Martin Keller

The recent application of molecular phylogeny to environmental samples has resulted in the discovery of an abundance of unique and previously unrecognized microorganisms. The vast majority of this microbial diversity has proved refractory to cultivation. Here, we describe a universal method that provides access to this immense reservoir of untapped microbial diversity. This technique combines encapsulation of cells in gel microdroplets for massively parallel microbial cultivation under low nutrient flux conditions, followed by flow cytometry to detect microdroplets containing microcolonies. The ability to grow and study previously uncultured organisms in pure culture will enhance our understanding of microbial physiology and metabolic adaptation and will provide new sources of microbial metabolites. We show that this technology can be applied to samples from several different environments, including seawater and soil.


Gene | 1991

High-fidelity amplification using a thermostable DNA polymerase isolated from Pyrococcus furiosus.

Kelly S. Lundberg; Daniel D. Abrahms Apartment C Shoemaker; Michael W. W. Adams; Jay M. Short; Joseph A. Sorge; Eric J. Mathur

A thermostable DNA polymerase which possesses an associated 3-to-5 exonuclease (proofreading) activity has been isolated from the hyperthermophilic archaebacterium, Pyrococcus furiosus (Pfu). To test its fidelity, we have utilized a genetic assay that directly measures DNA polymerase fidelity in vitro during the polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Our results indicate that PCR performed with the DNA polymerase purified from P. furiosus yields amplification products containing less than 10% of the number of mutations obtained from similar amplifications performed with Taq DNA polymerase. The PCR fidelity assay is based on the amplification and cloning of lacI, lacO and lacZ alpha gene sequences (lacIOZ alpha) using either Pfu or Taq DNA polymerase. Certain mutations within the lacI gene inactivate the Lac repressor protein and permit the expression of beta Gal. When plated on a chromogenic substrate, these LacI- mutants exhibit a blue-plaque phenotype. These studies demonstrate that the error rate per nucleotide induced in the 182 known detectable sites of the lacI gene was 1.6 x 10(-6) for Pfu DNA polymerase, a greater than tenfold improvement over the 2.0 x 10(-5) error rate for Taq DNA polymerase, after approx. 10(5)-fold amplification.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

The genome of Nanoarchaeum equitans: Insights into early archaeal evolution and derived parasitism

Elizabeth R. Waters; Michael J. Hohn; Ivan Ahel; David E. Graham; Mark D. Adams; Mary Barnstead; Karen Beeson; Lisa Bibbs; Randall Bolanos; Martin S. Keller; Keith Kretz; Xiaoying Lin; Eric J. Mathur; Jingwei Ni; Mircea Podar; Toby Richardson; Granger Sutton; Melvin I. Simon; Dieter Söll; Karl O. Stetter; Jay M. Short; Michiel Noordewier

The hyperthermophile Nanoarchaeum equitans is an obligate symbiont growing in coculture with the crenarchaeon Ignicoccus. Ribosomal protein and rRNA-based phylogenies place its branching point early in the archaeal lineage, representing the new archaeal kingdom Nanoarchaeota. The N. equitans genome (490,885 base pairs) encodes the machinery for information processing and repair, but lacks genes for lipid, cofactor, amino acid, or nucleotide biosyntheses. It is the smallest microbial genome sequenced to date, and also one of the most compact, with 95% of the DNA predicted to encode proteins or stable RNAs. Its limited biosynthetic and catabolic capacity indicates that N. equitans symbiotic relationship to Ignicoccus is parasitic, making it the only known archaeal parasite. Unlike the small genomes of bacterial parasites that are undergoing reductive evolution, N. equitans has few pseudogenes or extensive regions of noncoding DNA. This organism represents a basal archaeal lineage and has a highly reduced genome.


Nature | 2005

Proteorhodopsin in the ubiquitous marine bacterium SAR11

Stephen J. Giovannoni; Lisa Bibbs; Jang-Cheon Cho; Martha Stapels; Russell A. Desiderio; Kevin L. Vergin; Michael S. Rappé; Samuel R. Laney; Lawrence J. Wilhelm; H. James Tripp; Eric J. Mathur; Douglas F. Barofsky

Proteorhodopsins are light-dependent proton pumps that are predicted to have an important role in the ecology of the oceans by supplying energy for microbial metabolism. Proteorhodopsin genes were first discovered through the cloning and sequencing of large genomic DNA fragments from seawater. They were later shown to be widely distributed, phylogenetically diverse, and active in the oceans. Proteorhodopsin genes have not been found in cultured bacteria, and on the basis of environmental sequence data, it has not yet been possible to reconstruct the genomes of uncultured bacterial strains that have proteorhodopsin genes. Although the metabolic effect of proteorhodopsins is uncertain, they are thought to function in cells for which the primary mode of metabolism is the heterotrophic assimilation of dissolved organic carbon. Here we report that SAR11 strain HTCC1062 (‘Pelagibacter ubique’), the first cultivated member of the extraordinarily abundant SAR11 clade, expresses a proteorhodopsin gene when cultured in autoclaved seawater and in its natural environment, the ocean. The Pelagibacter proteorhodopsin functions as a light-dependent proton pump. The gene is expressed by cells grown in either diurnal light or in darkness, and there is no difference between the growth rates or cell yields of cultures grown in light or darkness.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2004

Exploring nitrilase sequence space for enantioselective catalysis.

Dan E. Robertson; Jennifer Ann Chaplin; Grace DeSantis; Mircea Podar; Mark Madden; Ellen Chi; Toby Richardson; Aileen Milan; Mark E. Miller; David P. Weiner; Kelvin Wong; Jeff McQuaid; Bob Farwell; Lori Preston; Xuqiu Tan; Marjory A. Snead; Martin S. Keller; Eric J. Mathur; Patricia L. Kretz; Mark J. Burk; Jay M. Short

ABSTRACT Nitrilases are important in the biosphere as participants in synthesis and degradation pathways for naturally occurring, as well as xenobiotically derived, nitriles. Because of their inherent enantioselectivity, nitrilases are also attractive as mild, selective catalysts for setting chiral centers in fine chemical synthesis. Unfortunately, <20 nitrilases have been reported in the scientific and patent literature, and because of stability or specificity shortcomings, their utility has been largely unrealized. In this study, 137 unique nitrilases, discovered from screening of >600 biotope-specific environmental DNA (eDNA) libraries, were characterized. Using culture-independent means, phylogenetically diverse genomes were captured from entire biotopes, and their genes were expressed heterologously in a common cloning host. Nitrilase genes were targeted in a selection-based expression assay of clonal populations numbering 106 to 1010 members per eDNA library. A phylogenetic analysis of the novel sequences discovered revealed the presence of at least five major sequence clades within the nitrilase subfamily. Using three nitrile substrates targeted for their potential in chiral pharmaceutical synthesis, the enzymes were characterized for substrate specificity and stereospecificity. A number of important correlations were found between sequence clades and the selective properties of these nitrilases. These enzymes, discovered using a high-throughput, culture-independent method, provide a catalytic toolbox for enantiospecific synthesis of a variety of carboxylic acid derivatives, as well as an intriguing library for evolutionary and structural analyses.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Metagenomes from high-temperature chemotrophic systems reveal geochemical controls on microbial community structure and function.

William P. Inskeep; Douglas B. Rusch; Zackary J. Jay; Markus J. Herrgård; Mark A. Kozubal; Toby Richardson; Richard E. Macur; Natsuko Hamamura; Ryan deM. Jennings; Bruce W. Fouke; Anna-Louise Reysenbach; Frank Roberto; Mark J. Young; Ariel Schwartz; Eric S. Boyd; Jonathan H. Badger; Eric J. Mathur; Alice C. Ortmann; Mary M. Bateson; Gill G. Geesey; Marvin Frazier

The Yellowstone caldera contains the most numerous and diverse geothermal systems on Earth, yielding an extensive array of unique high-temperature environments that host a variety of deeply-rooted and understudied Archaea, Bacteria and Eukarya. The combination of extreme temperature and chemical conditions encountered in geothermal environments often results in considerably less microbial diversity than other terrestrial habitats and offers a tremendous opportunity for studying the structure and function of indigenous microbial communities and for establishing linkages between putative metabolisms and element cycling. Metagenome sequence (14–15,000 Sanger reads per site) was obtained for five high-temperature (>65°C) chemotrophic microbial communities sampled from geothermal springs (or pools) in Yellowstone National Park (YNP) that exhibit a wide range in geochemistry including pH, dissolved sulfide, dissolved oxygen and ferrous iron. Metagenome data revealed significant differences in the predominant phyla associated with each of these geochemical environments. Novel members of the Sulfolobales are dominant in low pH environments, while other Crenarchaeota including distantly-related Thermoproteales and Desulfurococcales populations dominate in suboxic sulfidic sediments. Several novel archaeal groups are well represented in an acidic (pH 3) Fe-oxyhydroxide mat, where a higher O2 influx is accompanied with an increase in archaeal diversity. The presence or absence of genes and pathways important in S oxidation-reduction, H2-oxidation, and aerobic respiration (terminal oxidation) provide insight regarding the metabolic strategies of indigenous organisms present in geothermal systems. Multiple-pathway and protein-specific functional analysis of metagenome sequence data corroborated results from phylogenetic analyses and clearly demonstrate major differences in metabolic potential across sites. The distribution of functional genes involved in electron transport is consistent with the hypothesis that geochemical parameters (e.g., pH, sulfide, Fe, O2) control microbial community structure and function in YNP geothermal springs.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2004

Unusual Microbial Xylanases from Insect Guts

Yali Brennan; Walter Callen; Leif Christoffersen; Paul Dupree; Florence Goubet; Shaun Healey; Myrian Hernández; Martin S. Keller; Ke Li; Nisha Palackal; Ana Sittenfeld; Giselle Tamayo; Steve Wells; Geoffrey P. Hazlewood; Eric J. Mathur; Jay M. Short; Dan E. Robertson; Brian Steer

ABSTRACT Recombinant DNA technologies enable the direct isolation and expression of novel genes from biotopes containing complex consortia of uncultured microorganisms. In this study, genomic libraries were constructed from microbial DNA isolated from insect intestinal tracts from the orders Isoptera (termites) and Lepidoptera (moths). Using a targeted functional assay, these environmental DNA libraries were screened for genes that encode proteins with xylanase activity. Several novel xylanase enzymes with unusual primary sequences and novel domains of unknown function were discovered. Phylogenetic analysis demonstrated remarkable distance between the sequences of these enzymes and other known xylanases. Biochemical analysis confirmed that these enzymes are true xylanases, which catalyze the hydrolysis of a variety of substituted β-1,4-linked xylose oligomeric and polymeric substrates and produce unique hydrolysis products. From detailed polyacrylamide carbohydrate electrophoresis analysis of substrate cleavage patterns, the xylan polymer binding sites of these enzymes are proposed.


Protein Science | 2004

An evolutionary route to xylanase process fitness

Nisha Palackal; Yali Brennan; Walter Callen; Paul Dupree; Gerhard Frey; Florence Goubet; Geoffrey P. Hazlewood; Shaun Healey; Young E. Kang; Keith Kretz; Edd Lee; Xuqiu Tan; Geoffery L. Tomlinson; John Verruto; Vicky W.K. Wong; Eric J. Mathur; Jay M. Short; Dan E. Robertson; Brian Steer

Directed evolution technologies were used to selectively improve the stability of an enzyme without compromising its catalytic activity. In particular, this article describes the tandem use of two evolution strategies to evolve a xylanase, rendering it tolerant to temperatures in excess of 90°C. A library of all possible 19 amino acid substitutions at each residue position was generated and screened for activity after a temperature challenge. Nine single amino acid residue changes were identified that enhanced thermostability. All 512 possible combinatorial variants of the nine mutations were then generated and screened for improved thermal tolerance under stringent conditions. The screen yielded eleven variants with substantially improved thermal tolerance. Denaturation temperature transition midpoints were increased from 61°C to as high as 96°C. The use of two evolution strategies in combination enabled the rapid discovery of the enzyme variant with the highest degree of fitness (greater thermal tolerance and activity relative to the wild‐type parent).


Methods in Enzymology | 2005

High‐Throughput Cultivation of Microorganisms Using Microcapsules

Karsten Zengler; Marion Walcher; Greg Clark; Imke Haller; Gerardo Vicente Toledo; Trevin Holland; Eric J. Mathur; Gary Woodnutt; Jay M. Short; Martin S. Keller

This chapter describes a universal and novel method that provides access to the immense reservoir of untapped microbial diversity by cultivation. This technique uses microcapsules to encapsulate single cells combined with parallel microbial cultivation under low nutrient flux conditions. Under these conditions, single encapsulated cells grow and form microcolonies within the microcapsules. Flow cytometry is used as a sensitive tool to detect growth within the microcapsules. Microcapsules that contain microcolonies (originated from a single encapsulated cell) are sorted individually into microtiter dishes containing organic-rich medium. This high-throughput cultivation can provide more than 10,000 bacterial and fungal isolates per environmental sample.

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Mircea Podar

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Robert M. Kelly

North Carolina State University

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Hwai W. Chang

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Kimberley N Parker

North Carolina State University

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