Graham O’Hara
Murdoch University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Graham O’Hara.
New Phytologist | 2008
Jason Terpolilli; Graham O’Hara; Ravi Tiwari; M. J. Dilworth; John Howieson
Medicago truncatula (barrel medic) A17 is currently being sequenced as a model legume, complementing the sequenced root nodule bacterial strain Sinorhizobium meliloti 1021 (Sm1021). In this study, the effectiveness of the Sm1021-M. truncatula symbiosis at fixing N(2) was evaluated. N(2) fixation effectiveness was examined with eight Medicago species and three accessions of M. truncatula with Sm1021 and two other Sinorhizobium strains. Plant shoot dry weights, plant nitrogen content and nodule distribution, morphology and number were analysed. Compared with nitrogen-fed controls, Sm1021 was ineffective or partially effective on all hosts tested (excluding M. sativa), as measured by reduced dry weights and shoot N content. Against an effective strain, Sm1021 on M. truncatula accessions produced more nodules, which were small, pale, more widely distributed on the root system and with fewer infected cells. The Sm1021-M. truncatula symbiosis is poorly matched for N(2) fixation and the strain could possess broader N(2) fixation deficiencies. A possible origin for this reduction in effectiveness is discussed. An alternative sequenced strain, effective at N(2) fixation on M. truncatula A17, is Sinorhizobium medicae WSM419.
Standards in Genomic Sciences | 2010
Wayne Reeve; Patrick Chain; Graham O’Hara; Julie Ardley; Kemanthi Nandesena; Lambert Bräu; Ravi Tiwari; Stephanie Malfatti; Hajnalka Kiss; Alla Lapidus; Alex Copeland; Matt Nolan; Miriam Land; Loren Hauser; Yun-Juan Chang; Natalia Ivanova; Konstantinos Mavromatis; Victor Markowitz; Nikos C. Kyrpides; Margaret Gollagher; R.J. Yates; M. J. Dilworth; John Howieson
Ensifer (Sinorhizobium) medicae is an effective nitrogen fixing microsymbiont of a diverse range of annual Medicago (medic) species. Strain WSM419 is an aerobic, motile, non-spore forming, Gram-negative rod isolated from a M. murex root nodule collected in Sardinia, Italy in 1981. WSM419 was manufactured commercially in Australia as an inoculant for annual medics during 1985 to 1993 due to its nitrogen fixation, saprophytic competence and acid tolerance properties. Here we describe the basic features of this organism, together with the complete genome sequence, and annotation. This is the first report of a complete genome sequence for a microsymbiont of the group of annual medic species adapted to acid soils. We reveal that its genome size is 6,817,576 bp encoding 6,518 protein-coding genes and 81 RNA only encoding genes. The genome contains a chromosome of size 3,781,904 bp and 3 plasmids of size 1,570,951 bp, 1,245,408 bp and 219,313 bp. The smallest plasmid is a feature unique to this medic microsymbiont.
Extremophiles | 2006
Rebecca B. Hawkes; Peter D. Franzmann; Graham O’Hara; Jason J. Plumb
A new species of Archaea was isolated from an industrial mineral sulphide bioleach heap. Strain BH2, a non-motile pleomorphic coccus, was capable of chemomixotrophic growth on ferrous sulphate and yeast extract. Growth was not supported in the absence of yeast extract. Phylogenetic analysis based on the 16S rRNA gene showed that strain BH2 was most closely related to the species Ferroplasma acidiphilum; however, it showed only 95% sequence similarity with this species. Strain BH2 had a temperature optimum of 53.6°C and a temperature range for growth between 22 and 63°C. Thus, it is the first moderately thermophilic member of the genus Ferroplasma. The optimum pH for the growth of the strain occurred between pH 1.0 and 1.2 and the lowest pH at which growth was observed was 0.4. Based on 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis and other physiological characteristics, strain BH2 constitutes a new species within the genus Ferroplasma. The name Ferroplasma cupricumulans is proposed for the new species and strain BH2 (DSM 16651) is proposed as the type strain.
Standards in Genomic Sciences | 2010
Wayne Reeve; Graham O’Hara; Patrick Chain; Julie Ardley; Lambert Bräu; Kemanthi Nandesena; Ravi Tiwari; Alex Copeland; Matt Nolan; Cliff Han; Thomas Brettin; Miriam Land; Galina Ovchinikova; Natalia Ivanova; Konstantinos Mavromatis; Victor Markowitz; Nikos C. Kyrpides; Vanessa Melino; Matthew D. Denton; R.J. Yates; John Howieson
Rhizobium leguminosarum bv trifolii is a soil-inhabiting bacterium that has the capacity to be an effective nitrogen fixing microsymbiont of a diverse range of annual Trifolium (clover) species. Strain WSM1325 is an aerobic, motile, non-spore forming, Gram-negative rod isolated from root nodules collected in 1993 from the Greek Island of Serifos. WSM1325 is produced commercially in Australia as an inoculant for a broad range of annual clovers of Mediterranean origin due to its superior attributes of saprophytic competence, nitrogen fixation and acid-tolerance. Here we describe the basic features of this organism, together with the complete genome sequence, and annotation. This is the first completed genome sequence for a microsymbiont of annual clovers. We reveal that its genome size is 7,418,122 bp encoding 7,232 protein-coding genes and 61 RNA-only encoding genes. This multipartite genome contains 6 distinct replicons; a chromosome of size 4,767,043 bp and 5 plasmids of size 828,924 bp, 660,973 bp, 516,088 bp, 350,312 bp and 294,782 bp.
Standards in Genomic Sciences | 2010
Wayne Reeve; Graham O’Hara; Patrick Chain; Julie Ardley; Lambert Bräu; Kemanthi Nandesena; Ravi Tiwari; Stephanie Malfatti; Hajnalka Kiss; Alla Lapidus; Alex Copeland; Matt Nolan; Miriam Land; Natalia Ivanova; Konstantinos Mavromatis; Victor Markowitz; Nikos C. Kyrpides; Vanessa Melino; Matthew D. Denton; R.J. Yates; John Howieson
Rhizobium leguminosarum bv trifolii is the effective nitrogen fixing microsymbiont of a diverse range of annual and perennial Trifolium (clover) species. Strain WSM2304 is an aerobic, motile, non-spore forming, Gram-negative rod, isolated from Trifolium polymorphum in Uruguay in 1998. This microsymbiont predominated in the perennial grasslands of Glencoe Research Station, in Uruguay, to competitively nodulate its host, and fix atmospheric nitrogen. Here we describe the basic features of WSM2304, together with the complete genome sequence, and annotation. This is the first completed genome sequence for a nitrogen fixing microsymbiont of a clover species from the American center of origin. We reveal that its genome size is 6,872,702 bp encoding 6,643 protein-coding genes and 62 RNA only encoding genes. This multipartite genome was found to contain 5 distinct replicons; a chromosome of size 4,537,948 bp and four circular plasmids of size 1,266,105 bp, 501,946 bp, 308,747 bp and 257,956 bp.
Soil Biology & Biochemistry | 2000
Elizabeth Watkin; Graham O’Hara; John Howieson; A. R. Glenn
The acid-soil tolerance of six strains (WU95, NA3001, WSM409, TA1, NA3025 and NA3039) of Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. trifolii was assessed in a three-year cross-row field experiment in an acid sandy soil of pH 4.2. Strains WSM409, NA3039 and WU95 were more acid-soil tolerant than strains NA3025, TA1 and NA3001. Strains WSM409 and NA3039 colonised and persisted in acid-soil to a greater degree than strains TA1 and NA3001. The data from this study clearly identified strain WSM409 as a strain with outstanding potential for improving the production of clovers on acid soils.
International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 2014
Krisle da Silva; Sofie E. De Meyer; Luc Felicianus Marie Rouws; Eliane do Nascimento Cunha Farias; Marco Antônio Oliveira dos Santos; Graham O’Hara; Julie Ardley; Anne Willems; Rosa Maria Pitard; Jerri Édson Zilli
Root-nodule bacteria were isolated from Inga laurina (Sw.) Willd. growing in the Cerrado Amazon region, State of Roraima, Brazil. The 16S rRNA gene sequences of six strains (BR 10250(T), BR 10248, BR 10249, BR 10251, BR 10252 and BR 10253) showed low similarities with currently described species of the genus Bradyrhizobium. Phylogenetic analyses of sequences of five housekeeping genes (dnaK, glnII, gyrB, recA and rpoB) revealed Bradyrhizobium iriomotense EK05(T) to be the closest type strain (97.4% sequence similarity or less). Chemotaxonomic data, including fatty acid profiles [with the major components C16:0 and summed feature 8 (C18:1ω6c/C18:1ω7c)], the slow growth rate and carbon compound utilization patterns supported the assignment of our strains to the genus Bradyrhizobium. Results from DNA-DNA hybridizations and physiological traits differentiated our strains from the closest related species of the genus Bradyrhizobium with validly published names. Sequences of symbiosis-related genes for nodulation (nodC) and nitrogen fixation (nifH) grouped together with those of B. iriomotense EK05(T) and Bradyrhizobium sp. strains BR 6610 (used as a commercial inoculant for Inga marginata in Brazil) and TUXTLAS-10 (previously observed in Central America). Based on these data, the six strains represent a novel species, for which the name Bradyrhizobium ingae sp. nov. is proposed. The type strain is BR 10250(T) ( = HAMBI 3600(T)).
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016
Timothy L. Haskett; Jason Terpolilli; Amanuel Bekuma; Graham O’Hara; John T. Sullivan; Penghao Wang; Clive W. Ronson; Joshua P. Ramsay
Significance Integrative and conjugative elements (ICEs) are one of the most prevalent but least-characterized families of mobile genetic elements in bacteria. We identified a family of ICEs that exists as three separate parts integrated within the single chromosomes of symbiotic mesorhizobia. These “tripartite ICEs,” through a series of chromosomal recombinations mediated by integrase proteins, assemble into a single circular ICE. Following transfer to nonsymbiotic mesorhizobia, tripartite ICEs integrate and disassemble into three parts in the recipient genome and exconjugant mesorhizobia gain the ability to form a symbiosis with legumes. These discoveries expand our appreciation of the potential for gene transfer in bacteria and demonstrate how mobile genetic elements can dramatically manipulate the bacterial genome. Integrative and conjugative elements (ICEs) are ubiquitous mobile genetic elements present as “genomic islands” within bacterial chromosomes. Symbiosis islands are ICEs that convert nonsymbiotic mesorhizobia into symbionts of legumes. Here we report the discovery of symbiosis ICEs that exist as three separate chromosomal regions when integrated in their hosts, but through recombination assemble as a single circular ICE for conjugative transfer. Whole-genome comparisons revealed exconjugants derived from nonsymbiotic mesorhizobia received three separate chromosomal regions from the donor Mesorhizobium ciceri WSM1271. The three regions were each bordered by two nonhomologous integrase attachment (att) sites, which together comprised three homologous pairs of attL and attR sites. Sequential recombination between each attL and attR pair produced corresponding attP and attB sites and joined the three fragments to produce a single circular ICE, ICEMcSym1271. A plasmid carrying the three attP sites was used to recreate the process of tripartite ICE integration and to confirm the role of integrase genes intS, intM, and intG in this process. Nine additional tripartite ICEs were identified in diverse mesorhizobia and transfer was demonstrated for three of them. The transfer of tripartite ICEs to nonsymbiotic mesorhizobia explains the evolution of competitive but suboptimal N2-fixing strains found in Western Australian soils. The unheralded existence of tripartite ICEs raises the possibility that multipartite elements reside in other organisms, but have been overlooked because of their unusual biology. These discoveries reveal mechanisms by which integrases dramatically manipulate bacterial genomes to allow cotransfer of disparate chromosomal regions.
Plant and Soil | 2011
R.J. Yates; John Howieson; Wayne Reeve; Graham O’Hara
AimTo ensure that the majority of nodules on a legume are occupied by the inoculant strain poses a significant challenge to maximising nitrogen fixation in agricultural settings. The aim of this review is to establish a set of common terms with which to classify and interrogate experiments that investigate nodule occupancy in legumes.ResultsAt least six different terminologies have been developed to discuss experimental outcomes where legumes have access to more than one rhizobial strain. In this review we nominate a set of preferred terms: promiscuous, exclusive, selective and non-selective nodulation in an attempt to provide conformity to the general scientific pursuit of understanding the circumstances leading to nodule occupancy in legumes when more than one strain has the opportunity to form the nodule.DiscussionTo maximise nitrogen fixation from legumes, a primary challenge is to prevent rhizobia resident in the soil from dominating nodule occupation, since whilst they may be numerically dominant, they are often not optimally matched for nitrogen fixation with the introduced legume. It is apparent, however, that at times the legume host is able to preferentially enter into symbiosis with a fully effective strain, even if an ineffective strain is present and numerically dominant.ConclusionThis manuscript reviews the terminology currently applied to nodulation outcomes in introduced legume symbioses where more than one strain type is available to infect the plant. We suggest adoption of a more stringent terminology as the research discipline matures to exploit genome sequence information. We have suggested the term “selective nodulation” to describe certain nodulation outcomes that are not based upon numerical supremacy.
Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2016
Sofie E. De Meyer; Leah Briscoe; Pilar Martínez-Hidalgo; Christina M. Agapakis; Paulina Estrada de-los Santos; Rekha Seshadri; Wayne Reeve; George M. Weinstock; Graham O’Hara; John Howieson; Ann M. Hirsch
Genome analysis of fourteen mimosoid and four papilionoid beta-rhizobia together with fourteen reference alpha-rhizobia for both nodulation (nod) and nitrogen-fixing (nif/fix) genes has shown phylogenetic congruence between 16S rRNA/MLSA (combined 16S rRNA gene sequencing and multilocus sequence analysis) and nif/fix genes, indicating a free-living diazotrophic ancestry of the beta-rhizobia. However, deeper genomic analysis revealed a complex symbiosis acquisition history in the beta-rhizobia that clearly separates the mimosoid and papilionoid nodulating groups. Mimosoid-nodulating beta-rhizobia have nod genes tightly clustered in the nodBCIJHASU operon, whereas papilionoid-nodulating Burkholderia have nodUSDABC and nodIJ genes, although their arrangement is not canonical because the nod genes are subdivided by the insertion of nif and other genes. Furthermore, the papilionoid Burkholderia spp. contain duplications of several nod and nif genes. The Burkholderia nifHDKEN and fixABC genes are very closely related to those found in free-living diazotrophs. In contrast, nifA is highly divergent between both groups, but the papilionoid species nifA is more similar to alpha-rhizobia nifA than to other groups. Surprisingly, for all Burkholderia, the fixNOQP and fixGHIS genes required for cbb3 cytochrome oxidase production and assembly are missing. In contrast, symbiotic Cupriavidus strains have fixNOQPGHIS genes, revealing a divergence in the evolution of two distinct electron transport chains required for nitrogen fixation within the beta-rhizobia.