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Featured researches published by John H. Gunderson.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2008

Interactions between Food-Borne Pathogens and Protozoa Isolated from Lettuce and Spinach

Poornima Gourabathini; Maria T. Brandl; Katherine S. Redding; John H. Gunderson; Sharon G. Berk

ABSTRACT The survival of Salmonella enterica was recently shown to increase when the bacteria were sequestered in expelled food vacuoles (vesicles) of Tetrahymena. Because fresh produce is increasingly linked to outbreaks of enteric illness, the present investigation aimed to determine the prevalence of protozoa on spinach and lettuce and to examine their interactions with S. enterica, Escherichia coli O157:H7, and Listeria monocytogenes. Glaucoma sp., Colpoda steinii, and Acanthamoeba palestinensis were cultured from store-bought spinach and lettuce and used in our study. A strain of Tetrahymena pyriformis previously isolated from spinach and a soil-borne Tetrahymena sp. were also used. Washed protozoa were allowed to graze on green fluorescent protein- or red fluorescent protein-labeled enteric pathogens. Significant differences in interactions among the various protist-enteric pathogen combinations were observed. Vesicles were produced by Glaucoma with all of the bacterial strains, although L. monocytogenes resulted in the smallest number per ciliate. Vesicle production was observed also during grazing of Tetrahymena on E. coli O157:H7 and S. enterica but not during grazing on L. monocytogenes, in vitro and on leaves. All vesicles contained intact fluorescing bacteria. In contrast, C. steinii and the amoeba did not produce vesicles from any of the enteric pathogens, nor were pathogens trapped within their cysts. Studies of the fate of E. coli O157:H7 in expelled vesicles revealed that by 4 h after addition of spinach extract, the bacteria multiplied and escaped the vesicles. The presence of protozoa on leafy vegetables and their sequestration of enteric bacteria in vesicles indicate that they may play an important role in the ecology of human pathogens on produce.


Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology | 1999

The Phylogenetic Position of Amoebophrya sp. Infecting Gymnodinium sanguineum

John H. Gunderson; Susan H. Goss; D. Wayne Coats

ABSTRACT The small‐subunit rRNA sequence of a species of Amoebophrya infecting Gymnodinium sanguineum in Chesapeake Bay was obtained and compared to the small subunit rRNA sequences of other protists. Phylogenetic trees constructed with the new sequence place Amoebophrya between the remaining dinoflagellates and other protists.


Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology | 2002

Multiple strains of the parasitic dinoflagellate Amoebophrya exist in Chesapeake Bay

John H. Gunderson; Shinu A. John; W. Chanson Boman; D. Wayne Coats

Abstract Small subunit rRNA sequences were amplified from Amoebophrya strains infecting Karlodinium micrum, Gymnodinium instriatum and an unidentified Scrippsiella species in Chesapeake Bay. The alignable parts of the sequences differed from each other and from the previously reported rRNA sequence of the Amoebophrya strain infecting Akashiwo sanguinea in Chesapeake Bay by 4 to 10%. This is a greater degree of difference than sometimes found between sequences from separate genera of free-living dinoflagellates. These sequence differences indicate that the Amoebophrya strains parasitizing dinoflagellates in Chesapeake Bay do not all belong to the same species. In spite of their relative dissimilarity, the sequences do group together into a single clade with high bootstrap support in phylogenetic trees constructed from the sequences.


Protist | 2013

Amoeba Stages in the Deepest Branching Heteroloboseans, Including Pharyngomonas: Evolutionary and Systematic Implications

Tommy Harding; Matthew W. Brown; Andrey Plotnikov; Elena Selivanova; Jong Soo Park; John H. Gunderson; Manuela Baumgartner; Jeffrey D. Silberman; Andrew J. Roger; Alastair G. B. Simpson

The taxon Heterolobosea (Excavata) is a major group of protists well known for its diversity of life stages. Most are amoebae capable of transforming into flagellates (amoeboflagellates), while others are known solely as flagellates or solely as amoebae. The deepest-branching heterolobosean taxon confirmed previously, Pharyngomonas, was generally assumed to be a pure flagellate, suggesting that the amoeba form arose later in the evolution of Heterolobosea sensu lato. Here we report that multiple isolates of Pharyngomonas are actually amoeboflagellates that also have cyst stages, with only amoebae transforming into cysts. The amoeba form of Pharyngomonas showed heterolobosean characteristics (e. g. eruptive movement), but also possessed unusual morphological features like slow-flowing crenulated hyaline crescents with conical subpseudopodia, finger-like projections and branching posterior extensions. Furthermore, phylogenetic analyses of 18S ribosomal RNA gene sequences that included two undescribed species of amoebae showed that Pharyngomonas is not the only deep-branching heterolobosean to possess an amoeba stage. These results suggest that possession of an amoeba stage was ancestral for Heterolobosea, unifying this taxon as a group of species with amoeba stages in their lifecycle or derived from organisms with such stages.


Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology | 1997

Fluorescently-labeled Oligonucleotide Probes Can Be Used To Identify Protistan Food Vacuole Contents

John H. Gunderson; Susan H. Goss

ABSTRACT. In situ hybridization using fluorescent oligonucleotide probes complementary to unique regions of 16S rRNA molecules provides a way of identifying the food vacuole contents of bactivorous protists. Laboratory experiments with Tetrahymena showed rRNAs in food vacuoles are degraded slowly enough to permit their use as hybridization targets for such probes. A probe specific for a hypervariable region of the small subunit rRNA of an unnamed proteobacterium abundant in a local lake was then synthesized. It was used to probe the food vacuoles of the ciliates present in fixed water samples collected from the same lake. The vacuoles of several filter‐feeding ciliates bound the probe, indicating that such probes can be used to identify the food vacuole contents of ciliates collected from natural samples.


Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology | 2001

FISH Probes for the Detection of the Parasitic Dinoflagellate Amoebophrya sp. Infecting the Dinoflagellate Akashiwo sanguinea in Chesapeake Bay

John H. Gunderson; Susan H. Goss; D. Wayne Coats

Abstract A comparison of the small subunit rRNA sequences of a Chesapeake Bay strain of the dinoflagellate Akashiwo sanguinea and the dinoflagellate Amoebophrya sp. parasitizing it revealed several potential target sites that could be used to detect the parasite through in situ hybridization. The fluorescence of probed cells under various conditions of hybridization was measured by using a spot meter on a Nikon UFX-II camera attachment so that the effect of various hybridization parameters on probe binding could be determined. Probes directed against both the junction between helices 8 and 11 and helix 46 could detect the parasite, although the helix 8/11 probe produced a stronger signal under the conditions tested. The fluorescence of the probed cells increased with increasing hybridization time up to approximately twelve hours. The background fluorescence was lower at the wavelengths used to detect Texas Red than at those used to detect fluorescein, so probed cells were more distinct when Texas Red was used as the label. Cells stored in cold paraformaldehyde for a year still bound the probes. Young stages of the parasite could be seen more readily after in situ hybridization than after protargol impregnation.


Genome Announcements | 2016

Draft Genome Sequences of Two Novel Amoeba-Resistant Intranuclear Bacteria, “Candidatus Berkiella cookevillensis” and “Candidatus Berkiella aquae”

Yohannes T. Mehari; Brock A. Arivett; Anthony Farone; John H. Gunderson; Mary Farone

ABSTRACT “Candidatus Berkiella cookevillensis” and “Candidatus Berkiella aquae” are obligate intranuclear endosymbionts of freshwater amoebae. Here, we present the draft genome sequences of these two bacteria, with total sizes of 2,990,361 bp and 3,626,027 bp, respectively.


Berk, S G , Gunderson, J H Wastewater organisms | 1993

Wastewater organisms: a color atlas

Sharon G. Berk; John H. Gunderson


Archive | 1999

Phylogenetic position of Amoebophrya sp. from Gymnodinium sanguineum

John H. Gunderson; Susan H. Goss; D. Wayne Coats


International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 2016

Description of ‘Candidatus Berkiella aquae’ and ‘Candidatus Berkiella cookevillensis’, two intranuclear bacteria of freshwater amoebae

Mehari Yt; Hayes Bj; Redding Ks; Mariappan Pv; John H. Gunderson; Anthony Farone; Mary Farone

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D. Wayne Coats

Smithsonian Environmental Research Center

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Susan H. Goss

Tennessee Technological University

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Mary Farone

Middle Tennessee State University

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Anthony Farone

Middle Tennessee State University

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Anthony L. Newsome

Middle Tennessee State University

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Brock A. Arivett

Middle Tennessee State University

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Hayes Bj

Middle Tennessee State University

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Katherine S. Redding

Tennessee Technological University

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