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Dive into the research topics where Judy D. Wall is active.

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Featured researches published by Judy D. Wall.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2006

Temporal Transcriptomic Analysis as Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough Transitions into Stationary Phase during Electron Donor Depletion

M.E. Clark; Qiang He; Zhili He; Katherine H. Huang; Eric Alm; Xiu-Feng Wan; Terry C. Hazen; Adam P. Arkin; Judy D. Wall; J. Zhou; Matthew W. Fields

ABSTRACT Desulfovibrio vulgaris was cultivated in a defined medium, and biomass was sampled for approximately 70 h to characterize the shifts in gene expression as cells transitioned from the exponential to the stationary phase during electron donor depletion. In addition to temporal transcriptomics, total protein, carbohydrate, lactate, acetate, and sulfate levels were measured. The microarray data were examined for statistically significant expression changes, hierarchical cluster analysis, and promoter element prediction and were validated by quantitative PCR. As the cells transitioned from the exponential phase to the stationary phase, a majority of the down-expressed genes were involved in translation and transcription, and this trend continued at the remaining times. There were general increases in relative expression for intracellular trafficking and secretion, ion transport, and coenzyme metabolism as the cells entered the stationary phase. As expected, the DNA replication machinery was down-expressed, and the expression of genes involved in DNA repair increased during the stationary phase. Genes involved in amino acid acquisition, carbohydrate metabolism, energy production, and cell envelope biogenesis did not exhibit uniform transcriptional responses. Interestingly, most phage-related genes were up-expressed at the onset of the stationary phase. This result suggested that nutrient depletion may affect community dynamics and DNA transfer mechanisms of sulfate-reducing bacteria via the phage cycle. The putative feoAB system (in addition to other presumptive iron metabolism genes) was significantly up-expressed, and this suggested the possible importance of Fe2+ acquisition under metal-reducing conditions. The expression of a large subset of carbohydrate-related genes was altered, and the total cellular carbohydrate levels declined during the growth phase transition. Interestingly, the D. vulgaris genome does not contain a putative rpoS gene, a common attribute of the δ-Proteobacteria genomes sequenced to date, and the transcription profiles of other putative rpo genes were not significantly altered. Our results indicated that in addition to expected changes (e.g., energy conversion, protein turnover, translation, transcription, and DNA replication and repair), genes related to phage, stress response, carbohydrate flux, the outer envelope, and iron homeostasis played important roles as D. vulgaris cells experienced electron donor depletion.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2009

Expression profiling of hypothetical genes in Desulfovibrio vulgaris leads to improved functional annotation

Dwayne A. Elias; Aindrila Mukhopadhyay; Marcin P. Joachimiak; Elliott C. Drury; Alyssa M. Redding; Huei-Che B. Yen; Matthew W. Fields; Terry C. Hazen; Adam P. Arkin; Jay D. Keasling; Judy D. Wall

Hypothetical (HyP) and conserved HyP genes account for >30% of sequenced bacterial genomes. For the sulfate-reducing bacterium Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough, 347 of the 3634 genes were annotated as conserved HyP (9.5%) along with 887 HyP genes (24.4%). Given the large fraction of the genome, it is plausible that some of these genes serve critical cellular roles. The study goals were to determine which genes were expressed and provide a more functionally based annotation. To accomplish this, expression profiles of 1234 HyP and conserved genes were used from transcriptomic datasets of 11 environmental stresses, complemented with shotgun LC–MS/MS and AMT tag proteomic data. Genes were divided into putatively polycistronic operons and those predicted to be monocistronic, then classified by basal expression levels and grouped according to changes in expression for one or multiple stresses. One thousand two hundred and twelve of these genes were transcribed with 786 producing detectable proteins. There was no evidence for expression of 17 predicted genes. Except for the latter, monocistronic gene annotation was expanded using the above criteria along with matching Clusters of Orthologous Groups. Polycistronic genes were annotated in the same manner with inferences from their proximity to more confidently annotated genes. Two targeted deletion mutants were used as test cases to determine the relevance of the inferred functional annotations.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2006

Temporal transcriptomic analyses of Desulfovibrio vulgarisHildenborough during electron donor depletion

M.E. Clark; Qiang He; Zhili He; Eric Alm; Katherine H. Huang; Terry C. Hazen; Adam P. Arkin; Judy D. Wall; J. Zhou; Matthew W. Fields

ABSTRACT Desulfovibrio vulgaris was cultivated in a defined medium, and biomass was sampled for approximately 70 h to characterize the shifts in gene expression as cells transitioned from the exponential to the stationary phase during electron donor depletion. In addition to temporal transcriptomics, total protein, carbohydrate, lactate, acetate, and sulfate levels were measured. The microarray data were examined for statistically significant expression changes, hierarchical cluster analysis, and promoter element prediction and were validated by quantitative PCR. As the cells transitioned from the exponential phase to the stationary phase, a majority of the down-expressed genes were involved in translation and transcription, and this trend continued at the remaining times. There were general increases in relative expression for intracellular trafficking and secretion, ion transport, and coenzyme metabolism as the cells entered the stationary phase. As expected, the DNA replication machinery was down-expressed, and the expression of genes involved in DNA repair increased during the stationary phase. Genes involved in amino acid acquisition, carbohydrate metabolism, energy production, and cell envelope biogenesis did not exhibit uniform transcriptional responses. Interestingly, most phage-related genes were up-expressed at the onset of the stationary phase. This result suggested that nutrient depletion may affect community dynamics and DNA transfer mechanisms of sulfate-reducing bacteria via the phage cycle. The putative feoAB system (in addition to other presumptive iron metabolism genes) was significantly up-expressed, and this suggested the possible importance of Fe2+ acquisition under metal-reducing conditions. The expression of a large subset of carbohydrate-related genes was altered, and the total cellular carbohydrate levels declined during the growth phase transition. Interestingly, the D. vulgaris genome does not contain a putative rpoS gene, a common attribute of the δ-Proteobacteria genomes sequenced to date, and the transcription profiles of other putative rpo genes were not significantly altered. Our results indicated that in addition to expected changes (e.g., energy conversion, protein turnover, translation, transcription, and DNA replication and repair), genes related to phage, stress response, carbohydrate flux, the outer envelope, and iron homeostasis played important roles as D. vulgaris cells experienced electron donor depletion.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2006

Temporal transcriptomic analysis of Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough transition into stationary phase growth during electrondonor depletion

M.E. Clark; Qiang He; Zhili He; Katherine H. Huang; Eric Alm; Xiu-Feng Wan; Terry C. Hazen; Adam P. Arkin; Judy D. Wall; J. Zhou; Matthew W. Fields

ABSTRACT Desulfovibrio vulgaris was cultivated in a defined medium, and biomass was sampled for approximately 70 h to characterize the shifts in gene expression as cells transitioned from the exponential to the stationary phase during electron donor depletion. In addition to temporal transcriptomics, total protein, carbohydrate, lactate, acetate, and sulfate levels were measured. The microarray data were examined for statistically significant expression changes, hierarchical cluster analysis, and promoter element prediction and were validated by quantitative PCR. As the cells transitioned from the exponential phase to the stationary phase, a majority of the down-expressed genes were involved in translation and transcription, and this trend continued at the remaining times. There were general increases in relative expression for intracellular trafficking and secretion, ion transport, and coenzyme metabolism as the cells entered the stationary phase. As expected, the DNA replication machinery was down-expressed, and the expression of genes involved in DNA repair increased during the stationary phase. Genes involved in amino acid acquisition, carbohydrate metabolism, energy production, and cell envelope biogenesis did not exhibit uniform transcriptional responses. Interestingly, most phage-related genes were up-expressed at the onset of the stationary phase. This result suggested that nutrient depletion may affect community dynamics and DNA transfer mechanisms of sulfate-reducing bacteria via the phage cycle. The putative feoAB system (in addition to other presumptive iron metabolism genes) was significantly up-expressed, and this suggested the possible importance of Fe2+ acquisition under metal-reducing conditions. The expression of a large subset of carbohydrate-related genes was altered, and the total cellular carbohydrate levels declined during the growth phase transition. Interestingly, the D. vulgaris genome does not contain a putative rpoS gene, a common attribute of the δ-Proteobacteria genomes sequenced to date, and the transcription profiles of other putative rpo genes were not significantly altered. Our results indicated that in addition to expected changes (e.g., energy conversion, protein turnover, translation, transcription, and DNA replication and repair), genes related to phage, stress response, carbohydrate flux, the outer envelope, and iron homeostasis played important roles as D. vulgaris cells experienced electron donor depletion.


Archive | 2012

Hildenboroughin Desulfovibrio vulgaris Crp/Fnr-Type Global Transcriptional Functional Characterization of

Judy D. Wall; Terry C. Hazen; Jizhong Zhou Baumohl; Qiang He; Matthew W. Fields; Adam P. Arkin; Christopher L. Hemme; Marcin P. Joachimiak; Yunyu I. Chen; Grant M. Zane; Zhili He


Archive | 2011

GENOME ANNOUNCEMENT 1 2 Complete Genome Sequence of the Haloalkaliphilic, Hydrogen Producing 3 Halanaerobium hydrogenoformans 4 5

Steven D. Brown; Matthew B. Begemann; Melanie Rose Mormile; Judy D. Wall; S Cliff; Lynne Goodwin; Miriam Land; Loren Hauser; Dwayne A. Elias


Archive | 2010

Fumarate Dismutation in Desulfovibrio G20 and the Effect of Formate

Kimberly L. Keller; Barbara J. Giles; Adam M. Deutschbauer; Jennifer V. Kuehl; Adam P. Arkin; PoratS. D. Brown; Judy D. Wall; Iris Porat


Archive | 2010

Relationship between nitrate and nitrite stress responses of Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough and Desulfovibrio alaskensis G20

Hannah L. Korte; Grant M. Zane; Adam M. Deutschbauer; Morgan N. Price; Adam Arkin; Judy D. Wall


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2010

Can direct extracellular electron transfer occur in the absence of outer membrane cytochromes in Desulfovibrio vulgaris

Dwayne A. Elias; Grant M. Zane; Manfred Auer; Matthew W. Fields; Judy D. Wall; Yuri A. Gorby


Archive | 2009

Adaptation to Salt Stress during in experimental evolution of Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough

Aifen Zhou; Zhili He; Marcin P. Joachimiak; Paramvir Dehal; Adam P. Arkin; Kristina L. Hillesland; David Stahl; Judy D. Wall; Terry C. Hazen; J. Zhou

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J. Zhou

University of Missouri

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Zhili He

University of Missouri

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Adam P. Arkin

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Qiang He

University of Tennessee

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Aindrila Mukhopadhyay

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Dwayne A. Elias

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Eric Alm

University of Washington

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Marcin P. Joachimiak

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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