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Dive into the research topics where Julian Davies is active.

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Featured researches published by Julian Davies.


Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews | 2010

Origins and Evolution of Antibiotic Resistance

Julian Davies; Dorothy Davies

SUMMARY Antibiotics have always been considered one of the wonder discoveries of the 20th century. This is true, but the real wonder is the rise of antibiotic resistance in hospitals, communities, and the environment concomitant with their use. The extraordinary genetic capacities of microbes have benefitted from mans overuse of antibiotics to exploit every source of resistance genes and every means of horizontal gene transmission to develop multiple mechanisms of resistance for each and every antibiotic introduced into practice clinically, agriculturally, or otherwise. This review presents the salient aspects of antibiotic resistance development over the past half-century, with the oft-restated conclusion that it is time to act. To achieve complete restitution of therapeutic applications of antibiotics, there is a need for more information on the role of environmental microbiomes in the rise of antibiotic resistance. In particular, creative approaches to the discovery of novel antibiotics and their expedited and controlled introduction to therapy are obligatory.


Nature Reviews Microbiology | 2010

Call of the wild: antibiotic resistance genes in natural environments

Heather K. Allen; Justin J. Donato; Helena Huimi Wang; Karen A. Cloud-Hansen; Julian Davies; Jo Handelsman

Antibiotic-resistant pathogens are profoundly important to human health, but the environmental reservoirs of resistance determinants are poorly understood. The origins of antibiotic resistance in the environment is relevant to human health because of the increasing importance of zoonotic diseases as well as the need for predicting emerging resistant pathogens. This Review explores the presence and spread of antibiotic resistance in non-agricultural, non-clinical environments and demonstrates the need for more intensive investigation on this subject.


The EMBO Journal | 1987

Characterization of the herbicide-resistance gene bar from Streptomyces hygroscopicus

Charles J. Thompson; N. Rao Movva; Richard Tizard; Reto Crameri; Julian Davies; Marc Lauwereys; Johan Botterman

A gene which confers resistance to the herbicide bialaphos (bar) has been characterized. The bar gene was originally cloned from Streptomyces hygroscopicus, an organism which produces the tripeptide bialaphos as a secondary metabolite. Bialaphos contains phosphinothricin, an analogue of glutamate which is an inhibitor of glutamine synthetase. The bar gene product was purified and shown to be a modifying enzyme which acetylates phosphinothricin or demethylphosphinothricin but not bialaphos or glutamate. The bar gene was subcloned and its nucleotide sequence was determined. Interspecific transfer of this Streptomyces gene into Escherichia coli showed that it could be used as a selectable marker in other bacteria. In the accompanying paper, bar has been used to engineer herbicide‐resistant plants.


Nature Reviews Microbiology | 2011

Tackling antibiotic resistance

Karen Bush; Patrice Courvalin; Gautam Dantas; Julian Davies; Barry I. Eisenstein; George A. Jacoby; Roy Kishony; Barry N. Kreiswirth; Elizabeth Kutter; Stephen A. Lerner; Stuart B. Levy; Olga Lomovskaya; Jeffrey H. Miller; Shahriar Mobashery; Laura J. V. Piddock; Steven Projan; Christopher M. Thomas; Alexander Tomasz; Paul M. Tulkens; Timothy R. Walsh; James D. Watson; Jan A. Witkowski; Wolfgang Witte; Gerry Wright; Pamela J. Yeh; Helen I. Zgurskaya

The development and spread of antibiotic resistance in bacteria is a universal threat to both humans and animals that is generally not preventable but can nevertheless be controlled, and it must be tackled in the most effective ways possible. To explore how the problem of antibiotic resistance might best be addressed, a group of 30 scientists from academia and industry gathered at the Banbury Conference Centre in Cold Spring Harbor, New York, USA, from 16 to 18 May 2011. From these discussions there emerged a priority list of steps that need to be taken to resolve this global crisis.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

The complete genome of Rhodococcus sp. RHA1 provides insights into a catabolic powerhouse

Michael P. McLeod; René L. Warren; William W. L. Hsiao; Naoto Araki; Matthew Myhre; Clinton Fernandes; Daisuke Miyazawa; Wendy Wong; Anita L. Lillquist; Dennis Wang; Manisha Dosanjh; Hirofumi Hara; Anca Petrescu; Ryan D. Morin; George P. Yang; Jeff M. Stott; Jacqueline E. Schein; Heesun Shin; Duane E. Smailus; Asim Siddiqui; Marco A. Marra; Steven J.M. Jones; Robert A. Holt; Fiona S. L. Brinkman; Keisuke Miyauchi; Masao Fukuda; Julian Davies; William W. Mohn; Lindsay D. Eltis

Rhodococcus sp. RHA1 (RHA1) is a potent polychlorinated biphenyl-degrading soil actinomycete that catabolizes a wide range of compounds and represents a genus of considerable industrial interest. RHA1 has one of the largest bacterial genomes sequenced to date, comprising 9,702,737 bp (67% G+C) arranged in a linear chromosome and three linear plasmids. A targeted insertion methodology was developed to determine the telomeric sequences. RHA1s 9,145 predicted protein-encoding genes are exceptionally rich in oxygenases (203) and ligases (192). Many of the oxygenases occur in the numerous pathways predicted to degrade aromatic compounds (30) or steroids (4). RHA1 also contains 24 nonribosomal peptide synthase genes, six of which exceed 25 kbp, and seven polyketide synthase genes, providing evidence that rhodococci harbor an extensive secondary metabolism. Among sequenced genomes, RHA1 is most similar to those of nocardial and mycobacterial strains. The genome contains few recent gene duplications. Moreover, three different analyses indicate that RHA1 has acquired fewer genes by recent horizontal transfer than most bacteria characterized to date and far fewer than Burkholderia xenovorans LB400, whose genome size and catabolic versatility rival those of RHA1. RHA1 and LB400 thus appear to demonstrate that ecologically similar bacteria can evolve large genomes by different means. Overall, RHA1 appears to have evolved to simultaneously catabolize a diverse range of plant-derived compounds in an O2-rich environment. In addition to establishing RHA1 as an important model for studying actinomycete physiology, this study provides critical insights that facilitate the exploitation of these industrially important microorganisms.


Trends in Microbiology | 2000

Horizontal gene transfer and the origin of species: lessons from bacteria

Fernando de la Cruz; Julian Davies

In bacteria, horizontal gene transfer (HGT) is widely recognized as the mechanism responsible for the widespread distribution of antibiotic resistance genes, gene clusters encoding biodegradative pathways and pathogenicity determinants. We propose that HGT is also responsible for speciation and sub-speciation in bacteria, and that HGT mechanisms exist in eukaryotes.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

A gene cluster encoding cholesterol catabolism in a soil actinomycete provides insight into Mycobacterium tuberculosis survival in macrophages

Robert van der Geize; Katherine C. Yam; Thomas Heuser; Maarten Hotse Wilbrink; Hirofumi Hara; Matthew C. Anderton; Edith Sim; Lubbert Dijkhuizen; Julian Davies; William W. Mohn; Lindsay D. Eltis

Rhodococcus sp. strain RHA1, a soil bacterium related to Mycobacterium tuberculosis, degrades an exceptionally broad range of organic compounds. Transcriptomic analysis of cholesterol-grown RHA1 revealed a catabolic pathway predicted to proceed via 4-androstene-3,17-dione and 3,4-dihydroxy-9,10-seconandrost-1,3,5(10)-triene-9,17-dione (3,4-DHSA). Inactivation of each of the hsaC, supAB, and mce4 genes in RHA1 substantiated their roles in cholesterol catabolism. Moreover, the hsaC− mutant accumulated 3,4-DHSA, indicating that HsaCRHA1, formerly annotated as a biphenyl-degrading dioxygenase, catalyzes the oxygenolytic cleavage of steroid ring A. Bioinformatic analyses revealed that 51 rhodococcal genes specifically expressed during growth on cholesterol, including all predicted to specify the catabolism of rings A and B, are conserved within an 82-gene cluster in M. tuberculosis H37Rv and Mycobacterium bovis bacillus Calmette–Guérin. M. bovis bacillus Calmette–Guérin grew on cholesterol, and hsaC and kshA were up-regulated under these conditions. Heterologously produced HsaCH37Rv and HsaDH37Rv transformed 3,4-DHSA and its ring-cleaved product, respectively, with apparent specificities ≈40-fold higher than for the corresponding biphenyl metabolites. Overall, we annotated 28 RHA1 genes and proposed physiological roles for a similar number of mycobacterial genes. During survival of M. tuberculosis in the macrophage, these genes are specifically expressed, and many appear to be essential. We have delineated a complete suite of genes necessary for microbial steroid degradation, and pathogenic mycobacteria have been shown to catabolize cholesterol. The results suggest that cholesterol metabolism is central to M. tuberculosiss unusual ability to survive in macrophages and provide insights into potential targets for novel therapeutics.


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

Transcriptional modulation of bacterial gene expression by subinhibitory concentrations of antibiotics

Ee-Been Goh; Grace Yim; Wayne Tsui; Jo-Ann McClure; Michael G. Surette; Julian Davies

Antibiotics such as erythromycin and rifampicin, at low concentrations, alter global bacterial transcription patterns as measured by the stimulation or inhibition of a variety of promoter–lux reporter constructs in a Salmonella typhimurium library. Analysis of a 6,500-clone library indicated that as many as 5% of the promoters may be affected, comprising genes for a variety of functions, as well as a significant fraction of genes with no known function. Studies of a selection of the reporter clones showed that stimulation varied depending on the nature of the antibiotic, the promoter, and what culture medium was used; the response differed on solid as compared with liquid media. Transcription was markedly reduced in antibiotic-resistant hosts, but the presence of mutations deficient in stress responses such as SOS or universal stress did not prevent antibiotic-induced modulation. The results show that small molecules may have contrasting effects on bacteria depending on their concentration: either the modulation of bacterial metabolism by altering transcription patterns or the inhibition of growth by the inhibition of specific target functions. Both activities could play important roles in the regulation of microbial communities. These studies indicate that the detection of pharmaceutically useful natural product inhibitors could be effectively achieved by measuring activation of transcription at low concentrations in high-throughput assays using appropriate bacterial promoter–reporter constructs.


Trends in Microbiology | 1997

Bacterial resistance to aminoglycoside antibiotics.

Julian Davies; Gerard D. Wright

The aminoglycoside antibiotics are broad-spectrum antibacterial compounds that are used extensively for the treatment of many bacterial infections. In view of the current concerns over the global rise in antibiotic-resistant microorganisms, there has been renewed interest in the mechanisms of resistance to the aminoglycosides, including the superfamily of aminoglycoside-modifying enzymes.


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 1999

Antibiotic resistance in microbes

Didier Mazel; Julian Davies

Abstract. The treatment of infectious disease is compromised by the development of antibiotic-resistant strains of microbial pathogens. A variety of biochemical processes are involved that may keep antibiotics out of the cell, alter the target of the drug, or disable the antibiotic. Studies have shown that resistance determinants arise by either of two genetic mechanisms: mutation and acquisition. Antibiotic resistance genes can be disseminated among bacterial populations by several processes, but principally by conjugation. Thus the overall problem of antibiotic resistance is one of genetic ecology and a better understanding of the contributing parameters is necessary to devise rational approaches to reduce the development and spread of antibiotic resistance and so avoid a critical situation in therapy—a return to a pre-antibiotic era.

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Grace Yim

University of British Columbia

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Lindsay D. Eltis

University of British Columbia

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Vivian Miao

University of British Columbia

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William W. Mohn

University of British Columbia

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Raoul E. Benveniste

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Barbara Waters

University of British Columbia

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Charles J. Thompson

University of British Columbia

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Ivan Villanueva

University of British Columbia

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