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Dive into the research topics where Karl Nordström is active.

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Featured researches published by Karl Nordström.


Nature Genetics | 2012

Lifestyle transitions in plant pathogenic Colletotrichum fungi deciphered by genome and transcriptome analyses

Richard O'Connell; Michael R. Thon; Stéphane Hacquard; Stefan G. Amyotte; Jochen Kleemann; Maria F. Torres; Ulrike Damm; Ester Buiate; Lynn Epstein; Noam Alkan; Janine Altmüller; Lucia Alvarado-Balderrama; Christopher Bauser; Christian Becker; Bruce W. Birren; Zehua Chen; Jae Young Choi; Jo Anne Crouch; Jonathan P. Duvick; Mark A. Farman; Pamela Gan; David I. Heiman; Bernard Henrissat; Richard J. Howard; Mehdi Kabbage; Christian Koch; Barbara Kracher; Yasuyuki Kubo; Audrey D. Law; Marc-Henri Lebrun

Colletotrichum species are fungal pathogens that devastate crop plants worldwide. Host infection involves the differentiation of specialized cell types that are associated with penetration, growth inside living host cells (biotrophy) and tissue destruction (necrotrophy). We report here genome and transcriptome analyses of Colletotrichum higginsianum infecting Arabidopsis thaliana and Colletotrichum graminicola infecting maize. Comparative genomics showed that both fungi have large sets of pathogenicity-related genes, but families of genes encoding secreted effectors, pectin-degrading enzymes, secondary metabolism enzymes, transporters and peptidases are expanded in C. higginsianum. Genome-wide expression profiling revealed that these genes are transcribed in successive waves that are linked to pathogenic transitions: effectors and secondary metabolism enzymes are induced before penetration and during biotrophy, whereas most hydrolases and transporters are upregulated later, at the switch to necrotrophy. Our findings show that preinvasion perception of plant-derived signals substantially reprograms fungal gene expression and indicate previously unknown functions for particular fungal cell types.


The Plant Cell | 2012

Analysis of the Arabidopsis Shoot Meristem Transcriptome during Floral Transition Identifies Distinct Regulatory Patterns and a Leucine-Rich Repeat Protein That Promotes Flowering

Stefano Torti; Fabio Fornara; Coral Vincent; Fernando Andrés; Karl Nordström; Ulrike Göbel; Daniela Knoll; Heiko Schoof; George Coupland

Laser microdissection combined with Solexa sequencing of cDNA was used to analyze the transcriptome of the shoot meristem during the floral transition. Activated genes were placed in pathways downstream or parallel to the inductive signal encoded by FLOWERING LOCUS T. Flowering of Arabidopsis thaliana is induced by exposure to long days (LDs). During this process, the shoot apical meristem is converted to an inflorescence meristem that forms flowers, and this transition is maintained even if plants are returned to short days (SDs). We show that exposure to five LDs is sufficient to commit the meristem of SD-grown plants to flower as if they were exposed to continuous LDs. The MADS box proteins SUPPRESSOR OF OVEREXPRESSION OF CONSTANS1 (SOC1) and FRUITFULL (FUL) play essential roles in this commitment process and in the induction of flowering downstream of the transmissible FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT) signal. We exploited laser microdissection and Solexa sequencing to identify 202 genes whose transcripts increase in the meristem during floral commitment. Expression of six of these transcripts was tested in different mutants, allowing them to be assigned to FT-dependent or FT-independent pathways. Most, but not all, of those dependent on FT and its paralog TWIN SISTER OF FT (TSF) also relied on SOC1 and FUL. However, this dependency on FT and TSF or SOC1 and FUL was often bypassed in the presence of the short vegetative phase mutation. FLOR1, which encodes a leucine-rich repeat protein, was induced in the early inflorescence meristem, and flor1 mutations delayed flowering. Our data contribute to the definition of LD-dependent pathways downstream and in parallel to FT.


Science | 2013

Mechanisms of Age-Dependent Response to Winter Temperature in Perennial Flowering of Arabis alpina

Sara Bergonzi; Maria C. Albani; Emiel Ver Loren van Themaat; Karl Nordström; Renhou Wang; Korbinian Schneeberger; Perry D. Moerland; George Coupland

Multiple Inputs to Flowering Perennial plants need to cycle through an extended vegetative phase, in a process known as vernalization, before they initiate flowering. Bergonzi et al. (p. 1094) and Zhou et al. (p. 1097) studied how molecular signals translate environmental information—such as exposure to a winter season or changes in daylength and physiological information, such as age of the plant—into signals that promote flowering. In both Arabis alpina and Cardamine flexuosa, age and vernalization pathways are integrated through the regulation of microRNAs miR156 and miR172. MicroRNAs regulate perennial flowering. Perennial plants live for more than 1 year and flower only after an extended vegetative phase. We used Arabis alpina, a perennial relative of annual Arabidopsis thaliana, to study how increasing age and exposure to winter cold (vernalization) coordinate to establish competence to flower. We show that the APETALA2 transcription factor, a target of microRNA miR172, prevents flowering before vernalization. Additionally, miR156 levels decline as A. alpina ages, causing increased production of SPL (SQUAMOSA PROMOTER BINDING PROTEIN LIKE) transcription factors and ensuring that flowering occurs in response to cold. The age at which plants respond to vernalization can be altered by manipulating miR156 levels. Although miR156 and miR172 levels are uncoupled in A. alpina, miR156 abundance represents the timer controlling age-dependent flowering responses to cold.


Nature Biotechnology | 2013

Mutation identification by direct comparison of whole-genome sequencing data from mutant and wild-type individuals using k -mers

Karl Nordström; Maria C. Albani; Geo Velikkakam James; Caroline Gutjahr; Benjamin Hartwig; Franziska Turck; Uta Paszkowski; George Coupland; Korbinian Schneeberger

Genes underlying mutant phenotypes can be isolated by combining marker discovery, genetic mapping and resequencing, but a more straightforward strategy for mapping mutations would be the direct comparison of mutant and wild-type genomes. Applying such an approach, however, is hampered by the need for reference sequences and by mutational loads that confound the unambiguous identification of causal mutations. Here we introduce NIKS (needle in the k-stack), a reference-free algorithm based on comparing k-mers in whole-genome sequencing data for precise discovery of homozygous mutations. We applied NIKS to eight mutants induced in nonreference rice cultivars and to two mutants of the nonmodel species Arabis alpina. In both species, comparing pooled F2 individuals selected for mutant phenotypes revealed small sets of mutations including the causal changes. Moreover, comparing M3 seedlings of two allelic mutants unambiguously identified the causal gene. Thus, for any species amenable to mutagenesis, NIKS enables forward genetics without requiring segregating populations, genetic maps and reference sequences.


Nature plants | 2015

Genome expansion of Arabis alpina linked with retrotransposition and reduced symmetric DNA methylation

Eva Maria Willing; Vimal Rawat; Terezie Mandáková; Florian Maumus; Geo Velikkakam James; Karl Nordström; Claude Becker; Norman Warthmann; Claudia Chica; Bogna Szarzynska; Matthias Zytnicki; Maria C. Albani; Christiane Kiefer; Sara Bergonzi; Loren Castaings; Julieta L. Mateos; Markus C. Berns; Nora Bujdoso; Thomas Piofczyk; Laura de Lorenzo; Cristina Barrero-Sicilia; Isabel Mateos; Mathieu Piednoël; Jörg Hagmann; Romy Chen-Min-Tao; Raquel Iglesias-Fernández; Stephan C. Schuster; Carlos Alonso-Blanco; François Roudier; Pilar Carbonero

Despite evolutionary conserved mechanisms to silence transposable element activity, there are drastic differences in the abundance of transposable elements even among closely related plant species. We conducted a de novo assembly for the 375u2005Mb genome of the perennial model plant, Arabis alpina. Analysing this genome revealed long-lasting and recent transposable element activity predominately driven by Gypsy long terminal repeat retrotransposons, which extended the low-recombining pericentromeres and transformed large formerly euchromatic regions into repeat-rich pericentromeric regions. This reduced capacity for long terminal repeat retrotransposon silencing and removal in A. alpina co-occurs with unexpectedly low levels of DNA methylation. Most remarkably, the striking reduction of symmetrical CG and CHG methylation suggests weakened DNA methylation maintenance in A. alpina compared with Arabidopsis thaliana. Phylogenetic analyses indicate a highly dynamic evolution of some components of methylation maintenance machinery that might be related to the unique methylation in A. alpina.


Genome Biology | 2013

User guide for mapping-by-sequencing in Arabidopsis

Geo Velikkakam James; Vipul Patel; Karl Nordström; Jonas R. Klasen; Patrice A. Salomé; Detlef Weigel; Korbinian Schneeberger

Mapping-by-sequencing combines genetic mapping with whole-genome sequencing in order to accelerate mutant identification. However, application of mapping-by-sequencing requires decisions on various practical settings on the experimental design that are not intuitively answered. Following an experimentally determined recombination landscape of Arabidopsis and next generation sequencing-specific biases, we simulated more than 400,000 mapping-by-sequencing experiments. This allowed us to evaluate a broad range of different types of experiments and to develop general rules for mapping-by-sequencing in Arabidopsis. Most importantly, this informs about the properties of different crossing scenarios, the number of recombinants and sequencing depth needed for successful mapping experiments.


Plant Journal | 2012

Synteny‐based mapping‐by‐sequencing enabled by targeted enrichment

Vinicius Costa Galvão; Karl Nordström; Christa Lanz; Patric Sulz; Johannes Mathieu; David Posé; Markus Schmid; Detlef Weigel; Korbinian Schneeberger

Mapping-by-sequencing, as implemented in SHOREmap (SHOREmapping), is greatly accelerating the identification of causal mutations. The original SHOREmap approach based on resequencing of bulked segregants required a highly accurate and complete reference sequence. However, current whole-genome or transcriptome assemblies from next-generation sequencing data of non-model organisms do not produce chromosome-length scaffolds. We have therefore developed a method that exploits synteny with a related genome for genetic mapping. We first demonstrate how mapping-by-sequencing can be performed using a reduced number of markers, and how the associated decrease in the number of markers can be compensated for by enrichment of marker sequences. As proof of concept, we apply this method to Arabidopsis thaliana gene models ordered by synteny with the genome sequence of the distant relative Brassica rapa, whose genome has several large-scale rearrangements relative to A.xa0thaliana. Our approach provides an alternative method for high-resolution genetic mapping in species that lack finished genome reference sequences or for which only RNA-seq assemblies are available. Finally, for improved identification of causal mutations by fine-mapping, we introduce a new likelihood ratio test statistic, transforming local allele frequency estimations into a confidence interval similar to conventional mapping intervals.


Plant Journal | 2014

Elevated salicylic acid levels conferred by increased expression of ISOCHORISMATE SYNTHASE 1 contribute to hyperaccumulation of SUMO1 conjugates in the Arabidopsis mutant early in short days 4

Mitzi Villajuana-Bonequi; Nabil Elrouby; Karl Nordström; Thomas Griebel; Andreas Bachmair; George Coupland

Post-translational modification of proteins by attachment of small ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO) is essential for plant growth and development. Mutations in the SUMO protease early in short days 4 (ESD4) cause hyperaccumulation of conjugates formed between SUMO and its substrates, and phenotypically are associated with extreme early flowering and impaired growth. We performed a suppressor mutagenesis screen of esd4 and identified a series of mutants called suppressor of esd4 (sed), which delay flowering, enhance growth and reduce hyperaccumulation of SUMO conjugates. Genetic mapping and genome sequencing indicated that one of these mutations (sed111) is in the gene salicylic acid induction-deficient 2 (SID2), which encodes ISOCHORISMATE SYNTHASE I, an enzyme required for biosynthesis of salicylic acid (SA). Analyses showed that compared with wild-type plants, esd4 contains higher levels of SID2 mRNA and about threefold more SA, whereas sed111 contains lower SA levels. Other sed mutants also contain lower SA levels but are not mutant for SID2, although most reduce SID2 mRNA levels. Therefore, higher SA levels contribute to the small size, early flowering and elevated SUMO conjugate levels of esd4. Our results support previous data indicating that SUMO homeostasis influences SA biosynthesis in wild-type plants, and also demonstrate that elevated levels of SA strongly increase the abundance of SUMO conjugates.


The Plant Cell | 2014

Evening Expression of Arabidopsis GIGANTEA Is Controlled by Combinatorial Interactions among Evolutionarily Conserved Regulatory Motifs

Markus C. Berns; Karl Nordström; Frédéric Cremer; Réka Tóth; Martin Hartke; Samson Simon; Jonas R. Klasen; Ingmar Bürstel; George Coupland

Integration of environmental cues and circadian clock control confers daily rhythms in gene expression. GIGANTEA regulates flowering as well as stress responses, and its transcription peaks in the evening. In this work, evolutionary comparisons, whole-genome data, and dissection of promoters were used to define combinations of motifs that confer evening expression and light induction of GIGANTEA. Diurnal patterns of gene transcription are often conferred by complex interactions between circadian clock control and acute responses to environmental cues. Arabidopsis thaliana GIGANTEA (GI) contributes to photoperiodic flowering, circadian clock control, and photoreceptor signaling, and its transcription is regulated by the circadian clock and light. We used phylogenetic shadowing to identify three evolutionarily constrained regions (conserved regulatory modules [CRMs]) within the GI promoter and show that CRM2 is sufficient to confer a similar transcriptional pattern as the full-length promoter. Dissection of CRM2 showed that one subfragment (CRM2-A) contributes light inducibility, while another (CRM2-B) exhibits a diurnal response. Mutational analysis showed that three ABA RESPONSE ELEMENT LIKE (ABREL) motifs in CRM2-A and three EVENING ELEMENTs (EEs) in CRM2-B are essential in combination to confer a high amplitude diurnal pattern of expression. Genome-wide analysis identified characteristic spacing patterns of EEs and 71 A. thaliana promoters containing three EEs. Among these promoters, that of FLAVIN BINDING KELCH REPEAT F-BOX1 was analyzed in detail and shown to harbor a CRM functionally related to GI CRM2. Thus, combinatorial interactions among EEs and ABRELs confer diurnal patterns of transcription via an evolutionarily conserved module present in GI and other evening-expressed genes.


Archive | 2016

MOESM11 of Epigenetic dynamics of monocyte-to-macrophage differentiation

Stefan Wallner; Christopher Schröder; Elsa Leitão; Tea Berulava; Claudia Haak; Daniela Beißer; Sven Rahmann; Andreas S. Richter; Thomas Manke; Ulrike Bönisch; Laura Arrigoni; Sebastian Fröhler; Filippos Klironomos; Wei Chen; Nikolaus Rajewsky; Fabian Müller; Peter Ebert; Thomas Lengauer; Matthias Barann; Philip Rosenstiel; Gilles Gasparoni; Karl Nordström; Jörn Walter; Benedikt Brors; Gideon Zipprich; Bärbel Felder; Ludger Klein-Hitpass; Corinna Attenberger; Gerd Schmitz; Bernhard Horsthemke

Additional file 11: Table S5. Overview over the donors and sample nomenclature used in the analyses presented in the manuscript.

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