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Dive into the research topics where Malcolm J. Gardner is active.

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Featured researches published by Malcolm J. Gardner.


Nature | 2002

Genome sequence of the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum

Malcolm J. Gardner; Neil Hall; Eula Fung; Owen White; Matthew Berriman; Richard W. Hyman; Jane M. Carlton; Arnab Pain; Karen E. Nelson; Sharen Bowman; Ian T. Paulsen; Keith D. James; Jonathan A. Eisen; Kim Rutherford; Alister Craig; Sue Kyes; Man Suen Chan; Vishvanath Nene; Shamira Shallom; Bernard B. Suh; Jeremy Peterson; Sam Angiuoli; Mihaela Pertea; Jonathan E. Allen; Jeremy D. Selengut; Daniel H. Haft; Michael W. Mather; Akhil B. Vaidya; David M. A. Martin; Alan H. Fairlamb

The parasite Plasmodium falciparum is responsible for hundreds of millions of cases of malaria, and kills more than one million African children annually. Here we report an analysis of the genome sequence of P. falciparum clone 3D7. The 23-megabase nuclear genome consists of 14 chromosomes, encodes about 5,300 genes, and is the most (A + T)-rich genome sequenced to date. Genes involved in antigenic variation are concentrated in the subtelomeric regions of the chromosomes. Compared to the genomes of free-living eukaryotic microbes, the genome of this intracellular parasite encodes fewer enzymes and transporters, but a large proportion of genes are devoted to immune evasion and host–parasite interactions. Many nuclear-encoded proteins are targeted to the apicoplast, an organelle involved in fatty-acid and isoprenoid metabolism. The genome sequence provides the foundation for future studies of this organism, and is being exploited in the search for new drugs and vaccines to fight malaria.


Nature | 2002

A proteomic view of the Plasmodium falciparum life cycle.

Laurence Florens; Michael P. Washburn; J. Dale Raine; Robert M. Anthony; Munira Grainger; J. David Haynes; J. Kathleen Moch; Nemone Muster; John B. Sacci; David L. Tabb; Adam A. Witney; Dirk Wolters; Yimin Wu; Malcolm J. Gardner; Anthony A. Holder; Robert E. Sinden; John R. Yates; Daniel J. Carucci

The completion of the Plasmodium falciparum clone 3D7 genome provides a basis on which to conduct comparative proteomics studies of this human pathogen. Here, we applied a high-throughput proteomics approach to identify new potential drug and vaccine targets and to better understand the biology of this complex protozoan parasite. We characterized four stages of the parasite life cycle (sporozoites, merozoites, trophozoites and gametocytes) by multidimensional protein identification technology. Functional profiling of over 2,400 proteins agreed with the physiology of each stage. Unexpectedly, the antigenically variant proteins of var and rif genes, defined as molecules on the surface of infected erythrocytes, were also largely expressed in sporozoites. The detection of chromosomal clusters encoding co-expressed proteins suggested a potential mechanism for controlling gene expression.


Nature | 2002

Genome sequence and comparative analysis of the model rodent malaria parasite Plasmodium yoelii yoelii

Jane M. Carlton; Samuel V. Angiuoli; Bernard B. Suh; Taco W. A. Kooij; Mihaela Pertea; Joana C. Silva; Maria D. Ermolaeva; Jonathan E. Allen; Jeremy D. Selengut; Hean L. Koo; Jeremy Peterson; Mihai Pop; Daniel S. Kosack; Martin Shumway; Shelby Bidwell; Shamira Shallom; Susan Van Aken; Steven Riedmuller; Tamara Feldblyum; Jennifer Cho; John Quackenbush; Martha Sedegah; Azadeh Shoaibi; Leda M. Cummings; Laurence Florens; John R. Yates; J. Dale Raine; Robert E. Sinden; Michael Harris; Deirdre Cunningham

Species of malaria parasite that infect rodents have long been used as models for malaria disease research. Here we report the whole-genome shotgun sequence of one species, Plasmodium yoelii yoelii, and comparative studies with the genome of the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum clone 3D7. A synteny map of 2,212 P. y. yoelii contiguous DNA sequences (contigs) aligned to 14 P. falciparum chromosomes reveals marked conservation of gene synteny within the body of each chromosome. Of about 5,300 P. falciparum genes, more than 3,300 P. y. yoelii orthologues of predominantly metabolic function were identified. Over 800 copies of a variant antigen gene located in subtelomeric regions were found. This is the first genome sequence of a model eukaryotic parasite, and it provides insight into the use of such systems in the modelling of Plasmodium biology and disease.


Nature | 2008

Comparative genomics of the neglected human malaria parasite Plasmodium vivax.

Jane M. Carlton; John H. Adams; Joana C. Silva; Shelby Bidwell; Hernan Lorenzi; Elisabet Caler; Jonathan Crabtree; Samuel V. Angiuoli; Emilio F. Merino; Paolo Amedeo; Qin Cheng; Richard M. R. Coulson; Brendan S. Crabb; Hernando A. del Portillo; Kobby Essien; Tamara V. Feldblyum; Carmen Fernandez-Becerra; Paul R. Gilson; Amy H. Gueye; Xiang Guo; Simon Kang’a; Taco W. A. Kooij; Michael L. J. Korsinczky; Esmeralda V. S. Meyer; Vish Nene; Ian T. Paulsen; Owen White; Stuart A. Ralph; Qinghu Ren; Tobias Sargeant

The human malaria parasite Plasmodium vivax is responsible for 25–40% of the ∼515 million annual cases of malaria worldwide. Although seldom fatal, the parasite elicits severe and incapacitating clinical symptoms and often causes relapses months after a primary infection has cleared. Despite its importance as a major human pathogen, P. vivax is little studied because it cannot be propagated continuously in the laboratory except in non-human primates. We sequenced the genome of P. vivax to shed light on its distinctive biological features, and as a means to drive development of new drugs and vaccines. Here we describe the synteny and isochore structure of P. vivax chromosomes, and show that the parasite resembles other malaria parasites in gene content and metabolic potential, but possesses novel gene families and potential alternative invasion pathways not recognized previously. Completion of the P. vivax genome provides the scientific community with a valuable resource that can be used to advance investigation into this neglected species.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2010

TriTrypDB: a functional genomic resource for the Trypanosomatidae

Martin Aslett; Cristina Aurrecoechea; Matthew Berriman; John Brestelli; Brian P. Brunk; Mark Carrington; Daniel P. Depledge; Steve Fischer; Bindu Gajria; Xin Gao; Malcolm J. Gardner; Alan R. Gingle; Greg Grant; Omar S. Harb; Mark Heiges; Christiane Hertz-Fowler; Robin Houston; Frank Innamorato; John Iodice; Jessica C. Kissinger; Eileen Kraemer; Wei Li; Flora J. Logan; John A. Miller; Siddhartha Mitra; Peter J. Myler; Vishal Nayak; Cary Pennington; Isabelle Phan; Deborah F. Pinney

TriTrypDB (http://tritrypdb.org) is an integrated database providing access to genome-scale datasets for kinetoplastid parasites, and supporting a variety of complex queries driven by research and development needs. TriTrypDB is a collaborative project, utilizing the GUS/WDK computational infrastructure developed by the Eukaryotic Pathogen Bioinformatics Resource Center (EuPathDB.org) to integrate genome annotation and analyses from GeneDB and elsewhere with a wide variety of functional genomics datasets made available by members of the global research community, often pre-publication. Currently, TriTrypDB integrates datasets from Leishmania braziliensis, L. infantum, L. major, L. tarentolae, Trypanosoma brucei and T. cruzi. Users may examine individual genes or chromosomal spans in their genomic context, including syntenic alignments with other kinetoplastid organisms. Data within TriTrypDB can be interrogated utilizing a sophisticated search strategy system that enables a user to construct complex queries combining multiple data types. All search strategies are stored, allowing future access and integrated searches. ‘User Comments’ may be added to any gene page, enhancing available annotation; such comments become immediately searchable via the text search, and are forwarded to curators for incorporation into the reference annotation when appropriate.


Genome Research | 2009

Comparative genomic analyses of the human fungal pathogens Coccidioides and their relatives.

Thomas J. Sharpton; Jason E. Stajich; Steven D. Rounsley; Malcolm J. Gardner; Jennifer R. Wortman; Vinita S. Jordar; Rama Maiti; Chinnappa D. Kodira; Daniel E. Neafsey; Qiandong Zeng; Chiung Yu Hung; Cody McMahan; Anna Muszewska; Marcin Grynberg; M. Alejandra Mandel; Ellen M. Kellner; Bridget M. Barker; John N. Galgiani; Marc J. Orbach; Theo N. Kirkland; Garry T. Cole; Matthew R. Henn; Bruce W. Birren; John W. Taylor

While most Ascomycetes tend to associate principally with plants, the dimorphic fungi Coccidioides immitis and Coccidioides posadasii are primary pathogens of immunocompetent mammals, including humans. Infection results from environmental exposure to Coccidiodies, which is believed to grow as a soil saprophyte in arid deserts. To investigate hypotheses about the life history and evolution of Coccidioides, the genomes of several Onygenales, including C. immitis and C. posadasii; a close, nonpathogenic relative, Uncinocarpus reesii; and a more diverged pathogenic fungus, Histoplasma capsulatum, were sequenced and compared with those of 13 more distantly related Ascomycetes. This analysis identified increases and decreases in gene family size associated with a host/substrate shift from plants to animals in the Onygenales. In addition, comparison among Onygenales genomes revealed evolutionary changes in Coccidioides that may underlie its infectious phenotype, the identification of which may facilitate improved treatment and prevention of coccidioidomycosis. Overall, the results suggest that Coccidioides species are not soil saprophytes, but that they have evolved to remain associated with their dead animal hosts in soil, and that Coccidioides metabolism genes, membrane-related proteins, and putatively antigenic compounds have evolved in response to interaction with an animal host.


Parasitology | 2004

Theileria : intracellular protozoan parasites of wild and domestic ruminants transmitted by ixodid ticks

Richard P. Bishop; A.J. Musoke; Subhash Morzaria; Malcolm J. Gardner; Vishvanath Nene

Theileria are economically important, intra-cellular protozoa, transmitted by ixodid ticks, which infect wild and domestic ruminants. In the mammalian host, parasites infect leukocytes and erythrocytes. In the arthropod vector they develop in gut epithelial cells and salivary glands. All four intra-cellular stages of Theileria survive free in the cytoplasm. The schizont stages of certain Theileria species induce a unique, cancer-like, phenotype in infected host leukocytes. Theileria undergoes an obligate sexual cycle, involving fusion of gametes in the tick gut, to produce a transiently diploid zygote. The existence of sexual recombination in T. parva has been confirmed in the laboratory, and is presumed to contribute to the extensive polymorphism observed in field isolates. Key parameters in T. parva population dynamics are the relative importance of asymptomatic carrier cattle and animals undergoing severe disease, in transmission of the parasite to ticks, and the extent of transmission by nymphs as compared to adult ticks. Tick populations differ in vector competence for specific T. parva stocks. Recombinant forms of T. parva and T. annulata sporozoite surface antigens induce protection against parasite challenge in cattle. In future, vaccines might be improved by inclusion of tick peptides in multivalent vaccines.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Exploring the transcriptome of the malaria sporozoite stage

Stefan H. I. Kappe; Malcolm J. Gardner; Stuart M. Brown; Jessica Ross; Kai Matuschewski; José M. C. Ribeiro; John H. Adams; John Quackenbush; Jennifer Cho; Daniel J. Carucci; Stephen L. Hoffman; Victor Nussenzweig

Most studies of gene expression in Plasmodium have been concerned with asexual and/or sexual erythrocytic stages. Identification and cloning of genes expressed in the preerythrocytic stages lag far behind. We have constructed a high quality cDNA library of the Plasmodium sporozoite stage by using the rodent malaria parasite P. yoelii, an important model for malaria vaccine development. The technical obstacles associated with limited amounts of RNA material were overcome by PCR-amplifying the transcriptome before cloning. Contamination with mosquito RNA was negligible. Generation of 1,972 expressed sequence tags (EST) resulted in a total of 1,547 unique sequences, allowing insight into sporozoite gene expression. The circumsporozoite protein (CS) and the sporozoite surface protein 2 (SSP2) are well represented in the data set. A blastx search with all tags of the nonredundant protein database gave only 161 unique significant matches (P(N) ≤ 10−4), whereas 1,386 of the unique sequences represented novel sporozoite-expressed genes. We identified ESTs for three proteins that may be involved in host cell invasion and documented their expression in sporozoites. These data should facilitate our understanding of the preerythrocytic Plasmodium life cycle stages and the development of preerythrocytic vaccines.


International Journal for Parasitology | 2002

AvGI, an index of genes transcribed in the salivary glands of the ixodid tick Amblyomma variegatum.

Vishvanath Nene; Dan Lee; John Quackenbush; Robert A. Skilton; Stephen Mwaura; Malcolm J. Gardner; Richard P. Bishop

Random clones from a cDNA library made from mRNA purified from dissected salivary glands of feeding female Amblyomma variegatum ticks were subjected to single pass sequence analysis. A total of 3992 sequences with an average read length of 580 nucleotides have been used to construct a gene index called AvGI that consists of 2109 non-redundant sequences. A provisional gene identity has been assigned to 39% of the database entries by sequence similarity searches against a non-redundant amino acid database and a protein database that has been assigned gene ontology terms. Homologs of genes encoding basic cellular functions including previously characterised enzyme activities, such as stearoyl CoA saturase and protein phosphatase, of ixodid tick salivary glands were found. Several families of abundant cDNA sequences that may code for protein components of tick cement and A. variegatum proteins which may contribute to anti-haemostatic and anti-inflammatory responses, and, one with potential immunosuppressive activity, were also identified. Interference with the function of such proteins might disrupt the life cycle of A. variegatum and help to control this ectoparasite or to reduce its ability to transmit disease causing organisms. AvGI represents an electronic knowledge base, which can be used to launch investigations of the biology of the salivary glands of this tick species. The database may be accessed via the World Wide Web at http://www.tigr.org/tdb/tgi.shtml.


Nature Genetics | 1999

A shotgun optical map of the entire Plasmodium falciparum genome

Zhongwu Lai; Junping Jing; Christopher Aston; Virginia Clarke; Jennifer Apodaca; Eileen T. Dimalanta; Daniel J. Carucci; Malcolm J. Gardner; Bud Mishra; Thomas S. Anantharaman; Salvatore Paxia; Stephen L. Hoffman; J. Craig Venter; Edward J. Huff; David C. Schwartz

The unicellular parasite Plasmodium falciparum is the cause of human malaria, resulting in 1.7–2.5 million deaths each year. To develop new means to treat or prevent malaria, the Malaria Genome Consortium was formed to sequence and annotate the entire 24.6-Mb genome. The plan, already underway, is to sequence libraries created from chromosomal DNA separated by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE). The AT-rich genome of P. falciparum presents problems in terms of reliable library construction and the relative paucity of dense physical markers or extensive genetic resources. To deal with these problems, we reasoned that a high-resolution, ordered restriction map covering the entire genome could serve as a scaffold for the alignment and verification of sequence contigs developed by members of the consortium. Thus optical mapping was advanced to use simply extracted, unfractionated genomic DNA as its principal substrate. Ordered restriction maps (BamHI and NheI) derived from single molecules were assembled into 14 deep contigs corresponding to the molecular karyotype determined by PFGE (ref. 3).

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Richard P. Bishop

International Livestock Research Institute

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Daniel J. Carucci

Naval Medical Research Center

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Vishvanath Nene

International Livestock Research Institute

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Ruobing Wang

Naval Medical Research Center

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