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Dive into the research topics where Marcin P. Joachimiak is active.

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Featured researches published by Marcin P. Joachimiak.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2010

MicrobesOnline: an integrated portal for comparative and functional genomics

Paramvir Dehal; Marcin P. Joachimiak; Morgan N. Price; John T. Bates; Jason K. Baumohl; Dylan Chivian; Greg D. Friedland; Katherine H. Huang; Keith Keller; Pavel S. Novichkov; Inna Dubchak; Eric Alm; Adam P. Arkin

Since 2003, MicrobesOnline (http://www.microbesonline.org) has been providing a community resource for comparative and functional genome analysis. The portal includes over 1000 complete genomes of bacteria, archaea and fungi and thousands of expression microarrays from diverse organisms ranging from model organisms such as Escherichia coli and Saccharomyces cerevisiae to environmental microbes such as Desulfovibrio vulgaris and Shewanella oneidensis. To assist in annotating genes and in reconstructing their evolutionary history, MicrobesOnline includes a comparative genome browser based on phylogenetic trees for every gene family as well as a species tree. To identify co-regulated genes, MicrobesOnline can search for genes based on their expression profile, and provides tools for identifying regulatory motifs and seeing if they are conserved. MicrobesOnline also includes fast phylogenetic profile searches, comparative views of metabolic pathways, operon predictions, a workbench for sequence analysis and integration with RegTransBase and other microbial genome resources. The next update of MicrobesOnline will contain significant new functionality, including comparative analysis of metagenomic sequence data. Programmatic access to the database, along with source code and documentation, is available at http://microbesonline.org/programmers.html.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2007

Cell-Wide Responses to Low-Oxygen Exposure in Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough

Aindrila Mukhopadhyay; Alyssa M. Redding; Marcin P. Joachimiak; Adam P. Arkin; Sharon E. Borglin; Paramvir Dehal; Romy Chakraborty; Jil T. Geller; Terry C. Hazen; Qiang He; Dominique Joyner; Vincent J.J. Martin; Judy D. Wall; Zamin Koo Yang; Jizhong Zhou; Jay D. Keasling

The responses of the anaerobic, sulfate-reducing organism Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough to low-oxygen exposure (0.1% O(2)) were monitored via transcriptomics and proteomics. Exposure to 0.1% O(2) caused a decrease in the growth rate without affecting viability. Concerted upregulation of the predicted peroxide stress response regulon (PerR) genes was observed in response to the 0.1% O(2) exposure. Several of the candidates also showed increases in protein abundance. Among the remaining small number of transcript changes was the upregulation of the predicted transmembrane tetraheme cytochrome c(3) complex. Other known oxidative stress response candidates remained unchanged during the low-O(2) exposure. To fully understand the results of the 0.1% O(2) exposure, transcriptomics and proteomics data were collected for exposure to air using a similar experimental protocol. In contrast to the 0.1% O(2) exposure, air exposure was detrimental to both the growth rate and viability and caused dramatic changes at both the transcriptome and proteome levels. Interestingly, the transcripts of the predicted PerR regulon genes were downregulated during air exposure. Our results highlight the differences in the cell-wide responses to low and high O(2) levels in D. vulgaris and suggest that while exposure to air is highly detrimental to D. vulgaris, this bacterium can successfully cope with periodic exposure to low O(2) levels in its environment.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2007

Response of Desulfovibrio vulgaris to Alkaline Stress

Sergey Stolyar; Qiang He; Marcin P. Joachimiak; Zhili He; Zamin Koo Yang; Sharon E. Borglin; Dominique Joyner; Katherine H. Huang; Eric J. Alm; Terry C. Hazen; Jizhong Zhou; Judy D. Wall; Adam P. Arkin; David A. Stahl

The response of exponentially growing Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough to pH 10 stress was studied using oligonucleotide microarrays and a study set of mutants with genes suggested by microarray data to be involved in the alkaline stress response deleted. The data showed that the response of D. vulgaris to increased pH is generally similar to that of Escherichia coli but is apparently controlled by unique regulatory circuits since the alternative sigma factors (sigma S and sigma E) contributing to this stress response in E. coli appear to be absent in D. vulgaris. Genes previously reported to be up-regulated in E. coli were up-regulated in D. vulgaris; these genes included three ATPase genes and a tryptophan synthase gene. Transcription of chaperone and protease genes (encoding ATP-dependent Clp and La proteases and DnaK) was also elevated in D. vulgaris. As in E. coli, genes involved in flagellum synthesis were down-regulated. The transcriptional data also identified regulators, distinct from sigma S and sigma E, that are likely part of a D. vulgaris Hildenborough-specific stress response system. Characterization of a study set of mutants with genes implicated in alkaline stress response deleted confirmed that there was protective involvement of the sodium/proton antiporter NhaC-2, tryptophanase A, and two putative regulators/histidine kinases (DVU0331 and DVU2580).


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2010

Global Transcriptional, Physiological, and Metabolite Analyses of the Responses of Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough to Salt Adaptation

Zhili He; Aifen Zhou; Edward E. K. Baidoo; Qiang He; Marcin P. Joachimiak; Peter I. Benke; Richard Phan; Aindrila Mukhopadhyay; Christopher L. Hemme; Katherine H. Huang; Eric J. Alm; Matthew W. Fields; Judy D. Wall; David A. Stahl; Terry C. Hazen; Jay D. Keasling; Adam P. Arkin; Jizhong Zhou

ABSTRACT The response of Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough to salt adaptation (long-term NaCl exposure) was examined by performing physiological, global transcriptional, and metabolite analyses. Salt adaptation was reflected by increased expression of genes involved in amino acid biosynthesis and transport, electron transfer, hydrogen oxidation, and general stress responses (e.g., heat shock proteins, phage shock proteins, and oxidative stress response proteins). The expression of genes involved in carbon metabolism, cell growth, and phage structures was decreased. Transcriptome profiles of D. vulgaris responses to salt adaptation were compared with transcriptome profiles of D. vulgaris responses to salt shock (short-term NaCl exposure). Metabolite assays showed that glutamate and alanine accumulated under salt adaptation conditions, suggesting that these amino acids may be used as osmoprotectants in D. vulgaris. Addition of amino acids (glutamate, alanine, and tryptophan) or yeast extract to the growth medium relieved salt-related growth inhibition. A conceptual model that links the observed results to currently available knowledge is proposed to increase our understanding of the mechanisms of D. vulgaris adaptation to elevated NaCl levels.


The ISME Journal | 2010

Impact of elevated nitrate on sulfate-reducing bacteria: a comparative study of Desulfovibrio vulgaris.

Qiang He; Zhili He; Dominique Joyner; Marcin P. Joachimiak; Morgan N. Price; Zamin K. Yang; Huei-Che Bill Yen; Christopher L. Hemme; Wenqiong Chen; Matthew M Fields; David Stahl; Jay D. Keasling; Martin Keller; Adam P. Arkin; Terry C. Hazen; Judy D. Wall; J. Zhou

Sulfate-reducing bacteria have been extensively studied for their potential in heavy-metal bioremediation. However, the occurrence of elevated nitrate in contaminated environments has been shown to inhibit sulfate reduction activity. Although the inhibition has been suggested to result from the competition with nitrate-reducing bacteria, the possibility of direct inhibition of sulfate reducers by elevated nitrate needs to be explored. Using Desulfovibrio vulgaris as a model sulfate-reducing bacterium, functional genomics analysis reveals that osmotic stress contributed to growth inhibition by nitrate as shown by the upregulation of the glycine/betaine transporter genes and the relief of nitrate inhibition by osmoprotectants. The observation that significant growth inhibition was effected by 70 mM NaNO3 but not by 70 mM NaCl suggests the presence of inhibitory mechanisms in addition to osmotic stress. The differential expression of genes characteristic of nitrite stress responses, such as the hybrid cluster protein gene, under nitrate stress condition further indicates that nitrate stress response by D. vulgaris was linked to components of both osmotic and nitrite stress responses. The involvement of the oxidative stress response pathway, however, might be the result of a more general stress response. Given the low similarities between the response profiles to nitrate and other stresses, less-defined stress response pathways could also be important in nitrate stress, which might involve the shift in energy metabolism. The involvement of nitrite stress response upon exposure to nitrate may provide detoxification mechanisms for nitrite, which is inhibitory to sulfate-reducing bacteria, produced by microbial nitrate reduction as a metabolic intermediate and may enhance the survival of sulfate-reducing bacteria in environments with elevated nitrate level.


The ISME Journal | 2012

Functional responses of methanogenic archaea to syntrophic growth

Christopher B. Walker; Alyssa M. Redding-Johanson; Edward E. K. Baidoo; Lara Rajeev; Zhili He; Erik L. Hendrickson; Marcin P. Joachimiak; Sergey Stolyar; Adam P. Arkin; John A. Leigh; Jizhong Zhou; Jay D. Keasling; Aindrila Mukhopadhyay; David A. Stahl

Methanococcus maripaludis grown syntrophically with Desulfovibrio vulgaris was compared with M. maripaludis monocultures grown under hydrogen limitation using transcriptional, proteomic and metabolite analyses. These measurements indicate a decrease in transcript abundance for energy-consuming biosynthetic functions in syntrophically grown M. maripaludis, with an increase in transcript abundance for genes involved in the energy-generating central pathway for methanogenesis. Compared with growth in monoculture under hydrogen limitation, the response of paralogous genes, such as those coding for hydrogenases, often diverged, with transcripts of one variant increasing in relative abundance, whereas the other was little changed or significantly decreased in abundance. A common theme was an apparent increase in transcripts for functions using H2 directly as reductant, versus those using the reduced deazaflavin (coenzyme F420). The greater importance of direct reduction by H2 was supported by improved syntrophic growth of a deletion mutant in an F420-dependent dehydrogenase of M. maripaludis. These data suggest that paralogous genes enable the methanogen to adapt to changing substrate availability, sustaining it under environmental conditions that are often near the thermodynamic threshold for growth. Additionally, the discovery of interspecies alanine transfer adds another metabolic dimension to this environmentally relevant mutualism.


Current Opinion in Biotechnology | 2012

Application of phenotypic microarrays to environmental microbiology

Sharon E. Borglin; Dominique Joyner; Kristen M. DeAngelis; Jane Khudyakov; Patrik D’haeseleer; Marcin P. Joachimiak; Terry C. Hazen

Environmental organisms are extremely diverse and only a small fraction has been successfully cultured in the laboratory. Culture in micro wells provides a method for rapid screening of a wide variety of growth conditions and commercially available plates contain a large number of substrates, nutrient sources, and inhibitors, which can provide an assessment of the phenotype of an organism. This review describes applications of phenotype arrays to anaerobic and thermophilic microorganisms, use of the plates in stress response studies, in development of culture media for newly discovered strains, and for assessment of phenotype of environmental communities. Also discussed are considerations and challenges in data interpretation and visualization, including data normalization, statistics, and curve fitting.


BMC Genomics | 2012

Transcriptomic and proteomic analyses of Desulfovibrio vulgaris biofilms: Carbon and energy flow contribute to the distinct biofilm growth state

M.E. Clark; Zhili He; Alyssa M. Redding; Marcin P. Joachimiak; Jay D. Keasling; Jizhong Zhou; Adam P. Arkin; Aindrila Mukhopadhyay; Matthew W. Fields

BackgroundDesulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough is a sulfate-reducing bacterium (SRB) that is intensively studied in the context of metal corrosion and heavy-metal bioremediation, and SRB populations are commonly observed in pipe and subsurface environments as surface-associated populations. In order to elucidate physiological changes associated with biofilm growth at both the transcript and protein level, transcriptomic and proteomic analyses were done on mature biofilm cells and compared to both batch and reactor planktonic populations. The biofilms were cultivated with lactate and sulfate in a continuously fed biofilm reactor, and compared to both batch and reactor planktonic populations.ResultsThe functional genomic analysis demonstrated that biofilm cells were different compared to planktonic cells, and the majority of altered abundances for genes and proteins were annotated as hypothetical (unknown function), energy conservation, amino acid metabolism, and signal transduction. Genes and proteins that showed similar trends in detected levels were particularly involved in energy conservation such as increases in an annotated ech hydrogenase, formate dehydrogenase, pyruvate:ferredoxin oxidoreductase, and rnf oxidoreductase, and the biofilm cells had elevated formate dehydrogenase activity. Several other hydrogenases and formate dehydrogenases also showed an increased protein level, while decreased transcript and protein levels were observed for putative coo hydrogenase as well as a lactate permease and hyp hydrogenases for biofilm cells. Genes annotated for amino acid synthesis and nitrogen utilization were also predominant changers within the biofilm state. Ribosomal transcripts and proteins were notably decreased within the biofilm cells compared to exponential-phase cells but were not as low as levels observed in planktonic, stationary-phase cells. Several putative, extracellular proteins (DVU1012, 1545) were also detected in the extracellular fraction from biofilm cells.ConclusionsEven though both the planktonic and biofilm cells were oxidizing lactate and reducing sulfate, the biofilm cells were physiologically distinct compared to planktonic growth states due to altered abundances of genes/proteins involved in carbon/energy flow and extracellular structures. In addition, average expression values for multiple rRNA transcripts and respiratory activity measurements indicated that biofilm cells were metabolically more similar to exponential-phase cells although biofilm cells are structured differently. The characterization of physiological advantages and constraints of the biofilm growth state for sulfate-reducing bacteria will provide insight into bioremediation applications as well as microbially-induced metal corrosion.


BMC Genomics | 2009

Snapshot of iron response in Shewanella oneidensis by gene network reconstruction

Yunfeng Yang; Daniel P Harris; Feng Luo; Wenlu Xiong; Marcin P. Joachimiak; Liyou Wu; Paramvir Dehal; J. Jacobsen; Zamin Yang; Anthony V. Palumbo; Adam P. Arkin; Jizhong Zhou

BackgroundIron homeostasis of Shewanella oneidensis, a γ-proteobacterium possessing high iron content, is regulated by a global transcription factor Fur. However, knowledge is incomplete about other biological pathways that respond to changes in iron concentration, as well as details of the responses. In this work, we integrate physiological, transcriptomics and genetic approaches to delineate the iron response of S. oneidensis.ResultsWe show that the iron response in S. oneidensis is a rapid process. Temporal gene expression profiles were examined for iron depletion and repletion, and a gene co-expression network was reconstructed. Modules of iron acquisition systems, anaerobic energy metabolism and protein degradation were the most noteworthy in the gene network. Bioinformatics analyses suggested that genes in each of the modules might be regulated by DNA-binding proteins Fur, CRP and RpoH, respectively. Closer inspection of these modules revealed a transcriptional regulator (SO2426) involved in iron acquisition and ten transcriptional factors involved in anaerobic energy metabolism. Selected genes in the network were analyzed by genetic studies. Disruption of genes encoding a putative alcaligin biosynthesis protein (SO3032) and a gene previously implicated in protein degradation (SO2017) led to severe growth deficiency under iron depletion conditions. Disruption of a novel transcriptional factor (SO1415) caused deficiency in both anaerobic iron reduction and growth with thiosulfate or TMAO as an electronic acceptor, suggesting that SO1415 is required for specific branches of anaerobic energy metabolism pathways.ConclusionUsing a reconstructed gene network, we identified major biological pathways that were differentially expressed during iron depletion and repletion. Genetic studies not only demonstrated the importance of iron acquisition and protein degradation for iron depletion, but also characterized a novel transcriptional factor (SO1415) with a role in anaerobic energy metabolism.


bioRxiv | 2016

The DOE Systems Biology Knowledgebase (KBase)

Adam P. Arkin; Rick Stevens; Robert W. Cottingham; Sergei Maslov; Christopher S. Henry; Paramvir Dehal; Doreen Ware; Fernando Perez; Nomi L. Harris; Shane Canon; Michael W Sneddon; Matthew L Henderson; William J Riehl; Dan Gunter; Dan Murphy-Olson; Stephen Chan; Roy T Kamimura; Thomas S Brettin; Folker Meyer; Dylan Chivian; David J. Weston; Elizabeth M. Glass; Brian H. Davison; Sunita Kumari; Benjamin H Allen; Jason K. Baumohl; Aaron A. Best; Ben Bowen; Steven E. Brenner; Christopher C Bun

The U.S. Department of Energy Systems Biology Knowledgebase (KBase) is an open-source software and data platform designed to meet the grand challenge of systems biology — predicting and designing biological function from the biomolecular (small scale) to the ecological (large scale). KBase is available for anyone to use, and enables researchers to collaboratively generate, test, compare, and share hypotheses about biological functions; perform large-scale analyses on scalable computing infrastructure; and combine experimental evidence and conclusions that lead to accurate models of plant and microbial physiology and community dynamics. The KBase platform has (1) extensible analytical capabilities that currently include genome assembly, annotation, ontology assignment, comparative genomics, transcriptomics, and metabolic modeling; (2) a web-browser-based user interface that supports building, sharing, and publishing reproducible and well-annotated analyses with integrated data; (3) access to extensive computational resources; and (4) a software development kit allowing the community to add functionality to the system.

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Adam P. Arkin

Sanford-Burnham Institute for Medical Research

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Judy D. Wall

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Zhili He

University of Oklahoma

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Aindrila Mukhopadhyay

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Aifen Zhou

University of Oklahoma

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Paramvir Dehal

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Jay D. Keasling

California Institute for Quantitative Biosciences

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Dominique Joyner

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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