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Dive into the research topics where Mark Karavis is active.

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Featured researches published by Mark Karavis.


Infection, Genetics and Evolution | 2015

Genomic sequences of six botulinum neurotoxin-producing strains representing three clostridial species illustrate the mobility and diversity of botulinum neurotoxin genes

Theresa J. Smith; Karen K. Hill; Gary Xie; Brian T. Foley; Charles H. D. Williamson; Jeffrey T. Foster; Shannon L. Johnson; Olga Chertkov; Hazuki Teshima; Henry S. Gibbons; Lauren A. Johnsky; Mark Karavis; Leonard A. Smith

The whole genomes for six botulinum neurotoxin-producing clostridial strains were sequenced to provide references for under-represented toxin types, bivalent strains or unusual toxin complexes associated with a bont gene. The strains include three Clostridium botulinum Group I strains (CDC 297, CDC 1436, and Prevot 594), a Group II C. botulinum strain (Eklund 202F), a Group IV Clostridium argentinense strain (CDC 2741), and a Group V Clostridium baratii strain (Sullivan). Comparisons of the Group I genomic sequences revealed close relationships and conservation of toxin gene locations with previously published Group I C. botulinum genomes. The bont/F6 gene of strain Eklund 202F was determined to be a chimeric toxin gene composed of bont/F1 and bont/F2. The serotype G strain CDC 2741 remained unfinished in 20 contigs with the bont/G located within a 1.15Mb contig, indicating a possible chromosomal location for this toxin gene. Within the genome of C. baratii Sullivan strain, direct repeats of IS1182 insertion sequence (IS) elements were identified flanking the bont/F7 toxin complex that may be the mechanism of bont insertion into C. baratii. Highlights of the six strains are described and release of their genomic sequences will allow further study of unusual neurotoxin-producing clostridial strains.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Genomic Signatures of Strain Selection and Enhancement in Bacillus atrophaeus var. globigii ,a Historical Biowarfare Simulant

Henry S. Gibbons; S. M. Broomall; Lauren McNew; Hajnalka E. Daligault; Carol Chapman; David Bruce; Mark Karavis; Michael Krepps; Paul McGregor; Charles Hong; Kyong H. Park; Arya Akmal; Andrew B. Feldman; Jeffrey S. Lin; Wenling E. Chang; Brandon W. Higgs; Plamen A. Demirev; John Lindquist; Alvin T. Liem; Ed Fochler; Timothy D. Read; Roxanne Tapia; Shannon L. Johnson; Kimberly A. Bishop-Lilly; Chris Detter; Cliff Han; Shanmuga Sozhamannan; C. Nicole Rosenzweig; Evan W. Skowronski

Background Despite the decades-long use of Bacillus atrophaeus var. globigii (BG) as a simulant for biological warfare (BW) agents, knowledge of its genome composition is limited. Furthermore, the ability to differentiate signatures of deliberate adaptation and selection from natural variation is lacking for most bacterial agents. We characterized a lineage of BGwith a long history of use as a simulant for BW operations, focusing on classical bacteriological markers, metabolic profiling and whole-genome shotgun sequencing (WGS). Results Archival strains and two “present day” type strains were compared to simulant strains on different laboratory media. Several of the samples produced multiple colony morphotypes that differed from that of an archival isolate. To trace the microevolutionary history of these isolates, we obtained WGS data for several archival and present-day strains and morphotypes. Bacillus-wide phylogenetic analysis identified B. subtilis as the nearest neighbor to B. atrophaeus. The genome of B. atrophaeus is, on average, 86% identical to B. subtilis on the nucleotide level. WGS of variants revealed that several strains were mixed but highly related populations and uncovered a progressive accumulation of mutations among the “military” isolates. Metabolic profiling and microscopic examination of bacterial cultures revealed enhanced growth of “military” isolates on lactate-containing media, and showed that the “military” strains exhibited a hypersporulating phenotype. Conclusions Our analysis revealed the genomic and phenotypic signatures of strain adaptation and deliberate selection for traits that were desirable in a simulant organism. Together, these results demonstrate the power of whole-genome and modern systems-level approaches to characterize microbial lineages to develop and validate forensic markers for strain discrimination and reveal signatures of deliberate adaptation.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2016

Use of Unamplified RNA/cDNA–Hybrid Nanopore Sequencing for Rapid Detection and Characterization of RNA Viruses

Andy Kilianski; Pierce A. Roth; Alvin T. Liem; Jessica M. Hill; Kristen L. Willis; Rebecca D. Rossmaier; Andrew V. Marinich; Michele N. Maughan; Mark Karavis; Jens H. Kuhn; Anna N. Honko; C. Nicole Rosenzweig

Nanopore sequencing, a novel genomics technology, has potential applications for routine biosurveillance, clinical diagnosis, and outbreak investigation of virus infections. Using rapid sequencing of unamplified RNA/cDNA hybrids, we identified Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus and Ebola virus in 3 hours from sample receipt to data acquisition, demonstrating a fieldable technique for RNA virus characterization.


BMC Microbiology | 2012

Detection of Burkholderia pseudomallei O-antigen serotypes in near-neighbor species

Joshua K. Stone; Mark Mayo; Stephanie A. Grasso; Jennifer L. Ginther; Stephanie D. Warrington; Christopher J. Allender; Adina Doyle; Shalamar Georgia; Mirjam Kaestli; S. M. Broomall; Mark Karavis; Joseph M. Insalaco; Kyle S. Hubbard; Lauren McNew; Henry S. Gibbons; Bart J. Currie; Paul Keim; Apichai Tuanyok

BackgroundBurkholderia pseudomallei is the etiological agent of melioidosis and a CDC category B select agent with no available effective vaccine. Previous immunizations in mice have utilized the lipopolysaccharide (LPS) as a potential vaccine target because it is known as one of the most important antigenic epitopes in B. pseudomallei. Complicating this strategy are the four different B. pseudomallei LPS O-antigen types: A, B, B2, and rough. Sero-crossreactivity is common among O-antigens of Burkholderia species. Here, we identified the presence of multiple B. pseudomallei O-antigen types and sero-crossreactivity in its near-neighbor species.ResultsPCR screening of O-antigen biosynthesis genes, phenotypic characterization using SDS-PAGE, and immunoblot analysis showed that majority of B. mallei and B. thailandensis strains contained the typical O-antigen type A. In contrast, most of B. ubonensis and B. thailandensis-like strains expressed the atypical O-antigen types B and B2, respectively. Most B. oklahomensis strains expressed a distinct and non-seroreactive O-antigen type, except strain E0147 which expressed O-antigen type A. O-antigen type B2 was also detected in B. thailandensis 82172, B. ubonensis MSMB108, and Burkholderia sp. MSMB175. Interestingly, B. thailandensis-like MSMB43 contained a novel serotype B positive O-antigen.ConclusionsThis study expands the number of species which express B. pseudomallei O-antigen types. Further work is required to elucidate the full structures and how closely these are to the B. pseudomallei O-antigens, which will ultimately determine the efficacy of the near-neighbor B serotypes for vaccine development.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Comparative genomics of 2009 seasonal plague (Yersinia pestis) in New Mexico.

Henry S. Gibbons; Michael Krepps; Gary Ouellette; Mark Karavis; Lisa Onischuk; Pascale Leonard; S. M. Broomall; Todd Sickler; Janet L. Betters; Paul McGregor; Greg Donarum; Alvin T. Liem; Ed Fochler; Lauren McNew; C. Nicole Rosenzweig; Evan W. Skowronski

Plague disease caused by the Gram-negative bacterium Yersinia pestis routinely affects animals and occasionally humans, in the western United States. The strains native to the North American continent are thought to be derived from a single introduction in the late 19th century. The degree to which these isolates have diverged genetically since their introduction is not clear, and new genomic markers to assay the diversity of North American plague are highly desired. To assay genetic diversity of plague isolates within confined geographic areas, draft genome sequences were generated by 454 pyrosequencing from nine environmental and clinical plague isolates. In silico assemblies of Variable Number Tandem Repeat (VNTR) loci were compared to laboratory-generated profiles for seven markers. High-confidence SNPs and small Insertion/Deletions (Indels) were compared to previously sequenced Y. pestis isolates. The resulting panel of mutations allowed clustering of the strains and tracing of the most likely evolutionary trajectory of the plague strains. The sequences also allowed the identification of new putative SNPs that differentiate the 2009 isolates from previously sequenced plague strains and from each other. In addition, new insertion points for the abundant insertion sequences (IS) of Y. pestis are present that allow additional discrimination of strains; several of these new insertions potentially inactivate genes implicated in virulence. These sequences enable whole-genome phylogenetic analysis and allow the unbiased comparison of closely related isolates of a genetically monomorphic pathogen.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Pangenome Analysis of Burkholderia pseudomallei: Genome Evolution Preserves Gene Order despite High Recombination Rates

Senanu Spring-Pearson; Joshua K. Stone; Adina Doyle; Christopher J. Allender; Richard T. Okinaka; Mark Mayo; S. M. Broomall; Jessica M. Hill; Mark Karavis; Kyle S. Hubbard; Joseph M. Insalaco; Lauren McNew; C. Nicole Rosenzweig; Henry S. Gibbons; Bart J. Currie; David M. Wagner; Paul Keim; Apichai Tuanyok

The pangenomic diversity in Burkholderia pseudomallei is high, with approximately 5.8% of the genome consisting of genomic islands. Genomic islands are known hotspots for recombination driven primarily by site-specific recombination associated with tRNAs. However, recombination rates in other portions of the genome are also high, a feature we expected to disrupt gene order. We analyzed the pangenome of 37 isolates of B. pseudomallei and demonstrate that the pangenome is ‘open’, with approximately 136 new genes identified with each new genome sequenced, and that the global core genome consists of 4568±16 homologs. Genes associated with metabolism were statistically overrepresented in the core genome, and genes associated with mobile elements, disease, and motility were primarily associated with accessory portions of the pangenome. The frequency distribution of genes present in between 1 and 37 of the genomes analyzed matches well with a model of genome evolution in which 96% of the genome has very low recombination rates but 4% of the genome recombines readily. Using homologous genes among pairs of genomes, we found that gene order was highly conserved among strains, despite the high recombination rates previously observed. High rates of gene transfer and recombination are incompatible with retaining gene order unless these processes are either highly localized to specific sites within the genome, or are characterized by symmetrical gene gain and loss. Our results demonstrate that both processes occur: localized recombination introduces many new genes at relatively few sites, and recombination throughout the genome generates the novel multi-locus sequence types previously observed while preserving gene order.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Pathoadaptive Mutations in Salmonella enterica Isolated after Serial Passage in Mice

Sanna Koskiniemi; Henry S. Gibbons; Linus Sandegren; Naeem Anwar; Gary Ouellette; S. M. Broomall; Mark Karavis; Paul McGregor; Alvin T. Liem; Ed Fochler; Lauren McNew; Carolyn Nicole Rosenzweig; Mikael Rhen; Evan W. Skowronski; Dan I. Andersson

How pathogenic bacteria adapt and evolve in the complex and variable environment of the host remains a largely unresolved question. Here we have used whole genome sequencing of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium LT2 populations serially passaged in mice to identify mutations that adapt bacteria to systemic growth in mice. We found unique pathoadaptive mutations in two global regulators, phoQ and stpA, which increase the competitive indexes of the bacteria 3- to 5-fold. Also, all mouse-adapted lineages had changed the orientation of the hin invertable element, resulting in production of a FliC type of flagellum. Competition experiments in mice with locked flagellum mutants showed that strains expressing the FliC type of flagellum had a 5-fold increase in competitive index as compared to those expressing FljB type flagellum. Combination of the flagellum cassette inversion with the stpA mutation increased competitive indexes up to 20-fold. These experiments show that Salmonella can rapidly adapt to a mouse environment by acquiring a few mutations of moderate individual effect that when combined confer substantial increases in growth.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2016

Whole-Genome Sequencing in Microbial Forensic Analysis of Gamma-Irradiated Microbial Materials

S. M. Broomall; Mohamed Ait Ichou; Michael Krepps; Lauren A. Johnsky; Mark Karavis; Kyle S. Hubbard; Joseph M. Insalaco; Janet L. Betters; Brady Redmond; Bryan Rivers; Alvin T. Liem; Jessica M. Hill; Edward T. Fochler; Pierce A. Roth; C. Nicole Rosenzweig; Evan W. Skowronski; Henry S. Gibbons

ABSTRACT Effective microbial forensic analysis of materials used in a potential biological attack requires robust methods of morphological and genetic characterization of the attack materials in order to enable the attribution of the materials to potential sources and to exclude other potential sources. The genetic homogeneity and potential intersample variability of many of the category A to C bioterrorism agents offer a particular challenge to the generation of attributive signatures, potentially requiring whole-genome or proteomic approaches to be utilized. Currently, irradiation of mail is standard practice at several government facilities judged to be at particularly high risk. Thus, initial forensic signatures would need to be recovered from inactivated (nonviable) material. In the study described in this report, we determined the effects of high-dose gamma irradiation on forensic markers of bacterial biothreat agent surrogate organisms with a particular emphasis on the suitability of genomic DNA (gDNA) recovered from such sources as a template for whole-genome analysis. While irradiation of spores and vegetative cells affected the retention of Gram and spore stains and sheared gDNA into small fragments, we found that irradiated material could be utilized to generate accurate whole-genome sequence data on the Illumina and Roche 454 sequencing platforms.


bioRxiv | 2018

The essential role of hypermutation in rapid adaptation to antibiotic stress

Heer H Mehta; Amy G Prater; Kathryn Beabout; Ryan A. Leo Elworth; Mark Karavis; Henry S. Gibbons; Yousif Shamoo

A common outcome of antibiotic exposure in patients and in vitro is the evolution of a hypermutator phenotype that enables rapid adaptation by pathogens. While hypermutation is a robust mechanism for rapid adaptation, it requires trade-offs between the adaptive mutations and the more common “hitchhiker” mutations that accumulate from the increased mutation rate. Using quantitative experimental evolution, we examined the role of hypermutation in driving adaptation of Pseudomonas aeruginosa to colistin. Metagenomic deep sequencing revealed 2,657 mutations at > 5% frequency in 1,197 genes and 761 mutations in 29 end point isolates. By combining genomic information, phylogenetic analyses, and statistical tests, we showed that evolutionary trajectories leading to resistance could be reliably discerned. In addition to known alleles such as pmrB, hypermutation allowed identification of additional adaptive alleles with epistatic relationships. Although hypermutation provided a short-term fitness benefit, it was detrimental to overall fitness. Alarmingly, a small fraction of the colistin adapted population remained colistin susceptible and escaped hypermutation. In a clinical population, such cells could play a role in re-establishing infection upon withdrawal of colistin. We present here a framework for evaluating the complex evolutionary trajectories of hypermutators that applies to both current and emerging pathogen populations. Importance Bacteria can increase mutation rates in response to stress as an evolutionary strategy to avoid extinction. However, the complex mutational landscape of hypermutators makes it difficult to distinguish truly adaptive mutations from hitchhikers that follow similar evolutionary trajectories. We provide a framework for evaluating the complex evolutionary trajectories of hypermutators that can be applied to both current and emerging pathogen populations. Using Pseudomonas aeruginosa evolving to colistin as a model system, we examine the essential role of hypermutation in the evolution of resistance. Additionally, our results highlight the presence of a subset of cells that survive and remain susceptible during colistin exposure which can serve as a reservoir for re-infection upon withdrawal of the drug in clinical infections. This study provides a broad understanding of hypermutation during adaptation and describes a series of analyses that will be useful in identifying adaptive mutations in well annotated and novel bacterial mutator populations.


Fems Microbiology Letters | 2013

A strain of Yersinia pestis with a mutator phenotype from the Republic of Georgia.

Chythanya Rajanna; Gary Ouellette; Mohammed H. Rashid; Adam Zemla; Mark Karavis; Carol L. Ecale Zhou; Tamara Revazishvili; Brady Redmond; Lauren McNew; Lela Bakanidze; Paata Imnadze; Bryan Rivers; Evan W. Skowronski; Kevin P. O'Connell; Alexander Sulakvelidze; Henry S. Gibbons

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Henry S. Gibbons

Edgewood Chemical Biological Center

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Lauren McNew

Edgewood Chemical Biological Center

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S. M. Broomall

Edgewood Chemical Biological Center

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Alvin T. Liem

Edgewood Chemical Biological Center

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C. Nicole Rosenzweig

Edgewood Chemical Biological Center

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Evan W. Skowronski

Edgewood Chemical Biological Center

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Brady Redmond

Edgewood Chemical Biological Center

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Bryan Rivers

Edgewood Chemical Biological Center

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Ed Fochler

Edgewood Chemical Biological Center

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Gary Ouellette

Edgewood Chemical Biological Center

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