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Dive into the research topics where Michael A. Fischbach is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael A. Fischbach.


Nature | 2014

Diet rapidly and reproducibly alters the human gut microbiome.

Lawrence A. David; Corinne F. Maurice; Rachel N. Carmody; David B. Gootenberg; Julie E. Button; Benjamin E. Wolfe; Alisha V. Ling; A. Sloan Devlin; Yug Varma; Michael A. Fischbach; Sudha B. Biddinger; Rachel J. Dutton; Peter J. Turnbaugh

Long-term dietary intake influences the structure and activity of the trillions of microorganisms residing in the human gut, but it remains unclear how rapidly and reproducibly the human gut microbiome responds to short-term macronutrient change. Here we show that the short-term consumption of diets composed entirely of animal or plant products alters microbial community structure and overwhelms inter-individual differences in microbial gene expression. The animal-based diet increased the abundance of bile-tolerant microorganisms (Alistipes, Bilophila and Bacteroides) and decreased the levels of Firmicutes that metabolize dietary plant polysaccharides (Roseburia, Eubacterium rectale and Ruminococcus bromii). Microbial activity mirrored differences between herbivorous and carnivorous mammals, reflecting trade-offs between carbohydrate and protein fermentation. Foodborne microbes from both diets transiently colonized the gut, including bacteria, fungi and even viruses. Finally, increases in the abundance and activity of Bilophila wadsworthia on the animal-based diet support a link between dietary fat, bile acids and the outgrowth of microorganisms capable of triggering inflammatory bowel disease. In concert, these results demonstrate that the gut microbiome can rapidly respond to altered diet, potentially facilitating the diversity of human dietary lifestyles.


Science | 2009

Antibiotics for Emerging Pathogens

Michael A. Fischbach; Christopher T. Walsh

Toward New Scaffolds Most existing antibiotics are derived from a small number of core molecular structures or scaffolds. As more and more pathogens emerge that are resistant to existing antibiotics, Fischbach and Walsh (p. 1089) review why renewed efforts must be made to find not only new antibiotics but new scaffolds. Approaches in the areas of natural products, synthesis, and target-based discovery are all yielding promising antibiotics candidates. The battle against resistance should also involve researching narrow-spectrum antibiotics and using combination therapies to extend the usefulness of drugs with high intrinsic resistance rates. Antibiotic-resistant strains of pathogenic bacteria are increasingly prevalent in hospitals and the community. New antibiotics are needed to combat these bacterial pathogens, but progress in developing them has been slow. Historically, most antibiotics have come from a small set of molecular scaffolds whose functional lifetimes have been extended by generations of synthetic tailoring. The emergence of multidrug resistance among the latest generation of pathogens suggests that the discovery of new scaffolds should be a priority. Promising approaches to scaffold discovery are emerging; they include mining underexplored microbial niches for natural products, designing screens that avoid rediscovering old scaffolds, and repurposing libraries of synthetic molecules for use as antibiotics.


Nature | 2009

Genome sequence and analysis of the Irish potato famine pathogen Phytophthora infestans

Brian J. Haas; Sophien Kamoun; Michael C. Zody; Rays H. Y. Jiang; Robert E. Handsaker; Liliana M. Cano; Manfred Grabherr; Chinnappa D. Kodira; Sylvain Raffaele; Trudy Torto-Alalibo; Tolga O. Bozkurt; Audrey M. V. Ah-Fong; Lucia Alvarado; Vicky L. Anderson; Miles R. Armstrong; Anna O. Avrova; Laura Baxter; Jim Beynon; Petra C. Boevink; Stephanie R. Bollmann; Jorunn I. B. Bos; Vincent Bulone; Guohong Cai; Cahid Cakir; James C. Carrington; Megan Chawner; Lucio Conti; Stefano Costanzo; Richard Ewan; Noah Fahlgren

Phytophthora infestans is the most destructive pathogen of potato and a model organism for the oomycetes, a distinct lineage of fungus-like eukaryotes that are related to organisms such as brown algae and diatoms. As the agent of the Irish potato famine in the mid-nineteenth century, P. infestans has had a tremendous effect on human history, resulting in famine and population displacement. To this day, it affects world agriculture by causing the most destructive disease of potato, the fourth largest food crop and a critical alternative to the major cereal crops for feeding the world’s population. Current annual worldwide potato crop losses due to late blight are conservatively estimated at


Nucleic Acids Research | 2015

antiSMASH 3.0—a comprehensive resource for the genome mining of biosynthetic gene clusters

Tilmann Weber; Kai Blin; Srikanth Duddela; Daniel Krug; Hyun Uk Kim; Robert E. Bruccoleri; Sang Yup Lee; Michael A. Fischbach; Rolf Müller; Wolfgang Wohlleben; Rainer Breitling; Eriko Takano; Marnix H. Medema

6.7 billion. Management of this devastating pathogen is challenged by its remarkable speed of adaptation to control strategies such as genetically resistant cultivars. Here we report the sequence of the P. infestans genome, which at ∼240 megabases (Mb) is by far the largest and most complex genome sequenced so far in the chromalveolates. Its expansion results from a proliferation of repetitive DNA accounting for ∼74% of the genome. Comparison with two other Phytophthora genomes showed rapid turnover and extensive expansion of specific families of secreted disease effector proteins, including many genes that are induced during infection or are predicted to have activities that alter host physiology. These fast-evolving effector genes are localized to highly dynamic and expanded regions of the P. infestans genome. This probably plays a crucial part in the rapid adaptability of the pathogen to host plants and underpins its evolutionary potential.


Current Opinion in Microbiology | 2011

Combination therapies for combating antimicrobial resistance

Michael A. Fischbach

Abstract Microbial secondary metabolism constitutes a rich source of antibiotics, chemotherapeutics, insecticides and other high-value chemicals. Genome mining of gene clusters that encode the biosynthetic pathways for these metabolites has become a key methodology for novel compound discovery. In 2011, we introduced antiSMASH, a web server and stand-alone tool for the automatic genomic identification and analysis of biosynthetic gene clusters, available at http://antismash.secondarymetabolites.org. Here, we present version 3.0 of antiSMASH, which has undergone major improvements. A full integration of the recently published ClusterFinder algorithm now allows using this probabilistic algorithm to detect putative gene clusters of unknown types. Also, a new dereplication variant of the ClusterBlast module now identifies similarities of identified clusters to any of 1172 clusters with known end products. At the enzyme level, active sites of key biosynthetic enzymes are now pinpointed through a curated pattern-matching procedure and Enzyme Commission numbers are assigned to functionally classify all enzyme-coding genes. Additionally, chemical structure prediction has been improved by incorporating polyketide reduction states. Finally, in order for users to be able to organize and analyze multiple antiSMASH outputs in a private setting, a new XML output module allows offline editing of antiSMASH annotations within the Geneious software.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2011

antiSMASH: rapid identification, annotation and analysis of secondary metabolite biosynthesis gene clusters in bacterial and fungal genome sequences

Marnix H. Medema; Kai Blin; Peter Cimermancic; Victor de Jager; Piotr Zakrzewski; Michael A. Fischbach; Tilmann Weber; Eriko Takano; Rainer Breitling

New drug development strategies are needed to combat antimicrobial resistance. The object of this perspective is to highlight one such strategy: treating infections with sets of drugs rather than individual drugs. We will highlight three categories of combination therapy: those that inhibit targets in different pathways; those that inhibit distinct nodes in the same pathway; and those that inhibit the very same target in different ways. We will then consider examples of naturally occurring combination therapies produced by micro-organisms, and conclude by discussing key opportunities and challenges for making more widespread use of drug combinations.


Natural Product Reports | 2013

Ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified peptide natural products: overview and recommendations for a universal nomenclature

Paul G. Arnison; Mervyn J. Bibb; Gabriele Bierbaum; Albert A. Bowers; Tim S. Bugni; Grzegorz Bulaj; Julio A. Camarero; Dominic J. Campopiano; Gregory L. Challis; Jon Clardy; Paul D. Cotter; David J. Craik; Michael J. Dawson; Elke Dittmann; Stefano Donadio; Pieter C. Dorrestein; Karl Dieter Entian; Michael A. Fischbach; John S. Garavelli; Ulf Göransson; Christian W. Gruber; Daniel H. Haft; Thomas K. Hemscheidt; Christian Hertweck; Colin Hill; Alexander R. Horswill; Marcel Jaspars; Wendy L. Kelly; Judith P. Klinman; Oscar P. Kuipers

Bacterial and fungal secondary metabolism is a rich source of novel bioactive compounds with potential pharmaceutical applications as antibiotics, anti-tumor drugs or cholesterol-lowering drugs. To find new drug candidates, microbiologists are increasingly relying on sequencing genomes of a wide variety of microbes. However, rapidly and reliably pinpointing all the potential gene clusters for secondary metabolites in dozens of newly sequenced genomes has been extremely challenging, due to their biochemical heterogeneity, the presence of unknown enzymes and the dispersed nature of the necessary specialized bioinformatics tools and resources. Here, we present antiSMASH (antibiotics & Secondary Metabolite Analysis Shell), the first comprehensive pipeline capable of identifying biosynthetic loci covering the whole range of known secondary metabolite compound classes (polyketides, non-ribosomal peptides, terpenes, aminoglycosides, aminocoumarins, indolocarbazoles, lantibiotics, bacteriocins, nucleosides, beta-lactams, butyrolactones, siderophores, melanins and others). It aligns the identified regions at the gene cluster level to their nearest relatives from a database containing all other known gene clusters, and integrates or cross-links all previously available secondary-metabolite specific gene analysis methods in one interactive view. antiSMASH is available at http://antismash.secondarymetabolites.org.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2013

antiSMASH 2.0—a versatile platform for genome mining of secondary metabolite producers

Kai Blin; Marnix H. Medema; Daniyal Kazempour; Michael A. Fischbach; Rainer Breitling; Eriko Takano; Tilmann Weber

This review presents recommended nomenclature for the biosynthesis of ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified peptides (RiPPs), a rapidly growing class of natural products. The current knowledge regarding the biosynthesis of the >20 distinct compound classes is also reviewed, and commonalities are discussed.


Nature Biotechnology | 2006

New antibiotics from bacterial natural products.

Jon Clardy; Michael A. Fischbach; Christopher T. Walsh

Microbial secondary metabolites are a potent source of antibiotics and other pharmaceuticals. Genome mining of their biosynthetic gene clusters has become a key method to accelerate their identification and characterization. In 2011, we developed antiSMASH, a web-based analysis platform that automates this process. Here, we present the highly improved antiSMASH 2.0 release, available at http://antismash.secondarymetabolites.org/. For the new version, antiSMASH was entirely re-designed using a plug-and-play concept that allows easy integration of novel predictor or output modules. antiSMASH 2.0 now supports input of multiple related sequences simultaneously (multi-FASTA/GenBank/EMBL), which allows the analysis of draft genomes comprising multiple contigs. Moreover, direct analysis of protein sequences is now possible. antiSMASH 2.0 has also been equipped with the capacity to detect additional classes of secondary metabolites, including oligosaccharide antibiotics, phenazines, thiopeptides, homo-serine lactones, phosphonates and furans. The algorithm for predicting the core structure of the cluster end product is now also covering lantipeptides, in addition to polyketides and non-ribosomal peptides. The antiSMASH ClusterBlast functionality has been extended to identify sub-clusters involved in the biosynthesis of specific chemical building blocks. The new features currently make antiSMASH 2.0 the most comprehensive resource for identifying and analyzing novel secondary metabolite biosynthetic pathways in microorganisms.


Genome Research | 2008

Insights from the complete genome sequence of Mycobacterium marinum on the evolution of Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Timothy P. Stinear; Torsten Seemann; Paul F. Harrison; Grant A. Jenkin; John K. Davies; Paul D. R. Johnson; Zahra Abdellah; Claire Arrowsmith; Tracey Chillingworth; Carol Churcher; Kay Clarke; Ann Cronin; Paul Davis; Ian Goodhead; Nancy Holroyd; Kay Jagels; Angela Lord; Sharon Moule; Karen Mungall; Halina Norbertczak; Michael A. Quail; Ester Rabbinowitsch; Danielle Walker; Brian R. White; Sally Whitehead; Pamela L. C. Small; Roland Brosch; Lalita Ramakrishnan; Michael A. Fischbach; Julian Parkhill

For the past five decades, the need for new antibiotics has been met largely by semisynthetic tailoring of natural product scaffolds discovered in the middle of the 20th century. More recently, however, advances in technology have sparked a resurgence in the discovery of natural product antibiotics from bacterial sources. In particular, efforts have refocused on finding new antibiotics from old sources (for example, streptomycetes) and new sources (for example, other actinomycetes, cyanobacteria and uncultured bacteria). This has resulted in several newly discovered antibiotics with unique scaffolds and/or novel mechanisms of action, with the potential to form a basis for new antibiotic classes addressing bacterial targets that are currently underexploited.

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Marnix H. Medema

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Eriko Takano

University of Manchester

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