Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Michael P. Thelen is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Michael P. Thelen.


Science | 2005

Community Proteomics of a Natural Microbial Biofilm

Rachna J. Ram; Nathan C. VerBerkmoes; Michael P. Thelen; Gene W. Tyson; Brett J. Baker; Robert C. Blake; Manesh B Shah; Robert L. Hettich; Jillian F. Banfield

One proposed strategy for controlling the transmission of insect-borne pathogens uses a drive mechanism to ensure the rapid spread of transgenes conferring disease refractoriness throughout wild populations. Here, we report the creation of maternal-effect selfish genetic elements in Drosophila that drive population replacement and are resistant to recombination-mediated dissociation of drive and disease refractoriness functions. These selfish elements use microRNA-mediated silencing of a maternally expressed gene essential for embryogenesis, which is coupled with early zygotic expression of a rescuing transgene.The phosphoinositide phosphatase PTEN is mutated in many human cancers. Although the role of PTEN has been studied extensively, the relative contributions of its numerous potential downstream effectors to deregulated growth and tumorigenesis remain uncertain. We provide genetic evidence in Drosophila melanogaster for the paramount importance of the protein kinase Akt [also called protein kinase B (PKB)] in mediating the effects of increased phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-trisphosphate (PIP3) concentrations that are caused by the loss of PTEN function. A mutation in the pleckstrin homology (PH) domain of Akt that reduces its affinity for PIP3 sufficed to rescue the lethality of flies devoid of PTEN activity. Thus, Akt appears to be the only critical target activated by increased PIP3 concentrations in Drosophila.Using genomic and mass spectrometry-based proteomic methods, we evaluated gene expression, identified key activities, and examined partitioning of metabolic functions in a natural acid mine drainage (AMD) microbial biofilm community. We detected 2033 proteins from the five most abundant species in the biofilm, including 48% of the predicted proteins from the dominant biofilm organism, Leptospirillum group II. Proteins involved in protein refolding and response to oxidative stress appeared to be highly expressed, which suggests that damage to biomolecules is a key challenge for survival. We validated and estimated the relative abundance and cellular localization of 357 unique and 215 conserved novel proteins and determined that one abundant novel protein is a cytochrome central to iron oxidation and AMD formation.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2000

Structure-based predictions of Rad1, Rad9, Hus1 and Rad17 participation in sliding clamp and clamp-loading complexes

Česlovas Venclovas; Michael P. Thelen

The repair of damaged DNA is coupled to the completion of DNA replication by several cell cycle checkpoint proteins, including, for example, in fission yeast Rad1(Sp), Hus1(Sp), Rad9(Sp) and Rad17(Sp). We have found that these four proteins are conserved with protein sequences throughout eukaryotic evolution. Using computational techniques, including fold recognition, comparative modeling and generalized sequence profiles, we have made high confidence structure predictions for the each of the Rad1, Hus1 and Rad9 protein families (Rad17(Sc), Mec3(Sc) and Ddc1(Sc) in budding yeast, respectively). Each of these families was found to share a common protein fold with that of PCNA, the sliding clamp protein that tethers DNA polymerase to its template. We used previously reported genetic and biochemical data for these proteins from yeast and human cells to predict a heterotrimeric PCNA-like ring structure for the functional Rad1/Rad9/Hus1 complex and to determine their exact order within it. In addition, for each individual protein family, contact regions with neighbors within the PCNA-like ring were identified. Based on a molecular model for Rad17(Sp), we concluded that members of this family, similar to the subunits of the RFC clamp-loading complex, are capable of coupling ATP binding with conformational changes required to load a sliding clamp onto DNA. This model substantiates previous findings regarding the behavior of Rad17 family proteins upon DNA damage and within the RFC complex of clamp-loading proteins.


Nature | 2007

Strain-resolved community proteomics reveals recombining genomes of acidophilic bacteria

Ian Lo; Vincent J. Denef; Nathan C. VerBerkmoes; Manesh B Shah; Daniela S. Aliaga Goltsman; Genevieve DiBartolo; Gene W. Tyson; Eric E. Allen; Rachna J. Ram; J. Chris Detter; Paul G. Richardson; Michael P. Thelen; Robert L. Hettich; Jillian F. Banfield

Microbes comprise the majority of extant organisms, yet much remains to be learned about the nature and driving forces of microbial diversification. Our understanding of how microorganisms adapt and evolve can be advanced by genome-wide documentation of the patterns of genetic exchange, particularly if analyses target coexisting members of natural communities. Here we use community genomic data sets to identify, with strain specificity, expressed proteins from the dominant member of a genomically uncharacterized, natural, acidophilic biofilm. Proteomics results reveal a genome shaped by recombination involving chromosomal regions of tens to hundreds of kilobases long that are derived from two closely related bacterial populations. Inter-population genetic exchange was confirmed by multilocus sequence typing of isolates and of uncultivated natural consortia. The findings suggest that exchange of large blocks of gene variants is crucial for the adaptation to specific ecological niches within the very acidic, metal-rich environment. Mass-spectrometry-based discrimination of expressed protein products that differ by as little as a single amino acid enables us to distinguish the behaviour of closely related coexisting organisms. This is important, given that microorganisms grouped together as a single species may have quite distinct roles in natural systems and their interactions might be key to ecosystem optimization. Because proteomic data simultaneously convey information about genome type and activity, strain-resolved community proteomics is an important complement to cultivation-independent genomic (metagenomic) analysis of microorganisms in the natural environment.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997

Reconstitution of human excision nuclease with recombinant XPF-ERCC1 complex

Tadayoshi Bessho; Aziz Sancar; Larry H. Thompson; Michael P. Thelen

The human XPF-ERCC1 protein complex is one of several factors known to be required for general nucleotide excision repair. Genetic data indicate that both proteins of this complex are necessary for the repair of interstrand cross-links, perhaps via recombination. To determine whether XPF-ERCC1 completes a set of six proteins that are sufficient to carry out excision repair, the human XPF and ERCC1 cDNAs were coexpressed in Sf21 insect cells from a baculovirus vector. The purified complex contained the anticipated 5′ junction-specific endonuclease activity that is stimulated through a direct interaction between XPF and replication protein A (RPA). The recombinant complex also complemented extracts of XP-F cells and Chinese hamster ovary mutants assigned to complementation groups 1, 4, and 11. Furthermore, reconstitution of the human excision nuclease was observed with a mixture of five repair factors (XPA, XPC, XPG, TFIIH, and RPA) and the recombinant XPF-ERCC1, thus verifying that no additional protein factors are needed for the specific dual incisions characteristic of human excision repair.


Cell | 1999

A Sliding Clamp Model for the Rad1 Family of Cell Cycle Checkpoint Proteins

Michael P. Thelen; Česlovas Venclovas; Krzysztof Fidelis

We explored the possibility that the Rad1 family members have more distant homology with other proteins of Rad1 family were embedded into the Rad1 Mm sequence using BLOCKs, and this cobbled sequence was used as the probe in a PSI-BLAST search. An initial weak We have identified an unexpected structural similarity match was amplified after several iterations, and PCNA between six members of the Rad1 cell cycle checkpoint (S. cerevisiae, and other species) was retrieved as a family and the DNA sliding clamp protein PCNA. Like candidate homolog with nearly end-to-end sequence its prokaryotic structural homolog, the ␤ subunit of DNA alignment. However, PCNA and the probe sequence polymerase III, PCNA facilitates genome replication by were only 15% identical, making it uncertain whether encircling the DNA helix and tethering DNA polymerase these protein families are truly related. to its substrate. Our Rad1 model predicts that eukaryotic We therefore sought independent verification of this cells contain a second PCNA-like structure, one that hypothesis using the methods of fold recognition and may be critical to the mechanisms coupling DNA repair comparative modeling. Using an empirically derived fit-and DNA synthesis to a mitotic checkpoint. ness function, fold recognition (threading) evaluates the The Rad1 family of proteins, including Rec1 of Usti-compatibility of a new sequence with templates in the lago maydis and its distant relatives Rad1 sp (S. pombe) library of known folds. Threading was performed for and Rad17 sc (S. cerevisiae), function in both DNA repair each of the six homologs separately. In each case, only and cell cycle control (Lydall and Weinert, 1995; Onel the PCNA fold was always among the top ranking hits. Sequence comparisons reveal established false positive threshold (Fischer and Eisen-conserved blocks of amino acids between these six berg, 1996). proteins, but overall there is less than 30% identity be-The hypothesis was further explored by building and tween any two sequences. Similarity to other known evaluating an all atom model of Rad1 Mm. Using the PSI-proteins is not obvious, and a common biochemical BLAST alignment as a guide, Rad1 Mm amino acid side chains were placed on the peptide backbone of the function remains unclear. Rad1 homologs include those from mouse (Mm_Rad1), fruit fly (Dm_Rad1), smut fungus (Um_Rec1), and fission yeast (Sp_Rad1). PCNA sequences are from budding yeast (Sc_PCNA), malaria parasite (Pf_PCNA), bac-ulovirus (Ac_PCNA), and human (Hs_PCNA). Rad1 family sequence alignment with PCNA proteins relied on Rad1 Mm modeling …


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2009

Community Genomic and Proteomic Analyses of Chemoautotrophic Iron-Oxidizing “Leptospirillum rubarum” (Group II) and “Leptospirillum ferrodiazotrophum” (Group III) Bacteria in Acid Mine Drainage Biofilms

Daniela S. Aliaga Goltsman; Vincent J. Denef; Steven W. Singer; Nathan C. VerBerkmoes; Mark Lefsrud; Ryan S. Mueller; Gregory J. Dick; Christine L. Sun; Korin E. Wheeler; Adam Zemla; Brett J. Baker; Loren Hauser; Miriam Land; Manesh B Shah; Michael P. Thelen; Robert L. Hettich; Jillian F. Banfield

ABSTRACT We analyzed near-complete population (composite) genomic sequences for coexisting acidophilic iron-oxidizing Leptospirillum group II and III bacteria (phylum Nitrospirae) and an extrachromosomal plasmid from a Richmond Mine, Iron Mountain, CA, acid mine drainage biofilm. Community proteomic analysis of the genomically characterized sample and two other biofilms identified 64.6% and 44.9% of the predicted proteins of Leptospirillum groups II and III, respectively, and 20% of the predicted plasmid proteins. The bacteria share 92% 16S rRNA gene sequence identity and >60% of their genes, including integrated plasmid-like regions. The extrachromosomal plasmid carries conjugation genes with detectable sequence similarity to genes in the integrated conjugative plasmid, but only those on the extrachromosomal element were identified by proteomics. Both bacterial groups have genes for community-essential functions, including carbon fixation and biosynthesis of vitamins, fatty acids, and biopolymers (including cellulose); proteomic analyses reveal these activities. Both Leptospirillum types have multiple pathways for osmotic protection. Although both are motile, signal transduction and methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins are more abundant in Leptospirillum group III, consistent with its distribution in gradients within biofilms. Interestingly, Leptospirillum group II uses a methyl-dependent and Leptospirillum group III a methyl-independent response pathway. Although only Leptospirillum group III can fix nitrogen, these proteins were not identified by proteomics. The abundances of core proteins are similar in all communities, but the abundance levels of unique and shared proteins of unknown function vary. Some proteins unique to one organism were highly expressed and may be key to the functional and ecological differentiation of Leptospirillum groups II and III.


Nature | 2011

ATM controls meiotic double-strand-break formation

Julian Lange; Jing Pan; Francesca Cole; Michael P. Thelen; Maria Jasin; Scott Keeney

In many organisms, developmentally programmed double-strand breaks (DSBs) formed by the SPO11 transesterase initiate meiotic recombination, which promotes pairing and segregation of homologous chromosomes. Because every chromosome must receive a minimum number of DSBs, attention has focused on factors that support DSB formation. However, improperly repaired DSBs can cause meiotic arrest or mutation; thus, having too many DSBs is probably as deleterious as having too few. Only a small fraction of SPO11 protein ever makes a DSB in yeast or mouse and SPO11 and its accessory factors remain abundant long after most DSB formation ceases, implying the existence of mechanisms that restrain SPO11 activity to limit DSB numbers. Here we report that the number of meiotic DSBs in mouse is controlled by ATM, a kinase activated by DNA damage to trigger checkpoint signalling and promote DSB repair. Levels of SPO11–oligonucleotide complexes, by-products of meiotic DSB formation, are elevated at least tenfold in spermatocytes lacking ATM. Moreover, Atm mutation renders SPO11–oligonucleotide levels sensitive to genetic manipulations that modulate SPO11 protein levels. We propose that ATM restrains SPO11 via a negative feedback loop in which kinase activation by DSBs suppresses further DSB formation. Our findings explain previously puzzling phenotypes of Atm-null mice and provide a molecular basis for the gonadal dysgenesis observed in ataxia telangiectasia, the human syndrome caused by ATM deficiency.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2010

Characterization of Extracellular Polymeric Substances from Acidophilic Microbial Biofilms

Yongqin Jiao; George D. Cody; Anna K. Harding; Paul Wilmes; Matthew O. Schrenk; Korin E. Wheeler; Jillian F. Banfield; Michael P. Thelen

ABSTRACT We examined the chemical composition of extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) extracted from two natural microbial pellicle biofilms growing on acid mine drainage (AMD) solutions. The EPS obtained from a mid-developmental-stage biofilm (DS1) and a mature biofilm (DS2) were qualitatively and quantitatively compared. More than twice as much EPS was derived from DS2 as from DS1 (approximately 340 and 150 mg of EPS per g [dry weight] for DS2 and DS1, respectively). Composition analyses indicated the presence of carbohydrates, metals, proteins, and minor quantities of DNA and lipids, although the relative concentrations of these components were different for the two EPS samples. EPS from DS2 contained higher concentrations of metals and carbohydrates than EPS from DS1. Fe was the most abundant metal in both samples, accounting for about 73% of the total metal content, followed by Al, Mg, and Zn. The relative concentration profile for these metals resembled that for the AMD solution in which the biofilms grew, except for Si, Mn, and Co. Glycosyl composition analysis indicated that both EPS samples were composed primarily of galactose, glucose, heptose, rhamnose, and mannose, while the relative amounts of individual sugars were substantially different in DS1 and DS2. Additionally, carbohydrate linkage analysis revealed multiply linked heptose, galactose, glucose, mannose, and rhamnose, with some of the glucose in a 4-linked form. These results indicate that the biochemical composition of the EPS from these acidic biofilms is dependent on maturity and is controlled by the microbial communities, as well as the local geochemical environment.


PLOS Biology | 2008

Population Genomic Analysis of Strain Variation in Leptospirillum Group II Bacteria Involved in Acid Mine Drainage Formation

Sheri L. Simmons; Genevieve DiBartolo; Vincent J. Denef; Daniela S. Aliaga Goltsman; Michael P. Thelen; Jillian F. Banfield

Deeply sampled community genomic (metagenomic) datasets enable comprehensive analysis of heterogeneity in natural microbial populations. In this study, we used sequence data obtained from the dominant member of a low-diversity natural chemoautotrophic microbial community to determine how coexisting closely related individuals differ from each other in terms of gene sequence and gene content, and to uncover evidence of evolutionary processes that occur over short timescales. DNA sequence obtained from an acid mine drainage biofilm was reconstructed, taking into account the effects of strain variation, to generate a nearly complete genome tiling path for a Leptospirillum group II species closely related to L. ferriphilum (sampling depth ∼20×). The population is dominated by one sequence type, yet we detected evidence for relatively abundant variants (>99.5% sequence identity to the dominant type) at multiple loci, and a few rare variants. Blocks of other Leptospirillum group II types (∼94% sequence identity) have recombined into one or more variants. Variant blocks of both types are more numerous near the origin of replication. Heterogeneity in genetic potential within the population arises from localized variation in gene content, typically focused in integrated plasmid/phage-like regions. Some laterally transferred gene blocks encode physiologically important genes, including quorum-sensing genes of the LuxIR system. Overall, results suggest inter- and intrapopulation genetic exchange involving distinct parental genome types and implicate gain and loss of phage and plasmid genes in recent evolution of this Leptospirillum group II population. Population genetic analyses of single nucleotide polymorphisms indicate variation between closely related strains is not maintained by positive selection, suggesting that these regions do not represent adaptive differences between strains. Thus, the most likely explanation for the observed patterns of polymorphism is divergence of ancestral strains due to geographic isolation, followed by mixing and subsequent recombination.


Bioresource Technology | 2011

A microfluidic microbial fuel cell fabricated by soft lithography

Fang Qian; Zhen He; Michael P. Thelen; Yat Li

Here we report a new microfluidic microbial fuel cell (MFC) platform built by soft-lithography techniques. The MFC design includes a unique sub-5 μL polydimethylsiloxane soft chamber featuring carbon cloth electrodes and microfluidic delivery of electrolytes. Bioelectricity was generated using Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 cultivated on either complex organic substrates or lactate-based minimal medium. These micro-MFCs exhibited fast start-ups, reproducible current generation, and enhanced power densities up to 62.5 W m(-3) that represents the best result for sub-100 μL MFCs. Systematic comparisons of custom-made MFC reactors having different chamber sizes indicate volumetric power density is inversely correlated with chamber size in our systems: i.e., the smaller the chamber, the higher the power density is achieved.

Collaboration


Dive into the Michael P. Thelen's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Steven W. Singer

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nathan C. VerBerkmoes

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Robert L. Hettich

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Blake A. Simmons

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mona Hwang

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Adam Zemla

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Manesh B Shah

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Korin E. Wheeler

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge