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Dive into the research topics where Nathan D. Hicks is active.

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Featured researches published by Nathan D. Hicks.


Mbio | 2014

Cryptococcus gattii in North American Pacific Northwest: Whole-Population Genome Analysis Provides Insights into Species Evolution and Dispersal

David M. Engelthaler; Nathan D. Hicks; John D. Gillece; Chandler C. Roe; James M. Schupp; Elizabeth M. Driebe; Felix Gilgado; Fabian Carriconde; Luciana Trilles; Carolina Firacative; Popchai Ngamskulrungroj; Elizabeth Castañeda; Márcia dos Santos Lazéra; Marcia de Souza Carvalho Melhem; Åsa Pérez-Bercoff; Gavin A. Huttley; Tania C. Sorrell; Kerstin Voelz; Robin C. May; Matthew C. Fisher; George R. Thompson; Shawn R. Lockhart; Paul Keim; Wieland Meyer

ABSTRACT The emergence of distinct populations of Cryptococcus gattii in the temperate North American Pacific Northwest (PNW) was surprising, as this species was previously thought to be confined to tropical and semitropical regions. Beyond a new habitat niche, the dominant emergent population displayed increased virulence and caused primary pulmonary disease, as opposed to the predominantly neurologic disease seen previously elsewhere. Whole-genome sequencing was performed on 118 C. gattii isolates, including the PNW subtypes and the global diversity of molecular type VGII, to better ascertain the natural source and genomic adaptations leading to the emergence of infection in the PNW. Overall, the VGII population was highly diverse, demonstrating large numbers of mutational and recombinational events; however, the three dominant subtypes from the PNW were of low diversity and were completely clonal. Although strains of VGII were found on at least five continents, all genetic subpopulations were represented or were most closely related to strains from South America. The phylogenetic data are consistent with multiple dispersal events from South America to North America and elsewhere. Numerous gene content differences were identified between the emergent clones and other VGII lineages, including genes potentially related to habitat adaptation, virulence, and pathology. Evidence was also found for possible gene introgression from Cryptococcus neoformans var. grubii that is rarely seen in global C. gattii but that was present in all PNW populations. These findings provide greater understanding of C. gattii evolution in North America and support extensive evolution in, and dispersal from, South America. IMPORTANCE Cryptococcus gattii emerged in the temperate North American Pacific Northwest (PNW) in the late 1990s. Beyond a new environmental niche, these emergent populations displayed increased virulence and resulted in a different pattern of clinical disease. In particular, severe pulmonary infections predominated in contrast to presentation with neurologic disease as seen previously elsewhere. We employed population-level whole-genome sequencing and analysis to explore the genetic relationships and gene content of the PNW C. gattii populations. We provide evidence that the PNW strains originated from South America and identified numerous genes potentially related to habitat adaptation, virulence expression, and clinical presentation. Characterization of these genetic features may lead to improved diagnostics and therapies for such fungal infections. The data indicate that there were multiple recent introductions of C. gattii into the PNW. Public health vigilance is warranted for emergence in regions where C. gattii is not thought to be endemic. Cryptococcus gattii emerged in the temperate North American Pacific Northwest (PNW) in the late 1990s. Beyond a new environmental niche, these emergent populations displayed increased virulence and resulted in a different pattern of clinical disease. In particular, severe pulmonary infections predominated in contrast to presentation with neurologic disease as seen previously elsewhere. We employed population-level whole-genome sequencing and analysis to explore the genetic relationships and gene content of the PNW C. gattii populations. We provide evidence that the PNW strains originated from South America and identified numerous genes potentially related to habitat adaptation, virulence expression, and clinical presentation. Characterization of these genetic features may lead to improved diagnostics and therapies for such fungal infections. The data indicate that there were multiple recent introductions of C. gattii into the PNW. Public health vigilance is warranted for emergence in regions where C. gattii is not thought to be endemic.


Nature Communications | 2014

Community-integrated omics links dominance of a microbial generalist to fine-tuned resource usage

Emilie Muller; Nicolás Pinel; Cédric C. Laczny; Michael R. Hoopmann; Shaman Narayanasamy; Laura Lebrun; Hugo Roume; Jake Lin; Patrick May; Nathan D. Hicks; Anna Heintz-Buschart; Linda Wampach; Cindy M. Liu; Lance B. Price; John D. Gillece; Cédric Guignard; James M. Schupp; Nikos Vlassis; Nitin S. Baliga; Robert L. Moritz; Paul Keim; Paul Wilmes

Microbial communities are complex and dynamic systems that are primarily structured according to their members’ ecological niches. To investigate how niche breadth (generalist versus specialist lifestyle strategies) relates to ecological success, we develop and apply an integrative workflow for the multi-omic analysis of oleaginous mixed microbial communities from a biological wastewater treatment plant. Time- and space-resolved coupled metabolomic and taxonomic analyses demonstrate that the community-wide lipid accumulation phenotype is associated with the dominance of the generalist bacterium Candidatus Microthrix spp. By integrating population-level genomic reconstructions (reflecting fundamental niches) with transcriptomic and proteomic data (realised niches), we identify finely tuned gene expression governing resource usage by Candidatus Microthrix parvicella over time. Moreover, our results indicate that the fluctuating environmental conditions constrain the accumulation of genetic variation in Candidatus Microthrix parvicella likely due to fitness trade-offs. Based on our observations, niche breadth has to be considered as an important factor for understanding the evolutionary processes governing (microbial) population sizes and structures in situ.


Microbial genomics | 2016

Nasp: An accurate, rapid method for the identification of snps in wgs datasets that supports flexible input and output formats

Jason W. Sahl; Darrin Lemmer; Jason Travis; James M. Schupp; John D. Gillece; Maliha Aziz; Elizabeth M. Driebe; Kevin P. Drees; Nathan D. Hicks; Charles Hall Davis Williamson; Crystal M. Hepp; David Smith; Chandler C. Roe; David M. Engelthaler; David M. Wagner; Paul Keim

Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) of bacterial isolates has become standard practice in many laboratories. Applications for WGS analysis include phylogeography and molecular epidemiology, using single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) as the unit of evolution. NASP was developed as a reproducible method that scales well with the hundreds to thousands of WGS data typically used in comparative genomics applications. In this study, we demonstrate how NASP compares with other tools in the analysis of two real bacterial genomics datasets and one simulated dataset. Our results demonstrate that NASP produces similar, and often better, results in comparison with other pipelines, but is much more flexible in terms of data input types, job management systems, diversity of supported tools and output formats. We also demonstrate differences in results based on the choice of the reference genome and choice of inferring phylogenies from concatenated SNPs or alignments including monomorphic positions. NASP represents a source-available, version-controlled, unit-tested method and can be obtained from tgennorth.github.io/NASP.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Detection of Low-Level Mixed-Population Drug Resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis Using High Fidelity Amplicon Sequencing.

Rebecca E. Colman; James M. Schupp; Nathan D. Hicks; David Smith; Jordan L. Buchhagen; Faramarz Valafar; Valeriu Crudu; Elena Romancenco; Ecaterina Noroc; Lynn Jackson; Donald G. Catanzaro; Timothy C. Rodwell; Antonino Catanzaro; Paul Keim; David M. Engelthaler

Undetected and untreated, low-levels of drug resistant (DR) subpopulations in clinical Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) infections may lead to development of DR-tuberculosis, potentially resulting in treatment failure. Current phenotypic DR susceptibility testing has a theoretical potential for 1% sensitivity, is not quantitative, and requires several weeks to complete. The use of “single molecule-overlapping reads” (SMOR) analysis with next generation DNA sequencing for determination of ultra-rare target alleles in complex mixtures provides increased sensitivity over standard DNA sequencing. Ligation free amplicon sequencing with SMOR analysis enables the detection of resistant allele subpopulations at ≥0.1% of the total Mtb population in near real-time analysis. We describe the method using standardized mixtures of DNA from resistant and susceptible Mtb isolates and the assay’s performance for detecting ultra-rare DR subpopulations in DNA extracted directly from clinical sputum samples. SMOR analysis enables rapid near real-time detection and tracking of previously undetectable DR sub-populations in clinical samples allowing for the evaluation of the clinical relevance of low-level DR subpopulations. This will provide insights into interventions aimed at suppressing minor DR subpopulations before they become clinically significant.


npj Biofilms and Microbiomes | 2015

Comparative integrated omics: identification of key functionalities in microbial community-wide metabolic networks

Hugo Roume; Anna Heintz-Buschart; Emilie Muller; Patrick May; Venkata P. Satagopam; Cédric C. Laczny; Shaman Narayanasamy; Laura Lebrun; Michael R. Hoopmann; James M. Schupp; John D. Gillece; Nathan D. Hicks; David M. Engelthaler; Thomas Sauter; Paul Keim; Robert L. Moritz; Paul Wilmes

Background:Mixed microbial communities underpin important biotechnological processes such as biological wastewater treatment (BWWT). A detailed knowledge of community structure and function relationships is essential for ultimately driving these systems towards desired outcomes, e.g., the enrichment in organisms capable of accumulating valuable resources during BWWT.Methods:A comparative integrated omic analysis including metagenomics, metatranscriptomics and metaproteomics was carried out to elucidate functional differences between seasonally distinct oleaginous mixed microbial communities (OMMCs) sampled from an anoxic BWWT tank. A computational framework for the reconstruction of community-wide metabolic networks from multi-omic data was developed. These provide an overview of the functional capabilities by incorporating gene copy, transcript and protein abundances. To identify functional genes, which have a disproportionately important role in community function, we define a high relative gene expression and a high betweenness centrality relative to node degree as gene-centric and network topological features, respectively.Results:Genes exhibiting high expression relative to gene copy abundance include genes involved in glycerolipid metabolism, particularly triacylglycerol lipase, encoded by known lipid accumulating populations, e.g., Candidatus Microthrix parvicella. Genes with a high relative gene expression and topologically important positions in the network include genes involved in nitrogen metabolism and fatty acid biosynthesis, encoded by Nitrosomonas spp. and Rhodococcus spp. Such genes may be regarded as ‘keystone genes’ as they are likely to be encoded by keystone species.Conclusion:The linking of key functionalities to community members through integrated omics opens up exciting possibilities for devising prediction and control strategies for microbial communities in the future.


bioRxiv | 2016

The Northern Arizona SNP Pipeline (NASP): accurate, flexible, and rapid identification of SNPs in WGS datasets

Jason W. Sahl; Darrin Lemmer; Jason Travis; James M. Schupp; John D. Gillece; Maliha Aziz; Elizabeth M. Driebe; Kevin P. Drees; Nathan D. Hicks; Charles H. D. Williamson; Crystal M. Hepp; David Smith; Chandler C. Roe; David M. Engelthaler; David M. Wagner; Paul Keim

Whole genome sequencing (WGS) of bacteria is becoming standard practice in many laboratories. Applications for WGS analysis include phylogeography and molecular epidemiology, using single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) as the unit of evolution. The Northern Arizona SNP Pipeline (NASP) was developed as a reproducible pipeline that scales well with the large amount of WGS data typically used in comparative genomics applications. In this study, we demonstrate how NASP compares to other tools in the analysis of two real bacterial genomics datasets and one simulated dataset. Our results demonstrate that NASP produces comparable, and often better, results to other pipelines, but is much more flexible in terms of data input types, job management systems, diversity of supported tools, and output formats. We also demonstrate differences in results based on the choice of the reference genome and choice of inferring phylogenies from concatenated SNPs or alignments including monomorphic positions. NASP represents a source-available, version-controlled, unit-tested method and can be obtained from tgennorth.github.io/NASP.


PLOS ONE | 2016

More than 50% of Clostridium difficile Isolates from Pet Dogs in Flagstaff, USA, Carry Toxigenic Genotypes

Nathan E. Stone; Lindsay Sidak-Loftis; Jason W. Sahl; Adam J. Vazquez; Kristin Wiggins; John D. Gillece; Nathan D. Hicks; James M. Schupp; Joseph D. Busch; Paul Keim; David M. Wagner

Nosocomial acquisition of Clostridium difficile is well documented, yet recent studies have highlighted the importance of community acquired infections and identified community associated reservoirs for this pathogen. Multiple studies have implicated companion pets and farm animals as possible sources of community acquired C. difficile infections in humans. To explore the potential role of pet dogs in human C. difficile infections we systematically collected canine fecal samples (n = 197) in Flagstaff, AZ. Additionally, nineteen fecal samples were collected at a local veterinary clinic from diarrheic dogs. We used these combined samples to investigate important questions regarding C. difficile colonization in pet canines: 1) What is the prevalence and diversity of C. difficile in this companion pet population, and 2) Do C. difficile isolates collected from canines genetically overlap with isolates that cause disease in humans? We used a two-step sequence typing approach, including multilocus sequence typing to determine the overall genetic diversity of C. difficile present in Flagstaff canines, and whole-genome sequencing to assess the fine-scale diversity patterns within identical multilocus sequence types from isolates obtained within and among multiple canine hosts. We detected C. difficile in 17% of the canine fecal samples with 10% containing toxigenic strains that are known to cause human disease. Sequencing analyses revealed similar genotypes in dogs and humans. These findings suggest that companion pets are a potential source of community acquired C. difficile infections in humans.


Nature microbiology | 2018

Clinically prevalent mutations in Mycobacterium tuberculosis alter propionate metabolism and mediate multidrug tolerance

Nathan D. Hicks; Jian Yang; Xiaobing Zhang; Bing Zhao; Yonatan H. Grad; Liguo Liu; Xichao Ou; Zhili Chang; Hui Xia; Yang Zhou; Shengfen Wang; Jie Dong; Lilian Sun; Yafang Zhu; Yanlin Zhao; Qi Jin; Sarah M. Fortune

The global epidemic of drug-resistant tuberculosis is a catastrophic example of how antimicrobial resistance is undermining the public health gains made possible by combination drug therapy. Recent evidence points to unappreciated bacterial factors that accelerate the emergence of drug resistance. In a genome-wide association study of Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates from China, we find mutations in the gene encoding the transcription factor prpR enriched in drug-resistant strains. prpR mutations confer conditional drug tolerance to three of the most effective classes of antibiotics by altering propionyl-CoA metabolism. prpR-mediated drug tolerance is carbon-source dependent, and while readily detectable during infection of human macrophages, is not captured by standard susceptibility testing. These data define a previously unrecognized and clinically prevalent class of M. tuberculosis variants that undermine antibiotic efficacy and drive drug resistance.A genome-wide association study of Mycobacterium tuberculosis clinical isolates finds mutations in prpR that alter propionate metabolism and mediate multidrug tolerance.


bioRxiv | 2018

Rifampicin and rifabutin resistance in 1000 Mycobacterium tuberculosis clinical isolates

Maha R. Farhat; Jaimie Sixsmith; Roger Calderon; Nathan D. Hicks; Sarah M. Fortune; Megan Murray

Drug resistant tuberculosis (TB) remains a public health challenge with limited treatment options and high associated mortality. Rifamycins are among the most potent anti-TB drugs, and the loss of susceptibility to these agents, a hallmark of MDR TB, is considered a substantial therapeutic challenge. Rifamycins are known to target the RpoB subunit of RNA polymerase; however, our understanding of how rifamycin resistance is genetically encoded remains incomplete. Here we investigated rpoB genetic diversity and cross resistance between the two rifamycin drugs rifampicin (RIF) and rifabutin (RFB). We performed whole genome sequencing of 1005 MTB clinical isolates and measured minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) to both agents on 7H10 agar using the indirect proportion method. Of the 1005 isolates, 767 were RIF resistant, and of these, 211 (27%) were sensitive to RFB at the critical concentration of 0.5ug/ml; 101/211 isolates had the rpoB mutation D435V (E.coli D516V). Isolates with discrepant resistance (RIF R and RFB S) 16.9 times more likely to harbor a D435V mutation as those resistant to both agents (OR 95% CI 10.5-27.9, P-value <10-40). To further understand this discrepancy, we generated both D435V and S450L (E.coli S531L) rpoB mutants in a laboratory strain and measured their antibiotic susceptibility using the alamar blue reduction assay. Compared with wildtype, D435V increased the 50% inhibitory concentration (IC50) to both RIF and RFB, however in both cases to a lesser degree than the S450L mutation. The observation that the rpoB D435V mutation produces an increase in the IC50 for both drugs contrasts with findings from previous smaller studies that suggested that isolates with D435V mutation remain RFB susceptible despite being RIF resistant. Our finding thus suggests that the recommended critical testing concentration for RFB should be revised.


Standards in Genomic Sciences | 2017

First draft genome sequence of a strain belonging to the Zoogloea genus and its gene expression in situ

Emilie Muller; Shaman Narayanasamy; Myriam Zeimes; Cédric C. Laczny; Laura Lebrun; Malte Herold; Nathan D. Hicks; John D. Gillece; James M. Schupp; Paul Keim; Paul Wilmes

The Gram-negative beta-proteobacterium Zoogloea sp. LCSB751 (LMG 29444) was newly isolated from foaming activated sludge of a municipal wastewater treatment plant. Here, we describe its draft genome sequence and annotation together with a general physiological and genomic analysis, as the first sequenced representative of the Zoogloea genus. Moreover, Zoogloea sp. gene expression in its environment is described using metatranscriptomic data obtained from the same treatment plant. The presented genomic and transcriptomic information demonstrate a pronounced capacity of this genus to synthesize poly-β-hydroxyalkanoate within wastewater.

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James M. Schupp

Translational Genomics Research Institute

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John D. Gillece

Translational Genomics Research Institute

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David M. Engelthaler

Translational Genomics Research Institute

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Chandler C. Roe

Translational Genomics Research Institute

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David Smith

Translational Genomics Research Institute

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Elizabeth M. Driebe

Translational Genomics Research Institute

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Emilie Muller

University of Luxembourg

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Laura Lebrun

University of Luxembourg

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