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Dive into the research topics where Olga Chertkov is active.

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Featured researches published by Olga Chertkov.


Nature Biotechnology | 2008

Genome sequencing and analysis of the biomass-degrading fungus Trichoderma reesei (syn. Hypocrea jecorina).

Diego Martinez; Randy M. Berka; Bernard Henrissat; Markku Saloheimo; Mikko Arvas; Scott E. Baker; Jarod Chapman; Olga Chertkov; Pedro M. Coutinho; Dan Cullen; Etienne Danchin; Igor V. Grigoriev; Paul Harris; Melissa Jackson; Christian P. Kubicek; Cliff Han; Isaac Ho; Luis F. Larrondo; Alfredo Lopez de Leon; Jon K. Magnuson; Sandy Merino; Monica Misra; Beth Nelson; Nicholas H. Putnam; Barbara Robbertse; Asaf Salamov; Monika Schmoll; Astrid Terry; Nina Thayer; Ann Westerholm-Parvinen

Trichoderma reesei is the main industrial source of cellulases and hemicellulases used to depolymerize biomass to simple sugars that are converted to chemical intermediates and biofuels, such as ethanol. We assembled 89 scaffolds (sets of ordered and oriented contigs) to generate 34 Mbp of nearly contiguous T. reesei genome sequence comprising 9,129 predicted gene models. Unexpectedly, considering the industrial utility and effectiveness of the carbohydrate-active enzymes of T. reesei, its genome encodes fewer cellulases and hemicellulases than any other sequenced fungus able to hydrolyze plant cell wall polysaccharides. Many T. reesei genes encoding carbohydrate-active enzymes are distributed nonrandomly in clusters that lie between regions of synteny with other Sordariomycetes. Numerous genes encoding biosynthetic pathways for secondary metabolites may promote survival of T. reesei in its competitive soil habitat, but genome analysis provided little mechanistic insight into its extraordinary capacity for protein secretion. Our analysis, coupled with the genome sequence data, provides a roadmap for constructing enhanced T. reesei strains for industrial applications such as biofuel production.


Genome Biology | 2011

Comparative genome sequence analysis underscores mycoparasitism as the ancestral life style of Trichoderma

Christian P. Kubicek; Alfredo Herrera-Estrella; Diego Martinez; Irina S. Druzhinina; Michael R. Thon; Susanne Zeilinger; Sergio Casas-Flores; Benjamin A. Horwitz; Prasun K. Mukherjee; Mala Mukherjee; László Kredics; Luis David Alcaraz; Andrea Aerts; Zsuzsanna Antal; Lea Atanasova; Mayte Guadalupe Cervantes-Badillo; Jean F. Challacombe; Olga Chertkov; Kevin McCluskey; Fanny Coulpier; Nandan Deshpande; Hans von Döhren; Daniel J. Ebbole; Edgardo U. Esquivel-Naranjo; Erzsébet Fekete; Michel Flipphi; Fabian Glaser; Elida Yazmín Gómez-Rodríguez; Sabine Gruber; Cliff Han

BackgroundMycoparasitism, a lifestyle where one fungus is parasitic on another fungus, has special relevance when the prey is a plant pathogen, providing a strategy for biological control of pests for plant protection. Probably, the most studied biocontrol agents are species of the genus Hypocrea/Trichoderma.ResultsHere we report an analysis of the genome sequences of the two biocontrol species Trichoderma atroviride (teleomorph Hypocrea atroviridis) and Trichoderma virens (formerly Gliocladium virens, teleomorph Hypocrea virens), and a comparison with Trichoderma reesei (teleomorph Hypocrea jecorina). These three Trichoderma species display a remarkable conservation of gene order (78 to 96%), and a lack of active mobile elements probably due to repeat-induced point mutation. Several gene families are expanded in the two mycoparasitic species relative to T. reesei or other ascomycetes, and are overrepresented in non-syntenic genome regions. A phylogenetic analysis shows that T. reesei and T. virens are derived relative to T. atroviride. The mycoparasitism-specific genes thus arose in a common Trichoderma ancestor but were subsequently lost in T. reesei.ConclusionsThe data offer a better understanding of mycoparasitism, and thus enforce the development of improved biocontrol strains for efficient and environmentally friendly protection of plants.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Comparative genomics reveals mechanism for short-term and long-term clonal transitions in pandemic Vibrio cholerae

Jongsik Chun; Christopher J. Grim; Nur A. Hasan; Je Hee Lee; Seon Young Choi; Bradd J. Haley; Elisa Taviani; Yoon-Seong Jeon; Dong-Wook Kim; Jae-Hak Lee; Thomas Brettin; David Bruce; Jean F. Challacombe; J. Chris Detter; Cliff Han; A. Christine Munk; Olga Chertkov; Linda Meincke; Elizabeth Saunders; Ronald A. Walters; Anwar Huq; G. Balakrish Nair; Rita R. Colwell

Vibrio cholerae, the causative agent of cholera, is a bacterium autochthonous to the aquatic environment, and a serious public health threat. V. cholerae serogroup O1 is responsible for the previous two cholera pandemics, in which classical and El Tor biotypes were dominant in the sixth and the current seventh pandemics, respectively. Cholera researchers continually face newly emerging and reemerging pathogenic clones carrying diverse combinations of phenotypic and genotypic properties, which significantly hampered control of the disease. To elucidate evolutionary mechanisms governing genetic diversity of pandemic V. cholerae, we compared the genome sequences of 23 V. cholerae strains isolated from a variety of sources over the past 98 years. The genome-based phylogeny revealed 12 distinct V. cholerae lineages, of which one comprises both O1 classical and El Tor biotypes. All seventh pandemic clones share nearly identical gene content. Using analogy to influenza virology, we define the transition from sixth to seventh pandemic strains as a “shift” between pathogenic clones belonging to the same O1 serogroup, but from significantly different phyletic lineages. In contrast, transition among clones during the present pandemic period is characterized as a “drift” between clones, differentiated mainly by varying composition of laterally transferred genomic islands, resulting in emergence of variants, exemplified by V. cholerae O139 and V. cholerae O1 El Tor hybrid clones. Based on the comparative genomics it is concluded that V. cholerae undergoes extensive genetic recombination via lateral gene transfer, and, therefore, genome assortment, not serogroup, should be used to define pathogenic V. cholerae clones.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2006

Pathogenomic Sequence Analysis of Bacillus cereus and Bacillus thuringiensis Isolates Closely Related to Bacillus anthracis

Cliff Han; Gary Xie; Jean F. Challacombe; Michael R. Altherr; Smriti S. Bhotika; David Bruce; Connie S. Campbell; Mary L. Campbell; Jin Chen; Olga Chertkov; Cathy Cleland; Mira Dimitrijevic; Norman A. Doggett; John J. Fawcett; Tijana Glavina; Lynne Goodwin; Karen K. Hill; Penny Hitchcock; Paul J. Jackson; Paul Keim; Avinash Ramesh Kewalramani; Jon Longmire; Susan Lucas; Stephanie Malfatti; Kim McMurry; Linda Meincke; Monica Misra; Bernice L. Moseman; Mark Mundt; A. Christine Munk

Bacillus anthracis, Bacillus cereus, and Bacillus thuringiensis are closely related gram-positive, spore-forming bacteria of the B. cereus sensu lato group. While independently derived strains of B. anthracis reveal conspicuous sequence homogeneity, environmental isolates of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis exhibit extensive genetic diversity. Here we report the sequencing and comparative analysis of the genomes of two members of the B. cereus group, B. thuringiensis 97-27 subsp. konkukian serotype H34, isolated from a necrotic human wound, and B. cereus E33L, which was isolated from a swab of a zebra carcass in Namibia. These two strains, when analyzed by amplified fragment length polymorphism within a collection of over 300 of B. cereus, B. thuringiensis, and B. anthracis isolates, appear closely related to B. anthracis. The B. cereus E33L isolate appears to be the nearest relative to B. anthracis identified thus far. Whole-genome sequencing of B. thuringiensis 97-27and B. cereus E33L was undertaken to identify shared and unique genes among these isolates in comparison to the genomes of pathogenic strains B. anthracis Ames and B. cereus G9241 and nonpathogenic strains B. cereus ATCC 10987 and B. cereus ATCC 14579. Comparison of these genomes revealed differences in terms of virulence, metabolic competence, structural components, and regulatory mechanisms.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2007

Genome Sequence of the Cellulolytic Gliding Bacterium Cytophaga hutchinsonii

Gary Xie; David Bruce; Jean F. Challacombe; Olga Chertkov; John C. Detter; Paul Gilna; Cliff Han; Susan Lucas; Monica Misra; Gerald L. Myers; Paul G. Richardson; Roxanne Tapia; Nina Thayer; Linda S. Thompson; Thomas Brettin; Bernard Henrissat; David B. Wilson; Mark J. McBride

ABSTRACT The complete DNA sequence of the aerobic cellulolytic soil bacterium Cytophaga hutchinsonii, which belongs to the phylum Bacteroidetes, is presented. The genome consists of a single, circular, 4.43-Mb chromosome containing 3,790 open reading frames, 1,986 of which have been assigned a tentative function. Two of the most striking characteristics of C. hutchinsonii are its rapid gliding motility over surfaces and its contact-dependent digestion of crystalline cellulose. The mechanism of C. hutchinsonii motility is not known, but its genome contains homologs for each of the gld genes that are required for gliding of the distantly related bacteroidete Flavobacterium johnsoniae. Cytophaga-Flavobacterium gliding appears to be novel and does not involve well-studied motility organelles such as flagella or type IV pili. Many genes thought to encode proteins involved in cellulose utilization were identified. These include candidate endo-β-1,4-glucanases and β-glucosidases. Surprisingly, obvious homologs of known cellobiohydrolases were not detected. Since such enzymes are needed for efficient cellulose digestion by well-studied cellulolytic bacteria, C. hutchinsonii either has novel cellobiohydrolases or has an unusual method of cellulose utilization. Genes encoding proteins with cohesin domains, which are characteristic of cellulosomes, were absent, but many proteins predicted to be involved in polysaccharide utilization had putative D5 domains, which are thought to be involved in anchoring proteins to the cell surface.


Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2012

Genome Sequencing and Mapping Reveal Loss of Heterozygosity as a Mechanism for Rapid Adaptation in the Vegetable Pathogen Phytophthora capsici

Kurt Lamour; Joann Mudge; Daniel Gobena; Oscar Hurtado-Gonzales; Jeremy Schmutz; Alan Kuo; Neil Miller; Brandon J. Rice; Sylvain Raffaele; Liliana M. Cano; Arvind K. Bharti; Ryan S. Donahoo; Sabra Finley; Edgar Huitema; Jon Hulvey; Darren Platt; Asaf Salamov; Alon Savidor; Rahul Sharma; Remco Stam; Dylan Storey; Marco Thines; Joe Win; Brian J. Haas; Darrell L. Dinwiddie; Jerry Jenkins; James Knight; Jason Affourtit; Cliff Han; Olga Chertkov

The oomycete vegetable pathogen Phytophthora capsici has shown remarkable adaptation to fungicides and new hosts. Like other members of this destructive genus, P. capsici has an explosive epidemiology, rapidly producing massive numbers of asexual spores on infected hosts. In addition, P. capsici can remain dormant for years as sexually recombined oospores, making it difficult to produce crops at infested sites, and allowing outcrossing populations to maintain significant genetic variation. Genome sequencing, development of a high-density genetic map, and integrative genomic or genetic characterization of P. capsici field isolates and intercross progeny revealed significant mitotic loss of heterozygosity (LOH) in diverse isolates. LOH was detected in clonally propagated field isolates and sexual progeny, cumulatively affecting >30% of the genome. LOH altered genotypes for more than 11,000 single-nucleotide variant sites and showed a strong association with changes in mating type and pathogenicity. Overall, it appears that LOH may provide a rapid mechanism for fixing alleles and may be an important component of adaptability for P. capsici.


PLOS ONE | 2011

The complete genome sequence of Fibrobacter succinogenes S85 reveals a cellulolytic and metabolic specialist.

Garret Suen; Paul J. Weimer; David M. Stevenson; Frank O. Aylward; Julie Boyum; Jan Deneke; Colleen Drinkwater; Natalia Ivanova; Natalia Mikhailova; Olga Chertkov; Lynne Goodwin; Cameron R. Currie; David A. Mead; Phillip J. Brumm

Fibrobacter succinogenes is an important member of the rumen microbial community that converts plant biomass into nutrients usable by its host. This bacterium, which is also one of only two cultivated species in its phylum, is an efficient and prolific degrader of cellulose. Specifically, it has a particularly high activity against crystalline cellulose that requires close physical contact with this substrate. However, unlike other known cellulolytic microbes, it does not degrade cellulose using a cellulosome or by producing high extracellular titers of cellulase enzymes. To better understand the biology of F. succinogenes, we sequenced the genome of the type strain S85 to completion. A total of 3,085 open reading frames were predicted from its 3.84 Mbp genome. Analysis of sequences predicted to encode for carbohydrate-degrading enzymes revealed an unusually high number of genes that were classified into 49 different families of glycoside hydrolases, carbohydrate binding modules (CBMs), carbohydrate esterases, and polysaccharide lyases. Of the 31 identified cellulases, none contain CBMs in families 1, 2, and 3, typically associated with crystalline cellulose degradation. Polysaccharide hydrolysis and utilization assays showed that F. succinogenes was able to hydrolyze a number of polysaccharides, but could only utilize the hydrolytic products of cellulose. This suggests that F. succinogenes uses its array of hemicellulose-degrading enzymes to remove hemicelluloses to gain access to cellulose. This is reflected in its genome, as F. succinogenes lacks many of the genes necessary to transport and metabolize the hydrolytic products of non-cellulose polysaccharides. The F. succinogenes genome reveals a bacterium that specializes in cellulose as its sole energy source, and provides insight into a novel strategy for cellulose degradation.


Standards in Genomic Sciences | 2014

Complete genome sequence of DSM 30083T, the type strain (U5/41T) of Escherichia coli, and a proposal for delineating subspecies in microbial taxonomy

Jan P. Meier-Kolthoff; Richard L. Hahnke; Jörn Petersen; Carmen Scheuner; Victoria Michael; Anne Fiebig; Christine Rohde; Manfred Rohde; Berthold Fartmann; Lynne Goodwin; Olga Chertkov; T. B. K. Reddy; Amrita Pati; Natalia Ivanova; Victor Markowitz; Nikos C. Kyrpides; Tanja Woyke; Markus Göker; Hans-Peter Klenk

Although Escherichia coli is the most widely studied bacterial model organism and often considered to be the model bacterium per se, its type strain was until now forgotten from microbial genomics. As a part of the GenomicEncyclopedia ofBacteria andArchaea project, we here describe the features of E. coli DSM 30083T together with its genome sequence and annotation as well as novel aspects of its phenotype. The 5,038,133 bp containing genome sequence includes 4,762 protein-coding genes and 175 RNA genes as well as a single plasmid. Affiliation of a set of 250 genome-sequenced E. coli strains, Shigella and outgroup strains to the type strain of E. coli was investigated using digital DNA:DNA-hybridization (dDDH) similarities and differences in genomic G+C content. As in the majority of previous studies, results show Shigella spp. embedded within E. coli and in most cases forming a single subgroup of it. Phylogenomic trees also recover the proposed E. coli phylotypes as monophyla with minor exceptions and place DSM 30083T in phylotype B2 with E. coli S88 as its closest neighbor. The widely used lab strain K-12 is not only genomically but also physiologically strongly different from the type strain. The phylotypes do not express a uniform level of character divergence as measured using dDDH, however, thus an alternative arrangement is proposed and discussed in the context of bacterial subspecies. Analyses of the genome sequences of a large number of E. coli strains and of strains from > 100 other bacterial genera indicate a value of 79-80% dDDH as the most promising threshold for delineating subspecies, which in turn suggests the presence of five subspecies within E. coli.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Genomic comparison of Escherichia coli O104:H4 isolates from 2009 and 2011 reveals plasmid, and prophage heterogeneity, including shiga toxin encoding phage stx2.

Sanaa Ahmed; Joy Awosika; Carson Baldwin; Kimberly A. Bishop-Lilly; Biswajit Biswas; S. M. Broomall; Patrick Chain; Olga Chertkov; Otar Chokoshvili; Susan R. Coyne; Karen W. Davenport; J. Chris Detter; William Dorman; Tracy Erkkila; Jason P. Folster; K. G. Frey; Matroner George; Cheryl D. Gleasner; Matthew Henry; Karen K. Hill; Kyle S. Hubbard; Joseph Insalaco; Shannon L. Johnson; Aaron Kitzmiller; Michael Krepps; Chien-Chi Lo; Truong Luu; Lauren McNew; Timothy D. Minogue; Christine Munk

In May of 2011, an enteroaggregative Escherichia coli O104:H4 strain that had acquired a Shiga toxin 2-converting phage caused a large outbreak of bloody diarrhea in Europe which was notable for its high prevalence of hemolytic uremic syndrome cases. Several studies have described the genomic inventory and phylogenies of strains associated with the outbreak and a collection of historical E. coli O104:H4 isolates using draft genome assemblies. We present the complete, closed genome sequences of an isolate from the 2011 outbreak (2011C–3493) and two isolates from cases of bloody diarrhea that occurred in the Republic of Georgia in 2009 (2009EL–2050 and 2009EL–2071). Comparative genome analysis indicates that, while the Georgian strains are the nearest neighbors to the 2011 outbreak isolates sequenced to date, structural and nucleotide-level differences are evident in the Stx2 phage genomes, the mer/tet antibiotic resistance island, and in the prophage and plasmid profiles of the strains, including a previously undescribed plasmid with homology to the pMT virulence plasmid of Yersinia pestis. In addition, multiphenotype analysis showed that 2009EL–2071 possessed higher resistance to polymyxin and membrane-disrupting agents. Finally, we show evidence by electron microscopy of the presence of a common phage morphotype among the European and Georgian strains and a second phage morphotype among the Georgian strains. The presence of at least two stx2 phage genotypes in host genetic backgrounds that may derive from a recent common ancestor of the 2011 outbreak isolates indicates that the emergence of stx2 phage-containing E. coli O104:H4 strains probably occurred more than once, or that the current outbreak isolates may be the result of a recent transfer of a new stx2 phage element into a pre-existing stx2-positive genetic background.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2013

Comparative genomics of freshwater Fe-oxidizing bacteria: implications for physiology, ecology, and systematics

David Emerson; Erin K. Field; Olga Chertkov; Karen W. Davenport; Lynne Goodwin; Christine Munk; Matt Nolan; Tanja Woyke

The two microaerophilic, Fe-oxidizing bacteria (FeOB) Sideroxydans ES-1 and Gallionella ES-2 have single circular chromosomes of 3.00 and 3.16 Mb that encode 3049 and 3006 genes, respectively. Multi-locus sequence analysis (MLSA) confirmed the relationship of these two organisms to one another, and indicated they may form a novel order, the Gallionellalaes, within the Betaproteobacteria. Both are adapted for chemolithoautotropy, including pathways for CO2-fixation, and electron transport pathways adapted for growth at low O2-levels, an important adaptation for growing on Fe(II). Both genomes contain Mto-genes implicated in iron-oxidation, as well as other genes that could be involved in Fe-oxidation. Nearly 10% of their genomes are devoted to environmental sensing, signal transduction, and chemotaxis, consistent with their requirement for growing in narrow redox gradients of Fe(II) and O2. There are important differences as well. Sideroxydans ES-1 is more metabolically flexible, and can utilize reduced S-compounds, including thiosulfate, for lithotrophic growth. It has a suite of genes for nitrogen fixation. Gallionella ES-2 contains additional gene clusters for exopolysaccharide production, and has more capacity to resist heavy metals. Both strains contain genes for hemerythrins and globins, but ES-1 has an especially high numbers of these genes that may be involved in oxygen homeostasis, or storage. The two strains share homology with the marine FeOB Mariprofundus ferrooxydans PV-1 in CO2 fixation genes, and respiratory genes. In addition, ES-1 shares a suite of 20 potentially redox active genes with PV-1, as well as a large prophage. Combined these genetic, morphological, and physiological differences indicate that these are two novel species, Sideroxydans lithotrophicus ES-1T (ATCC 700298T; JCM 14762; DSMZ 22444; NCMA B100), and Gallionella capsiferriformans ES-2T (ATCC 700299T; JCM 14763; DSMZ 22445; NCMA B101).

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Lynne Goodwin

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Cliff Han

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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David Bruce

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Susan Lucas

United States Department of Energy

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Sam Pitluck

Joint Genome Institute

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Alla Lapidus

University of California

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Miriam Land

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Matt Nolan

Joint Genome Institute

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Amrita Pati

Joint Genome Institute

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