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Dive into the research topics where Oliver Deusch is active.

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Featured researches published by Oliver Deusch.


Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2008

Genes of Cyanobacterial Origin in Plant Nuclear Genomes Point to a Heterocyst-Forming Plastid Ancestor

Oliver Deusch; Giddy Landan; Mayo Roettger; Nicole Gruenheit; Klaus V. Kowallik; John F. Allen; William Martin; Tal Dagan

Plastids are descended from a cyanobacterial symbiosis which occurred over 1.2 billion years ago. During the course of endosymbiosis, most genes were lost from the cyanobacteriums genome and many were relocated to the host nucleus through endosymbiotic gene transfer (EGT). The issue of how many genes were acquired through EGT in different plant lineages is unresolved. Here, we report the genome-wide frequency of gene acquisitions from cyanobacteria in 4 photosynthetic eukaryotes--Arabidopsis, rice, Chlamydomonas, and the red alga Cyanidioschyzon--by comparison of the 83,138 proteins encoded in their genomes with 851,607 proteins encoded in 9 sequenced cyanobacterial genomes, 215 other reference prokaryotic genomes, and 13 reference eukaryotic genomes. The analyses entail 11,569 phylogenies inferred with both maximum likelihood and Neighbor-Joining approaches. Because each phylogenetic result is dependent not only upon the reconstruction method but also upon the site patterns in the underlying alignment, we investigated how the reliability of site pattern generation via alignment affects our results: if the site patterns in an alignment differ depending upon the order in which amino acids are introduced into multiple sequence alignment--N- to C-terminal versus C- to N-terminal--then the phylogenetic result is likely to be artifactual. Excluding unreliable alignments by this means, we obtain a conservative estimate, wherein about 14% of the proteins examined in each plant genome indicate a cyanobacterial origin for the corresponding nuclear gene, with higher proportions (17-25%) observed among the more reliable alignments. The identification of cyanobacterial genes in plant genomes affords access to an important question: from which type of cyanobacterium did the ancestor of plastids arise? Among the 9 cyanobacterial genomes sampled, Nostoc sp. PCC7120 and Anabaena variabilis ATCC29143 were found to harbor collections of genes which are-in terms of presence/absence and sequence similarity-more like those possessed by the plastid ancestor than those of the other 7 cyanobacterial genomes sampled here. This suggests that the ancestor of plastids might have been an organism more similar to filamentous, heterocyst-forming (nitrogen-fixing) representatives of section IV recognized in Staniers cyanobacterial classification. Members of section IV are very common partners in contemporary symbiotic associations involving endosymbiotic cyanobacteria, which generally provide nitrogen to their host, consistent with suggestions that fixed nitrogen supplied by the endosymbiont might have played an important role during the origin of plastids.


Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2009

A Proteomic Survey of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii Mitochondria Sheds New Light on the Metabolic Plasticity of the Organelle and on the Nature of the α-Proteobacterial Mitochondrial Ancestor

Ariane Atteia; Annie Adrait; Sabine Brugière; Marianne Tardif; Robert van Lis; Oliver Deusch; Tal Dagan; Lauriane Kuhn; Brigitte Gontero; William Martin; Jérôme Garin; Jacques Joyard; Norbert Rolland

Mitochondria play a key role in the life and death of eukaryotic cells, yet the full spectrum of mitochondrial functions is far from being fully understood, especially in photosynthetic organisms. To advance our understanding of mitochondrial functions in a photosynthetic cell, an extensive proteomic survey of Percoll-purified mitochondria from the metabolically versatile, hydrogen-producing green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii was performed. Different fractions of purified mitochondria from Chlamydomonas cells grown under aerobic conditions were analyzed by nano-liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry after protein separation on sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis or on blue-native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Of the 496 nonredundant proteins identified, 149 are known or predicted to reside in other cellular compartments and were thus excluded from the molecular and evolutionary analyses of the Chlamydomonas proteome. The mitochondrial proteome of the photosynthetic alga reveals important lineage-specific differences with other mitochondrial proteomes, reflecting the high metabolic diversity of the organelle. Some mitochondrial metabolic pathways in Chlamydomonas appear to combine typical mitochondrial enzymes and bacterial-type ones, whereas others are unknown among mitochondriate eukaryotes. The comparison of the Chlamydomonas proteins to their identifiable homologs predicted from 354 sequenced genomes indicated that Arabidopsis is the most closely related nonalgal eukaryote. Furthermore, this phylogenomic analysis shows that free-living alpha-proteobacteria from the metabolically versatile orders Rhizobiales and Rhodobacterales better reflect the gene content of the ancestor of the chlorophyte mitochondria than parasitic alpha-proteobacteria with reduced and specialized genomes.


Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2011

Transcriptomic Evidence That Longevity of Acquired Plastids in the Photosynthetic Slugs Elysia timida and Plakobranchus ocellatus Does Not Entail Lateral Transfer of Algal Nuclear Genes

Heike Wägele; Oliver Deusch; Katharina Händeler; Rainer Martin; Valerie Schmitt; Gregor Christa; Britta Pinzger; Sven B. Gould; Tal Dagan; Annette Klussmann-Kolb; William Martin

Sacoglossan sea slugs are unique in the animal kingdom in that they sequester and maintain active plastids that they acquire from the siphonaceous algae upon which they feed, making the animals photosynthetic. Although most sacoglossan species digest their freshly ingested plastids within hours, four species from the family Plakobranchidae retain their stolen plastids (kleptoplasts) in a photosynthetically active state on timescales of weeks to months. The molecular basis of plastid maintenance within the cytosol of digestive gland cells in these photosynthetic metazoans is yet unknown but is widely thought to involve gene transfer from the algal food source to the slugs based upon previous investigations of single genes. Indeed, normal plastid development requires hundreds of nuclear-encoded proteins, with protein turnover in photosystem II in particular known to be rapid under various conditions. Moreover, only algal plastids, not the algal nuclei, are sequestered by the animals during feeding. If algal nuclear genes are transferred to the animal either during feeding or in the germ line, and if they are expressed, then they should be readily detectable with deep-sequencing methods. We have sequenced expressed mRNAs from actively photosynthesizing, starved individuals of two photosynthetic sea slug species, Plakobranchus ocellatus Van Hasselt, 1824 and Elysia timida Risso, 1818. We find that nuclear-encoded, algal-derived genes specific to photosynthetic function are expressed neither in P. ocellatus nor in E. timida. Despite their dramatic plastid longevity, these photosynthetic sacoglossan slugs do not express genes acquired from algal nuclei in order to maintain plastid function.


Genome Biology and Evolution | 2011

Systematic Error in Seed Plant Phylogenomics

Bojian Zhong; Oliver Deusch; Vadim V. Goremykin; David Penny; Patrick J. Biggs; Robin A. Atherton; Svetlana V. Nikiforova; Peter J. Lockhart

Resolving the closest relatives of Gnetales has been an enigmatic problem in seed plant phylogeny. The problem is known to be difficult because of the extent of divergence between this diverse group of gymnosperms and their closest phylogenetic relatives. Here, we investigate the evolutionary properties of conifer chloroplast DNA sequences. To improve taxon sampling of Cupressophyta (non-Pinaceae conifers), we report sequences from three new chloroplast (cp) genomes of Southern Hemisphere conifers. We have applied a site pattern sorting criterion to study compositional heterogeneity, heterotachy, and the fit of conifer chloroplast genome sequences to a general time reversible + G substitution model. We show that non-time reversible properties of aligned sequence positions in the chloroplast genomes of Gnetales mislead phylogenetic reconstruction of these seed plants. When 2,250 of the most varied sites in our concatenated alignment are excluded, phylogenetic analyses favor a close evolutionary relationship between the Gnetales and Pinaceae—the Gnepine hypothesis. Our analytical protocol provides a useful approach for evaluating the robustness of phylogenomic inferences. Our findings highlight the importance of goodness of fit between substitution model and data for understanding seed plant phylogeny.


BMC Genomics | 2012

Cutoffs and k-mers: implications from a transcriptome study in allopolyploid plants

Nicole Gruenheit; Oliver Deusch; Christian Esser; Matthias Becker; Claudia Voelckel; Peter J. Lockhart

BackgroundTranscriptome analysis is increasingly being used to study the evolutionary origins and ecology of non-model plants. One issue for both transcriptome assembly and differential gene expression analyses is the common occurrence in plants of hybridisation and whole genome duplication (WGD) and hybridization resulting in allopolyploidy. The divergence of duplicated genes following WGD creates near identical homeologues that can be problematic for de novo assembly and also reference based assembly protocols that use short reads (35 - 100 bp).ResultsHere we report a successful strategy for the assembly of two transcriptomes made using 75 bp Illumina reads from Pachycladon fastigiatum and Pachycladon cheesemanii. Both are allopolyploid plant species (2n = 20) that originated in the New Zealand Alps about 0.8 million years ago. In a systematic analysis of 19 different coverage cutoffs and 20 different k-mer sizes we showed that i) none of the genes could be assembled across all of the parameter space ii) assembly of each gene required an optimal set of parameter values and iii) these parameter values could be explained in part by different gene expression levels and different degrees of similarity between genes.ConclusionsTo obtain optimal transcriptome assemblies for allopolyploid plants, k-mer size and k-mer coverage need to be considered simultaneously across a broad parameter space. This is important for assembling a maximum number of full length ESTs and for avoiding chimeric assemblies of homeologous and paralogous gene copies.


Nature Climate Change | 2013

Hybridization may facilitate in situ survival of endemic species through periods of climate change

Matthias Becker; Nicole Gruenheit; Mike Steel; Claudia Voelckel; Oliver Deusch; P. B. Heenan; Patricia A. McLenachan; Olga Kardailsky; Jessica W. Leigh; Peter J. Lockhart

Predicting species’ chances of survival under climate change requires an understanding of their adaptive potential. Now research into hybridization—one mechanism that could facilitate adaptation—shows that species of the plant genus Pachycladon that survived the Last Glacial Maximum benefited from the transfer of genetic information through hybridization. Predicting survival and extinction scenarios for climate change requires an understanding of the present day ecological characteristics of species and future available habitats, but also the adaptive potential of species to cope with environmental change. Hybridization is one mechanism that could facilitate this. Here we report statistical evidence that the transfer of genetic information through hybridization is a feature of species from the plant genus Pachycladon that survived the Last Glacial Maximum in geographically separated alpine refugia in New Zealand’s South Island. We show that transferred glucosinolate hydrolysis genes also exhibit evidence of intra-locus recombination. Such gene exchange and recombination has the potential to alter the chemical defence in the offspring of hybridizing species. We use a mathematical model to show that when hybridization increases the adaptive potential of species, future biodiversity will be best protected by preserving closely related species that hybridize rather than by conserving distantly related species that are genetically isolated.


Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology | 2009

Transketolase from Cyanophora paradoxa: In Vitro Import into Cyanelles and Pea Chloroplasts and a Complex History of a Gene Often, But Not Always, Transferred in the Context of Secondary Endosymbiosis

Yan Ma; Johannes Jakowitsch; Oliver Deusch; Katrin Henze; William Martin; Wolfgang Löffelhardt

ABSTRACT. The glaucocystophyte Cyanophora paradoxa is an obligatorily photoautotrophic biflagellated protist containing cyanelles, peculiar plastids surrounded by a peptidoglycan layer between their inner and outer envelope membranes. Although the 136‐kb cyanelle genome surpasses higher plant chloroplast genomes in coding capacity by about 50 protein genes, these primitive plastids still have to import >2,000 polypeptides across their unique organelle wall. One such protein is transketolase, an essential enzyme of the Calvin cycle. We report the sequence of the pre‐transketolase cDNA from C. paradoxa and in vitro import experiments of precursor polypeptides into cyanelles and into pea chloroplasts. The transit sequence clearly indicates the localization of the gene product to cyanelles and is more similar to the transit sequences of the plant homologues than to transit sequences of other cyanelle precursor polypeptides with the exception of a cyanelle consensus sequence at the N‐terminus. The mature sequence reveals conservation of the thiamine pyrophosphate binding site. A neighbor‐net planar graph suggests that Cyanophora, higher plants, and the photosynthetic protist Euglena gracilis acquired their nuclear‐encoded transketolase genes via endosymbiotic gene transfer from the cyanobacterial ancestor of plastids; in the case of Euglena probably entailing two transfers, once from the plastid in the green algal lineage and once again in the secondary endosymbiosis underlying the origin of Euglenas plastids. By contrast, transketolase genes in some eukaryotes with secondary plastids of red algal origin, such as Thalassiosira pseudonana, have retained the pre‐existing transketolase gene germane to their secondary host.


Tree Genetics & Genomes | 2015

A DNA-based diagnostic for differentiating among New Zealand endemic Podocarpus

Christina W. Marshall; David Chagné; Oliver Deusch; Nicole Gruenheit; John McCallum; David Bergin; Peter J. Lockhart; Phillip Wilcox

Species of the genus Podocarpus are primarily found in the Southern Hemisphere. In New Zealand, there are four endemic species—Podocarpus acutifolius, Podocarpus nivalis, Podocarpus totara and Podocarpus cunninghamii. The last mentioned two species, tōtara and Hall’s tōtara, are the most economically and culturally important and have been used extensively for carving, timber and medicinal purposes. However, these species are often difficult to distinguish morphologically as seedlings and adults. Useable Po. totara and Po. cunninghamii timber resources are now scarce, and replanting of tōtara is very costly; therefore, cheap diagnostics for ensuring species identity would be useful for replanting. Using expressed sequence tag (EST)-aligned genomic DNA sequences from putative Po. totara × Po. cunninghamii hybrids, we designed 120 primers for high-resolution melting (HRM) assays. These were evaluated in a multi-stage screening process to identify markers that discriminate among New Zealand endemic Podocarpus species. Ten markers reproducibly differentiated at least one species from the other three, and six differentiated two or more species. One marker differentiated all four species. Moreover, two markers were able to identify ‘artifical’ F1 hybrids of Po. totara and Po. cunninghamii that had been created from mixing equal amounts of DNA from one genotype of each species. Markers also differentiated a non-New Zealand endemic, Podocarpus lawrencei. Phylogenetic analyses indicated that Po. acutifolius accessions were genetically most similar to those of Po. totara, while Po. nivalis was the most genetically distinct species. Our results show that HRM markers can be easily developed from small amounts of next-generation sequence data and used to identify species and determine their phylogenetic relationships.


Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2007

Independent Wheat B and G Genome Origins in Outcrossing Aegilops Progenitor Haplotypes

Benjamin Kilian; H. Özkan; Oliver Deusch; S. Effgen; A. Brandolini; Jochen Kohl; William Martin; Francesco Salamini


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 2006

Haplotype structure at seven barley genes: relevance to gene pool bottlenecks, phylogeny of ear type and site of barley domestication

Benjamin Kilian; Hakan Özkan; Jochen Kohl; Arndt von Haeseler; Francesca Barale; Oliver Deusch; Andrea Brandolini; Cemal Yücel; William Martin; Francesco Salamini

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William Martin

University of Düsseldorf

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Jochen Kohl

University of Düsseldorf

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