Paul Keim
University of Arizona
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Featured researches published by Paul Keim.
Archive | 2010
Giovanna Morelli; Yajun Song; Camila J. Mazzoni; Mark Eppinger; Philippe Roumagnac; David M. Wagner; Mirjam Feldkamp; Barica Kusecek; Amy J. Vogler; Yanjun Li; Yujun Cui; Nicholas R. Thomson; Thibaut Jombart; Raphaël Leblois; Peter Lichtner; Lila Rahalison; Jeannine M. Petersen; Francois Balloux; Paul Keim; Thierry Wirth; Jacques Ravel; Ruifu Yang; Elisabeth Carniel; Mark Achtman
Pandemic infectious diseases have accompanied humans since their origins1, and have shaped the form of civilizations2. Of these, plague is possibly historically the most dramatic. We reconstructed historical patterns of plague transmission through sequence variation in 17 complete genome sequences and 933 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) within a global collection of 286 Yersinia pestis isolates. Y. pestis evolved in or near China, and has been transmitted via multiple epidemics that followed various routes, probably including transmissions to West Asia via the Silk Road and to Africa by Chinese marine voyages. In 1894, Y. pestis spread to India and radiated to diverse parts of the globe, leading to country-specific lineages that can be traced by lineage-specific SNPs. All 626 current isolates from the U.S.A. reflect one radiation and 82 isolates from Madagascar represent a second. Subsequent local microevolution of Y. pestis is marked by sequential, geographically-specific SNPs.Plague is a pandemic human invasive disease caused by the bacterial agent Yersinia pestis. We here report a comparison of 17 whole genomes of Y. pestis isolates from global sources. We also screened a global collection of 286 Y. pestis isolates for 933 SNPs using Sequenom MassArray SNP typing. We conducted phylogenetic analyses on this sequence variation dataset, assigned isolates to populations based on maximum parsimony and, from these results, made inferences regarding historical transmission routes. Our phylogenetic analysis suggests that Y. pestis evolved in or near China and spread through multiple radiations to Europe, South America, Africa and Southeast Asia, leading to country-specific lineages that can be traced by lineage-specific SNPs. All 626 current isolates from the United States reflect one radiation, and 82 isolates from Madagascar represent a second radiation. Subsequent local microevolution of Y. pestis is marked by sequential, geographically specific SNPs.
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2015
Xiangyu Deng; Nikki Shariat; Elizabeth M. Driebe; Chandler C. Roe; Beth Tolar; Eija Trees; Paul Keim; Wei Zhang; Edward G. Dudley; Patricia I. Fields; David M. Engelthaler
ABSTRACT A retrospective investigation was performed to evaluate whole-genome sequencing as a benchmark for comparing molecular subtyping methods for Salmonella enterica serotype Enteritidis and survey the population structure of commonly encountered S. enterica serotype Enteritidis outbreak isolates in the United States. A total of 52 S. enterica serotype Enteritidis isolates representing 16 major outbreaks and three sporadic cases collected between 2001 and 2012 were sequenced and subjected to subtyping by four different methods: (i) whole-genome single-nucleotide-polymorphism typing (WGST), (ii) multiple-locus variable-number tandem-repeat (VNTR) analysis (MLVA), (iii) clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats combined with multi-virulence-locus sequence typing (CRISPR-MVLST), and (iv) pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE). WGST resolved all outbreak clusters and provided useful robust phylogenetic inference results with high epidemiological correlation. While both MLVA and CRISPR-MVLST yielded higher discriminatory power than PFGE, MLVA outperformed the other methods in delineating outbreak clusters whereas CRISPR-MVLST showed the potential to trace major lineages and ecological origins of S. enterica serotype Enteritidis. Our results suggested that whole-genome sequencing makes a viable platform for the evaluation and benchmarking of molecular subtyping methods.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2012
Emilie Muller; Nicolás Pinel; John D. Gillece; James M. Schupp; Lance B. Price; David M. Engelthaler; Caterina Levantesi; Valter Tandoi; Khai Luong; Nitin S. Baliga; Jonas Korlach; Paul Keim; Paul Wilmes
Archive | 2002
Paul Keim; Christine Keys
Applications and Systematics of Bacillus and Relatives | 2008
Peter C. B. Turnbull; Paul J. Jackson; Karen K. Hill; Paul Keim; Anne-Brit Kolstø; Douglas J. Beecher
Archive | 2003
Paul Keim; Kristen Zinnamon
Genome Announcements | 2016
Shannon L. Johnson; Kimberly A. Bishop-Lilly; Jason T. Ladner; Hajnalka E. Daligault; Karen W. Davenport; James G. Jaissle; K. G. Frey; Galina Koroleva; David C. Bruce; Susan R. Coyne; Stacey M. Broomall; Natkunam Ketheesan; Mark Mayo; Alex R. Hoffmaster; Mindy G. Elrod; Vanaporn Wuthiekanun; Apichai Tuanyok; Robert Norton; Bart J. Currie; David M. Wagner; Paul Keim; Po E. Li; Hazuki Teshima; H. S. Gibbons; Gustavo Palacios; C. Nicole Rosenzweig; C. L. Redden; Yan Xu; Timothy D. Minogue; Patrick Chain
Archive | 2014
Xiangyu Deng; Nikki Shariat; Elizabeth M. Driebe; Chandler C. Roe; Beth Tolar; Paul Keim; Wei Zhang; Edward G. Dudley; Patricia I. Fields
Archive | 2013
Leo J. Kenefic; William D. Brown; Paul Keim; Kathryn Shaw; Barun K. De; Richard A. Robison; Thomas C Foster; Richard T. Okinaka; Rita Svensson
Archive | 2007
Jean F. Challacombe; Michael R. Altherr; Gary Xie; 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; Lance D. Green; Cliff Han; Karen K. Hill; Penny Hitchcock; Paul J. Jackson; Paul Keim; Avinash Ramesh Kewalramani; Jon Longmire; Susan Lucas; Stephanie Malfatti; Diego Martinez; Kim McMurry; Linda Meincke; Monica Misra; Bernice L. Moseman