Robert A. Preston
University of Pittsburgh
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Featured researches published by Robert A. Preston.
Infection and Immunity | 2006
Kai Shen; Sameera Sayeed; Patricia Antalis; John Gladitz; Azad Ahmed; Bethany Dice; Benjamin Janto; Richard Dopico; Randy Keefe; Jay Hayes; Sandra Johnson; Sujun Yu; Nathan Ehrlich; Jennifer Jocz; Laura Kropp; Ray Wong; Robert M. Wadowsky; Malcolm Slifkin; Robert A. Preston; Geza Erdos; J. Christopher Post; Garth D. Ehrlich; Fen Z. Hu
ABSTRACT The distributed genome hypothesis (DGH) states that each strain within a bacterial species receives a unique distribution of genes from a population-based supragenome that is many times larger than the genome of any given strain. The observations that natural infecting populations are often polyclonal and that most chronic bacterial pathogens have highly developed mechanisms for horizontal gene transfer suggested the DGH and provided the means and the mechanisms to explain how chronic infections persist in the face of a mammalian hosts adaptive defense mechanisms. Having previously established the validity of the DGH for obligate pathogens, we wished to evaluate its applicability to an opportunistic bacterial pathogen. This was accomplished by construction and analysis of a highly redundant pooled genomic library containing approximately 216,000 functional clones that was constructed from 12 low-passage clinical isolates of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, 6 otorrheic isolates and 6 from other body sites. Sequence analysis of 3,214 randomly picked clones (mean insert size, ∼1.4 kb) from this library demonstrated that 348 (10.8%) of the clones were unique with respect to all genomic sequences of the P. aeruginosa prototype strain, PAO1. Hypothetical translations of the open reading frames within these unique sequences demonstrated protein homologies to a number of bacterial virulence factors and other proteins not previously identified in P. aeruginosa. PCR and reverse transcription-PCR-based assays were performed to analyze the distribution and expression patterns of a 70-open reading frame subset of these sequences among 11 of the clinical strains. These sequences were unevenly distributed among the clinical isolates, with nearly half (34/70) of the novel sequences being present in only one or two of the individual strains. Expression profiling revealed that a vast majority of these sequences are expressed, strongly suggesting they encode functional proteins.
Infection and Immunity | 2006
Kai Shen; John Gladitz; Patricia Antalis; Bethany Dice; Benjamin Janto; Randy Keefe; Jay Hayes; Azad Ahmed; Richard Dopico; Nathan Ehrlich; Jennifer Jocz; Laura Kropp; Shujun Yu; Laura Nistico; David P. Greenberg; Karen A. Barbadora; Robert A. Preston; J. Christopher Post; Garth D. Ehrlich; Fen Z. Hu
ABSTRACT Eight low-passage-number Streptococcus pneumoniae clinical isolates, each of a different serotype and a different multilocus sequence type, were obtained from pediatric participants in a pneumococcal vaccine trial. Comparative genomic analyses were performed with these strains and two S. pneumoniae reference strains. Individual genomic libraries were constructed for each of the eight clinical isolates, with an average insert size of ∼1 kb. A total of 73,728 clones were picked for arraying, providing more than four times genomic coverage per strain. A subset of 4,793 clones were sequenced, for which homology searches revealed that 750 (15.6%) of the sequences were unique with respect to the TIGR4 reference genome and 263 (5.5%) clones were unrelated to any available streptococcal sequence. Hypothetical translations of the open reading frames identified within these novel sequences showed homologies to a variety of proteins, including bacterial virulence factors not previously identified in S. pneumoniae. The distribution and expression patterns of 58 of these novel sequences among the eight clinical isolates were analyzed by PCR- and reverse transcriptase PCR-based analyses, respectively. These unique sequences were nonuniformly distributed among the eight isolates, and transcription of these genes in planktonic cultures was detected in 81% (172/212) of their genic occurrences. All 58 novel sequences were transcribed in one or more of the clinical strains, suggesting that they all correspond to functional genes. Sixty-five percent (38/58) of these sequences were found in 50% or less of the clinical strains, indicating a significant degree of genomic plasticity among natural isolates.
Nature Genetics | 1996
David C. Whitcomb; Michael C. Gorry; Robert A. Preston; William Furey; Michael Sossenheimer; Charles D. Ulrich; Stephen P. Martin; Lawrence K. Gates; Stephen T. Amann; Phillip P. Toskes; Roger Liddle; Kevin McGrath; G. Uomo; James Christopher Post; Garth D. Ehrlich
JAMA | 1995
J. Christopher Post; Robert A. Preston; Jerome J. Aul; Margaret Larkins-Pettigrew; Jill Rydquist-White; Kenneth W. Anderson; Robert M. Wadowsky; David R. Reagan; Elaine S. Walker; Lawrence A. Kingsley; Anthony E. Magit; Garth D. Ehrlich
The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 1997
Michael Sossenheimer; Ce Aston; Robert A. Preston; Lk Gates; Charles D. Ulrich; Stephen P. Martin; Yingze Zhang; Michael C. Gorry; Garth D. Ehrlich; David C. Whitcomb
JAMA | 2000
Fen Ze Hu; Robert A. Preston; J. Christopher Post; Gregory J. White; Lee W. Kikuchi; Xue Wang; Suzanne M. Leal; Mark A. Levenstien; Thomas W. Self; Gregory C. Allen; Richelle S. Stiffler; Elizabeth A. Pulsifer-Anderson; Garth D. Ehrlich
Human Molecular Genetics | 1995
Michael C. Gorry; Robert A. Preston; Gregory J. White; Yingze Zhang; Virender K. Singhal; H.Wolgang Losken; Michael G. Parker; Ngozi A. Nwokoro; J. Christopher Post; Garth D. Ehrlich
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1995
Craig A. Buchman; William J. Doyle; David P. Skoner; J. Christopher Post; Cuneyt M. Alper; James T. Seroky; Kenneth C. Anderson; Robert A. Preston; Frederick G. Hayden; Philip Fireman; Garth D. Ehrlich
Nature Genetics | 1994
Robert A. Preston; J. Christopher Post; Bronya Keats; Christopher Aston; Robert E. Ferrell; Janice M. Priest; Nassim Nouri; H. Wolfgang Losken; Colleen A. Morris; Mark R. Hurtt; John J. Mulvihill; Garth D. Ehrlich
Kidney International | 2004
Songshan Jiang; Jordan Gitlin; Fang Ming Deng; Feng Xia Liang; Andy Lee; Anthony Atala; Stuart B. Bauer; Garth D. Ehrlich; Sally Feather; Judith D. Goldberg; Judith A. Goodship; Timothy H.J. Goodship; Monika H. Hermanns; Fen Ze Hu; Katrin E. Jones; Sue Malcolm; Cathy Mendelsohn; Robert A. Preston; Alan B. Retik; Francis X. Schneck; Victoria Wright; Xiang Y. Ye; Adrian S. Woolf; Xue-Ru Wu; Harry Ostrer; Ellen Shapiro; Jun Yu; Tung-Tien Sun