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Dive into the research topics where Robert Haselkorn is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert Haselkorn.


Nature | 2003

Genome sequence of Bacillus cereus and comparative analysis with Bacillus anthracis

Natalia Ivanova; Alexei Sorokin; Iain Anderson; Nathalie Galleron; Benjamin Candelon; Vinayak Kapatral; Anamitra Bhattacharyya; Gary Reznik; Natalia Mikhailova; Alla Lapidus; Lien Chu; Michael Mazur; Eugene Goltsman; Niels Bent Larsen; Mark D'Souza; Theresa L. Walunas; Yuri Grechkin; Gordon D. Pusch; Robert Haselkorn; Michael Fonstein; S. Dusko Ehrlich; Ross Overbeek; Nikos C. Kyrpides

Bacillus cereus is an opportunistic pathogen causing food poisoning manifested by diarrhoeal or emetic syndromes. It is closely related to the animal and human pathogen Bacillus anthracis and the insect pathogen Bacillus thuringiensis, the former being used as a biological weapon and the latter as a pesticide. B. anthracis and B. thuringiensis are readily distinguished from B. cereus by the presence of plasmid-borne specific toxins (B. anthracis and B. thuringiensis) and capsule (B. anthracis). But phylogenetic studies based on the analysis of chromosomal genes bring controversial results, and it is unclear whether B. cereus, B. anthracis and B. thuringiensis are varieties of the same species or different species. Here we report the sequencing and analysis of the type strain B. cereus ATCC 14579. The complete genome sequence of B. cereus ATCC 14579 together with the gapped genome of B. anthracis A2012 enables us to perform comparative analysis, and hence to identify the genes that are conserved between B. cereus and B. anthracis, and the genes that are unique for each species. We use the former to clarify the phylogeny of the cereus group, and the latter to determine plasmid-independent species-specific markers.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

The genome sequence of the facultative intracellular pathogen Brucella melitensis

Vito G. DelVecchio; Vinayak Kapatral; Rajendra Redkar; Guy Patra; Cesar V. Mujer; Tamara Los; Natalia Ivanova; Iain Anderson; Anamitra Bhattacharyya; Athanasios Lykidis; Gary Reznik; Lynn Jablonski; Niels Bent Larsen; Mark D'Souza; Axel Bernal; Mikhail Mazur; Eugene Goltsman; Eugene Selkov; Philip H. Elzer; Sue D. Hagius; David O'Callaghan; Jean-Jacques Letesson; Robert Haselkorn; Nikos C. Kyrpides; Ross Overbeek

Brucella melitensis is a facultative intracellular bacterial pathogen that causes abortion in goats and sheep and Malta fever in humans. The genome of B. melitensis strain 16M was sequenced and found to contain 3,294,935 bp distributed over two circular chromosomes of 2,117,144 bp and 1,177,787 bp encoding 3,197 ORFs. By using the bioinformatics suite ERGO, 2,487 (78%) ORFs were assigned functions. The origins of replication of the two chromosomes are similar to those of other α-proteobacteria. Housekeeping genes, including those involved in DNA replication, transcription, translation, core metabolism, and cell wall biosynthesis, are distributed on both chromosomes. Type I, II, and III secretion systems are absent, but genes encoding sec-dependent, sec-independent, and flagella-specific type III, type IV, and type V secretion systems as well as adhesins, invasins, and hemolysins were identified. Several features of the B. melitensis genome are similar to those of the symbiotic Sinorhizobium meliloti.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Genes encoding plastid acetyl-CoA carboxylase and 3-phosphoglycerate kinase of the Triticum/Aegilops complex and the evolutionary history of polyploid wheat

Shaoxing Huang; Anchalee Sirikhachornkit; Xiujuan Su; Justin D. Faris; Bikram S. Gill; Robert Haselkorn; Piotr Gornicki

The classic wheat evolutionary history is one of adaptive radiation of the diploid Triticum/Aegilops species (A, S, D), genome convergence and divergence of the tetraploid (Triticum turgidum AABB, and Triticum timopheevii AAGG) and hexaploid (Triticum aestivum, AABBDD) species. We analyzed Acc-1 (plastid acetyl-CoA carboxylase) and Pgk-1 (plastid 3-phosphoglycerate kinase) genes to determine phylogenetic relationships among Triticum and Aegilops species of the wheat lineage and to establish the timeline of wheat evolution based on gene sequence comparisons. Triticum urartu was confirmed as the A genome donor of tetraploid and hexaploid wheat. The A genome of polyploid wheat diverged from T. urartu less than half a million years ago (MYA), indicating a relatively recent origin of polyploid wheat. The D genome sequences of T. aestivum and Aegilops tauschii are identical, confirming that T. aestivum arose from hybridization of T. turgidum and Ae. tauschii only 8,000 years ago. The diploid Triticum and Aegilops progenitors of the A, B, D, G, and S genomes all radiated 2.5–4.5 MYA. Our data suggest that the Acc-1 and Pgk-1 loci have different histories in different lineages, indicating genome mosaicity and significant intraspecific differentiation. Some loci of the S genome of Aegilops speltoides and the G genome of T. timophevii are closely related, suggesting the same origin of some parts of their genomes. None of the Aegilops genomes analyzed is a close relative of the B genome, so the diploid progenitor of the B genome remains unknown.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2002

Genome Sequence and Analysis of the Oral Bacterium Fusobacterium nucleatum Strain ATCC 25586

Vinayak Kapatral; Iain Anderson; Natalia Ivanova; Gary Reznik; Tamara Los; Athanasios Lykidis; Anamitra Bhattacharyya; Allen Bartman; Warren Gardner; Galina Grechkin; Lihua Zhu; Olga Vasieva; Lien Chu; Yakov Kogan; Oleg Chaga; Eugene Goltsman; Axel Bernal; Niels Bent Larsen; Mark D'Souza; Theresa L. Walunas; Gordon D. Pusch; Robert Haselkorn; Michael Fonstein; Nikos C. Kyrpides; Ross Overbeek

We present a complete DNA sequence and metabolic analysis of the dominant oral bacterium Fusobacterium nucleatum. Although not considered a major dental pathogen on its own, this anaerobe facilitates the aggregation and establishment of several other species including the dental pathogens Porphyromonas gingivalis and Bacteroides forsythus. The F. nucleatum strain ATCC 25586 genome was assembled from shotgun sequences and analyzed using the ERGO bioinformatics suite (http://www.integratedgenomics.com). The genome contains 2.17 Mb encoding 2,067 open reading frames, organized on a single circular chromosome with 27% GC content. Despite its taxonomic position among the gram-negative bacteria, several features of its core metabolism are similar to that of gram-positive Clostridium spp., Enterococcus spp., and Lactococcus spp. The genome analysis has revealed several key aspects of the pathways of organic acid, amino acid, carbohydrate, and lipid metabolism. Nine very-high-molecular-weight outer membrane proteins are predicted from the sequence, none of which has been reported in the literature. More than 137 transporters for the uptake of a variety of substrates such as peptides, sugars, metal ions, and cofactors have been identified. Biosynthetic pathways exist for only three amino acids: glutamate, aspartate, and asparagine. The remaining amino acids are imported as such or as di- or oligopeptides that are subsequently degraded in the cytoplasm. A principal source of energy appears to be the fermentation of glutamate to butyrate. Additionally, desulfuration of cysteine and methionine yields ammonia, H(2)S, methyl mercaptan, and butyrate, which are capable of arresting fibroblast growth, thus preventing wound healing and aiding penetration of the gingival epithelium. The metabolic capabilities of F. nucleatum revealed by its genome are therefore consistent with its specialized niche in the mouth.


Methods in Enzymology | 1987

Genetic engineering of the cyanobacterial chromosome.

Susan S. Golden; Judy Brusslan; Robert Haselkorn

Publisher Summary This chapter describes methods for the direct genetic engineering of the cyanobacterial chromosome and techniques for the analysis of DNA and RNA from the resulting transformants. The DNA in lane B described in the chapter is a by-product of the RNA isolation procedure. The genetic engineering of the cyanobacterial chromosome includes the techniques described in the chapter. The chapter focuses on methods that employ wholly homologous transforming DNA or heterologous sequences, which are flanked by cyanobacterial DNA on either side. The analysis of DNA from transformants is necessary to determine the chromosomal structure following recombination. The recombination events illustrated in the chapter are those that are usually seen, but aberrant events have been observed when the cloned region homologous to the chromosome is small. These events include the deletion of a chromosomal segment and integration at a related locus in the case of a gene family. Southern hybridization can determine whether the expected event has in fact, occurred. It is also important to analyze RNA from transformants, which have been engineered by these methods. A homologous recombination event, which replaces a wild-type gene with another functional allele, should result in the production of a full-length mitochondrial RNA (mRNA), which initiates and terminates properly. The chapter also mentions the instructions of the procedure that describe the preparation of glass fines used in the cyanobacterial total DNA miniprep procedure, which was adapted from the method of Vogelstein and Gillespie.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

The cyanobacterial genome core and the origin of photosynthesis

Armen Y. Mulkidjanian; Eugene V. Koonin; Kira S. Makarova; Sergey L. Mekhedov; Alexander V. Sorokin; Yuri I. Wolf; Alexis Dufresne; Frédéric Partensky; Henry Burd; Denis Kaznadzey; Robert Haselkorn; Michael Y. Galperin

Comparative analysis of 15 complete cyanobacterial genome sequences, including “near minimal” genomes of five strains of Prochlorococcus spp., revealed 1,054 protein families [core cyanobacterial clusters of orthologous groups of proteins (core CyOGs)] encoded in at least 14 of them. The majority of the core CyOGs are involved in central cellular functions that are shared with other bacteria; 50 core CyOGs are specific for cyanobacteria, whereas 84 are exclusively shared by cyanobacteria and plants and/or other plastid-carrying eukaryotes, such as diatoms or apicomplexans. The latter group includes 35 families of uncharacterized proteins, which could also be involved in photosynthesis. Only a few components of cyanobacterial photosynthetic machinery are represented in the genomes of the anoxygenic phototrophic bacteria Chlorobium tepidum, Rhodopseudomonas palustris, Chloroflexus aurantiacus, or Heliobacillus mobilis. These observations, coupled with recent geological data on the properties of the ancient phototrophs, suggest that photosynthesis originated in the cyanobacterial lineage under the selective pressures of UV light and depletion of electron donors. We propose that the first phototrophs were anaerobic ancestors of cyanobacteria (“procyanobacteria”) that conducted anoxygenic photosynthesis using a photosystem I-like reaction center, somewhat similar to the heterocysts of modern filamentous cyanobacteria. From procyanobacteria, photosynthesis spread to other phyla by way of lateral gene transfer.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2004

Genes Coding for Hepatotoxic Heptapeptides (Microcystins) in the Cyanobacterium Anabaena Strain 90

Leo Rouhiainen; Tanja Vakkilainen; Berit Lumbye Siemer; William J. Buikema; Robert Haselkorn; Kaarina Sivonen

ABSTRACT The cluster of microcystin synthetase genes from Anabaena strain 90 was sequenced and characterized. The total size of the region is 55.4 kb, and the genes are organized in three putative operons. The first operon (mcyA-mcyB-mcyC) is transcribed in the opposite direction from the second operon (mcyG-mcyD-mcyJ-mcyE-mcyF-mcyI) and the third operon (mcyH). The genes mcyA, mcyB, and mcyC encode nonribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPS), while mcyD codes for a polyketide synthase (PKS), and mcyG and mcyE are mixed NRPS-PKS genes. The genes mcyJ, mcyF, and mcyI are similar to genes coding for a methyltransferase, an aspartate racemase, and a d-3-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase, respectively. The region in the first module of mcyB coding for the adenylation domain was found to be 96% identical with the corresponding part of mcyC, suggesting a recent duplication of this fragment and a replacement in mcyB. In Anabaena strain 90, the order of the domains encoded by the genes in the two sets (from mcyG to mcyI and from mcyA to mcyC) is colinear with the hypothetical order of the enzymatic reactions for microcystin biosynthesis. The order of the microcystin synthetase genes in Anabaena strain 90 differs from the arrangement found in two other cyanobacterial species, Microcystis aeruginosa and Planktothrix agardhii. The average sequence match between the microcystin synthetase genes of Anabaena strain 90 and the corresponding genes of the other species is 74%. The identity of the individual proteins varies from 67 to 81%. The genes of microcystin biosynthesis from three major producers of this toxin are now known. This makes it possible to design probes and primers to identify the toxin producers in the environment.


Nature | 1985

Rearrangement of nitrogen fixation genes during heterocyst differentiation in the cyanobacterium Anabaena

James W. Golden; Steven J. Robinson; Robert Haselkorn

Nitrogen fixation by the cyanobacterium Anabaena is carried out in heterocysts, specialized, non-dividing cells which differentiate under conditions of ammonia or nitrate deprivation. In Anabaena, heterocyst differentiation is accompanied by rearrangement of some nitrogen fixation genes. A site-specific recombination between an 11 base-pair direct repeat sequence flanking the nif K and nif D genes removes 11 kilobases of intervening DNA, resulting in juxtaposition of the two genes and an alteration of the nif D protein-coding sequence.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Expression of the Anabaena hetR gene from a copper-regulated promoter leads to heterocyst differentiation under repressing conditions

William J. Buikema; Robert Haselkorn

Heterocyst differentiation in the filamentous cyanobacterium Anabaena PCC 7120 requires a functional hetR gene. Increased expression of the hetR gene is seen in developing and mature heterocysts in response to fixed nitrogen limitation. We mapped four likely transcriptional start sites for hetR and identified a specific transcript that is positively autoregulated. By using the copper-responsive petE promoter from Anabaena PCC 7120 to drive hetR expression, we show that ectopic expression of hetR increases heterocyst frequency and induces heterocyst differentiation under fully repressing conditions. Coexpression of a reporter gene shows that expression from the petE promoter is smoothly induced depending on the amount of copper supplied. In the heterocyst pattern mutant PatA, where terminally positioned heterocysts are formed almost exclusively, expression of the petE∷hetR fusion does not result in the formation of intercalary heterocysts. These results suggest that although the intracellular concentration of HetR has to be elevated for the differentiation decision, PatA plays a role as well. This role may be in the form of posttranslational modification of HetR, because PatA is a member of the response regulator family of proteins.


Molecular Microbiology | 2000

Genes encoding synthetases of cyclic depsipeptides, anabaenopeptilides, in Anabaena strain 90

Leo Rouhiainen; Lars Paulin; Sini Suomalainen; Heidi Hyytiäinen; William J. Buikema; Robert Haselkorn; Kaarina Sivonen

Anabaena strain 90 produces three hepatotoxic heptapeptides (microcystins), two seven‐residue depsipeptides called anabaenopeptilide 90A and 90B, and three six‐residue peptides called anabaenopeptins. The anabaenopeptilides belong to a group of cyanobacterial depsipeptides that share the structure of a six‐amino‐acid ring with a side‐chain. Despite their similarity to known cyclic peptide toxins, no function has been assigned to the anabaenopeptilides. Degenerate oligonucleotide primers based on the conserved amino acid sequences of other peptide synthetases were used to amplify DNA from Anabaena 90, and the resulting polymerase chain reaction (PCR) products were used to identify a peptide synthetase gene cluster. Four genes encoding putative anabaenopeptilide synthetase domains were characterized. Three genes, apdA, apdB and apdD, contain two, four and one module, respectively, encoding a total of seven modules for activation and peptide bond formation of seven l‐amino acids. Modules five and six also carry methyltransferase‐like domains. Before the first module, there is a region similar in amino acid sequence to formyltransferases. A fourth gene (apdC), between modules six and seven, is similar in sequence to halogenase genes. Thus, the order of domains is co‐linear with the positions of amino acid residues in the finished peptide. A mutant of Anabaena 90 was made by inserting a chloramphenicol resistance gene into the apdA gene. DNA amplification by PCR confirmed the insertion. Mass spectrometry analysis showed that anabaenopeptilides are not made in the mutant strain, but other peptides, such as microcystins and anabaenopeptins, are still produced by the mutant.

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Ross Overbeek

Argonne National Laboratory

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Gary Reznik

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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