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Dive into the research topics where Sandra W. Clifton is active.

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Featured researches published by Sandra W. Clifton.


Nature | 2001

Complete genome sequence of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium LT2

Michael McClelland; Kenneth E. Sanderson; John Spieth; Sandra W. Clifton; Phil Latreille; Laura Courtney; Steffen Porwollik; Johar Ali; Mike Dante; Feiyu Du; Shunfang Hou; Dan Layman; Shawn Leonard; Christine Nguyen; Kelsi Scott; Andrea Holmes; Neenu Grewal; Elizabeth Mulvaney; Ellen Ryan; Hui Sun; Liliana Florea; Webb Miller; Tamberlyn Stoneking; Michael Nhan; Robert H. Waterston; Richard Wilson

Salmonella enterica subspecies I, serovar Typhimurium (S. typhimurium), is a leading cause of human gastroenteritis, and is used as a mouse model of human typhoid fever. The incidence of non-typhoid salmonellosis is increasing worldwide, causing millions of infections and many deaths in the human population each year. Here we sequenced the 4,857-kilobase (kb) chromosome and 94-kb virulence plasmid of S. typhimurium strain LT2. The distribution of close homologues of S. typhimurium LT2 genes in eight related enterobacteria was determined using previously completed genomes of three related bacteria, sample sequencing of both S. enterica serovar Paratyphi A (S. paratyphi A) and Klebsiella pneumoniae, and hybridization of three unsequenced genomes to a microarray of S. typhimurium LT2 genes. Lateral transfer of genes is frequent, with 11% of the S. typhimurium LT2 genes missing from S. enterica serovar Typhi (S. typhi), and 29% missing from Escherichia coli K12. The 352 gene homologues of S. typhimurium LT2 confined to subspecies I of S. enterica—containing most mammalian and bird pathogens—are useful for studies of epidemiology, host specificity and pathogenesis. Most of these homologues were previously unknown, and 50 may be exported to the periplasm or outer membrane, rendering them accessible as therapeutic or vaccine targets.


Nature | 2011

Ancestral polyploidy in seed plants and angiosperms

Yuannian Jiao; Norman J. Wickett; Saravanaraj Ayyampalayam; André S. Chanderbali; Lena Landherr; Paula E. Ralph; Lynn P. Tomsho; Yi Hu; Haiying Liang; Pamela S. Soltis; Douglas E. Soltis; Sandra W. Clifton; Scott E. Schlarbaum; Stephan C. Schuster; Hong Ma; Jim Leebens-Mack; Claude W. dePamphilis

Whole-genome duplication (WGD), or polyploidy, followed by gene loss and diploidization has long been recognized as an important evolutionary force in animals, fungi and other organisms, especially plants. The success of angiosperms has been attributed, in part, to innovations associated with gene or whole-genome duplications, but evidence for proposed ancient genome duplications pre-dating the divergence of monocots and eudicots remains equivocal in analyses of conserved gene order. Here we use comprehensive phylogenomic analyses of sequenced plant genomes and more than 12.6 million new expressed-sequence-tag sequences from phylogenetically pivotal lineages to elucidate two groups of ancient gene duplications—one in the common ancestor of extant seed plants and the other in the common ancestor of extant angiosperms. Gene duplication events were intensely concentrated around 319 and 192 million years ago, implicating two WGDs in ancestral lineages shortly before the diversification of extant seed plants and extant angiosperms, respectively. Significantly, these ancestral WGDs resulted in the diversification of regulatory genes important to seed and flower development, suggesting that they were involved in major innovations that ultimately contributed to the rise and eventual dominance of seed plants and angiosperms.


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

Complete genome sequence of an M1 strain of Streptococcus pyogenes

Joseph J. Ferretti; William M. McShan; Dragana Ajdic; Dragutin J. Savic; Gorana Savić; Kevin Lyon; Charles Primeaux; S. Sezate; Alexander N. Suvorov; Steve Kenton; Hong Shing Lai; Shao Ping Lin; Yudong Qian; Hong Gui Jia; Fares Z. Najar; Qun Ren; Hua Zhu; Lin Song; James R. White; Xiling Yuan; Sandra W. Clifton; Bruce A. Roe; Robert McLaughlin

The 1,852,442-bp sequence of an M1 strain of Streptococcus pyogenes, a Gram-positive pathogen, has been determined and contains 1,752 predicted protein-encoding genes. Approximately one-third of these genes have no identifiable function, with the remainder falling into previously characterized categories of known microbial function. Consistent with the observation that S. pyogenes is responsible for a wider variety of human disease than any other bacterial species, more than 40 putative virulence-associated genes have been identified. Additional genes have been identified that encode proteins likely associated with microbial “molecular mimicry” of host characteristics and involved in rheumatic fever or acute glomerulonephritis. The complete or partial sequence of four different bacteriophage genomes is also present, with each containing genes for one or more previously undiscovered superantigen-like proteins. These prophage-associated genes encode at least six potential virulence factors, emphasizing the importance of bacteriophages in horizontal gene transfer and a possible mechanism for generating new strains with increased pathogenic potential.


Molecular Microbiology | 2002

Analyses of the cag pathogenicity island of Helicobacter pylori

Natalia S. Akopyants; Sandra W. Clifton; Dangeruta Kersulyte; Jean E. Crabtree; Bryan E. Youree; C.Adonis Reece; Nick O. Bukanov; E. Susan Drazek; Bruce A. Roe; Douglas E. Berg

Most strains of Helicobacter pylori from patients with peptic ulcer disease or intestinal‐type gastric cancer carry cagA, a gene that encodes an immunodominant protein of unknown function, whereas many of the strains from asymptomatically infected persons lack this gene. Recent studies showed that the cagA gene lies near the right end of a ≈37 kb DNA segment (a pathogenicity island, or PAI) that is unique to cagA+ strains and that the cag PAI was split in half by a transposable element insertion in the reference strain NCTC11638. In complementary experiments reported here, we also found the same cag PAI, and sequenced a 39 kb cosmid clone containing the left ‘cagII’ half of this PAI. Encoded in cagII were four proteins each with homology to four components of multiprotein complexes of Bordetella pertussis (‘Ptl’), Agrobacterium tumefaciens (‘Vir’), and conjugative plasmids (‘Tra’) that help deliver pertussis toxin and T (tumour inducing) and plasmid DNA, respectively, to target eukaryotic or prokaryotic cells, and also homologues of eukaryotic proteins that are involved in cytoskeletal structure. To the left of cagII in this cosmid were genes for homologues of HslU (heat‐shock protein) and Era (essential GTPase); to the right of cagII were homologues of genes for a type I restriction endonuclease and ion transport functions. Deletion of the cag PAI had no effect on synthesis of the vacuolating cytotoxin, but this deletion and several cag insertion mutations blocked induction of synthesis of proinflammatory cytokine IL‐8 in gastric epithelial cells. Comparisons among H. pylori strains indicated that cag PAI gene content and arrangement are rather well conserved. We also identified two genome rearrangements with end‐points in the cag PAI. One, in reference strain NCTC11638, involved IS605, a recently described transposable element (as also found by others). Another rearrangement, in 3 of 10 strains tested (including type strain NCTC11637), separated the normally adjacent cagA and picA genes and did not involve IS605. Our results are discussed in terms of how cag‐encoded proteins might help trigger the damaging inflammatory responses in the gastric epithelium and possible contributions of DNA rearrangements to genome evolution.


Science | 2010

A catalog of reference genomes from the human microbiome.

Karen E. Nelson; George M. Weinstock; Sarah K. Highlander; Kim C. Worley; Heather Huot Creasy; Jennifer R. Wortman; Douglas B. Rusch; Makedonka Mitreva; Erica Sodergren; Asif T. Chinwalla; Michael Feldgarden; Dirk Gevers; Brian J. Haas; Ramana Madupu; Doyle V. Ward; Bruce Birren; Richard A. Gibbs; Barbara A. Methé; Joseph F. Petrosino; Robert L. Strausberg; Granger Sutton; Owen White; Richard Wilson; Scott Durkin; Michelle G. Giglio; Sharvari Gujja; Clint Howarth; Chinnappa D. Kodira; Nikos C. Kyrpides; Teena Mehta

News from the Inner Tube of Life A major initiative by the U.S. National Institutes of Health to sequence 900 genomes of microorganisms that live on the surfaces and orifices of the human body has established standardized protocols and methods for such large-scale reference sequencing. By combining previously accumulated data with new data, Nelson et al. (p. 994) present an initial analysis of 178 bacterial genomes. The sampling so far barely scratches the surface of the microbial diversity found on humans, but the work provides an important baseline for future analyses. Standardized protocols and methods are being established for large-scale sequencing of the microorganisms living on humans. The human microbiome refers to the community of microorganisms, including prokaryotes, viruses, and microbial eukaryotes, that populate the human body. The National Institutes of Health launched an initiative that focuses on describing the diversity of microbial species that are associated with health and disease. The first phase of this initiative includes the sequencing of hundreds of microbial reference genomes, coupled to metagenomic sequencing from multiple body sites. Here we present results from an initial reference genome sequencing of 178 microbial genomes. From 547,968 predicted polypeptides that correspond to the gene complement of these strains, previously unidentified (“novel”) polypeptides that had both unmasked sequence length greater than 100 amino acids and no BLASTP match to any nonreference entry in the nonredundant subset were defined. This analysis resulted in a set of 30,867 polypeptides, of which 29,987 (~97%) were unique. In addition, this set of microbial genomes allows for ~40% of random sequences from the microbiome of the gastrointestinal tract to be associated with organisms based on the match criteria used. Insights into pan-genome analysis suggest that we are still far from saturating microbial species genetic data sets. In addition, the associated metrics and standards used by our group for quality assurance are presented.


Nature Genetics | 2013

Sequencing of the sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus) genome provides insights into vertebrate evolution.

Jeramiah J. Smith; Shigehiro Kuraku; Carson Holt; Tatjana Sauka-Spengler; Ning Jiang; Michael S. Campbell; Mark Yandell; Tereza Manousaki; Axel Meyer; Ona Bloom; Jennifer R. Morgan; Joseph D. Buxbaum; Ravi Sachidanandam; Carrie Sims; Alexander S. Garruss; Malcolm Cook; Robb Krumlauf; Leanne M. Wiedemann; Stacia A. Sower; Wayne A. Decatur; Jeffrey A. Hall; Chris T. Amemiya; Nil Ratan Saha; Katherine M. Buckley; Jonathan P. Rast; Sabyasachi Das; Masayuki Hirano; Nathanael McCurley; Peng Guo; Nicolas Rohner

Lampreys are representatives of an ancient vertebrate lineage that diverged from our own ∼500 million years ago. By virtue of this deeply shared ancestry, the sea lamprey (P. marinus) genome is uniquely poised to provide insight into the ancestry of vertebrate genomes and the underlying principles of vertebrate biology. Here, we present the first lamprey whole-genome sequence and assembly. We note challenges faced owing to its high content of repetitive elements and GC bases, as well as the absence of broad-scale sequence information from closely related species. Analyses of the assembly indicate that two whole-genome duplications likely occurred before the divergence of ancestral lamprey and gnathostome lineages. Moreover, the results help define key evolutionary events within vertebrate lineages, including the origin of myelin-associated proteins and the development of appendages. The lamprey genome provides an important resource for reconstructing vertebrate origins and the evolutionary events that have shaped the genomes of extant organisms.


Nature Genetics | 2004

Comparison of genome degradation in Paratyphi A and Typhi, human-restricted serovars of Salmonella enterica that cause typhoid.

Michael McClelland; Kenneth E. Sanderson; Sandra W. Clifton; Phil Latreille; Steffen Porwollik; Aniko Sabo; Rekha Meyer; Tamberlyn Bieri; Phil Ozersky; Michael D. McLellan; C Richard Harkins; Chunyan Wang; Christine Nguyen; Amy Berghoff; Glendoria Elliott; Sara Kohlberg; Cindy Strong; Feiyu Du; Jason Carter; Colin Kremizki; Dan Layman; Shawn Leonard; Hui Sun; Lucinda Fulton; William E. Nash; Tracie L. Miner; Patrick Minx; Kim D. Delehaunty; Catrina C. Fronick; Vincent Magrini

Salmonella enterica serovars often have a broad host range, and some cause both gastrointestinal and systemic disease. But the serovars Paratyphi A and Typhi are restricted to humans and cause only systemic disease. It has been estimated that Typhi arose in the last few thousand years. The sequence and microarray analysis of the Paratyphi A genome indicates that it is similar to the Typhi genome but suggests that it has a more recent evolutionary origin. Both genomes have independently accumulated many pseudogenes among their ∼4,400 protein coding sequences: 173 in Paratyphi A and ∼210 in Typhi. The recent convergence of these two similar genomes on a similar phenotype is subtly reflected in their genotypes: only 30 genes are degraded in both serovars. Nevertheless, these 30 genes include three known to be important in gastroenteritis, which does not occur in these serovars, and four for Salmonella-translocated effectors, which are normally secreted into host cells to subvert host functions. Loss of function also occurs by mutation in different genes in the same pathway (e.g., in chemotaxis and in the production of fimbriae).


Science | 2010

Signatures of adaptation to obligate biotrophy in the Hyaloperonospora arabidopsidis genome.

Laura Baxter; Sucheta Tripathy; Naveed Ishaque; Nico Boot; Adriana Cabral; Eric Kemen; Marco Thines; Audrey M. V. Ah-Fong; Ryan G. Anderson; Wole Badejoko; Peter D. Bittner-Eddy; Jeffrey L. Boore; Marcus C. Chibucos; Mary Coates; Paramvir Dehal; Kim D. Delehaunty; Suomeng Dong; Polly Downton; Bernard Dumas; Georgina Fabro; Catrina C. Fronick; Susan I. Fuerstenberg; Lucinda Fulton; Elodie Gaulin; Francine Govers; Linda Karen Hughes; Sean Humphray; Rays H. Y. Jiang; Howard S. Judelson; Sophien Kamoun

From Blight to Powdery Mildew Pathogenic effects of microbes on plants have widespread consequences. Witness, for example, the cultural upheavals driven by potato blight in the 1800s. A variety of microbial pathogens continue to afflict crop plants today, driving both loss of yield and incurring the increased costs of control mechanisms. Now, four reports analyze microbial genomes in order to understand better how plant pathogens function (see the Perspective by Dodds). Raffaele et al. (p. 1540) describe how the genome of the potato blight pathogen accommodates transfer to different hosts. Spanu et al. (p. 1543) analyze what it takes to be an obligate biotroph in barley powdery mildew, and Baxter et al. (p. 1549) ask a similar question for a natural pathogen of Arabidopsis. Schirawski et al. (p. 1546) compared genomes of maize pathogens to identify virulence determinants. Better knowledge of what in a genome makes a pathogen efficient and deadly is likely to be useful for improving agricultural crop management and breeding. A group of papers analyzes pathogen genomes to find the roots of virulence, opportunism, and life-style determinants. Many oomycete and fungal plant pathogens are obligate biotrophs, which extract nutrients only from living plant tissue and cannot grow apart from their hosts. Although these pathogens cause substantial crop losses, little is known about the molecular basis or evolution of obligate biotrophy. Here, we report the genome sequence of the oomycete Hyaloperonospora arabidopsidis (Hpa), an obligate biotroph and natural pathogen of Arabidopsis thaliana. In comparison with genomes of related, hemibiotrophic Phytophthora species, the Hpa genome exhibits dramatic reductions in genes encoding (i) RXLR effectors and other secreted pathogenicity proteins, (ii) enzymes for assimilation of inorganic nitrogen and sulfur, and (iii) proteins associated with zoospore formation and motility. These attributes comprise a genomic signature of evolution toward obligate biotrophy.


Developmental Dynamics | 2002

Genetic and genomic tools for Xenopus research: The NIH Xenopus initiative.

Steven L. Klein; Robert L. Strausberg; Lukas Wagner; Joan Pontius; Sandra W. Clifton; Paul G. Richardson

The NIH Xenopus Initiative is establishing many of the genetic and genomic resources that have been recommended by the Xenopus research community. These resources include cDNA libraries, expressed sequence tags, full‐length cDNA sequences, genomic libraries, pilot projects to mutagenize and phenotype X. tropicalis, and sequencing the X. tropicalis genome. This review describes the status of these projects and explains how to access their data and resources. Current information about these activities is available on the NIH Xenopus Web site (http://www.nih.gov/science/models/xenopus/). Published 2002 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


Nature Genetics | 2008

The Pristionchus pacificus genome provides a unique perspective on nematode lifestyle and parasitism

Christoph Dieterich; Sandra W. Clifton; Lisa N Schuster; Asif T. Chinwalla; Kimberly D. Delehaunty; Iris Dinkelacker; Lucinda Fulton; Robert S. Fulton; Jennifer Godfrey; Patrick Minx; Makedonka Mitreva; Waltraud Roeseler; Huiyu Tian; Hanh Witte; Shiaw-Pyng Yang; Richard Wilson; Ralf J. Sommer

Here we present a draft genome sequence of the nematode Pristionchus pacificus, a species that is associated with beetles and is used as a model system in evolutionary biology. With 169 Mb and 23,500 predicted protein-coding genes, the P. pacificus genome is larger than those of Caenorhabditis elegans and the human parasite Brugia malayi. Compared to C. elegans, the P. pacificus genome has more genes encoding cytochrome P450 enzymes, glucosyltransferases, sulfotransferases and ABC transporters, many of which were experimentally validated. The P. pacificus genome contains genes encoding cellulase and diapausin, and cellulase activity is found in P. pacificus secretions, indicating that cellulases can be found in nematodes beyond plant parasites. The relatively higher number of detoxification and degradation enzymes in P. pacificus is consistent with its necromenic lifestyle and might represent a preadaptation for parasitism. Thus, comparative genomics analysis of three ecologically distinct nematodes offers a unique opportunity to investigate the association between genome structure and lifestyle.

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Richard Wilson

Washington University in St. Louis

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John Martin

Washington University in St. Louis

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Makedonka Mitreva

Washington University in St. Louis

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James P. McCarter

Washington University in St. Louis

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Deana Pape

Washington University in St. Louis

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Todd Wylie

Washington University in St. Louis

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Lucinda Fulton

Washington University in St. Louis

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Patrick Minx

Washington University in St. Louis

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