Sean Turner
Indiana University Bloomington
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Publication
Featured researches published by Sean Turner.
Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology | 1999
Sean Turner; Kathleen M. Pryer; Vivian Miao; Jeffrey D. Palmer
Small subunit rRNA sequence data were generated for 27 strains of cyanobacteria and incorporated into a phylogenetic analysis of 1,377 aligned sequence positions from a diverse sampling of 53 cyanobacteria and 10 photosynthetic plastids. Tree inference was carried out using a maximum likelihood method with correction for site‐to‐site variation in evolutionary rate. Confidence in the inferred phylogenetic relationships was determined by construction of a majority‐rule consensus tree based on alternative topologies not considered to be statistically significantly different from the optimal tree. The results are in agreement with earlier studies in the assignment of individual taxa to specific sequence groups. Several relationships not previously noted among sequence groups are indicated, whereas other relationships previously supported are contradicted. All plastids cluster as a strongly supported monophyletic group arising near the root of the cyanobacterial line of descent.
Journal of Molecular Evolution | 1991
Susan E. Douglas; Sean Turner
SummaryThe origin of plastids by either a single or multiple endosymbiotic event(s) and the nature of the progenitor(s) of plastids have been the subjects of much controversy. The sequence of the small subunit rRNA (Ssu rRNA) from the plastid of the chlorophyllc-containing algaCryptomonas ϕ is presented, allowing for the first time a comparison of this molecule from all of the major land plant and algal lineages. Using a distance matrix method, the phylogenetic relationships among representatives of these lineages have been inferred and the results indicate a common origin of plastids from a cyanobacterium-like ancestor. Within the plastid line of descent, there is a deep dichotomy between the chlorophyte/land plant lineage and the rhodophyte/chromophyte lineage, with the cyanelle ofCyanophora paradoxa forming the deepest branch in the latter group. Interestingly,Euglena gracilis and its colorless relativeAstasia longa are more related to the chromophytes than to the chlorophytes, raising once again the question of the origin of the euglenoid plastids.
Journal of Phycology | 1992
Annick Wilmotte; Sean Turner; Yves Van de Peer; Norman R. Pace
Partial 16S ribosomal RNA sequences from five marine oscillatoriacean strains with narrow trichomes were determined by a dideoxynucleotide‐termination method. A phenogram was constructed by a distance matrix method including a bootstrap analysis. In addition, a consensus tree was built using cladistic analysis. The results were largely congruent and indicate that the five strains belong to two different lineages. The first lineage groups four phycoerythrin‐producing strains with the strain PCC7375 (“Phormidium ectocarpi Gomont”). The second cluster groups strain PCC7105 (“Oscillatoria williamsii Drouet”) with the previously studied strain Microcoleus 10mfx. Comparisons to morphological data are made and the taxonomic level of the separations is estimated.
Standards in Genomic Sciences | 2016
Scott Federhen; Ramon Rosselló-Móra; Hans-Peter Klenk; Brian J. Tindall; Konstantinos T. Konstantinidis; William B. Whitman; Daniel R. Brown; David P. Labeda; David W. Ussery; George M Garrity; Rita R. Colwell; Nur A. Hasan; Joerg Graf; Aidan Parte; Pablo Yarza; Brittany Goldberg; Heike Sichtig; Ilene Karsch-Mizrachi; Karen Clark; Richard McVeigh; Kim D. Pruitt; Tatiana Tatusova; Robert Falk; Sean Turner; Thomas L. Madden; Paul Kitts; Avi Kimchi; William Klimke; Richa Agarwala; Michael DiCuccio
Many genomes are incorrectly identified at GenBank. We developed a plan to find and correct misidentified genomes using genomic comparison statistics together with a scaffold of reliably identified genomes from type. A workshop was organized with broad representation from the bacterial taxonomic community to review the proposal, the GenBank Microbial Genomic Taxonomy Workshop, Bethesda MD, May 12–13, 2015.
BMC Evolutionary Biology | 2007
Peik Haugen; Debashish Bhattacharya; Jeffrey D. Palmer; Sean Turner; Louise A. Lewis; Kathleen M. Pryer
BackgroundGroup I introns are one of the four major classes of introns as defined by their distinct splicing mechanisms. Because they catalyze their own removal from precursor transcripts, group I introns are referred to as autocatalytic introns. Group I introns are common in fungal and protist nuclear ribosomal RNA genes and in organellar genomes. In contrast, they are rare in all other organisms and genomes, including bacteria.ResultsHere we report five group I introns, each containing a LAGLIDADG homing endonuclease gene (HEG), in large subunit (LSU) rRNA genes of cyanobacteria. Three of the introns are located in the LSU gene of Synechococcus sp. C9, and the other two are in the LSU gene of Synechococcus lividus strain C1. Phylogenetic analyses show that these introns and their HEGs are closely related to introns and HEGs located at homologous insertion sites in organellar and bacterial rDNA genes. We also present a compilation of group I introns with homing endonuclease genes in bacteria.ConclusionWe have discovered multiple HEG-containing group I introns in a single bacterial gene. To our knowledge, these are the first cases of multiple group I introns in the same bacterial gene (multiple group I introns have been reported in at least one phage gene and one prophage gene). The HEGs each contain one copy of the LAGLIDADG motif and presumably function as homodimers. Phylogenetic analysis, in conjunction with their patchy taxonomic distribution, suggests that these intron-HEG elements have been transferred horizontally among organelles and bacteria. However, the mode of transfer and the nature of the biological connections among the intron-containing organisms are unknown.
International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 2018
Stacy Ciufo; Sivakumar Kannan; Shobha Sharma; Azat Badretdin; Karen Clark; Sean Turner; Slava Brover; Conrad L. Schoch; Avi Kimchi; Michael DiCuccio
Average nucleotide identity analysis is a useful tool to verify taxonomic identities in prokaryotic genomes, for both complete and draft assemblies. Using optimum threshold ranges appropriate for different prokaryotic taxa, we have reviewed all prokaryotic genome assemblies in GenBank with regard to their taxonomic identity. We present the methods used to make such comparisons, the current status of GenBank verifications, and recent developments in confirming species assignments in new genome submissions.
Nature | 1989
Sean Turner; Tineke Burger-Wiersma; Stephen J. Giovannoni; Luuc R. Mur; Norman R. Pace
RFC | 2011
Sean Turner; Lily Chen
RFC | 2011
Sean Turner; Tim Polk
RFC | 2009
Sean Turner; Russell Housley; Tim Polk; Daniel R. Brown; Kelvin Yiu