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Dive into the research topics where Tijana Glavina del Rio is active.

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Featured researches published by Tijana Glavina del Rio.


Nature | 2012

Defining the core Arabidopsis thaliana root microbiome

Derek S. Lundberg; Sarah L. Lebeis; Sur Herrera Paredes; Scott Yourstone; Jase Gehring; Stephanie Malfatti; Julien Tremblay; Anna Engelbrektson; Victor Kunin; Tijana Glavina del Rio; Robert C. Edgar; Thilo Eickhorst; Ruth E. Ley; Philip Hugenholtz; Susannah G. Tringe; Jeffery L. Dangl

Land plants associate with a root microbiota distinct from the complex microbial community present in surrounding soil. The microbiota colonizing the rhizosphere (immediately surrounding the root) and the endophytic compartment (within the root) contribute to plant growth, productivity, carbon sequestration and phytoremediation. Colonization of the root occurs despite a sophisticated plant immune system, suggesting finely tuned discrimination of mutualists and commensals from pathogens. Genetic principles governing the derivation of host-specific endophyte communities from soil communities are poorly understood. Here we report the pyrosequencing of the bacterial 16S ribosomal RNA gene of more than 600 Arabidopsis thaliana plants to test the hypotheses that the root rhizosphere and endophytic compartment microbiota of plants grown under controlled conditions in natural soils are sufficiently dependent on the host to remain consistent across different soil types and developmental stages, and sufficiently dependent on host genotype to vary between inbred Arabidopsis accessions. We describe different bacterial communities in two geochemically distinct bulk soils and in rhizosphere and endophytic compartments prepared from roots grown in these soils. The communities in each compartment are strongly influenced by soil type. Endophytic compartments from both soils feature overlapping, low-complexity communities that are markedly enriched in Actinobacteria and specific families from other phyla, notably Proteobacteria. Some bacteria vary quantitatively between plants of different developmental stage and genotype. Our rigorous definition of an endophytic compartment microbiome should facilitate controlled dissection of plant–microbe interactions derived from complex soil communities.


Science | 2015

Salicylic acid modulates colonization of the root microbiome by specific bacterial taxa

Sarah L. Lebeis; Sur Herrera Paredes; Derek S. Lundberg; Natalie Breakfield; Jase Gehring; Meredith McDonald; Stephanie Malfatti; Tijana Glavina del Rio; Corbin D. Jones; Susannah G. Tringe; Jeffery L. Dangl

Immune signals shape root communities To thwart microbial pathogens aboveground, the plant Arabidopsis turns on defensive signaling using salicylic acid. In Arabidopsis plants with modified immune systems, Lebeis et al. show that bacterial communities change in response to salicylic acid signaling in the root zone as well (see the Perspective by Haney and Ausubel). Abundance of some root-colonizing bacterial families increased at the expense of others, partly as a function of whether salicylic acid was used as an immune signal or as a carbon source for microbial growth. Science, this issue p. 860; see also p. 788 Bacteria that are endosymbiotic with the plant root respond to changes in the plant’s signaling status. [Also see Perspective by Haney and Ausubel] Immune systems distinguish “self” from “nonself” to maintain homeostasis and must differentially gate access to allow colonization by potentially beneficial, nonpathogenic microbes. Plant roots grow within extremely diverse soil microbial communities but assemble a taxonomically limited root-associated microbiome. We grew isogenic Arabidopsis thaliana mutants with altered immune systems in a wild soil and also in recolonization experiments with a synthetic bacterial community. We established that biosynthesis of, and signaling dependent on, the foliar defense phytohormone salicylic acid is required to assemble a normal root microbiome. Salicylic acid modulates colonization of the root by specific bacterial families. Thus, plant immune signaling drives selection from the available microbial communities to sculpt the root microbiome.


Standards in Genomic Sciences | 2009

Complete genome sequence of Kytococcus sedentarius type strain (541T)

David Sims; Thomas Brettin; John C. Detter; Cliff Han; Alla Lapidus; Alex Copeland; Tijana Glavina del Rio; Matt Nolan; Feng Chen; Susan Lucas; Hope Tice; Jan-Fang Cheng; David Bruce; Lynne Goodwin; Sam Pitluck; Galina Ovchinnikova; Amrita Pati; Natalia Ivanova; Konstantinos Mavromatis; Amy Chen; Krishna Palaniappan; Patrik D’haeseleer; Patrick Chain; Jim Bristow; Jonathan A. Eisen; Victor Markowitz; Philip Hugenholtz; Susanne Schneider; Markus Göker; Rüdiger Pukall

Kytococcus sedentarius (ZoBell and Upham 1944) Stackebrandt et al. 1995 is the type strain of the species, and is of phylogenetic interest because of its location in the Dermacoccaceae, a poorly studied family within the actinobacterial suborder Micrococcineae. K. sedentarius is known for the production of oligoketide antibiotics as well as for its role as an opportunistic pathogen causing valve endocarditis, hemorrhagic pneumonia, and pitted keratolysis. It is strictly aerobic and can only grow when several amino acids are provided in the medium. The strain described in this report is a free-living, nonmotile, Gram-positive bacterium, originally isolated from a marine environment. Here we describe the features of this organism, together with the complete genome sequence, and annotation. This is the first complete genome sequence of a member of the family Dermacoccaceae and the 2,785,024 bp long single replicon genome with its 2639 protein-coding and 64 RNA genes is part of the GenomicEncyclopedia ofBacteria andArchaea project.


Nature Communications | 2016

Host genotype and age shape the leaf and root microbiomes of a wild perennial plant

Maggie R. Wagner; Derek S. Lundberg; Tijana Glavina del Rio; Susannah G. Tringe; Jeffery L. Dangl; Thomas Mitchell-Olds

Bacteria living on and in leaves and roots influence many aspects of plant health, so the extent of a plants genetic control over its microbiota is of great interest to crop breeders and evolutionary biologists. Laboratory-based studies, because they poorly simulate true environmental heterogeneity, may misestimate or totally miss the influence of certain host genes on the microbiome. Here we report a large-scale field experiment to disentangle the effects of genotype, environment, age and year of harvest on bacterial communities associated with leaves and roots of Boechera stricta (Brassicaceae), a perennial wild mustard. Host genetic control of the microbiome is evident in leaves but not roots, and varies substantially among sites. Microbiome composition also shifts as plants age. Furthermore, a large proportion of leaf bacterial groups are shared with roots, suggesting inoculation from soil. Our results demonstrate how genotype-by-environment interactions contribute to the complexity of microbiome assembly in natural environments.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2010

Sequencing of Multiple Clostridial Genomes Related to Biomass Conversion and Biofuel Production

Christopher L. Hemme; Housna Mouttaki; Yong Jin Lee; Gengxin Zhang; Lynne Goodwin; Susan Lucas; Alex Copeland; Alla Lapidus; Tijana Glavina del Rio; Hope Tice; Elizabeth Saunders; Thomas Brettin; John C. Detter; Cliff Han; Sam Pitluck; Miriam Land; Loren Hauser; Nikos C. Kyrpides; Natalia Mikhailova; Zhili He; Liyou Wu; Joy D. Van Nostrand; Bernard Henrissat; Qiang He; Paul A. Lawson; Ralph S. Tanner; Lee R. Lynd; Juergen Wiegel; Matthew W. Fields; Adam P. Arkin

Modern methods to develop microbe-based biomass conversion processes require a system-level understanding of the microbes involved. Clostridium species have long been recognized as ideal candidates for processes involving biomass conversion and production of various biofuels and other industrial products. To expand the knowledge base for clostridial species relevant to current biofuel production efforts, we have sequenced the genomes of 20 species spanning multiple genera. The majority of species sequenced fall within the class III cellulosome-encoding Clostridium and the class V saccharolytic Thermoanaerobacteraceae. Species were chosen based on representation in the experimental literature as model organisms, ability to degrade cellulosic biomass either by free enzymes or by cellulosomes, ability to rapidly ferment hexose and pentose sugars to ethanol, and ability to ferment synthesis gas to ethanol. The sequenced strains significantly increase the number of noncommensal/nonpathogenic clostridial species and provide a key foundation for future studies of biomass conversion, cellulosome composition, and clostridial systems biology.


PeerJ | 2013

A metagenomic insight into freshwater methane-utilizing communities and evidence for cooperation between the Methylococcaceae and the Methylophilaceae.

David A. C. Beck; Marina G. Kalyuzhnaya; Stephanie Malfatti; Susannah G. Tringe; Tijana Glavina del Rio; Natalia Ivanova; Mary E. Lidstrom; Ludmila Chistoserdova

We investigated microbial communities active in methane oxidation in lake sediment at different oxygen tensions and their response to the addition of nitrate, via stable isotope probing combined with deep metagenomic sequencing. Communities from a total of four manipulated microcosms were analyzed, supplied with 13C-methane in, respectively, ambient air, ambient air with the addition of nitrate, nitrogen atmosphere and nitrogen atmosphere with the addition of nitrate, and these were compared to the community from an unamended sediment sample. We found that the major group involved in methane oxidation in both aerobic and microaerobic conditions were members of the family Methylococcaceae, dominated by species of the genus Methylobacter, and these were stimulated by nitrate in aerobic but not microaerobic conditions. In aerobic conditions, we also noted a pronounced response to both methane and nitrate by members of the family Methylophilaceae that are non-methane-oxidizing methylotrophs, and predominantly by the members of the genus Methylotenera. The relevant abundances of the Methylococcaceae and the Methylophilaceae and their coordinated response to methane and nitrate suggest that these species may be engaged in cooperative behavior, the nature of which remains unknown.


Mbio | 2014

Convergent Bacterial Microbiotas in the Fungal Agricultural Systems of Insects

Frank O. Aylward; Garret Suen; Peter H. W. Biedermann; Aaron S. Adams; Jarrod J. Scott; Stephanie Malfatti; Tijana Glavina del Rio; Susannah G. Tringe; Michael Poulsen; Kenneth F. Raffa; Kier D. Klepzig; Cameron R. Currie

ABSTRACT The ability to cultivate food is an innovation that has produced some of the most successful ecological strategies on the planet. Although most well recognized in humans, where agriculture represents a defining feature of civilization, species of ants, beetles, and termites have also independently evolved symbioses with fungi that they cultivate for food. Despite occurring across divergent insect and fungal lineages, the fungivorous niches of these insects are remarkably similar, indicating convergent evolution toward this successful ecological strategy. Here, we characterize the microbiota of ants, beetles, and termites engaged in nutritional symbioses with fungi to define the bacterial groups associated with these prominent herbivores and forest pests. Using culture-independent techniques and the in silico reconstruction of 37 composite genomes of dominant community members, we demonstrate that different insect-fungal symbioses that collectively shape ecosystems worldwide have highly similar bacterial microbiotas comprised primarily of the genera Enterobacter, Rahnella, and Pseudomonas. Although these symbioses span three orders of insects and two phyla of fungi, we show that they are associated with bacteria sharing high whole-genome nucleotide identity. Due to the fine-scale correspondence of the bacterial microbiotas of insects engaged in fungal symbioses, our findings indicate that this represents an example of convergence of entire host-microbe complexes. IMPORTANCE The cultivation of fungi for food is a behavior that has evolved independently in ants, beetles, and termites and has enabled many species of these insects to become ecologically important and widely distributed herbivores and forest pests. Although the primary fungal cultivars of these insects have been studied for decades, comparatively little is known of their bacterial microbiota. In this study, we show that diverse fungus-growing insects are associated with a common bacterial community composed of the same dominant members. Furthermore, by demonstrating that many of these bacteria have high whole-genome similarity across distantly related insect hosts that reside thousands of miles apart, we show that these bacteria are an important and underappreciated feature of diverse fungus-growing insects. Because of the similarities in the agricultural lifestyles of these insects, this is an example of convergence between both the life histories of the host insects and their symbiotic microbiota. The cultivation of fungi for food is a behavior that has evolved independently in ants, beetles, and termites and has enabled many species of these insects to become ecologically important and widely distributed herbivores and forest pests. Although the primary fungal cultivars of these insects have been studied for decades, comparatively little is known of their bacterial microbiota. In this study, we show that diverse fungus-growing insects are associated with a common bacterial community composed of the same dominant members. Furthermore, by demonstrating that many of these bacteria have high whole-genome similarity across distantly related insect hosts that reside thousands of miles apart, we show that these bacteria are an important and underappreciated feature of diverse fungus-growing insects. Because of the similarities in the agricultural lifestyles of these insects, this is an example of convergence between both the life histories of the host insects and their symbiotic microbiota.


Standards in Genomic Sciences | 2011

Non-contiguous finished genome sequence and contextual data of the filamentous soil bacterium Ktedonobacter racemifer type strain (SOSP1-21T)

Yun Juan Chang; Miriam Land; Loren Hauser; Olga Chertkov; Tijana Glavina del Rio; Matt Nolan; Alex Copeland; Hope Tice; Jan Fang Cheng; Susan Lucas; Cliff Han; Lynne Goodwin; Sam Pitluck; Natalia Ivanova; Galina Ovchinikova; Amrita Pati; Amy Chen; Krishna Palaniappan; Konstantinos Mavromatis; Konstantinos Liolios; Thomas Brettin; Anne Fiebig; Manfred Rohde; Birte Abt; Markus Göker; John C. Detter; Tanja Woyke; James Bristow; Jonathan A. Eisen; Victor Markowitz

Ktedonobacter racemifer corrig. Cavaletti et al. 2007 is the type species of the genus Ktedonobacter, which in turn is the type genus of the family Ktedonobacteraceae, the type family of the order Ktedonobacterales within the class Ktedonobacteria in the phylum ‘Chloroflexi’. Although K. racemifer shares some morphological features with the actinobacteria, it is of special interest because it was the first cultivated representative of a deep branching unclassified lineage of otherwise uncultivated environmental phylotypes tentatively located within the phylum ‘Chloroflexi’. The aerobic, filamentous, non-motile, spore-forming Gram-positive heterotroph was isolated from soil in Italy. The 13,661,586 bp long non-contiguous finished genome consists of ten contigs and is the first reported genome sequence from a member of the class Ktedonobacteria. With its 11,453 protein-coding and 87 RNA genes, it is the largest prokaryotic genome reported so far. It comprises a large number of over-represented COGs, particularly genes associated with transposons, causing the genetic redundancy within the genome being considerably larger than expected by chance. This work is a part of the GenomicEncyclopedia ofBacteria andArchaea project.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Metagenomic Profiling Reveals Lignocellulose Degrading System in a Microbial Community Associated with a Wood-Feeding Beetle

Erin D. Scully; Scott M. Geib; Kelli Hoover; Ming Tien; Susannah G. Tringe; Kerrie Barry; Tijana Glavina del Rio; Mansi Chovatia; Joshua R. Herr; John E. Carlson

The Asian longhorned beetle ( Anoplophoraglabripennis ) is an invasive, wood-boring pest that thrives in the heartwood of deciduous tree species. A large impediment faced by A . glabripennis as it feeds on woody tissue is lignin, a highly recalcitrant biopolymer that reduces access to sugars and other nutrients locked in cellulose and hemicellulose. We previously demonstrated that lignin, cellulose, and hemicellulose are actively deconstructed in the beetle gut and that the gut harbors an assemblage of microbes hypothesized to make significant contributions to these processes. While lignin degrading mechanisms have been well characterized in pure cultures of white rot basidiomycetes, little is known about such processes in microbial communities associated with wood-feeding insects. The goals of this study were to develop a taxonomic and functional profile of a gut community derived from an invasive population of larval A . glabripennis collected from infested host trees and to identify genes that could be relevant for the digestion of woody tissue and nutrient acquisition. To accomplish this goal, we taxonomically and functionally characterized the A . glabripennis midgut microbiota through amplicon and shotgun metagenome sequencing and conducted a large-scale comparison with the metagenomes from a variety of other herbivore-associated communities. This analysis distinguished the A. glabripennis larval gut metagenome from the gut communities of other herbivores, including previously sequenced termite hindgut metagenomes. Genes encoding enzymes were identified in the A . glabripennis gut metagenome that could have key roles in woody tissue digestion including candidate lignin degrading genes (laccases, dye-decolorizing peroxidases, novel peroxidases and β-etherases), 36 families of glycoside hydrolases (such as cellulases and xylanases), and genes that could facilitate nutrient recovery, essential nutrient synthesis, and detoxification. This community could serve as a reservoir of novel enzymes to enhance industrial cellulosic biofuels production or targets for novel control methods for this invasive and highly destructive insect.


Standards in Genomic Sciences | 2010

Complete genome sequence of Haliangium ochraceum type strain (SMP-2T)

Natalia Ivanova; Chris Daum; Elke Lang; Birte Abt; Markus Kopitz; Elizabeth Saunders; Alla Lapidus; Susan Lucas; Tijana Glavina del Rio; Matt Nolan; Hope Tice; Alex Copeland; Jan Fang Cheng; Feng Chen; David Bruce; Lynne Goodwin; Sam Pitluck; Konstantinos Mavromatis; Amrita Pati; Natalia Mikhailova; Amy Chen; Krishna Palaniappan; Miriam Land; Loren Hauser; Yun Juan Chang; Cynthia D. Jeffries; John C. Detter; Thomas Brettin; Manfred Rohde; Markus Göker

Haliangium ochraceum Fudou et al. 2002 is the type species of the genus Haliangium in the myxococcal family ‘Haliangiaceae’. Members of the genus Haliangium are the first halophilic myxobacterial taxa described. The cells of the species follow a multicellular lifestyle in highly organized biofilms, called swarms, they decompose bacterial and yeast cells as most myxobacteria do. The fruiting bodies contain particularly small coccoid myxospores. H. ochraceum encodes the first actin homologue identified in a bacterial genome. Here we describe the features of this organism, together with the complete genome sequence, and annotation. This is the first complete genome sequence of a member of the myxococcal suborder Nannocystineae, and the 9,446,314 bp long single replicon genome with its 6,898 protein-coding and 53 RNA genes is part of the GenomicEncyclopedia ofBacteria andArchaea project.

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Dive into the Tijana Glavina del Rio's collaboration.

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Susan Lucas

Joint Genome Institute

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Sam Pitluck

Joint Genome Institute

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Hope Tice

Joint Genome Institute

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Lynne Goodwin

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Miriam Land

University of California

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Natalia Ivanova

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Alla Lapidus

University of California

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Loren Hauser

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Amy Chen

Joint Genome Institute

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Matt Nolan

Joint Genome Institute

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