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cognitis nomina
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Authors Haygood

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Haygood, Margo G.


Publications
4

CitationNamesAbstract
Genome streamlining and chemical defense in a coral reef symbiosis Kwan et al. (2012). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 109 (50) “Endolissoclinum faulkneri”
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Evolutionary Relationships of “ Candidatus Endobugula” Bacterial Symbionts and Their Bugula Bryozoan Hosts Lim-Fong et al. (2008). Applied and Environmental Microbiology 74 (11) Ca. Endobugula
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α-Proteobacterial Symbionts of Marine Bryozoans in the GenusWatersipora Anderson, Haygood (2007). Applied and Environmental Microbiology 73 (1) “Endowatersipora glebosa” “Endowatersipora rubus”
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“ Candidatus Endobugula glebosa,” a Specific Bacterial Symbiont of the Marine Bryozoan Bugula simplex Lim, Haygood (2004). Applied and Environmental Microbiology 70 (8) “Endobugula glebosa”
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Genome streamlining and chemical defense in a coral reef symbiosis
Secondary metabolites are ubiquitous in bacteria, but by definition, they are thought to be nonessential. Highly toxic secondary metabolites such as patellazoles have been isolated from marine tunicates, where their exceptional potency and abundance implies a role in chemical defense, but their biological source is unknown. Here, we describe the association of the tunicate Lissoclinum patella with a symbiotic α-proteobacterium, Candidatus Endolissoclinum faulkneri, and present chemical and biological evidence that the bacterium synthesizes patellazoles. We sequenced and assembled the complete Ca . E. faulkneri genome, directly from metagenomic DNA obtained from the tunicate, where it accounted for 0.6% of sequence data. We show that the large patellazoles biosynthetic pathway is maintained, whereas the remainder of the genome is undergoing extensive streamlining to eliminate unneeded genes. The preservation of this pathway in streamlined bacteria demonstrates that secondary metabolism is an essential component of the symbiotic interaction.
Evolutionary Relationships of “ Candidatus Endobugula” Bacterial Symbionts and Their Bugula Bryozoan Hosts
ABSTRACT Ribosomal gene sequences were obtained from bryozoans in the genus Bugula and their bacterial symbionts; analyses of host and symbiont phylogenetic trees did not support a history of strict cospeciation. Symbiont-derived compounds known to defend host larvae from predation were only detected in two out of four symbiotic Bugula species.
α-Proteobacterial Symbionts of Marine Bryozoans in the GenusWatersipora
ABSTRACTBacterial symbionts that resembled mollicutes were discovered in the marine bryozoanWatersipora arcuatain the 1980s. In this study, we used PCR and sequencing of 16S rRNA genes, specific fluorescence in situ hybridization, and phylogenetic analysis to determine that the bacterial symbionts of “W. subtorquata” and “W. arcuata” from several locations along the California coast are actually closely related α-Proteobacteria, not mollicutes. We propose the names“CandidatusEndowatersipora palomitas” and “CandidatusEndowatersipora rubus” for the symbionts of “W. subtorquata” and “W. arcuata,” respectively.
“ Candidatus Endobugula glebosa,” a Specific Bacterial Symbiont of the Marine Bryozoan Bugula simplex
ABSTRACT The bryozoans Bugula neritina and Bugula simplex harbor bacteria in the pallial sinuses of their larvae as seen by electron microscopy. In B. neritina , the bacterial symbiont has been characterized as a gamma-proteobacterium, “ Candidatus Endobugula sertula.” “ Candidatus E. sertula” has been implicated as the source of the bryostatins, polyketides that provide chemical defense to the host and are also being tested for use in human cancer treatments. In this study, the bacterial symbiont in B. simplex larvae was identified by 16S rRNA-targeted PCR and sequencing as a gamma-proteobacterium closely related to and forming a monophyletic group with “ Candidatus E. sertula.” In a fluorescence in situ hybridization, a 16S ribosomal DNA probe specific to the B. simplex symbiont hybridized to long rod-shaped bacteria in the pallial sinus of a B. simplex larva. The taxonomic status “ Candidatus Endobugula glebosa” is proposed for the B. simplex larval symbiont. Degenerate polyketide synthase (PKS) primers amplified a gene fragment from B. simplex that closely matched a PKS gene fragment from the bryostatin PKS cluster. PCR surveys show that the symbiont and this PKS gene fragment are consistently and uniquely associated with B. simplex . Bryostatin activity assays and chemical analyses of B. simplex extracts reveal the presence of compounds similar to bryostatins. Taken together, these findings demonstrate a symbiosis in B. simplex that is similar and evolutionarily related to that in B. neritina .
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