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Pseudomonas Carbon Ecology
Plan
Report
Mark Andrew Miller ([ORCID: 0000-0001-9076-6066])
Research Question
Among free-living Pseudomonas clades, does the carbon source utilization profile predict the soil ecosystem type from which strains were isolated — and do clades that have transitioned to host-associated lifestyles show predictable losses of specific carbon pathways?
Key Findings
Finding 1: Host-Associated Pseudomonas Show Dramatic Loss of Plant-Derived Sugar Pathways
Pseudomonas sensu stricto (the P. aeruginosa group) shows near-complete loss of plant-derived sugar catabolism compared to Pseudomonas_E (the P. fluorescens/putida group). Of the 62 GapMind...
Cf Formulation Design
Plan
Report
Adam Arkin — U.C. Berkeley / Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Research Question
Can we build a multi-criterion framework that explains measured P. aeruginosa PA14 inhibition from metabolic competition, growth kinetics, and patient ecology data, and use it to design optimal 1–5 organism commensal formulations for competitive exclusion in CF lungs?
Pgp Pangenome Ecology
Plan
Report
Priya Ranjan
Research Question
Does environmental selection shape the distribution of plant growth-promoting (PGP) bacterial genes across the BERDL pangenome (293K genomes, 27K species), and are those genes core or accessory within their carrier species?
Key Findings
H1 SUPPORTED — PGP traits form a non-random syndrome, but nitrogen fixation is ecologically distinct
Across 11,272 species with at least one PGP gene, 8 of 10 focal-gene pairs were significantly associated after BH-FDR correction. Five pairs showed positive co-occurrence and three showed...
Amr Environmental Resistome
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
Do antimicrobial resistance gene profiles differ between ecological niches across 27,000 bacterial species? Using 83K AMR gene clusters mapped to 293K genomes with environmental metadata, we test whether the resistome is structured by ecology — and whether intrinsic (core) and acquired (accessory) resistance show different environmental signatures.
Key Findings
1. Clinical species carry 2.5× more AMR gene clusters than environmental species (H1 supported)
Species from clinical sources have a median of 5 AMR gene clusters, compared to 2 for soil, aquatic, and host-associated species (Kruskal-Wallis H = 781.9, p = 9.4×10⁻¹⁶⁷, η² = 0.056)....
Amr Cofitness Networks
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
What genes are co-regulated with antimicrobial resistance (AMR) genes across growth conditions, and do these "support networks" explain the uniform fitness cost of resistance? Using cofitness data and ICA fitness modules from 25 bacteria, we identify the functional context in which AMR genes operate.
Key Findings
1. AMR genes are embedded in larger-than-average co-regulated modules
Only 24% of AMR genes (192/801) are assigned to ICA fitness modules, but the modules they inhabit are significantly larger than non-AMR modules: median 46 vs 27 genes (MWU p = 1.7×10⁻⁸). This indicates that when AMR...
Ecotype Analysis
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
What drives gene content similarity between bacterial genomes: environmental similarity or phylogenetic relatedness?
Key Findings
Analysis of 172 species with sufficient environmental and phylogenetic data reveals:
Phylogeny Usually Dominates
- Median partial correlation for environment: 0.0025
- Median partial correlation for phylogeny: 0.0143
- Phylogeny dominates in 60.5% of species
- Environment...
Metal Fitness Atlas
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal, Adam Deutschbauer
Research Question
Across diverse bacteria subjected to genome-wide fitness profiling under metal stress, what is the genetic architecture of metal tolerance — is it encoded in the core or accessory genome, is it conserved across species, and can fitness-validated metal tolerance genes predict capabilities across the broader pangenome?
Key Findings
1. Metal-Important Genes Are Enriched in the Core Genome
Across 22 organisms and 14 metals, genes with significant fitness defects under metal stress are 87.4% core vs 76.9% baseline (OR=2.08, p=4.3e-162). This is the opposite of the initial hypothesis (H1a), which predicted accessory...
Core Gene Tradeoffs
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
Why are core genome genes MORE likely to show positive fitness effects when deleted, and what functions and conditions drive this burden paradox?
Key Findings
The Burden Paradox Is Function-Specific
Not all functional categories show the paradox. Core genes are disproportionately burdensome in Protein Metabolism (+6.2pp), Motility (+7.8pp), and RNA Metabolism (+12.9pp). But Cell Wall reverses: non-core cell wall genes are MORE burdensome...
Lab Field Ecology
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
Do lab-measured fitness effects under contaminant stress predict the field abundance of Fitness Browser organisms across Oak Ridge groundwater sites with varying geochemistry?
Key Findings
14 of 26 Fitness Browser Genera Detected at Oak Ridge
Of 26 unique genera represented in the Fitness Browser, 14 are detected in Oak Ridge groundwater communities via 16S amplicon sequencing. The most prevalent are Sphingomonas (93% of 108 sites), Pseudomonas (91%), and Caulobacter...
Amr Pangenome Atlas
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
What is the distribution, conservation, phylogenetic structure, functional context, and environmental association of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) genes across 27,000 bacterial species pangenomes?
Key Findings
1. AMR Genes Are Massively Depleted from the Core Genome
AMR genes are significantly less conserved than the pangenome average: only 30.3% are core vs 46.8% baseline (OR=0.49, chi-squared=23,117, p≈0). The auxiliary genome is 2.2x enriched for AMR (33.6% vs 15.3%). This depletion...
Pathway Capability Dependency
Plan
Report
Dileep Kishore, Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
When a bacterium's genome encodes a complete biosynthetic or catabolic pathway, does the organism actually depend on it? Can we use fitness data to distinguish active dependencies from latent capabilities — and predict which pathways are candidates for evolutionary gene loss?
Key Findings
1. Pathway Completeness Alone Is Insufficient to Predict Metabolic Dependency
Of 161 classified organism-pathway pairs (7 Fitness Browser organisms, 23 GapMind pathways), only 35.4% (57/161) are Active Dependencies where a complete pathway contains fitness-important genes. The largest...
Cog Analysis
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
How do COG functional category distributions differ across core, auxiliary, and novel genes in bacterial pangenomes?
Key Findings
Universal Functional Partitioning in Bacterial Pangenomes
Analysis of 32 species across 9 phyla (357,623 genes) reveals a remarkably consistent "two-speed genome":
Novel/singleton genes consistently enriched in:
- L (Mobile elements): +10.88% enrichment, 100% consistency across species...
Bacdive Metal Validation
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
Do bacteria isolated from metal-contaminated environments have higher predicted metal tolerance scores than bacteria from uncontaminated environments?
Key Findings
1. Bacteria From Metal-Contaminated Environments Have Significantly Higher Metal Tolerance Scores
Organisms isolated from heavy metal contamination sites have metal tolerance scores a full standard deviation above the environmental baseline (Cohen's d = +1.00, Mann-Whitney p=0.006, n=10)....
Aromatic Catabolism Network
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
Why does aromatic catabolism in Acinetobacter baylyi ADP1 require Complex I (NADH dehydrogenase), iron acquisition, and PQQ biosynthesis when growth on other carbon sources does not?
Key Findings
1. Aromatic catabolism requires a 51-gene support network spanning 4 metabolic subsystems
The 51 quinate-specific genes in ADP1 organize into a coherent metabolic dependency network around the β-ketoadipate pathway. Co-fitness analysis assigns 44/51 genes (86%) to four functional...
Pangenome Openness
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
Do open pangenomes show different patterns of environmental vs phylogenetic effects compared to closed pangenomes?
Key Findings
No Correlation Found
Analysis of pangenome openness vs environment/phylogeny effects revealed no significant relationship:
| Metric |
Spearman rho |
p-value |
| Openness vs Environment effect |
-0.05 |
0.54 |
| Openness vs Phylogeny effect |
0.03 |
... |
Metabolic Capability Dependency
Plan
Report
Christopher Neely, Sierra Moxon
Research Question
Just because a bacterium's genome encodes a complete metabolic pathway (metabolic capability), does the organism actually depend on it? Can we distinguish genomic capability from functional dependency using experimental fitness data?
Key Findings
H1 Supported: A Substantial Fraction of Complete Pathways Are Functionally Neutral
Across 1,695 pathway-organism pairs from 48 organisms, 15.8% of genomically complete pathways were classified as latent capabilities — pathways the genome encodes but that show no detectable fitness...
Acinetobacter Adp1 Explorer
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Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
What is the scope and structure of a comprehensive ADP1 database, and how do its annotations, metabolic models, and phenotype data intersect with BERDL collections (pangenome, biochemistry, fitness, PhageFoundry)?
Key Findings
1. Rich Multi-Omics Database with 6 Data Modalities
The user-provided SQLite database contains 15 tables with 461,522 total rows and 135 MB of data for Acinetobacter baylyi ADP1 and 13 related genomes. The central genome_features table has 5,852 genes with 51 annotation columns spanning...
Bacdive Phenotype Metal Tolerance
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
Can BacDive-measured bacterial phenotypes (Gram stain, oxygen tolerance, metabolite utilization, enzyme activities) predict metal tolerance as measured by Fitness Browser experiments and the Metal Fitness Atlas?
Key Findings
1. Gram-Negative Bacteria Have Significantly Higher Metal Tolerance Scores (d=-0.61)
Gram-negative species have higher metal tolerance scores than Gram-positive species (Cohen's d = -0.61, p < 1e-60, n = 3,272 species). This is the largest effect among all phenotype features tested....
Fitness Effects Conservation
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
Is there a continuous gradient from essential genes (core) to dispensable genes (accessory) across the full fitness spectrum, and what does the fitness landscape of novel genes look like?
Key Findings
Conservation Increases with Fitness Importance
A clear gradient from essential to neutral genes:
| Fitness category |
n genes |
% Core |
| Essential (no viable mutants) |
27,693 |
82% |
| Often sick (>10% experiments) |
15,989 |
78% |
| Mixed... |
|
|
Conservation Vs Fitness
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
Are essential genes preferentially conserved in the core genome, and what functional categories distinguish essential-core from essential-auxiliary genes?
Key Findings
Link Table (Phase 1)
- 44 of 48 FB organisms mapped to pangenome species clades
- 177,863 gene-to-cluster links at 100.0% median protein identity, 94.2% median gene coverage
- 34 organisms have >=90% coverage; 33 used for downstream analysis (Dyella79 excluded due to locus tag...
Enigma Contamination Functional Potential
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
Do high-contamination Oak Ridge groundwater communities show enrichment for taxa with higher inferred stress-related functional potential compared with low-contamination communities?
Key Findings
Multiplicity and sample-size context (primary panel)
Model-family sample counts from data/model_family_sample_counts.tsv frame how much data each analysis used:
| Mode |
Base Spearman n |
Adj+Cov n |
Adj+Fraction n |
High-coverage subset n |
| ... |
|
|
|
|
Fitness Modules
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
Can we decompose RB-TnSeq fitness compendia into latent functional modules via robust ICA, align them across organisms using orthology, and use module context to predict gene function?
Key Findings
- The strict membership threshold (|weight| >= 0.3, max 50 genes) was critical. The initial D'Agostino K-squared approach gave 100-280 genes per module with weak cofitness signal (59% enriched, 1-17x correlation). After switching to absolute weight thresholds, modules became biologically...
Temporal Core Dynamics
Plan
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
How does core genome composition change over sampling time, and do genes transition in and out of core status?
Adp1 Deletion Phenotypes
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
What is the condition-dependent structure of gene essentiality in Acinetobacter baylyi ADP1, as revealed by the de Berardinis single-gene deletion collection grown on 8 carbon sources?
Key Findings
1. Carbon sources define a three-tier essentiality landscape
The 8 carbon sources partition into demanding, moderate, and robust tiers based on the fraction of genes showing growth defects. Urea is the most demanding (97.9% of genes show severe defects at ratio < 0.5), while quinate is the...
Webofmicrobes Explorer
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
What does the kescience_webofmicrobes exometabolomics collection contain, which organisms overlap with the Fitness Browser, and how well do metabolite uptake/release profiles connect to pangenome-predicted metabolic capabilities?
Key Findings
1. WoM Action Encoding Uses Four Distinct Semantics, Not Three
The WoM database encodes metabolite observations with a 4-action system that differs between control and organism entries:
| Actor |
Action |
Meaning |
Count |
| Control ("The Environment")... |
|
|
|
Respiratory Chain Wiring
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
How is Acinetobacter baylyi ADP1's branched respiratory chain wired across carbon sources — which NADH dehydrogenases and terminal oxidases are required for which substrates?
Key Findings
1. Each carbon source uses a distinct respiratory chain configuration
ADP1's branched respiratory chain (62 genes across 8 subsystems) is wired in a condition-dependent manner. Quinate requires only Complex I; acetate requires Complex I, cytochrome bo3, ACIAD3522, and more; glucose requires...
Conservation Fitness Synthesis
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
How does a gene's importance for bacterial survival relate to its evolutionary conservation, and what does the conserved genome actually look like?
Key Findings
The Gradient
There is a clear, quantitative gradient from essential genes (82% core) to always-neutral genes (66% core). More important genes are more conserved -- but the effect is modest. Even genes with no detectable fitness effect in any experiment are 66% core. The gradient spans...
Env Embedding Explorer
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
What do AlphaEarth environmental embeddings capture, and how do they relate to geographic coordinates and NCBI environment labels?
Key Findings
1. Environmental samples show 3.4x stronger geographic signal than human-associated samples
AlphaEarth embeddings encode geographic/environmental signal, but the strength depends on the sample source. For environmental samples (Soil, Marine, Freshwater, Extreme, Plant), nearby genomes...
Cofitness Coinheritance
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
Do genes with correlated fitness profiles (co-fit) tend to co-occur in the same genomes across a species' pangenome? Does functional coupling constrain which genes are gained and lost together?
Key Findings
Pairwise Co-fitness Weakly Predicts Co-occurrence
Across 9 organisms with co-fitness data (2.25M cofit pairs vs 22.5M prevalence-matched random pairs), co-fit gene pairs show a weak but consistent positive co-occurrence signal. The mean delta phi (cofit - random) is +0.011 across organisms,...
Essential Metabolome
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
Which biochemical reactions are universally essential across bacteria, and what does the essential metabolome reveal about the minimal core metabolism required for microbial life?
Key Findings
High Conservation of Amino Acid Biosynthesis Pathways
17 of 18 amino acid biosynthesis pathways are present in all 7 organisms analyzed (100% within this sample):
- Complete pathways: arg, asn, chorismate, cys, gln, gly, his, ile, leu, lys, met, phe, pro, thr, trp, tyr, val
**One...
Metal Specificity
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
Among the 12,838 metal-important genes identified by the Metal Fitness Atlas, which are specifically required for metal tolerance vs general stress survival — and do the metal-specific genes show the expected accessory-genome enrichment?
Key Findings
1. 55% of Metal-Important Genes Are Metal-Specific
Of the 7,609 metal-important gene records with fitness matrix data across 24 organisms, 4,177 (54.9%) are metal-specific — they show significant fitness defects under metal stress but a <5% sick rate across 5,945 non-metal experiments....
Counter Ion Effects
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal, Aindrila Mukhopadhyay
Research Question
When bacteria are exposed to metal salts (CoCl₂, NiCl₂, CuCl₂), how much of the observed fitness effect is caused by the metal cation versus the counter anion (chloride)? Does correcting for chloride confounding change the conclusions of the Pan-Bacterial Metal Fitness Atlas?
Key Findings
1. 39.8% of Metal-Important Genes Are Also NaCl-Important
Across 19 organisms and 14 metals (86 organism × metal pairs), 4,304 of 10,821 metal-important gene records (39.8%) are also important under NaCl stress. This substantial overlap exists for every metal tested — from 9.2% for...
Field Vs Lab Fitness
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
Which genes matter for survival under environmentally-realistic conditions but appear dispensable in the lab, and vice versa? Do field-relevant fitness effects predict pangenome conservation better than lab-only effects?
Key Findings
ENIGMA CORAL Contains No DvH Fitness Data (NB01)
The ENIGMA CORAL database (47 tables, enigma_coral on BERDL) was surveyed for complementary data. Key finding: DvH is completely absent from the database. The single TnSeq library is for FW300-N2E2 (Pseudomonas), DubSeq libraries...
Essential Genome
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
Which essential genes are conserved across bacteria, which are context-dependent, and can we predict function for uncharacterized essential genes using module context from non-essential orthologs?
Key Findings
15 Gene Families Are Essential in All 48 Bacteria
The absolute core of bacterial life: ribosomal proteins (rpsC, rplW, rplK, rplB, rplA, rplF, rps11, rpsJ, rpsI, rpsM), chaperonin (groEL), CTP synthase (pyrG), translation elongation factor G (fusA), valyl-tRNA synthetase (valS), and...
Ecotype Env Reanalysis
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
Does the environment effect on gene content become stronger when analysis is restricted to genuinely environmental samples, excluding human-associated genomes whose AlphaEarth embeddings reflect hospital satellite imagery rather than ecological habitat?
Key Findings
1. Clinical bias does NOT explain the weak environment signal (H0 not rejected)
Environmental species (n=37, median partial correlation 0.051) do NOT show stronger environment–gene content correlations than human-associated species (n=93, median 0.084). The Mann-Whitney U test is far from...
Adp1 Triple Essentiality
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
Among genes that TnSeq says are dispensable in Acinetobacter baylyi ADP1, does FBA correctly predict which ones have growth defects? Can direct mutant growth rate measurements serve as an independent axis to evaluate where computational (FBA) and genetic (TnSeq) methods agree or disagree?
Costly Dispensable Genes
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
What characterizes genes that are simultaneously burdensome (fitness improves when deleted) and not conserved in the pangenome? Are they mobile elements, recent acquisitions, degraded pathways, or something else?
Key Findings
Costly+Dispensable Genes Are Mobile Genetic Elements
The 5,526 costly+dispensable genes are overwhelmingly associated with mobile genetic elements. They are 7.45x more likely to contain mobile element keywords in their descriptions (transposase, integrase, phage, IS element,...
Module Conservation
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
Are ICA fitness modules enriched in core pangenome genes, and do cross-organism module families map to the core genome?
Key Findings
Module Genes Are More Core Than Average
- Module genes: 86.0% core vs all genes: 81.5% (+4.5 percentage points)
- Genes assigned to ICA modules are co-regulated functional units, and they skew toward the conserved core genome
(Notebook: 01_module_conservation.ipynb)
Most...
Fw300 Metabolic Consistency
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
For Pseudomonas fluorescens FW300-N2E3 (ENIGMA groundwater isolate), how consistent are exometabolomic outputs (Web of Microbes), genome-wide gene fitness (Fitness Browser), species-level utilization phenotypes (BacDive), and computational pathway predictions (GapMind)?
Key Findings
1. High overall concordance across databases (94% mean concordance)
Of the 58 metabolites produced or increased by FW300-N2E3 (Web of Microbes), 21 could be cross-referenced against at least one other database. Among these testable metabolites, 17/21 (81%) were fully concordant across all...
Paperblast Explorer
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
What does the kescience_paperblast collection contain, how current is it, and what are its coverage patterns across organisms, domains of life, and functional databases?
Key Findings
Finding 1: One organism dominates nearly half of all literature
Homo sapiens alone accounts for 46.7% of all gene-paper records in PaperBLAST. The top 5 organisms (H. sapiens, M. musculus, R. norvegicus, A. thaliana, D. melanogaster) capture 72.8%. Of 20,723 organisms...
Amr Strain Variation
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
Within a species, how does the AMR repertoire vary between strains, and what drives that variation?
Key Findings
Finding 1: The majority of AMR genes are variable or rare within species
Across 1,305 species and 180,025 genomes, 51.3% of AMR gene-species occurrences are rare (present in <=5% of strains), 41.3% are variable (5-95%), and only 7.5% are fixed (>=95%). The median variabilit
Amr Fitness Cost
Plan
Report
Paramvir S. Dehal
Research Question
Do antimicrobial resistance (AMR) genes impose a fitness cost in the absence of antibiotic selection pressure? Using genome-wide RB-TnSeq fitness data from 28 bacteria, we test whether transposon knockouts of AMR genes show systematically positive fitness (mutant grows better than wildtype) under standard growth conditions, indicating the intact AMR gene is a metabolic burden.
Key Findings
1. Universal cost of resistance across 25 bacterial species (H1 supported)
AMR gene knockouts show systematically higher fitness than non-AMR gene knockouts under non-antibiotic conditions, confirming that resistance genes impose a metabolic burden. A DerSimonian-Laird random-effects...
Truly Dark Genes
Plan
Report
Adam Arkin
Research Question
Among the ~6,400 Fitness Browser genes that remain functionally unannotated even after bakta v1.12.0 reannotation, what distinguishes them from "annotation-lag" dark matter, and can their fitness phenotypes, genomic context, and sparse annotations prioritize them for experimental characterization?
Key Findings
Finding 1: Only 16.3% of "dark matter" resists modern annotation
Of 39,532 Fitness Browser dark genes with pangenome links, bakta v1.12.0 reannotation reclassifies 33,105 (83.7%) — leaving just 6,427 "truly dark" genes where both the original pipeline and bakta agree: these are hypothetical...
Functional Dark Matter
Plan
Report
Adam Arkin
Research Question
Which genes of unknown function across 48 bacteria have strong fitness phenotypes, and can biogeographic patterns, pathway gap analysis, and cross-organism fitness concordance — combined with existing function predictions and conservation data — prioritize them for experimental follow-up?
Key Findings
Finding 1: One in four bacterial genes is functionally dark, and 17,344 have experimentally measurable phenotypes
Across 48 Fitness Browser organisms (228,709 genes), 57,011 (24.9%) lack functional annotation ("hypothetical protein," DUF, or "uncharacterized"). Of these, 7,787 show strong...
Snipe Defense System
Plan
Report
Chris Mungall
Research Question
How prevalent are SNIPE (Surface-associated Nuclease Inhibiting Phage Entry) homologues across the 293K-genome BERDL pangenome, and does their taxonomic distribution, environmental context, or pangenome status (core vs. accessory) reveal ecological patterns of phage defense?
Key Findings
1. SNIPE resolves the phage resistance vs. metabolic cost trade-off
Saxton et al. (2026) showed that SNIPE constitutively localizes to the inner membrane and cleaves phage DNA as it passes through the ManYZ mannose transporter pore. Published knockout and coevolution studies (not from...
Nmdc Community Metabolic Ecology
Plan
Report
Christopher Neely
Research Question
Do the GapMind-predicted pathway completeness profiles of community resident taxa predict or
correlate with observed metabolomics profiles in NMDC environmental samples across diverse
habitat types?
Key Findings
Finding 1 — Black Queen dynamics are detectable at community scale
Across 13 testable amino acid biosynthesis pathways, 11 of 13 (85%) showed negative
Spearman correlations between community pathway completeness and ambient amino acid
metabolite intensity — the direction predicted by...
Prophage Ecology
Plan
Report
Adam Arkin
Research Question
How are prophage gene modules and terminase-defined prophage lineages distributed across bacterial phylogeny and environmental gradients, and which modules/lineages show environmental enrichment exceeding phylogenetic expectation?
Key Findings
1. Prophage gene modules are universal but structurally variable across 27,702 bacterial species
All 27,702 species in the BERDL pangenome carry prophage-associated gene clusters, with 4,005,537 total prophage gene clusters identified via eggNOG annotations. Three modules are...
Phb Granule Ecology
Plan
Report
Adam Arkin
Research Question
How are polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB) granule-forming pathways distributed across bacterial clades and environments, and does this distribution support the hypothesis that carbon storage granules are most beneficial in temporally variable feast/famine environments?
Key Findings
Finding 1: PHB pathways are widespread but phylogenetically concentrated
Across 27,690 GTDB species, 21.9% carry phaC (PHA synthase, the committed step for PHB biosynthesis) and 21.7% have a complete PHB pathway (phaC + phaA/phaB). The near-identical prevalence of phaC-only a
Openness Functional Composition
Plan
Justin Reese
Research Question
Do species with open pangenomes show different COG functional enrichment patterns than species with closed pangenomes?
Resistance Hotspots
Plan
William J. Riehl
Research Question
Which microbial species and ecological environments show the highest concentration of antibiotic resistance genes, and can we predict resistance accumulation from phylogenetic and ecological features?
Pangenome Pathway Geography
Plan
Christopher Neely
Research Question
Do pangenome characteristics (open vs. closed) correlate with metabolic pathway diversity and biogeographic distribution patterns?
Pangenome Pathway Ecology
Plan
William J. Riehl
Research Question
How do pangenome characteristics (open vs. closed) correlate with metabolic pathway completeness, phylogenetic distances, and species ecology?