Publications by authors named "Custer G"

Mangroves are impacted by multiple environmental stressors, including sea level rise, erosion, and plastic pollution. Thus, mangrove soil may be an excellent source of as yet unknown plastic-transforming microorganisms. Here, we assess the impact of polyethylene terephthalate (PET) particles and seawater intrusion on the mangrove soil microbiome and report an enrichment culture experiment to artificially select PET-transforming microbial consortia.

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Plant-associated microbiomes maintain biodiversity and ecosystem productivity amid global change. Under projected climate change scenarios, the abundance of plant-beneficial bacteria is expected to decrease. Altered plant-associated microbiomes may affect plant tolerance to stress and (agro-)ecosystem productivity.

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Cheatgrass is one of North America's most problematic invasive species. Invasion by this annual grass alters ecosystem structure and function and has proven very challenging to remove with traditional approaches. Commercially available bioherbicides, like .

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Community coalescence is defined as the mixing of intact ecological communities. From river confluences to fecal microbiota transplantation, community coalescence constitutes a common ecological occurrence affecting natural and engineered microbial systems. In this opinion article, we propose an integrative framework for microbial community coalescence to guide advances in our understanding of this important - yet underexplored - ecological phenomenon.

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Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) is a procedure used to treat diseases related to microbiome imbalances. We discuss how ecological principles can inform the design of FMT clinical trials and contribute to data interpretation. This effort will promote a better understanding of microbiome engraftment and assist the development of clinical protocols.

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The concept of a core microbiome has been broadly used to refer to the consistent presence of a set of taxa across multiple samples within a given habitat. The assignment of taxa to core microbiomes can be performed by several methods based on the abundance and occupancy (i.e.

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Plant roots are colonized by a multitude of microbial taxa that dynamically influence plant health. Plant-microbe interactions at the root-soil interface occur at the micro-scale and are affected by variation in root phenotypes. Different root phenotypes can have distinct impacts on physical and chemical gradients at the root-soil interface, leading to heterogeneous microhabitats for microbial colonization.

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Dispersal is simply defined as the movement of species across space and time. Despite this terse definition, dispersal is an essential process with direct ecological and evolutionary implications that modulate community assembly and turnover. Seminal ecological studies have shown that environmental context (e.

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Article Synopsis
  • Thousands of microbes in soil form symbiotic relationships with plants, influencing their growth and performance, and are often seen as part of the plant's genetic makeup.
  • The study investigated how elapsed time and microbial succession, rather than the plant's developmental stage, impact microbial diversity in the rhizosphere of Arabidopsis thaliana.
  • Results indicated that elapsed time is a strong predictor of microbial diversity, with minimal differences observed across various developmental stages of the plants, suggesting time is more crucial in shaping microbial communities.
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Article Synopsis
  • Researchers created special enzymes that can break down a protein called RAS, which is important in many cancers when it's not functioning properly.
  • They made these enzymes work better by making them rely on extra helper molecules for being effective.
  • These engineered enzymes were shown to successfully target and destroy RAS in lab experiments, and their design could be used for other important proteins too!
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High-throughput DNA sequencing techniques have contributed substantially to advances in our understanding of relationships among microbial communities, host characteristics, and broader ecosystem functions. With this rapid increase in breadth and depth of sequencing capabilities have come methods to extract, amplify, analyze, and interpret environmental DNA successfully with maximum efficiency. Unfortunately, performing DNA extractions quickly can come at the cost of increasing the risk of contamination among samples.

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Diet may be a significant determinant of insect gut microbiome composition. However, the extent to which dietary shifts shape both the composition and relevant functions of insect gut microbiomes, and ultimately impact host energy balance (i.e.

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In allostery, a signal from one site in a protein is transmitted to a second site to alter its function. Due to its ubiquity in biology and the potential for its exploitation in drug and protein design, the molecular basis of allosteric communication continues to be the subject of intense research. Although allosterically coupled sites are frequently characterized by disorder, how communication between disordered segments occurs remains obscure.

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As the range of bark beetles expands into new forests and woodlands, the need to understand their effects on multiple trophic levels becomes increasingly important. To date, much attention has been paid to the aboveground processes affected by bark beetle infestation, with a focus on photoautotrophs and ecosystem level processes. However, indirect effects of bark beetle on belowground processes, especially the structure and function of soil microbiota remains largely a black box.

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Micelles are self-assembled aggregates of amphiphilic surfactant molecules that are important in a variety of applications, including drug delivery, detergency, and catalysis. It is known that the micellization process is driven by the same physiochemical forces that drive protein folding, aggregation, and biological membrane self-assembly. Nevertheless, the molecular details of how micelle stability changes in water at low temperature are not fully clear.

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Small molecules regulate transcription in both eukaryotes and prokaryotes by either enhancing or repressing assembly of transcription regulatory complexes. For allosteric transcription repressors, superrepressor mutants can exhibit increased sensitivity to small molecule corepressors. However, because many transcription regulatory complexes assemble in multiple steps, the superrepressor phenotype can reflect changes in any or all of the individual assembly steps.

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Elucidation of the molecular details of allosteric communication between distant sites in a protein is key to understanding and manipulating many biological regulatory processes. Although protein disorder is acknowledged to play an important thermodynamic role in allostery, the molecular mechanisms by which this disorder is harnessed for long distance communication are known for a limited number of systems. Transcription repression by the Escherichia coli biotin repressor, BirA, is allosterically activated by binding of the small molecule effector biotinoyl-5'-AMP.

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Water is known to play a critical role in protein folding and stability. Here we develop and employ a coarse-grained (CG) model to directly explore the role of water in shaping the conformational landscape explored during protein folding. For this purpose, we simulate a designed sequence with binary patterning of neutral and hydrophobic residues, which is capable of folding to a three-helix bundle in explicit water.

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Human UDP-α-d-glucose-6-dehydrogenase (hUGDH) displays hysteresis because of a slow isomerization from an inactive state (E*) to an active state (E). Here we show that the structure of E* constrains hUGDH in a conformation that favors feedback inhibition at physiological pH. The feedback inhibitor UDP-α-d-xylose (UDP-Xyl) competes with the substrate UDP-α-d-glucose for the active site.

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Human UDP-α-d-glucose 6-dehydrogenase (hUGDH) forms a hexamer that catalyzes the NAD(+)-dependent oxidation of UDP-α-d-glucose (UDG) to produce UDP-α-d-glucuronic acid. Mammalian UGDH displays hysteresis (observed as a lag in progress curves), indicating that the enzyme undergoes a slow transition from an inactive to an active state. Here we show that hUGDH is sensitive to product inhibition during the lag.

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Recent concerns of adverse cardiac events associated with drugs used to treat attention-deficit-hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) have prompted debate over whether these drugs are truly safe. We describe a 17-year-old boy with a normal baseline echocardiogram who had been taking methylphenidate for ADHD for 18 months and experienced cardiac arrest. Emergency personnel attempted to resuscitate him, performing defibrillation twice for ventricular fibrillation, with subsequent pulseless electrical activity.

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Aims: Although long-term exposure of hepatocytes to ethanol results in agonist-selective potentiation of p42/44 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) activation, mediators of this effect of ethanol are not known.

Methods: We examined the role of phosphatidylethanol (PEth), a novel phospholipid formed exclusively in the presence of ethanol.

Results: PEth accumulated in primary cultures of rat hepatocytes treated with ethanol.

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