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[Turtle Creek Chorale: o holy Night]

Poster from the Turtle Creek Chorale Collection for their "O Holy Night" concert series which took place in December, 2010 at the Meyerson Symphony Center. A photograph of the chorale holding poinsettias on stage appears next to a photograph of a blurry Christmas tree.
Date: December 2010
Creator: Turtle Creek Chorale
System: The UNT Digital Library

[Concert Poster: The Rolling Stones Project]

Poster advertising a concert by One O'Clock Lab Band with guest artists Bernard Fowler and Tim Ries on November 23, 2010, at Murchison Performing Arts Center.
Date: November 23, 2010
Creator: University of North Texas. College of Music. Division of Jazz Studies.
System: The UNT Digital Library

[Concert Poster: Zebras Fall Concert 2010]

Poster advertising a concert by Zebras on November 22,2010, at Kenton Hall. Poster shows a flamenco dancer in motion wearing a red dress with blue sleeves.
Date: November 22, 2010
Creator: University of North Texas. College of Music. Division of Jazz Studies.
System: The UNT Digital Library

In silico discovery of the dormancy regulons in a number of Actinobacteria genomes

Mycobacterium tuberculosis is a dangerous Actinobacteria infecting nearly one third of the human population. It becomes dormant and phenotypically drug resistant in response to stresses. An important feature of the M. tuberculosis pathogenesis is the prevalence of latent infection without disease, making understanding of the mechanisms used by the bacteria to exist in this state and to switch to metabolically active infectious form a vital problem to consider. M. tuberculosis dormancy is regulated by the three-component regulatory system of two kinases (DosT and DevS) and transcriprional regulator (DevR). DevR activates transcription of a set of genes, which allow the bacteria to survive long periods of anaerobiosis, and may be important for long-term survival within the host during latent infection. The DevR-regulon is studied experimentally in M. tuberculosis and few other phylogenetically close Mycobacteria spp. As many other two-component systems, the devRS operon is autoregulated. However, the mechanism of the dormancy is not completely clear even for these bacteria and there is no data describing the dormancy regulons in other species.
Date: November 16, 2010
Creator: Gerasimova, Anna; Dubchak, Inna; Arkin, Adam & Gelfand, Mikhail
System: The UNT Digital Library

Reference set of regulons in Desulfovibrionales inferred by comparative genomics approach

in this study, we carried out large-scale comparative genomics analysis of regulatory interactions in Desulfovibrio vulgaris and 12 related genomes from Desulfovibrionales order using our recently developed web server RegPredict (http://regpredict.lbl.gov). An overall reference collection of 26 Desulfovibrionales regulogs can be accessed through RegPrecise database (http://regpredict.lbl.gov).
Date: November 15, 2010
Creator: Kazakov, Alexey E.; Rodionov, Dmitry A.; Price, Morgan N.; Arkin, Adam P.; Dubchak, Inna & Novichkov, Pavel S.
System: The UNT Digital Library

Regulon inference without arbitrary thresholds: three levels of sensitivity

Reconstruction of transcriptional regulatory networks is one of the major challenges facing the bioinformatics community in view of constantly growing number of complete genomes. The comparative genomics approach has been successfully used for the analysis of the transcriptional regulation of many metabolic systems in various bacteria taxa. The key step in this approach is given a position weight matrix, find an optimal threshold for the search of potential binding sites in genomes. In our previous work we proposed an approach for automatic selection of TFBS score threshold coupled with inference of regulon content. In this study we developed two modifications of this approach providing two additional levels of sensitivity.
Date: November 15, 2010
Creator: Dubchak, Pavel Novichkov, Elena Stavrovskaya, Dmitry Rodionov, Andrey Mironov, Inna; Rodionov, Dmitry; Mironov, Andrey; Dubchak, Inna & Novichkov, P.S.
System: The UNT Digital Library

[Concert Poster: We Shot JR is Dead]

Poster advertising a concert hosted by Fred Holston commemorating the end of the Denton blog We Shot JR. Bands performing include One Baptist General, White Drugs, Orange Coax, Early Lines, Fur, Geistheistler, Vulgar Fashion, Fungi Girls, Lychgate, Stelan Gonzalez, Cuckoo Byrds and Cygnus on October 30, 2010 at Rubber Gloves Rehearsal Studios in Denton, TX. Poster shows a painting of the lower half of a white horse with the stomach cut open and intestines showing against a stylized backdrop of the Dallas skyline. Colors are primarily red and white with blue accents.
Date: October 30, 2010
Creator: Hill, Nevada
System: The UNT Digital Library

[Concert Poster: One O'Clock Lab Band The Best College Band in the World!]

Poster advertising a concert by One O'Clock Lab Band and the Jazz Big Band from the CIT Cork School of Music on October 23, 2010, at CSM Curtis Auditorium.
Date: October 23, 2010
Creator: University of North Texas. College of Music. Division of Jazz Studies.
System: The UNT Digital Library

[Turtle Creek Chorale: A Night for Peace]

Poster from the Turtle Creek Chorale Collection for the choirs' "A Night for Peace" event which took place in 2010 at the Meyerson Symphony Center. The poster is decorated by a photograph of stained glass which is positioned above a photograph of the Turtle Creek men's choir.
Date: October 18, 2010
Creator: Turtle Creek Chorale
System: The UNT Digital Library

[Turtle Creek Chorale: A Night for Peace]

Poster from the Turtle Creek Chorale Collection for their ' "A Night for Peace" concert which took place in 2010 at the Meyerson Symphony Center. The poster is decorated by a photograph of stained glass which is positioned above a photograph of the Turtle Creek Chorale.
Date: October 18, 2010
Creator: Turtle Creek Chorale
System: The UNT Digital Library

[Concert Poster: Cats & Dogs]

Poster/flyer advertising a concert benefiting the Denton Humane Society featuring Greg Ginn & the Taylor Texas Corrugators, Shiny Around the Edges, Dust Congress, Brent Best, CS Flemmons, Dim Locator, Dear Human, RTB2, Holler Time, Spooky Folk, Video, Record Hop, New Science Projects, Delmore Pilcrow, and Sabra Laval on September 11, 2010, at Rubber Gloves Rehearsal Studio.
Date: September 11, 2010
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library

[Concert Poster: Drink to Victory, Drug Mountain, Dust Congress, Daniel Francis Doyle]

Poster advertising a concert by Drink to Victory, Dust Congress, Drug Mountain, and Daniel Francis Doyle on Saturday, August 28, 2010, at RGRS (Rubber Gloves Rehearsal Studios), Denton, Texas. Poster features a hand-drawn illustration of a unicorn, squirrel, and stars in light and dark purple ink, with event information in hand-drawn purple text written in the stars above the unicorn. Other text in chartreuse ink is scrawled, graffiti-like, across the image, reading "Do Not Attend This Blasphemy", "Repent! John 3:16", "wtf?!->", and "ACDC RULZ". The show was presented by Gutterth Productions and was advertised as a record release for both Drink to Victory and Dust Congress, and as the last show for Drug Mountain.
Date: August 28, 2010
Creator: Hill, Nevada
System: The UNT Digital Library

The Human Spirit: Anxiety, Spirituality, and Depression in HIV+ Adults

This poster examines the relationships between anxiety, spirituality, and depression in persons living with HIV.
Date: August 12, 2010
Creator: Deaton, Kyle & Vosvick, Mark A.
System: The UNT Digital Library

Positive States of Mind, Loneliness, and Anger: An Exploration of Resilience in the LGBT Community

This poster examines the association between positive states of mind, loneliness, anger, and resilience in LGBT individuals.
Date: August 12, 2010
Creator: Logan, Mandy Alene; Catalano, Denise E.; Vosvick, Mark A. & Chng, Chwee-Lye
System: The UNT Digital Library

Three-Compartment Sink

Poster depicting a three-compartment sink labelled with the purpose of each area. There is also information about sanitizing solutions and minimum required temperatures to meet Texas Health Department regulations.
Date: June 2010
Creator: Texas. Department of State Health Services.
System: The Portal to Texas History

Investigating the role of CheA-3 in Dusulfovibrio Vulgaris Hildenborough

Multiple sets of chemotaxis genes including three cheA homologs were identified in the genome sequence of the anaerobic bacterium Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough. Each CheA is a histidine kinase (HK) and part of a two component signal transduction system. Knock out mutants in the three cheA genes were created using single cross-over homologous recombination insertion. We studied the phenotypes of the cheA mutants in detail and discovered that ?cheA-3 has a non swarming/swimming phenotype both in the soft agar plates and Palleroni chamber assays. CheA-3 shows similarity to the Shewanella oneidensis CheA-3 and the Vibrio cholerae CheA-2 that are responsible for chemotaxis in the respective organisms. We did not find any morphological or structural differences between the three Delta cheA mutants and the wild type cells in electron microscopy. Our results from these studies are presented.
Date: May 22, 2010
Creator: Ray, Jayashee; Keller, Kimberley; Krierim, Bernhard; Auer, Manfred; Keasling, Jay; Wall, Judy et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library

Alternations of Structure and Functional Activity of Below Ground Microbial Communities at Elevated Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide

The global atmospheric concentration of CO2 has increased by more than 30percent since the industrial revolution. Although the stimulating effects of elevated CO2 (eCO2) on plant growth and primary productivity have been well studied, its influences on belowground microbial communities are poorly understood and controversial. In this study, we showed a significant change in the structure and functional potential of soil microbial communities at eCO2 in a grassland ecosystem, the BioCON (Biodiversity, CO2 and Nitrogen) experimental site (http://www.biocon.umn.edu/) using a comprehensive functional gene array, GeoChip 3.0, which contains about 28,0000 probes and covers approximately 57,000 gene variants from 292 functional gene families involved in carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus and sulfur cycles as well as other functional processes. GeoChip data indicated that the functional structure of microbial communities was markedly different between ambient CO2 (aCO2) and eCO2 by detrended correspondence analysis (DCA) of all 5001 detected functional gene probes although no significant differences were detected in the overall microbial diversity. A further analysis of 1503 detected functional genes involved in C, N, P, and S cycles showed that a considerable portion (39percent) of them were only detected under either aCO2 (14percent) or eCO2 (25percent), indicating that the functional characteristics of the microbial …
Date: May 17, 2010
Creator: He, Zhili; Xu, Meiying; Deng, Ye; Kang, Sanghoon; Wu, Liyou; Van Nostrand, Joy D. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library

Effect of Increasing Nitrogen Deposition on Soil Microbial Communities

Increasing nitrogen deposition, increasing atmospheric CO2, and decreasing biodiversity are three main environmental changes occurring on a global scale. The BioCON (Biodiversity, CO2, and Nitrogen) ecological experiment site at the University of Minnesota's Cedar Creek Ecosystem Science Reserve started in 1997, to better understand how these changes would affect soil systems. To understand how increasing nitrogen deposition affects the microbial community diversity, heterogeneity, and functional structure impact soil microbial communities, 12 samples were collected from the BioCON plots in which nitrogenous fertilizer was added to simulate the effect of increasing nitrogen deposition and 12 samples from without added fertilizer. DNA from the 24 samples was extracted using a freeze-grind protocol, amplified, labeled with a fluorescent dye, and then hybridized to GeoChip, a functional gene array containing probes for genes involved in N, S and C cycling, metal resistance and organic contaminant degradation. Detrended correspondence analysis (DCA) of all genes detected was performed to analyze microbial community patterns. The first two axes accounted for 23.5percent of the total variation. The samples fell into two major groups: fertilized and non-fertilized, suggesting that nitrogenous fertilizer had a significant impact on soil microbial community structure and diversity. The functional gene numbers detected in fertilized …
Date: May 17, 2010
Creator: Xiao, Shengmu; Xue, Kai; He, Zhili; VanNostrand, Joy D.; Liu, Jianshe; Hobbie, Sarah E. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library

Effects of experimental warming and clipping on metabolic change of microbial community in a US Great Plains tallgrass prairie

While more and more studies are being conducted on the effects of global warming, little is known regarding the response of metabolic change of whole soil microbial communities to this phenomenon. In this study, functional gene changes at the mRNA level were analyzed by our new developed GeoChip 3.0. Soil samples were taken from a long-term climate warming experiment site, which has been conducted for ~;;8 years at the Kessler Farm Field Laboratory, a 137.6-ha farm located in the Central Redbed Plains, in McClain County, Oklahoma. The experiment uses a paired factorial design with warming as the primary factor nested with clipping as a secondary factor. An infrared heater was used to simulate global warming, and clipping was used to mimic mowing hay. Twelve 2m x 2m plots were divided into six pairs of warmed and control plots. The heater generates a constant output of ~;;100 Watts m-2 to approximately 2 oC increase in soil temperature above the ambient plots, which is at the low range of the projected climate warming by IPCC. Soil whole microbial communities? mRNA was extracted, amplified, labeled and hybridized with our GeoChip 3.0, a functional gene array covering genes involved in N, C, P, and …
Date: May 17, 2010
Creator: Xie, Jianping; Liu, Xinxing; Liu, Xueduan; Nostrand, Joy D. Van; Deng, Ye; Wu, Liyou et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library

Functional Ecological Gene Networks to Reveal the Changes Among Microbial Interactions Under Elevated Carbon Dioxide Conditions

Biodiversity and its responses to environmental changes is a central issue in ecology, and for society. Almost all microbial biodiversity researches focus on species richness and abundance but ignore the interactions among different microbial species/populations. However, determining the interactions and their relationships to environmental changes in microbial communities is a grand challenge, primarily due to the lack of information on the network structure among different microbial species/populations. Here, a novel random matrix theory (RMT)-based conceptual framework for identifying functional ecological gene networks (fEGNs) is developed with the high throughput functional gene array hybridization data from the grassland microbial communities in a long-term FACE (Free Air CO2 Enrichment) experiment. Both fEGNs under elevated CO2 (eCO2) and ambient CO2 (aCO2) possessed general characteristics of many complex systems such as scale-free, small-world, modular and hierarchical. However, the topological structure of the fEGNs is distinctly different between eCO2 and aCO2, suggesting that eCO2 dramatically altered the interactions among different microbial functional groups/populations. In addition, the changes in network structure were significantly correlated with soil carbon and nitrogen dynamics, and plant productivity, indicating the potential importance of network interactions in ecosystem functioning. Elucidating network interactions in microbial communities and their responses to environmental changes are …
Date: May 17, 2010
Creator: Deng, Ye; Zhou, Jizhong; Luo, Feng; He, Zhili; Tu, Qichao & Zhi, Xiaoyang
System: The UNT Digital Library

HuMiChip: Development of a Functional Gene Array for the Study of Human Microbiomes

Microbiomes play very important roles in terms of nutrition, health and disease by interacting with their hosts. Based on sequence data currently available in public domains, we have developed a functional gene array to monitor both organismal and functional gene profiles of normal microbiota in human and mouse hosts, and such an array is called human and mouse microbiota array, HMM-Chip. First, seed sequences were identified from KEGG databases, and used to construct a seed database (seedDB) containing 136 gene families in 19 metabolic pathways closely related to human and mouse microbiomes. Second, a mother database (motherDB) was constructed with 81 genomes of bacterial strains with 54 from gut and 27 from oral environments, and 16 metagenomes, and used for selection of genes and probe design. Gene prediction was performed by Glimmer3 for bacterial genomes, and by the Metagene program for metagenomes. In total, 228,240 and 801,599 genes were identified for bacterial genomes and metagenomes, respectively. Then the motherDB was searched against the seedDB using the HMMer program, and gene sequences in the motherDB that were highly homologous with seed sequences in the seedDB were used for probe design by the CommOligo software. Different degrees of specific probes, including gene-specific, …
Date: May 17, 2010
Creator: Tu, Q.; Deng, Ye; Lin, Lu; Hemme, Chris L.; He, Zhili & Zhou, Jizhong
System: The UNT Digital Library

Identification of Small RNAs in Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough

Desulfovibrio vulgaris is an anaerobic sulfate-reducing bacterium capable of facilitating the removal of toxic metals such as uranium from contaminated sites via reduction. As such, it is essential to understand the intricate regulatory cascades involved in how D. vulgaris and its relatives respond to stressors in such sites. One approach is the identification and analysis of small non-coding RNAs (sRNAs); molecules ranging in size from 20-200 nucleotides that predominantly affect gene regulation by binding to complementary mRNA in an anti-sense fashion and therefore provide an immediate regulatory response. To identify sRNAs in D. vulgaris, a bacterium that does not possess an annotated hfq gene, RNA was pooled from stationary and exponential phases, nitrate exposure, and biofilm conditions. The subsequent RNA was size fractionated, modified, and converted to cDNA for high throughput transcriptomic deep sequencing. A computational approach to identify sRNAs via the alignment of seven separate Desulfovibrio genomes was also performed. From the deep sequencing analysis, 2,296 reads between 20 and 250 nt were identified with expression above genome background. Analysis of those reads limited the number of candidates to ~;;87 intergenic, while ~;;140 appeared to be antisense to annotated open reading frames (ORFs). Further BLAST analysis of the intergenic …
Date: May 17, 2010
Creator: Burns, Andrew; Joachimiak, Marcin; Deutschbauer, Adam; Arkin, Adam & Bender, Kelly
System: The UNT Digital Library

Mapping the Two-component Regulatory Networks in Desulfovibrio vulgaris

D. vulgaris Hildenborough has 72 response regulators. The Desulfovibrio are sulfate reducing bacteria that are important in the sulfur and carbon cycles in anoxic habitats. Its large number of two componenent systems are probably critical to its ability to sense and respond to its environment. Our goal is to map these RRs to the genes they regulate using a DNA-affinity-purification-chip (DAP-chip) protocol. First target determined usuing EMSA. A positive target was determined for as many RRs as possible using EMSA. Targets were selected based on gene proximity, regulon predictions and/or predicted sigma54 dependent promoters. qPCR was used to ensure that the target was enriched from sheared genomic DNA before proceeding to the DAP-chip.
Date: May 17, 2010
Creator: Rajeev, Lara; Luning, Eric; Dehal, Paramvir; Joachimiak, Marcin & Mukhopadhyay, Aindrila
System: The UNT Digital Library

Microarray-based analysis of survival of soil microbial community during ozonation

A 15 h ozonation was performed on bioremediated soil to remove recalcitrant residual oil. To monitor the survival of indigenous microorganisms in the soil during in-situ chemical oxidation(ISCO) culturing and a functional genearray, GeoChip, was used to examine the functional genes and structure of the microbial community during ozonation (0h, 2h, 4h, 6h, 10hand15h). Breakthrough ozonation decreased the population of cultivable heterotrophic bacteria by about 3 orders of magnitude. The total functional gene abundance and diversity decreased during ozonation, as the number of functional genes was reduced by 48percent after 15 h. However, functional genes were evenly distributed during ozonation as judged by the Shannon-Weaver Evenness index. A sharp decrease in gene number was observed in the first 6 h of ozonation followed by a slower decrease in the next 9 h, which was consistent with microbial populations measured by a culture based method. Functional genes involved in carbon, nitrogen, phosphors and sulfur cycling, metal resistance and organic remediation were detected in all samples. Though the pattern of gene categories detected was similar for all time points, hierarchica lcluster of all functional genes and major functional categories all showed a time-serial pattern. Bacteria, archaea and fungi decreased by 96.1percent, 95.1percent …
Date: May 17, 2010
Creator: Wang, Jian; Van Nostrand, Joy D.; He, Zhili; Wu, Liyou; Deng, Ye; Zhang, Xu et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library