17 results on '"Julie A. Brothwell"'
Search Results
2. Haemophilus ducreyi Infection Induces Oxidative Stress, Central Metabolic Changes, and a Mixed Pro- and Anti-inflammatory Environment in the Human Host
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Julie A. Brothwell, Kate R. Fortney, Hongyu Gao, Landon S. Wilson, Caroline F. Andrews, Tuan M. Tran, Xin Hu, Teresa A. Batteiger, Stephen Barnes, Yunlong Liu, and Stanley M. Spinola
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Haemophilus ducreyi ,dual RNA-seq ,metabolome ,interactome ,human ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
ABSTRACT Few studies have investigated host-bacterial interactions at sites of infection in humans using transcriptomics and metabolomics. Haemophilus ducreyi causes cutaneous ulcers in children and the genital ulcer disease chancroid in adults. We developed a human challenge model in which healthy adult volunteers are infected with H. ducreyi on the upper arm until they develop pustules. Here, we characterized host-pathogen interactions in pustules using transcriptomics and metabolomics and examined interactions between the host transcriptome and metabolome using integrated omics. In a previous pilot study, we determined the human and H. ducreyi transcriptomes and the metabolome of pustule and wounded sites of 4 volunteers (B. Griesenauer, T. M. Tran, K. R. Fortney, D. M. Janowicz, et al., mBio 10:e01193-19, 2019, https://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.01193-19). While we could form provisional transcriptional networks between the host and H. ducreyi, the study was underpowered to integrate the metabolome with the host transcriptome. To better define and integrate the transcriptomes and metabolome, we used samples from both the pilot study (n = 4) and new volunteers (n = 8) to identify 5,495 human differentially expressed genes (DEGs), 123 H. ducreyi DEGs, 205 differentially abundant positive ions, and 198 differentially abundant negative ions. We identified 42 positively correlated and 29 negatively correlated human-H. ducreyi transcriptome clusters. In addition, we defined human transcriptome-metabolome networks consisting of 9 total clusters, which highlighted changes in fatty acid metabolism and mitigation of oxidative damage. Taken together, the data suggest a mixed pro- and anti-inflammatory environment and rewired central metabolism in the host that provides a hostile, nutrient-limited environment for H. ducreyi. IMPORTANCE Interactions between the host and bacteria at sites of infection in humans are poorly understood. We inoculated human volunteers on the upper arm with the skin pathogen H. ducreyi or a buffer control and biopsied the resulting infected and sham-inoculated sites. We performed dual transcriptome sequencing (RNA-seq) and metabolic analysis on the biopsy samples. Network analyses between the host and bacterial transcriptomes and the host transcriptome-metabolome network were used to identify molecules that may be important for the virulence of H. ducreyi in the human host. Our results suggest that the pustule is highly oxidative, contains both pro- and anti-inflammatory components, and causes metabolic shifts in the host, to which H. ducreyi adapts to survive. To our knowledge, this is the first study to integrate transcriptomic and metabolomic responses to a single bacterial pathogen in the human host.
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- 2022
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3. CpxA Phosphatase Inhibitor Activates CpxRA and Is a Potential Treatment for Uropathogenic Escherichia coli in a Murine Model of Infection
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Kate R. Fortney, Sara N. Smith, Julia J. van Rensburg, Julie A. Brothwell, Jessi J. Gardner, Barry P. Katz, Nagib Ahsan, Adam S. Duerfeldt, Harry L. T. Mobley, and Stanley M. Spinola
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Escherichia coli ,UPEC ,CpxRA ,phosphatase inhibitor ,treatment ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
ABSTRACT CpxRA is an envelope stress response system that is highly conserved in the Enterobacteriaceae. CpxA has kinase activity for CpxR and phosphatase activity for phospho-CpxR (CpxR-P), a transcription factor. In response to membrane stress, CpxR-P is produced and upregulates genes involved in membrane repair and downregulates genes that encode virulence factors that are trafficked across the cell membrane. Mutants that constitutively activate CpxRA in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium and in uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC) are attenuated in murine models. We hypothesized that pharmacologic activation of CpxR could serve as an antimicrobial/antivirulence strategy and recently showed that 2,3,4,9-tetrahydro-1H-carbazol-1-amines activate the CpxRA system by inhibiting CpxA phosphatase activity. Here, we tested the ability of a series of three CpxRA-activating compounds with increasing potency to clear UPEC stain CFT073 in a murine urinary tract infection model. We show that these compounds are well tolerated and achieve sufficient levels to activate CpxR in the kidneys, bladder, and urine. Although the first two compounds were ineffective in promoting clearance of CFT073 in the murine model, the most potent derivative, compound 26, significantly reduced bacterial recovery in the urine and trended toward reducing bacterial recovery in the bladder and kidneys, with efficacy similar to ciprofloxacin. Treatment of CFT073 cultured in human urine with compound 26 fostered accumulation of CpxR-P and decreased the expression of proteins involved in siderophore biosynthesis and binding, heme degradation, and flagellar movement. These studies suggest that chemical activation of CpxRA may present a viable strategy for treating infections due to UPEC. IMPORTANCE The increasing prevalence of urinary tract infections (UTIs) due to antibiotic-resistant uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC) is a major public health concern. Bacteria contain proteins that sense their environment and have no human homologs and, thus, are attractive drug targets. CpxRA is a conserved sensing system whose function is to reduce stress in the bacterial cell membrane; activation of CpxRA reduces the expression of virulence determinants, which must cross the cell membrane to reach the bacterial surface. We previously identified a class of compounds that activate CpxRA. We show in a mouse UTI model that our most potent compound significantly reduced recovery of UPEC in the urine, trended toward reducing bacterial recovery in the bladder and kidneys, did not kill UPEC, and downregulated multiple proteins involved in UPEC virulence. Since these compounds do not act by a killing mechanism, they have potential to treat UTIs caused by antibiotic-resistant bacteria.
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- 2022
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4. Interactions of the Skin Pathogen Haemophilus ducreyi With the Human Host
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Julie A. Brothwell, Brad Griesenauer, Li Chen, and Stanley M. Spinola
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Haemophilus ducreyi ,interactome ,metabolome ,skin ,immune response ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
The obligate human pathogen Haemophilus ducreyi causes both cutaneous ulcers in children and sexually transmitted genital ulcers (chancroid) in adults. Pathogenesis is dependent on avoiding phagocytosis and exploiting the suppurative granuloma-like niche, which contains a myriad of innate immune cells and memory T cells. Despite this immune infiltrate, long-lived immune protection does not develop against repeated H. ducreyi infections—even with the same strain. Most of what we know about infectious skin diseases comes from naturally occurring infections and/or animal models; however, for H. ducreyi, this information comes from an experimental model of infection in human volunteers that was developed nearly three decades ago. The model mirrors the progression of natural disease and serves as a valuable tool to determine the composition of the immune cell infiltrate early in disease and to identify host and bacterial factors that are required for the establishment of infection and disease progression. Most recently, holistic investigation of the experimentally infected skin microenvironment using multiple “omics” techniques has revealed that non-canonical bacterial virulence factors, such as genes involved in central metabolism, may be relevant to disease progression. Thus, the immune system not only defends the host against H. ducreyi, but also dictates the nutrient availability for the invading bacteria, which must adapt their gene expression to exploit the inflammatory metabolic niche. These findings have broadened our view of the host-pathogen interaction network from considering only classical, effector-based virulence paradigms to include adaptations to the metabolic environment. How both host and bacterial factors interact to determine infection outcome is a current focus in the field. Here, we review what we have learned from experimental H. ducreyi infection about host-pathogen interactions, make comparisons to what is known for other skin pathogens, and discuss how novel technologies will deepen our understanding of this infection.
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- 2021
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5. 24435 Pathogen-specific metabolic pathways and innate immune responses associated with Chlamydia trachomatis infection and other STIs
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John D. Ryan, Evelyn Toh, Julie A. Brothwell, Yuan Sun, Stephen J. Jordan, and David E. Nelson
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Medicine - Abstract
ABSTRACT IMPACT: This project seeks to identify unique host responses that are biomarkers for specific urethral pathogens, and which can be used in the development of point-of-care (POC) STI diagnostics. OBJECTIVES/GOALS: How Chlamydia trachomatis (CT) and other common STIs, e.g. Neisseria gonorrhoeae, evade immunity and elicit pathology in the male urethra is poorly understood. Our objective is to determine how STI-infected urethral epithelial cells, as well as the uninfected ‘bystander’ cells with which infected cells communicate, respond to CT and other STIs. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: We evaluated how immortalized urethral cell lines - including transduced human urethral epithelial cells (THUECs) - respond to increasing doses of CT infectious particles using in vitro one-step progeny assays performed in the presence or absence of cycloheximide, a drug that inhibits eukaryotic protein synthesis. We will perform concurrent single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) and multiplex cytokine analyses to determine how different CT doses impact the transcriptomes of infected and bystander urethral epithelial cells and modulate cytokine production of the overall monolayer. Results of these experiments will inform the feasibility of performing similar analyses in situ using urethral swabs from men with clinically diagnosed urethritis. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: Our results demonstrate that immune-competent urethral cell monolayers strongly resist CT infection, unless most of the cells are simultaneously infected. This suggests that uninfected bystander cells sense CT-infected cells and secrete soluble factors that may act to limit CT proliferation in infected cells and to inform remaining uninfected cells that a potential pathogen is present. We anticipate that our scRNA-seq and cytokine analyses will identify both specific effector pathways that protect against CT and intracellular signals that modulate them. We speculate that these pathways and signals may differ during infection with CT and other STIs. Importantly, we anticipate that our in vitro model of CT infection will be highly representative of in situ immune responses observed in urethras of infected men. DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE OF FINDINGS: In men, common STIs including CT are usually managed syndromically due to a lack of POC diagnostics. By determining how STIs elicit urethral inflammation and identifying countermeasures that STIs use to evade urethral immunity, we can identify host responses that serve as biomarkers for urethritis, generally, and for specific urethral pathogens.
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- 2021
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6. Genetic Screen in Chlamydia muridarum Reveals Role for an Interferon-Induced Host Cell Death Program in Antimicrobial Inclusion Rupture
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Amanda M. Giebel, Shuai Hu, Krithika Rajaram, Ryan Finethy, Evelyn Toh, Julie A. Brothwell, Sandra G. Morrison, Robert J. Suchland, Barry D. Stein, Jörn Coers, Richard P. Morrison, and David E. Nelson
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Chlamydia ,host-pathogen interactions ,interferon-stimulated genes ,intracellular pathogens ,molecular genetics ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
ABSTRACT Interferon-regulated immune defenses protect mammals from pathogenically diverse obligate intracellular bacterial pathogens of the genus Chlamydia. Interferon gamma (IFN-γ) is especially important in controlling the virulence of Chlamydia species and thus impacts the modeling of human chlamydial infection and disease in mice. How IFN-γ contributes to cell-autonomous defenses against Chlamydia species and how these pathogens evade IFN-γ-mediated immunity in their natural hosts are not well understood. We conducted a genetic screen which identified 31 IFN-γ-sensitive (Igs) mutants of the mouse model pathogen Chlamydia muridarum. Genetic suppressor analysis and lateral gene transfer were used to map the phenotype of one of these mutants, Igs4, to a missense mutation in a putative chlamydial inclusion membrane protein, TC0574. We observed the lytic destruction of Igs4-occupied inclusions and accompanying host cell death in response to IFN-γ priming or various proapoptotic stimuli. However, Igs4 was insensitive to IFN-γ-regulated cell-autonomous defenses previously implicated in anti-Chlamydia trachomatis host defense in mice. Igs4 inclusion integrity was restored by caspase inhibitors, indicating that the IFN-γ-mediated destruction of Igs4 inclusions is dependent upon the function of caspases or related prodeath cysteine proteases. We further demonstrated that the Igs4 mutant is immune restricted in an IFN-γ-dependent manner in a mouse infection model, thereby implicating IFN-γ-mediated inclusion destruction and host cell death as potent in vivo host defense mechanisms to which wild-type C. muridarum is resistant. Overall, our results suggest that C. muridarum evolved resistance mechanisms to counter IFN-γ-elicited programmed cell death and the associated destruction of intravacuolar pathogens. IMPORTANCE Multiple obligatory intracellular bacteria in the genus Chlamydia are important pathogens. In humans, strains of C. trachomatis cause trachoma, chlamydia, and lymphogranuloma venereum. These diseases are all associated with extended courses of infection and reinfection that likely reflect the ability of chlamydiae to evade various aspects of host immune responses. Interferon-stimulated genes, driven in part by the cytokine interferon gamma, restrict the host range of various Chlamydia species, but how these pathogens evade interferon-stimulated genes in their definitive host is poorly understood. Various Chlamydia species can inhibit death of their host cells and may have evolved this strategy to evade prodeath signals elicited by host immune responses. We present evidence that chlamydia-induced programmed cell death resistance evolved to counter interferon- and immune-mediated killing of Chlamydia-infected cells.
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- 2019
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7. Dispensability of Ascorbic Acid Uptake and Utilization Encoded by ulaABCD for the Virulence of Haemophilus ducreyi in Humans
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Julie A Brothwell, Kate R Fortney, Teresa Batteiger, Barry P Katz, and Stanley M Spinola
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Infectious Diseases ,Brief Report ,Immunology and Allergy - Abstract
Compared with wounded skin, ascorbic acid is enriched in pustules of humans experimentally infected with Haemophilus ducreyi. Compared with the broth-grown inocula, transcription of the H. ducreyi ulaABCD operon, which encodes genes for ascorbic acid uptake, is increased in pustules. We hypothesized that ascorbic acid uptake plays a role in H. ducreyi virulence. Five volunteers were infected with both H. ducreyi strain 35000HP and its isogenic ulaABCD deletion mutant at multiple sites; the papule and pustule formation rates of the mutant and parent strains were similar. Thus, ascorbic acid uptake is not essential for H. ducreyi virulence in humans.
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- 2022
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8. Genes Differentially Expressed by Haemophilus ducreyi during Anaerobic Growth Significantly Overlap Those Differentially Expressed during Experimental Infection of Human Volunteers
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Julie A. Brothwell and Stanley M. Spinola
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Adult ,Haemophilus ducreyi ,Bacterial Proteins ,Humans ,bacteria ,Anaerobiosis ,Child ,Molecular Biology ,Microbiology ,Abscess ,Healthy Volunteers ,Research Article - Abstract
Haemophilus ducreyi causes cutaneous ulcers in children and the genital ulcer disease chancroid in adults. In humans, H. ducreyi is found in the anaerobic environment of an abscess; previous studies comparing bacterial gene expression levels in pustules with the inocula (∼4-h aerobic mid-log-phase cultures) identified several upregulated differentially expressed genes (DEGs) that are associated with anaerobic metabolism. To determine how H. ducreyi alters its gene expression in response to anaerobiosis, we performed RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) on both aerobic and anaerobic broth cultures harvested after 4, 8, and 18 h of growth. Principal-coordinate analysis (PCoA) plots showed that anaerobic growth resulted in distinct transcriptional profiles compared to aerobic growth. During anaerobic growth, early-time-point comparisons (4 versus 8 h) identified few DEGs at a 2-fold change in expression and a false discovery rate (FDR) of
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- 2022
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9. Genome Copy Number Regulates Inclusion Expansion, Septation, and Infectious Developmental Form Conversion in Chlamydia trachomatis
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Julie A. Brothwell, Barry D. Stein, George W. Liechti, David E. Nelson, Mary Brockett, and Arkaprabha Banerjee
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0303 health sciences ,Cell division ,biology ,dnaE ,030306 microbiology ,DNA polymerase ,DNA replication ,Processivity ,medicine.disease_cause ,Origin of replication ,Microbiology ,Genome ,Cell biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Chlamydia trachomatis ,Molecular Biology ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
DNA replication is essential for the growth and development of Chlamydia trachomatis ; however, it is unclear how this process contributes to and is controlled by the pathogen’s biphasic life cycle. While inhibitors of transcription, translation, cell division, and glucose-6-phosphate transport all negatively affect chlamydial intracellular development, the effects of directly inhibiting DNA polymerase have never been examined. We isolated a temperature-sensitive dnaE mutant (the dnaE ts mutant) that exhibits an ∼100-fold reduction in genome copy number at the nonpermissive temperature (40°C) but replicates similarly to the parent at the permissive temperature of 37°C. We measured higher ratios of genomic DNA nearer the origin of replication than the terminus in the dnaE ts mutant at 40°C, indicating that this replication deficiency is due to a defect in DNA polymerase processivity. The dnaE ts mutant formed fewer and smaller pathogenic vacuoles (inclusions) at 40°C, and the bacteria appeared enlarged and exhibited defects in cell division. The bacteria also lacked both discernible peptidoglycan and polymerized MreB, the major cell division-organizing protein in Chlamydia responsible for nascent peptidoglycan biosynthesis. We also found that the absolute genome copy number, rather than active genome replication, was sufficient for infectious progeny production. Deficiencies in both genome replication and inclusion expansion were reversed when the dnaE ts mutant was shifted from 40°C to 37°C early in infection, and intragenic suppressor mutations in dnaE ts also restored genome replication and inclusion expansion in the dnaE ts mutant at 40°C. Overall, our results show that genome replication in C. trachomatis is required for inclusion expansion, septum formation, and the transition between the microbe’s replicative and infectious forms. IMPORTANCE Chlamydiae transition between infectious, extracellular elementary bodies (EBs) and noninfectious, intracellular reticulate bodies (RBs). Some checkpoints that govern transitions in chlamydial development have been identified, but the extent to which genome replication plays a role in regulating the pathogen’s infectious cycle has not been characterized. We show that genome replication is dispensable for EB-to-RB conversion but is necessary for RB proliferation, division septum formation, and inclusion expansion. We use new methods to investigate developmental checkpoints and dependencies in Chlamydia that facilitate the ordering of events in the microbe’s biphasic life cycle. Our findings suggest that Chlamydia utilizes feedback inhibition to regulate core metabolic processes during development, likely an adaptation to intracellular stress and a nutrient-limiting environment.
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- 2021
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10. The Repressor Function of the Chlamydia Late Regulator EUO Is Enhanced by the Plasmid-Encoded Protein Pgp4
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Qiang Zhang, Syed M. Rizvi, Ming Tan, Julie A. Brothwell, Christopher J. Rosario, Cheng He, and Lauren M. Sheehan
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0303 health sciences ,030306 microbiology ,Regulator ,Repressor ,Promoter ,Biology ,Eye infection ,Microbiology ,Cell biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Plasmid ,Transcription (biology) ,Molecular Biology ,Gene ,Transcription factor ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
A critical step in intracellular Chlamydia infection is the production of infectious progeny through the expression of late genes. This differentiation step involves conversion from a reticulate body (RB), which is the replicating form of the bacterium, into an elementary body (EB), which is the developmental form that spreads the infection to a new host cell. EUO is an important chlamydial transcription factor that controls the expression of late genes, but the mechanisms that regulate EUO are not known. We report that a plasmid-encoded protein, Pgp4, enhanced the repressor activity of EUO. Pgp4 did not function as a transcription factor because it did not bind or directly modulate transcription of its target promoters. Instead, Pgp4 increased the ability of EUO to bind and repress EUO-regulated promoters in vitro and physically interacted with EUO in pulldown assays with recombinant proteins. We detected earlier onset of EUO-dependent late gene expression by immunofluorescence microscopy in Pgp4-deficient C. trachomatis and C. muridarum strains. In addition, the absence of Pgp4 led to earlier onset of RB-to-EB conversion in C. muridarum. These data support a role for Pgp4 as a negative regulator of chlamydial transcription that delays late gene expression. Our studies revealed that Pgp4 also has an EUO-independent function as a positive regulator of chlamydial transcription. IMPORTANCEChlamydia trachomatis is an important human pathogen that causes more than 150 million active cases of genital and eye infection in the world. This obligate intracellular bacterium produces infectious progeny within an infected human cell through the expression of late chlamydial genes. We showed that the ability of a key chlamydial transcription factor, EUO, to repress late genes was enhanced by a plasmid-encoded protein, Pgp4. In addition, studies with Chlamydia Pgp4-deficient strains provide evidence that Pgp4 delays late gene expression in infected cells. Thus, Pgp4 is a novel regulator of late gene expression in Chlamydia through its ability to enhance the repressor function of EUO.
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- 2020
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11. The Chlamydial Protease CPAF
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Christine Sütterlin, Ming Tan, Thomas Rudel, and Julie A. Brothwell
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Protease ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine ,Biology ,Microbiology - Published
- 2020
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12. The Repressor Function of the
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Qiang, Zhang, Christopher J, Rosario, Lauren M, Sheehan, Syed M, Rizvi, Julie A, Brothwell, Cheng, He, and Ming, Tan
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Repressor Proteins ,Bacterial Proteins ,Humans ,Chlamydia trachomatis ,Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ,Chlamydia Infections ,Promoter Regions, Genetic ,Plasmids ,Transcription Factors ,Research Article - Abstract
A critical step in intracellular Chlamydia infection is the production of infectious progeny through the expression of late genes. This differentiation step involves conversion from a reticulate body (RB), which is the replicating form of the bacterium, into an elementary body (EB), which is the developmental form that spreads the infection to a new host cell. EUO is an important chlamydial transcription factor that controls the expression of late genes, but the mechanisms that regulate EUO are not known. We report that a plasmid-encoded protein, Pgp4, enhanced the repressor activity of EUO. Pgp4 did not function as a transcription factor because it did not bind or directly modulate transcription of its target promoters. Instead, Pgp4 increased the ability of EUO to bind and repress EUO-regulated promoters in vitro and physically interacted with EUO in pulldown assays with recombinant proteins. We detected earlier onset of EUO-dependent late gene expression by immunofluorescence microscopy in Pgp4-deficient C. trachomatis and C. muridarum strains. In addition, the absence of Pgp4 led to earlier onset of RB-to-EB conversion in C. muridarum. These data support a role for Pgp4 as a negative regulator of chlamydial transcription that delays late gene expression. Our studies revealed that Pgp4 also has an EUO-independent function as a positive regulator of chlamydial transcription. IMPORTANCE Chlamydia trachomatis is an important human pathogen that causes more than 150 million active cases of genital and eye infection in the world. This obligate intracellular bacterium produces infectious progeny within an infected human cell through the expression of late chlamydial genes. We showed that the ability of a key chlamydial transcription factor, EUO, to repress late genes was enhanced by a plasmid-encoded protein, Pgp4. In addition, studies with Chlamydia Pgp4-deficient strains provide evidence that Pgp4 delays late gene expression in infected cells. Thus, Pgp4 is a novel regulator of late gene expression in Chlamydia through its ability to enhance the repressor function of EUO.
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- 2019
13. Beyond Tryptophan Synthase: Identification of Genes That Contribute to Chlamydia trachomatis Survival during Gamma Interferon-Induced Persistence and Reactivation
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David E. Nelson, Daniel D. Rockey, Julie A. Brothwell, Timothy E. Putman, Matthew K. Muramatsu, and Barry D. Stein
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0301 basic medicine ,Amino Acid Transport Systems ,DNA Repair ,030106 microbiology ,Immunology ,Population ,Mutant ,Chlamydia trachomatis ,Tryptophan synthase ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microbiology ,Interferon-gamma ,03 medical and health sciences ,Tryptophan Synthase ,medicine ,Humans ,Interferon gamma ,education ,Gene ,Cell Proliferation ,Genetics ,education.field_of_study ,Mutation ,Cellular Microbiology: Pathogen-Host Cell Molecular Interactions ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,Phenotype ,Infectious Diseases ,biology.protein ,Parasitology ,HeLa Cells ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Chlamydia trachomatis can enter a viable but nonculturable state in vitro termed persistence. A common feature of C. trachomatis persistence models is that reticulate bodies fail to divide and make few infectious progeny until the persistence-inducing stressor is removed. One model of persistence that has relevance to human disease involves tryptophan limitation mediated by the host enzyme indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase, which converts l -tryptophan to N -formylkynurenine. Genital C. trachomatis strains can counter tryptophan limitation because they encode a tryptophan-synthesizing enzyme. Tryptophan synthase is the only enzyme that has been confirmed to play a role in interferon gamma (IFN-γ)-induced persistence, although profound changes in chlamydial physiology and gene expression occur in the presence of persistence-inducing stressors. Thus, we screened a population of mutagenized C. trachomatis strains for mutants that failed to reactivate from IFN-γ-induced persistence. Six mutants were identified, and the mutations linked to the persistence phenotype in three of these were successfully mapped. One mutant had a missense mutation in tryptophan synthase; however, this mutant behaved differently from previously described synthase null mutants. Two hypothetical genes of unknown function, ctl0225 and ctl0694 , were also identified and may be involved in amino acid transport and DNA damage repair, respectively. Our results indicate that C. trachomatis utilizes functionally diverse genes to mediate survival during and reactivation from persistence in HeLa cells.
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- 2016
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14. Interrogating Genes That Mediate Chlamydia trachomatis Survival in Cell Culture Using Conditional Mutants and Recombination
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P. Scott Hefty, Michael L. Barta, Evelyn Toh, Julie A. Brothwell, Daniel D. Rockey, Matthew K. Muramatsu, Timothy E. Putman, David E. Nelson, and Robert J. Suchland
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0301 basic medicine ,Sexually transmitted disease ,Genotype ,030106 microbiology ,Mutant ,Population ,Chlamydia trachomatis ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microbiology ,Genome ,03 medical and health sciences ,medicine ,Humans ,education ,Molecular Biology ,Gene ,Alleles ,Recombination, Genetic ,Genetics ,education.field_of_study ,Temperature ,Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ,Articles ,Phenotype ,Mutation ,Genome, Bacterial ,HeLa Cells ,Genetic screen - Abstract
Intracellular bacterial pathogens in the family Chlamydiaceae are causes of human blindness, sexually transmitted disease, and pneumonia. Genetic dissection of the mechanisms of chlamydial pathogenicity has been hindered by multiple limitations, including the inability to inactivate genes that would prevent the production of elementary bodies. Many genes are also Chlamydia -specific genes, and chlamydial genomes have undergone extensive reductive evolution, so functions often cannot be inferred from homologs in other organisms. Conditional mutants have been used to study essential genes of many microorganisms, so we screened a library of 4,184 ethyl methanesulfonate-mutagenized Chlamydia trachomatis isolates for temperature-sensitive (TS) mutants that developed normally at physiological temperature (37°C) but not at nonphysiological temperatures. Heat-sensitive TS mutants were identified at a high frequency, while cold-sensitive mutants were less common. Twelve TS mutants were mapped using a novel markerless recombination approach, PCR, and genome sequencing. TS alleles of genes that play essential roles in other bacteria and chlamydia-specific open reading frames (ORFs) of unknown function were identified. Temperature-shift assays determined that phenotypes of the mutants manifested at distinct points in the developmental cycle. Genome sequencing of a larger population of TS mutants also revealed that the screen had not reached saturation. In summary, we describe the first approach for studying essential chlamydial genes and broadly applicable strategies for genetic mapping in Chlamydia spp. and mutants that both define checkpoints and provide insights into the biology of the chlamydial developmental cycle. IMPORTANCE Study of the pathogenesis of Chlamydia spp. has historically been hampered by a lack of genetic tools. Although there has been recent progress in chlamydial genetics, the existing approaches have limitations for the study of the genes that mediate growth of these organisms in cell culture. We used a genetic screen to identify conditional Chlamydia mutants and then mapped these alleles using a broadly applicable recombination strategy. Phenotypes of the mutants provide fundamental insights into unexplored areas of chlamydial pathogenesis and intracellular biology. Finally, the reagents and approaches we describe are powerful resources for the investigation of these organisms.
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- 2016
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15. Advances and Obstacles in the Genetic Dissection of Chlamydial Virulence
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Guangming Zhong, David E. Nelson, Matthew K. Muramatsu, and Julie A. Brothwell
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0301 basic medicine ,Gene Transfer, Horizontal ,Virulence ,Obligate ,Virulence Factors ,Mechanism (biology) ,030106 microbiology ,Genomics ,Computational biology ,Biology ,Genome ,Virology ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Horizontal gene transfer ,Animals ,Chlamydia ,Gene ,Genome, Bacterial ,Genetic screen - Abstract
Obligate intracellular pathogens in the family Chlamydiaceae infect taxonomically diverse eukaryotes ranging from amoebae to mammals. However, many fundamental aspects of chlamydial cell biology and pathogenesis remain poorly understood. Genetic dissection of chlamydial biology has historically been hampered by a lack of genetic tools. Exploitation of the ability of chlamydia to recombine genomic material by lateral gene transfer (LGT) ushered in a new era in chlamydia research. With methods to map mutations in place, genetic screens were able to assign functions and phenotypes to specific chlamydial genes. Development of an approach for stable transformation of chlamydia also provided a mechanism for gene delivery and platforms for disrupting chromosomal genes. Here, we explore how these and other tools have been used to test hypotheses concerning the functions of known chlamydial virulence factors and discover the functions of completely uncharacterized genes. Refinement and extension of the existing genetic tools to additional Chlamydia spp. will substantially advance understanding of the biology and pathogenesis of this important group of pathogens.
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- 2017
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16. CHARACTERIZATION OF THE OPIOID PEPTIDE DYNORPHIN A AS A NOVEL LIGAND FOR LEUKOCYTE INTEGRIN α M β 2 (Mac‐1)
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Julie A. Brothwell, Tatiana P. Ugarova, and Nataly P. Podolnikova
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chemistry.chemical_compound ,biology ,Chemistry ,Integrin ,Genetics ,biology.protein ,Dynorphin A ,Ligand (biochemistry) ,Opioid peptide ,Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry ,Biotechnology ,Cell biology - Published
- 2010
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17. The Opioid Peptide Dynorphin a Induces Leukocyte Responses via Integrin Mac-1 (αMβ2, CD11b/CD18)
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Tatiana P. Ugarova, Nataly P. Podolnikova, and Julie A. Brothwell
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Leukocyte migration ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Macrophage-1 Antigen ,Dynorphin ,Ligands ,Dynorphins ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Phagocytosis ,Peptide Library ,Dynorphin A ,Leukocytes ,Cell Adhesion ,medicine ,polycyclic compounds ,Humans ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Opioid peptide ,biology ,Chemistry ,Research ,Chemotaxis ,Monocyte ,musculoskeletal, neural, and ocular physiology ,Dynorphin B ,Fibrinogen ,U937 Cells ,Microspheres ,Protein Structure, Tertiary ,3. Good health ,Integrin Mac-1 (CD11b/CD18) ,HEK293 Cells ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Solubility ,Biochemistry ,Integrin alpha M ,nervous system ,Macrophage-1 antigen ,biology.protein ,Molecular Medicine ,Endorphins ,Adhesion molecules ,Opioid peptides ,Protein Binding - Abstract
Background Opioid peptides, including dynorphin A, besides their analgesic action in the nervous system, exert a broad spectrum of effects on cells of the immune system, including leukocyte migration, degranulation and cytokine production. The mechanisms whereby opioid peptides induce leukocyte responses are poorly understood. The integrin Mac-1 (αMβ2, CD11b/CD18) is a multiligand receptor which mediates numerous reactions of neutrophils and monocyte/macrophages during the immune-inflammatory response. Our recent elucidation of the ligand recognition specificity of Mac-1 suggested that dynorphin A and dynorphin B contain Mac-1 recognition motifs and can potentially interact with this receptor. Results In this study, we have synthesized the peptide library spanning the sequence of dynorphin AB, containing dynorphin A and B, and showed that the peptides bound recombinant αMI-domain, the ligand binding region of Mac-1. In addition, immobilized dynorphins A and B supported adhesion of the Mac-1-expressing cells. In binding to dynorphins A and B, Mac-1 cooperated with cell surface proteoglycans since both anti-Mac-1 function-blocking reagents and heparin were required to block adhesion. Further focusing on dynorphin A, we showed that its interaction with the αMI-domain was activation independent as both the α7 helix-truncated (active conformation) and helix-extended (nonactive conformation) αMI-domains efficiently bound dynorphin A. Dynorphin A induced a potent migratory response of Mac-1-expressing, but not Mac-1-deficient leukocytes, and enhanced Mac-1-mediated phagocytosis of latex beads by murine IC-21 macrophages. Conclusions Together, the results identify dynorphins A and B as novel ligands for Mac-1 and suggest a role for the Dynorphin A-Mac-1 interactions in the induction of nonopiod receptor-dependent effects in leukocytes. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12990-015-0027-0) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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