51 research outputs found

    Bacteriophage-encoded virion-associated enzymes to overcome the carbohydrate barriers during the infection process

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    Bacteriophages are bacterial viruses that infect the host after successful receptor recognition and adsorption to the cell surface. The irreversible adherence followed by genome material ejection into host cell cytoplasm must be preceded by the passage of diverse carbohydrate barriers such as capsule polysaccharides (CPSs), O-polysaccharide chains of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) molecules, extracellular polysaccharides (EPSs) forming biofilm matrix, and peptidoglycan (PG) layers. For that purpose, bacteriophages are equipped with various virion-associated carbohydrate active enzymes, termed polysaccharide depolymerases and lysins, that recognize, bind, and degrade the polysaccharide compounds. We discuss the existing diversity in structural locations, variable architectures, enzymatic specificities, and evolutionary aspects of polysaccharide depolymerases and virion-associated lysins (VALs) and illustrate how these aspects can correlate with the host spectrum. In addition, we present methods that can be used for activity determination and the application potential of these enzymes as antibacterials, antivirulence agents, and diagnostic tools

    Phosphorylated ERK5/BMK1 transiently accumulates within division spindles in mouse oocytes and preimplantation embryos

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    MAP kinases of the ERK family play important roles in oocyte maturation, fertilization, and early embryo development. The role of the signaling pathway involving ERK5 MAP kinase during meiotic and mitotic M-phase of the cell cycle is not well known. Here, we studied the localization of the phosphorylated, and thus potentially activated, form of ERK5 in mouse maturing oocytes and mitotically dividing early embryos. We show that phosphorylation/dephosphorylation, i.e. likely activation/inactivation of ERK5, correlates with M-phase progression. Phosphorylated form of ERK5 accumulates in division spindle of both meiotic and mitotic cells, and precisely co-localizes with spindle microtubules at metaphase. This localization changes drastically in the anaphase, when phospho-ERK5 completely disappears from microtubules and transits to the cytoplasmic granular, vesicle-like structures. In telophase oocytes it becomes incorporated into the midbody. Dynamic changes in the localization of phospho-ERK5 suggests that it may play an important role both in meiotic and mitotic division. (Folia Histochemica et Cytobiologica 2011, Vol. 49, No. 3, 528–534

    Engineering the modular receptor-binding proteins of Klebsiella phages switches their capsule serotype specificity

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    The high specificity of bacteriophages is driven by their receptor-binding proteins (RBPs). Many Klebsiella bacteriophages target the capsular exopolysaccharide as the receptor and encode RBPs with depolymerase activity. The modular structure of these RBPs with an N-terminal structural module to attach the RBP to the phage tail, and a C-terminal specificity module for exopolysaccharide degradation, supports horizontal transfer as a major evolutionary driver for Klebsiella phage RBPs. We mimicked this natural evolutionary process by the construction of modular RBP chimeras, exchanging N-terminal structural modules and C-terminal specificity modules. All chimeras strictly follow the capsular serotype specificity of the C-terminal module. Transplanting chimeras with a K11 N-terminal structural RBP module in a Klebsiella phage K11 scaffold results in a capsular serotype switch and corresponding host range modification of the synthetic phages, demonstrating that horizontal transfer of C-terminal specificity modules offers Klebsiella phages an evolutionary highway for rapid adaptation to new capsular serotypes. IMPORTANCE The antimicrobial resistance crisis has rekindled interest in bacteriophage therapy. Phages have been studied over a century as therapeutics to treat bacterial infections, but one of the biggest challenges for the use of phages in therapeutic interventions remains their high specificity. In particular, many Klebsiella phages have a narrow spectrum constrained by the high diversity of exopolysaccharide capsules that shield access to the cells. In this work, we have elaborated how Klebsiella phages deal with this high diversity by exchanging building blocks of their receptor-binding proteins

    Phage-borne depolymerases decrease Klebsiella pneumoniae resistance to innate defense mechanisms

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    Klebsiella pneumoniae produces capsular polysaccharides that are a crucial virulence factor protecting bacteria against innate response mechanisms of the infected host. Simultaneously, those capsules are targeted by specific bacteriophages equipped with virion-associated depolymerases able to recognize and degrade these polysaccharides. We show that Klebsiella phage KP32 produces two capsule depolymerases, KP32gp37 and KP32gp38, with a high specificity for the capsular serotypes K3 and K21, respectively. Together, they determine the host spectrum of bacteriophage KP32, which is limited to strains with serotype K3 and K21. Both depolymerases form a trimeric beta-structure, display moderate thermostability and function optimally under neutral to alkaline conditions. We show that both depolymerases strongly affect the virulence of K. pneumoniae with the corresponding K3 and K21 capsular serotypes. Capsule degradation renders the otherwise serum-resistant cells more prone to complement-mediated killing with up to four log reduction in serum upon exposure to KP32gp37. Decapsulated strains are also sensitized for phagocytosis with a twofold increased uptake. In addition, the intracellular survival of phagocytized cells in macrophages was significantly reduced when bacteria were previously exposed to the capsule depolymerases. Finally, depolymerase application considerably increases the lifespan of Galleria mellonella larvae infected with K. pneumoniae in a time- and strain-dependent manner. In sum, capsule depolymerases are promising antivirulence compounds that act by defeating a major resistance mechanism of K. pneumoniae against the innate immunity

    The temperate Burkholderia phage AP3 of the Peduovirinae shows efficient antimicrobial activity against B. cenocepacia of the IIIA lineage

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    Burkholderia phage AP3 (vB_BceM_AP3) is a temperate virus of the Myoviridae and the Peduovirinae subfamily (P2likevirus genus). This phage specifically infects multidrug-resistant clinical Burkholderia cenocepacia lineage IIIA strains commonly isolated from cystic fibrosis patients. AP3 exhibits high pairwise nucleotide identity (61.7 %) to Burkholderia phage KS5, specific to the same B. cenocepacia host, and has 46.7–49.5 % identity to phages infecting other species of Burkholderia. The lysis cassette of these related phages has a similar organization (putative antiholin, putative holin, endolysin, and spanins) and shows 29–98 % homology between specific lysis genes, in contrast to Enterobacteria phage P2, the hallmark phage of this genus. The AP3 and KS5 lysis genes have conserved locations and high amino acid sequence similarity. The AP3 bacteriophage particles remain infective up to 5 h at pH 4–10 and are stable at 60 °C for 30 min, but are sensitive to chloroform, with no remaining infective particles after 24 h of treatment. AP3 lysogeny can occur by stable genomic integration and by pseudo-lysogeny. The lysogenic bacterial mutants did not exhibit any significant changes in virulence compared to wild-type host strain when tested in the Galleria mellonella moth wax model. Moreover, AP3 treatment of larvae infected with B. cenocepacia revealed a significant increase (P < 0.0001) in larvae survival in comparison to AP3-untreated infected larvae. AP3 showed robust lytic activity, as evidenced by its broad host range, the absence of increased virulence in lysogenic isolates, the lack of bacterial gene disruption conditioned by bacterial tRNA downstream integration site, and the absence of detected toxin sequences. These data suggest that the AP3 phage is a promising potent agent against bacteria belonging to the most common B. cenocepacia IIIA lineage strains

    Current practice of care for adolescent and adult patients after Fontan surgery in Poland

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    Background: The growing number of adults patients after the Fontan operation requires regular surveillance tests in the specialized centers. Aims: Evaluation of current practice of care for Fontan patients in Poland based on a multicenter survey. Methods: Eight centers were included in the study-5 adult congenital heart disease (ACHD) and 3 pediatric centers for adolescents. To aim for a comparison between the centers and facilitate the interpretation of the results, the Fontan Surveillance Score (FSS) was developed. The higher score is consistent with better care, with a maximum of 19 points. Results: The number of 398 Fontan patients (243 adults and 155 adolescents [age 14-18 years]) was included in the study. The median FSS was 13 points with variability between the centers (interquartile range 7-14 points). Centers providing continuous care from the pediatric period until 18 years of age achieved a higher FSS compared to ACHD centers (median: 14 points vs 12 points, p&lt; 0.001). Most of the patients, both in the ACHD (82.3%) and in pediatric centers (89%), were seen annually and had a physical examination, electrocardiogram, and echocardiogram performed at each visit. However, unsatisfactory utilization of tests identifying the early stages of Fontan circulation failure (cardiopulmonary exercise tests, cardiac magnetic resonance, liver biochemistry and imaging, detection of protein-losing enteropathy) was observed. Conclusions: The results of the study showed that there is no unified surveillance approach for Fontan patients in Poland. The practice of care for adults differs from that of adolescents

    Rôles de la protéine multifonctionnelle E4F1 au cours de la senescence

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    Le facteur de transcription E4F1 fût initialement identifié comme une cible cellulaire de l'oncoprotéine virale E1A au cours de l'infection par l'adénovirus sérotype V. E4F1 est une protéine multifonctionelle essentielle au cours du développement embryonnaire précoce et joue des rôles importants dans l'équilibre entre prolifération/survie de différents types cellulaires, notamment des cellules souches. Au niveau moléculaire, E4F1 possède des activités transcriptionelles intrinsèques mais possède également une activité ubiquitine E3 ligase atypique dirigée contre d'autres facteurs de transcription tel que le suppresseur de tumeur p53. Récemment, il a été démontré qu'E4F1 régule les voies oncogéniques impliquant p53 et Rb qui jouent un rôle essentiel au cours de la sénescence cellulaire. La sénescence, qui est définie par un arrêt irréversible du cycle cellulaire, est considéré comme un mécanisme suppresseur de tumeurs essentiel au cours des phases précoces du développement tumoral. L'objectif de ma thèse a été d'évaluer le rôle d'E4F1 au cours de la sénescence cellulaire. Au travers d'études menées sur des fibroblastes humains primaires et des fibroblastes embryonnaires murins dérivés de souris génétiquement modifiées pour le gène E4F1, j'ai examiné comment la perturbation des activités d'E4F1 module l'initiation ou le maintien de la sénescence prématurée induit par l'oncogène RAS, la déplétion du membre de la famille polycomb Bmi1, ou par les dommages à l'ADN. Mes résultats suggèrent que la déplétion d'E4F1 protège partiellement contre l'induction de la sénescence alors que l'expression ectopique d'E4F1 accélère la sénescence par son implication dans la voie INK4A/ARF-p53. L'ensemble de mes résultats supportent la notion qu'E4F1 est un régulateur important de la sénescence cellulaire.E4F1 was originally identified as a cellular target of the viral oncoprotein E1A during adenoviral infection. E4F1 is a multifunctional protein that is essential during early embryogenesis and plays important roles in the proliferation/survival balance of different cell types including stem cells. At the molecular level, E4F1 exhibits intrinsic transcriptional activities but also an ubiquitin E3 ligase function that targets other transcription factors, including the p53 tumor suppressor. Recent studies indicate that E4F1 impinge on several pathways, including the Rb and p53 pathways, that are known to influence cellular senescence, an irreversible state of cell cycle arrest that is considered to be an essential tumor suppressor mechanism during early steps of tumorigenesis. The objective of my thesis was to evaluate the roles of E4F1 during cellular senescence. Using human primary fibroblasts and mouse embryonic fibroblasts derived from genetic ally engineered mouse models, I investigated how perturbations of E4F1 activities modulated the initiation or the maintenance of premature senescence induced by oncogenic Ras, depletion of the polycomb member Bmi1 or DNA damage. My results suggest that E4F1 depletion partly protects from the induction of cellular senescence whereas ectopic expression of E4F1 accelerates premature senescence through its implication in the Ink4a/ARF-p53 pathway. Altogether, my results support the notion that E4F1 is an important regulator of cellular senescence

    Special Issue: “Bacteriophages and Biofilms”

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    Biofilms are a community of surface-associated microorganisms characterized by the presence of different cell types in terms of physiology and phenotype [...
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