211 research outputs found

    Partial complementation of Sinorhizobium meliloti bacA mutant phenotypes by the Mycobacterium tuberculosis BacA protein

    Get PDF
    The Sinorhizobium meliloti BacA ABC transporter protein plays an important role in its nodulating symbiosis with the legume alfalfa (Medicago sativa). The Mycobacterium tuberculosis BacA homolog was found to be important for the maintenance of chronic murine infections, yet its in vivo function is unknown. In the legume plant as well as in the mammalian host, bacteria encounter host antimicrobial peptides (AMPs). We found that the M. tuberculosis BacA protein was able to partially complement the symbiotic defect of an S. meliloti BacA-deficient mutant on alfalfa plants and to protect this mutant in vitro from the antimicrobial activity of a synthetic legume peptide, NCR247, and a recombinant human \u3b2-defensin 2 (HBD2). This finding was also confirmed using an M. tuberculosis insertion mutant. Furthermore, M. tuberculosis BacA-mediated protection of the legume symbiont S. meliloti against legume defensins as well as HBD2 is dependent on its attached ATPase domain. In addition, we show that M. tuberculosis BacA mediates peptide uptake of the truncated bovine AMP, Bac71-16. This process required a functional ATPase domain. We therefore suggest that M. tuberculosis BacA is important for the transport of peptides across the cytoplasmic membrane and is part of a complete ABC transporter. Hence, BacA-mediated protection against host AMPs might be important for the maintenance of latent infections

    Complex dynamics of defective interfering baculoviruses during serial passage in insect cells

    Get PDF
    Defective interfering (DI) viruses are thought to cause oscillations in virus levels, known as the 'Von Magnus effect'. Interference by DI viruses has been proposed to underlie these dynamics, although experimental tests of this idea have not been forthcoming. For the baculoviruses, insect viruses commonly used for the expression of heterologous proteins in insect cells, the molecular mechanisms underlying DI generation have been investigated. However, the dynamics of baculovirus populations harboring DIs have not been studied in detail. In order to address this issue, we used quantitative real-time PCR to determine the levels of helper and DI viruses during 50 serial passages of Autographa californica multiple nucleopolyhedrovirus (AcMNPV) in Sf21 cells. Unexpectedly, the helper and DI viruses changed levels largely in phase, and oscillations were highly irregular, suggesting the presence of chaos. We therefore developed a simple mathematical model of baculovirus-DI dynamics. This theoretical model reproduced patterns qualitatively similar to the experimental data. Although we cannot exclude that experimental variation (noise) plays an important role in generating the observed patterns, the presence of chaos in the model dynamics was confirmed with the computation of the maximal Lyapunov exponent, and a Ruelle-Takens-Newhouse route to chaos was identified at decreasing production of DI viruses, using mutation as a control parameter. Our results contribute to a better understanding of the dynamics of DI baculoviruses, and suggest that changes in virus levels over passages may exhibit chaos.The authors thank Javier Carrera, Just Vlak and Lia Hemerik for helpful discussion. MPZ was supported by a Rubicon Grant from the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO, www.nwo.nl) and a 'Juan de la Cierva' postdoctoral contract (JCI-2011-10379) from the Spanish 'Secretaria de Estado de Investigacion, Desarrollo e Innovacion'. JS was supported by the Botin Foundation. SFE was supported by grant BFU2012-30805, also from the Spanish 'Secretaria de Estado de Investigacion, Desarrollo e Innovacion'.Zwart, MP.; Pijlman, G.; Sardanyes Cayuela, J.; Duarte, J.; Januario, C.; Elena Fito, SF. (2013). Complex dynamics of defective interfering baculoviruses during serial passage in insect cells. Journal of Biological Physics. 39(2):327-342. doi:10.1007/s10867-013-9317-9S327342392Von Magnus, P.: Incomplete forms of influenza virus. Adv. Virus. Res. 2, 59–79 (1954)Huang, A.S.: Defective interfering viruses. Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 27, 101–117 (1973)Kool, M., Voncken, J.W., Vanlier, F.L.J., Tramper, J., Vlak, J.M.: Detection and analysis of Autographa californica nuclear polyhedrosis-virus mutants with defective interfering properties. Virology 183, 739–746 (1991)Wickham, T.J., Davis, T., Granados, R.R., Hammer, D.A., Shuler, M.L., Wood, H.A.: Baculovirus defective interfering particles are responsible for variations in recombinant protein-production as a function of multiplicity of infection. Biotechnol. Lett. 13, 483–488 (1991)Pijlman, G.P., van den Born, E., Martens, D.E., Vlak, J.M.: Autographa californica baculoviruses with large genomic deletions are rapidly generated in infected insect cells. Virology 283, 132–138 (2001)Giri, L., Feiss, M.G., Bonning, B.C., Murhammer, D.W.: Production of baculovirus defective interfering particles during serial passage is delayed by removing transposon target sites in fp25k. J. Gen. Virol. 93, 389–399 (2012)King, L.A., Possee, R.D.: The Baculovirus Expression System. University Press, Cambridge (1992)Lee, H.Y., Krell, P.J.: Reiterated DNA fragments in defective genomes of Autographa californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus are competent for AcMNPV-dependent DNA replication. Virology 202, 418–429 (1994)Pijlman, G.P., Dortmans, J., Vermeesch, A.M.G., Yang, K., Martens, D.E., Goldbach, R.W., Vlak, J.M.: Pivotal role of the non-hr origin of DNA replication in the genesis of defective interfering baculoviruses. J. Virol. 76, 5605–5611 (2002)Pijlman, G.P., van Schijndel, J.E., Vlak, J.M.: Spontaneous excision of BAC vector sequences from bacmid-derived baculovirus expression vectors upon passage in insect cells. J. Gen. Virol. 84, 2669–2678 (2003)Pijlman, G.P., Vermeesch, A.M.G., Vlak, J.M.: Cell line-specific accumulation of the baculovirus non-hr origin of DNA replication in infected insect cells. J. Invertebr. Pathol. 84, 214–219 (2003)Roux, L., Simon, A.E., Holland, J.J.: Effects of defective interfering viruses on virus-replication and pathogenesis in vitro and in vivo. Adv. Virus. Res. 40, 181–211 (1991)Grabau, E.A., Holland, J.J.: Analysis of viral and defective-interfering nucleocapsids in acute and persistent infection by Rhadoviruses. J. Gen. Virol. 60, 87–97 (1982)Kawai, A., Matsumoto, S., Tanabe, K.: Characterization of Rabies viruses recovered from persistently infected BHK cells. Virology 67, 520–533 (1975)Roux, L., Holland, J.J.: Viral genome synthesis in BHK-21 cells persistently infected with Sendai virus. Virology 100, 53–64 (1980)Palma, E.L., Huang, A.: Cyclic production of vesicular stomatitis virus cause by defective interfering particles. J. Infect. Dis. 129, 402–410 (1974).Stauffer Thompson, K.A., Yin, J.: Population dynamics of an RNA virus and its defective interfering particles in passage cultures. Virol. J. 7, 257–266 (2010)Szathmáry, E.: Cooperation and defection – playing the field in virus dynamics. J. Theor. Biol. 165, 341–356 (1993)Bangham, C.R.M., Kirkwood, T.B.L.: Defective interfering particles – effects in modulating virus growth and persistence. Virology 179, 821–826 (1990)Kirkwood, T.B.L., Bangham, C.R.M.: Cycles, chaos, and evolution in virus cultures – a model of defective interfering particles. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 91, 8685–8689 (1994)De Gooijer, C.D., Koken, R.H.M., van Lier, F.L.J., Kool, M., Vlak, J.M., Tramper, J.: A structured dynamic model for the baculovirus infection process in insect-cell reactor configurations. Biotech. Bioeng. 40, 537–548 (1992)Van Lier, F.L.J., van der Meijs, W.C.J., Grobben, N.G., Olie, R.A., Vlak, J.M., Tramper, J.: Continuous beta-galactosidase production with a recombinant baculovirus insect-cell system in bioreactors. J. Biotechnol. 22, 291–298 (1992)Van Lier, F.L.J., van den Hombergh, J., de Gooijer, C.D., den Boer, M.M., Vlak, J.M., Tramper, J.: Long-term semi-continuous production of recombinant baculovirus protein in a repeated (fed-)batch two-stage reactor system. Enzyme Microb. Technol. 18, 460–466 (1996)Zwart, M.P., Erro, E., van Oers, M.M., de Visser, J.A.G.M., Vlak, J.M.: Low multiplicity of infection in vivo results in purifying selection against baculovirus deletion mutants. J. Gen. Virol. 89, 1220–1224 (2008)Luckow, V.A., Lee, S.C., Barry, G.F., Olins, P.O.: Efficient generation of infectious recombinant baculoviruses by site-specific transposon-mediated insertion of foreign genes into a baculovirus genome propagated in Escherichia coli. J. Virol. 67, 4566–4579 (1993)Vaughn, J.L., Goodwin, R.H., Tompkins, G.J., McCawley, P.: Establishment of 2 cell lines from insect Spodoptera frugiperda (Lepidoptera, Noctuidae). In Vitro 13, 213–217 (1977)Zwart, M.P., van Oers, M.M., Cory, J.S., van Lent, J.W.M., van der Werf, W., Vlak, J.M.: Development of a quantitative real-time PCR for determination of genotype frequencies for studies in baculovirus population biology. J. Virol. Meth. 148, 146–154 (2008)Zwart, M.P., Hemerik, L., Cory, J.S., de Visser, J.A.G.M., Bianchi, F.J.J.A., van Oers, M.M., Vlak, J.M., Hoekstra, R.F., van der Werf, W.: An experimental test of the independent action hypothesis in virus-insect pathosystems. Proc. R. Soc. B 276, 2233–2242 (2009)Olkin, I., Gleser, L.J., Derman, C.: Probability Models and Applications. Macmillan, New York (1994)Parker, T., Chua, L.: Practical Numerical Algorithms for Chaotic Systems. Springer-Verlag, Berlin (1989)Dieci, L., van Vleck, E.S.: Computation of a few Lyapunov exponents for continuous and discrete dynamical systems. J. Appl. Numer. Math. 17, 275–291 (1995)Matsumoto, T., Chua, L.O., Komuro, M.: The double scroll. IEEE Trans. Circuits Syst. 32, 797–818 (1985)Chua, L.O., Komuro, M., Matsumoto, T.: The double scroll family: rigorous proof of chaos. IEEE Trans. Circuits Syst. 33, 1072–1097 (1986)Ramasubramanian, K., Sriram, M.S.: A comparative study of computation of Lyapunov spectra with different algorithms. Phys. D: Nonlin. Phenom. 139, 72–86 (2000)Lee, H.Y., Krell, P.J.: Generation and analysis of defective genomes of Autographa californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus. J. Virol. 66, 4339–4347 (1992)Kovacs, G.R., Choi, J., Guarino, L.A., Summers MD: Functional dissection of the Autographa californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus immediate early 1 transcriptional regulatory protein. J. Virol. 66, 7429–7437 (1992)Legendre, P., Legendre, L.: Numerical Ecology. Elsevier, Amsterdam (1998)Schuster, H.G.: Deterministic Chaos: An Introduction. Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Wienheim (2005)Strogatz, S.H.: Nonlinear Dynamics and Chaos: With Applications to Physics, Biology, Chemistry and Engineering. Westview Press, Cambridge (1994)Dennis, B., Desharnais, R.A., Cushing, J.M., Henson, S.M., Constantino, R.F.: Can noise induce chaos? Oikos 102, 329–339 (2003)Crutchfield, J.P., Huberman, B.A.: Fluctuations and the onset of chaos. Phys. Lett. A 77, 407–410 (1980)Crutchfield, J.P., Farmer, J.D.: Fluctuations and simple chaotic dynamics. Phys. Rep. 92, 45–82 (1982

    Chewing analysis in subjects aged between 07 to 12 years with unilateral cross bite

    Get PDF
    PURPOSE: to analyze the function of chewing, related to the posterior unilateral crossbite in children aged between 07 to 12 years. METHODS: 10 samples of both genders with posterior unilateral crossbite, with no orthodontic treatment history. During the speech language pathology evaluation the examined items were: food cutting, side of the chewing, rhythm, lips position, food escape, jaw movement, exaggerated participation of the perioral muscles, food accumulation in the vestibule of the mouth, position and size of the alimentary cake. RESULTS: from the 10 evaluated samples, 80% demonstrated unilateral chewing of the same side of the posterior unilateral crossbite and 20% bilateral chewing. From the 08 analyzed samples, the results were: previous cut, without escape of food and rotatory movements 100%; slow rhythm 50% and fast rhythm 50%; closed lips 75%; exaggerated participation of perioral muscles 62,5%; without accumulation of food 87,5%; alimentary cake cente-red 62,5%; small cale size 62,5%. CONCLUSION: from the evaluated cases, it was observed that 80% confirmed the relation between unilateral chewing and unilateral posterior crossbite, corroborating the literature s reporting. In the chewing, no any alterations related to the posterior unilateral crossbite and unilateral chewing have been noted.OBJETIVO: analisar a função de mastigação relacionada à mordida cruzada posterior unilateral em crianças na faixa etária de sete a doze anos. MÉTODOS: dez indivíduos de ambos os sexos com mordida cruzada unilateral posterior sem intervenção ortodôntica. Na avaliação fonoaudiológica os itens considerados foram: corte do alimento, lado da mastigação, ritmo, postura labial, escape de alimentos, movimento de mandíbula, participação exagerada da musculatura perioral, acúmulo de alimento no vestíbulo da boca, posição e tamanho do bolo alimentar. RESULTADOS: dos dez indivíduos avaliados, 80% apresentaram mastigação unilateral do mesmo lado da mordida cruzada posterior unilateral e 20% mastigação bilateral. Dos oito indivíduos analisados com mastigação unilateral, os resultados encontrados foram: corte anterior, sem escape de alimentos e movimentos rotatórios 100%; ritmo lento 50% e rápido 50%; lábios fechados 75%; participação exagerada da musculatura perioral 62,5%; sem acúmulo de alimentos 87,5%; bolo alimentar centralizado 75%; tamanho do bolo pequeno 62,5%. CONCLUSÃO: dos casos avaliados, observou-se que 80% confirmam a relação entre mastigação unilateral e mordida cruzada posterior unilateral. Na mastigação, não foram evidenciadas quaisquer outras alterações que possam estar relacionadas à mordida cruzada posterior unilateral e mastigação unilateral.Prefeitura do Rio de JaneiroUniversidade do Estado do Rio de JaneiroCEFAC - Saúde e EducaçãoHospital Estadual Adão Pereira NunesUniversidade Federal de São Paulo (UNIFESP) Setor de Investigação em Doenças NeuromuscularesUniversidade Federal de São Paulo (UNIFESP)UNIFESP, Setor de Investigação em Doenças NeuromuscularesUNIFESPSciEL

    Evolution of Disease Response Genes in Loblolly Pine: Insights from Candidate Genes

    Get PDF
    BACKGROUND: Host-pathogen interactions that may lead to a competitive co-evolution of virulence and resistance mechanisms present an attractive system to study molecular evolution because strong, recent (or even current) selective pressure is expected at many genomic loci. However, it is unclear whether these selective forces would act to preserve existing diversity, promote novel diversity, or reduce linked neutral diversity during rapid fixation of advantageous alleles. In plants, the lack of adaptive immunity places a larger burden on genetic diversity to ensure survival of plant populations. This burden is even greater if the generation time of the plant is much longer than the generation time of the pathogen. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Here, we present nucleotide polymorphism and substitution data for 41 candidate genes from the long-lived forest tree loblolly pine, selected primarily for their prospective influences on host-pathogen interactions. This dataset is analyzed together with 15 drought-tolerance and 13 wood-quality genes from previous studies. A wide range of neutrality tests were performed and tested against expectations from realistic demographic models. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Collectively, our analyses found that axr (auxin response factor), caf1 (chromatin assembly factor) and gatabp1 (gata binding protein 1) candidate genes carry patterns consistent with directional selection and erd3 (early response to drought 3) displays patterns suggestive of a selective sweep, both of which are consistent with the arm-race model of disease response evolution. Furthermore, we have identified patterns consistent with diversifying selection at erf1-like (ethylene responsive factor 1), ccoaoemt (caffeoyl-CoA-O-methyltransferase), cyp450-like (cytochrome p450-like) and pr4.3 (pathogen response 4.3), expected under the trench-warfare evolution model. Finally, a drought-tolerance candidate related to the plant cell wall, lp5, displayed patterns consistent with balancing selection. In conclusion, both arms-race and trench-warfare models seem compatible with patterns of polymorphism found in different disease-response candidate genes, indicating a mixed strategy of disease tolerance evolution for loblolly pine, a major tree crop in southeastern United States

    Water relations of evergreen and drought-deciduous trees along a seasonally dry tropical forest chronosequence

    Get PDF
    Seasonally dry tropical forests (SDTF) are characterized by pronounced seasonality in rainfall, and as a result trees in these forests must endure seasonal variation in soil water availability. Furthermore, SDTF on the northern Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico, have a legacy of disturbances, thereby creating a patchy mosaic of different seral stages undergoing secondary succession. We examined the water status of six canopy tree species, representing contrasting leaf phenology (evergreen vs. drought-deciduous) at three seral stages along a fire chronosequence in order to better understand strategies that trees use to overcome seasonal water limitations. The early-seral forest was characterized by high soil water evaporation and low soil moisture, and consequently early-seral trees exhibited lower midday bulk leaf water potentials (ΨL) relative to late-seral trees (−1.01 ± 0.14 and −0.54 ± 0.07 MPa, respectively). Although ΨL did not differ between evergreen and drought-deciduous trees, results from stable isotope analyses indicated different strategies to overcome seasonal water limitations. Differences were especially pronounced in the early-seral stage where evergreen trees had significantly lower xylem water δ18O values relative to drought-deciduous trees (−2.6 ± 0.5 and 0.3 ± 0.6‰, respectively), indicating evergreen species used deeper sources of water. In contrast, drought-deciduous trees showed greater enrichment of foliar 18O (∆18Ol) and 13C, suggesting lower stomatal conductance and greater water-use efficiency. Thus, the rapid development of deep roots appears to be an important strategy enabling evergreen species to overcome seasonal water limitation, whereas, in addition to losing a portion of their leaves, drought-deciduous trees minimize water loss from remaining leaves during the dry season

    Regulators of genetic risk of breast cancer identified by integrative network analysis.

    Get PDF
    Genetic risk for breast cancer is conferred by a combination of multiple variants of small effect. To better understand how risk loci might combine, we examined whether risk-associated genes share regulatory mechanisms. We created a breast cancer gene regulatory network comprising transcription factors and groups of putative target genes (regulons) and asked whether specific regulons are enriched for genes associated with risk loci via expression quantitative trait loci (eQTLs). We identified 36 overlapping regulons that were enriched for risk loci and formed a distinct cluster within the network, suggesting shared biology. The risk transcription factors driving these regulons are frequently mutated in cancer and lie in two opposing subgroups, which relate to estrogen receptor (ER)(+) luminal A or luminal B and ER(-) basal-like cancers and to different luminal epithelial cell populations in the adult mammary gland. Our network approach provides a foundation for determining the regulatory circuits governing breast cancer, to identify targets for intervention, and is transferable to other disease settings.This work was funded by Cancer Research UK and the Breast Cancer Research Foundation. MAAC is funded by the National Research Council (CNPq) of Brazil. TEH held a fellowship from the US DOD Breast Cancer Research Program (W81XWH-11-1-0592) and is currently supported by an RAH Career Development Fellowship (Australia). TEH and WDT are funded by the NHMRC of Australia (NHMRC) (ID: 1008349 WDT; 1084416 WDT, TEH) and Cancer Australia/National Breast Cancer Foundation (ID 627229; WDT, TEH). BAJP is a Gibb Fellow of Cancer Research UK. We would like to acknowledge the support of The University of Cambridge, Cancer Research UK and Hutchison Whampoa Limited.This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from NPG via http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ng.345

    Fibrotic Myofibroblasts Manifest Genome-Wide Derangements of Translational Control

    Get PDF
    Background: As a group, fibroproliferative disorders of the lung, liver, kidney, heart, vasculature and integument are common, progressive and refractory to therapy. They can emerge following toxic insults, but are frequently idiopathic. Their enigmatic propensity to resist therapy and progress to organ failure has focused attention on the myofibroblast–the primary effector of the fibroproliferative response. We have recently shown that aberrant beta 1 integrin signaling in fibrotic fibroblasts results in defective PTEN function, unrestrained Akt signaling and subsequent activation of the translation initiation machinery. How this pathological integrin signaling alters the gene expression pathway has not been elucidated. Results: Using a systems approach to study this question in a prototype fibrotic disease, Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis (IPF); here we show organized changes in the gene expression pathway of primary lung myofibroblasts that persist for up to 9 sub-cultivations in vitro. When comparing IPF and control myofibroblasts in a 3-dimensional type I collagen matrix, more genes differed at the level of ribosome recruitment than at the level of transcript abundance, indicating pathological translational control as a major characteristic of IPF myofibroblasts. To determine the effect of matrix state on translational control, myofibroblasts were permitted to contract the matrix. Ribosome recruitment in control myofibroblasts was relatively stable. In contrast, IPF cells manifested large alterations in the ribosome recruitment pattern. Pathological studies suggest an epithelial origin for IPF myofibroblasts through the epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT). In accord wit

    Spatial and Sex-Specific Variation in Growth of Albacore Tuna (Thunnus alalunga) across the South Pacific Ocean

    Get PDF
    Spatial variation in growth is a common feature of demersal fish populations which often exist as discrete adult sub-populations linked by a pelagic larval stage. However, it remains unclear whether variation in growth occurs at similar spatial scales for populations of highly migratory pelagic species, such as tuna. We examined spatial variation in growth of albacore Thunnus alalunga across 90° of longitude in the South Pacific Ocean from the east coast of Australia to the Pitcairn Islands. Using length-at-age data from a validated ageing method we found evidence for significant variation in length-at-age and growth parameters (L∞ and k) between sexes and across longitudes. Growth trajectories were similar between sexes up until four years of age, after which the length-at-age for males was, on average, greater than that for females. Males reached an average maximum size more than 8 cm larger than females. Length-at-age and growth parameters were consistently greater at more easterly longitudes than at westerly longitudes for both females and males. Our results provide strong evidence that finer spatial structure exists within the South Pacific albacore stock and raises the question of whether the scale of their “highly migratory” nature should be re-assessed. Future stock assessment models for South Pacific albacore should consider sex-specific growth curves and spatial variation in growth within the stock
    corecore