38 research outputs found

    The Effects of Nutrient Availability on Pseudomonas aeruginosa Mono and Co-culture Biofilms

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    Cystic Fibrosis (CF) is a genetic disorder characterized by faulty ion channels and result in thick mucus accumulation, especially in lungs. Mucus buildup provides ideal conditions for bacterial infections. Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA) is the second most prevalent bacterium isolated from people with CF and has a high clinical importance. Most CF pathogens form biofilms which make treatment of infections difficult. Biofilms are clusters of cells attached to a surface enclosed in a structured matrix. These structures are a means to provide shelter for bacteria from the environment, especially antibiotics and the immune system. PA alone can form these biofilms, but communities of different bacterial species can also form biofilms together. Multispecies biofilms can form beneficial or antagonistic relationships with PA. In this study, we investigated the interaction between PA and two other important CF pathogens, Staphylococcus aureus (SA) and Burkholderia cenocepacia (BC). SA is the most prevalent CF pathogen and BC is arguably the most fatal. We tested the survival of these species in groups or alone in various nutrient conditions and in differing tobramycin concentrations. We chose tobramycin because it is an antibiotic commonly prescribed to treat PA infections. Our results show that nutrient composition, antibiotic concentration, and time all had a significant effect on the interactions between PA mono-culture and co-cultured biofilms. Understanding these interactions may set the stage for a better understanding of the clinical course of infection and how treatments can be altered for multi-species infections.https://ir.library.louisville.edu/uars/1017/thumbnail.jp

    Genes contributing to Porphyromonas gingivalis fitness in abscess and epithelial cell colonization environments

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    Porphyromonas gingivalis is an important cause of serious periodontal diseases, and is emerging as a pathogen in several systemic conditions including some forms of cancer. Initial colonization by P. gingivalis involves interaction with gingival epithelial cells, and the organism can also access host tissues and spread haematogenously. To better understand the mechanisms underlying these properties, we utilized a highly saturated transposon insertion library of P. gingivalis, and assessed the fitness of mutants during epithelial cell colonization and survival in a murine abscess model by high-throughput sequencing (Tn-Seq). Transposon insertions in many genes previously suspected as contributing to virulence showed significant fitness defects in both screening assays. In addition, a number of genes not previously associated with P. gingivalis virulence were identified as important for fitness. We further examined fitness defects of four such genes by generating defined mutations. Genes encoding a carbamoyl phosphate synthetase, a replication-associated recombination protein, a nitrosative stress responsive HcpR transcription regulator, and RNase Z, a zinc phosphodiesterase, showed a fitness phenotype in epithelial cell colonization and in a competitive abscess infection. This study verifies the importance of several well-characterized putative virulence factors of P. gingivalis and identifies novel fitness determinants of the organism

    Regulation of the Myxococcus xanthus C-Signal-Dependent Ξ©4400 Promoter by the Essential Developmental Protein FruA

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    The bacterium Myxococcus xanthus employs extracellular signals to coordinate aggregation and sporulation during multicellular development. Extracellular, contact-dependent signaling that involves the CsgA protein (called C-signaling) activates FruA, a putative response regulator that governs a branched signaling pathway inside cells. One branch regulates cell movement, leading to aggregation. The other branch regulates gene expression, leading to sporulation. C-signaling is required for full expression of most genes induced after 6 h into development, including the gene identified by Tn5 lac insertion Ξ©4400. To determine if FruA is a direct regulator of Ξ©4400 transcription, a combination of in vivo and in vitro experiments was performed. Ξ©4400 expression was abolished in a fruA mutant. The DNA-binding domain of FruA bound specifically to DNA upstream of the promoter βˆ’35 region in vitro. Mutations between bp βˆ’86 and βˆ’77 greatly reduced binding. One of these mutations had been shown previously to reduce Ξ©4400 expression in vivo and make it independent of C-signaling. For the first time, chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) experiments were performed on M. xanthus. The ChIP experiments demonstrated that FruA is associated with the Ξ©4400 promoter region late in development, even in the absence of C-signaling. Based on these results, we propose that FruA directly activates Ξ©4400 transcription to a moderate level prior to C-signaling and, in response to C-signaling, binds near bp βˆ’80 and activates transcription to a higher level. Also, the highly localized effects of mutations between bp βˆ’86 and βˆ’77 on DNA binding in vitro, together with recently published footprints, allow us to predict a consensus binding site of GTCG/CGA/G for the FruA DNA-binding domain

    Identification of potential therapeutic targets for Burkholderia cenocepacia by comparative transcriptomics.

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    Burkholderia cenocepacia is an endemic soil dweller and emerging opportunistic pathogen in patients with cystic fibrosis (CF). The identification of virulence factors and potential therapeutic targets has been hampered by the genomic diversity within the species as many factors are not shared among the pathogenic members of the species.In this study, global identification of putative virulence factors was performed by analyzing the transcriptome of two related strains of B. cenocepacia (one clinical, one environmental) under conditions mimicking cystic fibrosis sputum versus soil. Soil is a natural reservoir for this species; hence, genes induced under CF conditions relative to soil may represent adaptations that have occurred in clinical strains. Under CF conditions, several genes encoding proteins thought to be involved in virulence were induced and many new ones were identified. Our analysis, in combination with previous studies, reveals 458 strain-specific genes, 126 clinical-isolate-specific, and at least four species-specific genes that are induced under CF conditions. The chromosomal distribution of the induced genes was disproportionate to the size of the chromosome as genes expressed under soil conditions by both strains were more frequent on the second chromosome and those differentially regulated between strains were more frequent on the third chromosome. Conservation of these induced genes was established using the 11 available Bcc genome sequences to indicate whether potential therapeutic targets would be species-wide.Comparative transcriptomics is a useful way to identify new potential virulence factors and therapeutic targets for pathogenic bacteria. We identified eight genes induced under CF conditions that were also conserved in the Bcc and may constitute particularly attractive therapeutic targets due to their signal sequence, predicted cellular location, and homology to known therapeutic targets

    Genomic Diversity of <em>Escherichia</em> Isolates from Diverse Habitats

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    <div><p>Our understanding of the <em>Escherichia</em> genus is heavily biased toward pathogenic or commensal isolates from human or animal hosts. Recent studies have recovered <em>Escherichia</em> isolates that persist, and even grow, outside these hosts. Although the environmental isolates are typically phylogenetically distinct, they are highly related to and phenotypically indistinguishable from their human counterparts, including for the coliform test. To gain insights into the genomic diversity of <em>Escherichia</em> isolates from diverse habitats, including freshwater, soil, animal, and human sources, we carried out comparative DNA-DNA hybridizations using a multi-genome <em>E. coli</em> DNA microarray. The microarray was validated based on hybridizations with selected strains whose genome sequences were available and used to assess the frequency of microarray false positive and negative signals. Our results showed that human fecal isolates share two sets of genes (n>90) that are rarely found among environmental isolates, including genes presumably important for evading host immune mechanisms (e.g., a multi-drug transporter for acids and antimicrobials) and adhering to epithelial cells (e.g., hemolysin E and fimbrial-like adhesin protein). These results imply that environmental isolates are characterized by decreased ability to colonize host cells relative to human isolates. Our study also provides gene markers that can distinguish human isolates from those of warm-blooded animal and environmental origins, and thus can be used to more reliably assess fecal contamination in natural ecosystems.</p> </div

    Gene signatures of human strains.

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    <p>The 98 genes differentially shared between G-II and G-III (p-values lower than 10<sup>βˆ’4</sup> by Fisher’s exact test) are shown. Genes in blue boxes indicate hypothetical proteins and genes in red boxes are discussed in the text (associated with stress defense and adhesion). The color denotes gene presence (yellow) and absence (black).</p
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