104 research outputs found

    Altering Host Resistance to Infections through Microbial Transplantation

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    Host resistance to bacterial infections is thought to be dictated by host genetic factors. Infections by the natural murine enteric pathogen Citrobacter rodentium (used as a model of human enteropathogenic and enterohaemorrhagic E. coli infections) vary between mice strains, from mild self-resolving colonization in NIH Swiss mice to lethality in C3H/HeJ mice. However, no clear genetic component had been shown to be responsible for the differences observed with C. rodentium infections. Because the intestinal microbiota is important in regulating resistance to infection, and microbial composition is dependent on host genotype, it was tested whether variations in microbial composition between mouse strains contributed to differences in β€œhost” susceptibility by transferring the microbiota of resistant mice to lethally susceptible mice prior to infection. Successful transfer of the microbiota from resistant to susceptible mice resulted in delayed pathogen colonization and mortality. Delayed mortality was associated with increased IL-22 mediated innate defense including antimicrobial peptides Reg3Ξ³ and Reg3Ξ², and immunono-neutralization of IL-22 abrogated the beneficial effect of microbiota transfer. Conversely, depletion of the native microbiota in resistant mice by antibiotics and transfer of the susceptible mouse microbiota resulted in reduced innate defenses and greater pathology upon infection. This work demonstrates the importance of the microbiota and how it regulates mucosal immunity, providing an important factor in susceptibility to enteric infection. Transfer of resistance through microbial transplantation (bacteriotherapy) provides additional mechanisms to alter β€œhost” resistance, and a novel means to alter enteric infection and to study host-pathogen interactions

    Gnotobiotic IL-10βˆ’/βˆ’; NF-ΞΊBEGFP Mice Develop Rapid and Severe Colitis Following Campylobacter jejuni Infection

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    Limited information is available on the molecular mechanisms associated with Campylobacter jejuni (C. jejuni) induced food-borne diarrheal illnesses. In this study, we investigated the function of TLR/NF-ΞΊB signaling in C. jejuni induced pathogenesis using gnotobiotic IL-10βˆ’/βˆ’; NF-ΞΊBEGFP mice. In vitro analysis showed that C. jejuni induced IΞΊB phosphorylation, followed by enhanced NF-ΞΊB transcriptional activity and increased IL-6, MIP-2Ξ± and NOD2 mRNA accumulation in infected-mouse colonic epithelial cells CMT93. Importantly, these events were blocked by molecular delivery of an IΞΊB inhibitor (Ad5IΞΊBAA). NF-ΞΊB signalling was also important for C.jejuni-induced cytokine gene expression in bone marrow-derived dendritic cells. Importantly, C. jejuni associated IL-10βˆ’/βˆ’; NF-ΞΊBEGFP mice developed mild (day 5) and severe (day 14) ulcerating colonic inflammation and bloody diarrhea as assessed by colonoscopy and histological analysis. Macroscopic analysis showed elevated EGFP expression indicating NF-ΞΊB activation throughout the colon of C. jejuni associated IL-10βˆ’/βˆ’; NF-ΞΊBEGFP mice, while fluorescence microscopy revealed EGFP positive cells to be exclusively located in lamina propria mononuclear cells. Pharmacological NF-ΞΊB inhibition using Bay 11-7085 did not ameliorate C. jejuni induced colonic inflammation. Our findings indicate that C. jejuni induces rapid and severe intestinal inflammation in a susceptible host that correlates with enhanced NF-ΞΊB activity from lamina propria immune cells

    The Overlap of Small Molecule and Protein Binding Sites within Families of Protein Structures

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    Protein–protein interactions are challenging targets for modulation by small molecules. Here, we propose an approach that harnesses the increasing structural coverage of protein complexes to identify small molecules that may target protein interactions. Specifically, we identify ligand and protein binding sites that overlap upon alignment of homologous proteins. Of the 2,619 protein structure families observed to bind proteins, 1,028 also bind small molecules (250–1000 Da), and 197 exhibit a statistically significant (p<0.01) overlap between ligand and protein binding positions. These β€œbi-functional positions”, which bind both ligands and proteins, are particularly enriched in tyrosine and tryptophan residues, similar to β€œenergetic hotspots” described previously, and are significantly less conserved than mono-functional and solvent exposed positions. Homology transfer identifies ligands whose binding sites overlap at least 20% of the protein interface for 35% of domain–domain and 45% of domain–peptide mediated interactions. The analysis recovered known small-molecule modulators of protein interactions as well as predicted new interaction targets based on the sequence similarity of ligand binding sites. We illustrate the predictive utility of the method by suggesting structural mechanisms for the effects of sanglifehrin A on HIV virion production, bepridil on the cellular entry of anthrax edema factor, and fusicoccin on vertebrate developmental pathways. The results, available at http://pibase.janelia.org, represent a comprehensive collection of structurally characterized modulators of protein interactions, and suggest that homologous structures are a useful resource for the rational design of interaction modulators

    MyD88 Dependent Signaling Contributes to Protective Host Defense against Burkholderia pseudomallei

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    Background: Toll-like receptors (TLRs) have a central role in the recognition of pathogens and the initiation of the innate immune response. Myeloid differentiation primary-response gene 88 (MyD88) and TIR-domain-containing adaptor protein inducing IFNb (TRIF) are regarded as the key signaling adaptor proteins for TLRs. Melioidosis, which is endemic in SE-Asia, is a severe infection caused by the gram-negative bacterium Burkholderia pseudomallei. We here aimed to characterize the role of MyD88 and TRIF in host defense against melioidosis. Methodology and Principal Findings: First, we found that MyD88, but not TRIF, deficient whole blood leukocytes released less TNFa upon stimulation with B. pseudomallei compared to wild-type (WT) cells. Thereafter we inoculated MyD88 knockout (KO), TRIF mutant and WT mice intranasally with B. pseudomallei and found that MyD88 KO, but not TRIF mutant mice demonstrated a strongly accelerated lethality, which was accompanied by significantly increased bacterial loads in lungs, liver and blood, and grossly enhanced liver damage compared to WT mice. The decreased bacterial clearance capacity of MyD88 KO mice was accompanied by a markedly reduced early pulmonary neutrophil recruitment and a diminished activation of neutrophils after infection with B. pseudomallei. MyD88 KO leukocytes displayed an unaltered capacity to phagocytose and kill B. pseudomallei in vitro. Conclusions: MyD88 dependent signaling, but not TRIF dependent signaling, contributes to a protective host respons

    The Mycobacterium tuberculosis Drugome and Its Polypharmacological Implications

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    We report a computational approach that integrates structural bioinformatics, molecular modelling and systems biology to construct a drug-target network on a structural proteome-wide scale. The approach has been applied to the genome of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M.tb), the causative agent of one of today's most widely spread infectious diseases. The resulting drug-target interaction network for all structurally characterized approved drugs bound to putative M.tb receptors, we refer to as the β€˜TB-drugome’. The TB-drugome reveals that approximately one-third of the drugs examined have the potential to be repositioned to treat tuberculosis and that many currently unexploited M.tb receptors may be chemically druggable and could serve as novel anti-tubercular targets. Furthermore, a detailed analysis of the TB-drugome has shed new light on the controversial issues surrounding drug-target networks [1]–[3]. Indeed, our results support the idea that drug-target networks are inherently modular, and further that any observed randomness is mainly caused by biased target coverage. The TB-drugome (http://funsite.sdsc.edu/drugome/TB) has the potential to be a valuable resource in the development of safe and efficient anti-tubercular drugs. More generally the methodology may be applied to other pathogens of interest with results improving as more of their structural proteomes are determined through the continued efforts of structural biology/genomics

    Muc2 Protects against Lethal Infectious Colitis by Disassociating Pathogenic and Commensal Bacteria from the Colonic Mucosa

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    Despite recent advances in our understanding of the pathogenesis of attaching and effacing (A/E) Escherichia coli infections, the mechanisms by which the host defends against these microbes are unclear. The goal of this study was to determine the role of goblet cell-derived Muc2, the major intestinal secretory mucin and primary component of the mucus layer, in host protection against A/E pathogens. To assess the role of Muc2 during A/E bacterial infections, we inoculated Muc2 deficient (Muc2βˆ’/βˆ’) mice with Citrobacter rodentium, a murine A/E pathogen related to diarrheagenic A/E E. coli. Unlike wildtype (WT) mice, infected Muc2βˆ’/βˆ’ mice exhibited rapid weight loss and suffered up to 90% mortality. Stool plating demonstrated 10–100 fold greater C. rodentium burdens in Muc2βˆ’/βˆ’ vs. WT mice, most of which were found to be loosely adherent to the colonic mucosa. Histology of Muc2βˆ’/βˆ’ mice revealed ulceration in the colon amid focal bacterial microcolonies. Metabolic labeling of secreted mucins in the large intestine demonstrated that mucin secretion was markedly increased in WT mice during infection compared to uninfected controls, suggesting that the host uses increased mucin release to flush pathogens from the mucosal surface. Muc2 also impacted host-commensal interactions during infection, as FISH analysis revealed C. rodentium microcolonies contained numerous commensal microbes, which was not observed in WT mice. Orally administered FITC-Dextran and FISH staining showed significantly worsened intestinal barrier disruption in Muc2βˆ’/βˆ’ vs. WT mice, with overt pathogen and commensal translocation into the Muc2βˆ’/βˆ’ colonic mucosa. Interestingly, commensal depletion enhanced C. rodentium colonization of Muc2βˆ’/βˆ’ mice, although colonic pathology was not significantly altered. In conclusion, Muc2 production is critical for host protection during A/E bacterial infections, by limiting overall pathogen and commensal numbers associated with the colonic mucosal surface. Such actions limit tissue damage and translocation of pathogenic and commensal bacteria across the epithelium

    Connexin 26 35delG does not represent a mutational hotspot

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    Non-syndromic hearing impairment (NSHI) is the most common form of deafness and presents with no other symptoms or sensory defects. Mutations in the gap junction gene GJB2 account for a high proportion of recessive NSHI. The GJB2 gene encodes connexin 26, which forms plasma membrane channels between cochlear cells. In Caucasian populations a single mutation, 35delG, accounts for most cases of NSHI. This mutation appears to be most prevalent in individuals of Mediterranean European descent, with carrier frequencies estimated as being as high as one in thirty. The 35delG region may be a mutational hotspot. The mutation arises from the deletion of a guanine from a six-guanine stretch and nearby microsatellite markers show little evidence for linkage disequilibrium. We believe that 35delG is an old mutation in a chromosomal region of high recombination. The genetic context of the 35delG mutation was examined to distinguish between an old or a recurring mutation. We identified two single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) immediately upstream of the first exon of GJB2. Polymerase chain reaction/restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis determined the SNP genotype of 35delG containing chromosomes from various populations, including Italy, Brazil, and North America. We found the same, relatively rare, polymorphism associated with the 35delG mutation in all populations studied. We have also examined microsatellite markers D13S175, which is 80kb telomeric to GJB2, and D13S1316, which is 80kb centromeric to GJB2. D13S175 appears to be in weak linkage disequilibrium with 35delG, while D13S1316 is less so. SNPs located between the 35delG mutation and the microsatellite markers show strong evidence of linkage disequilibrium. Taken together, these results indicate there has been substantial recombination near the 35delG mutation; however, we present evidence that the 35delG mutation arose in European and Middle Eastern populations from a single mutational event on a founder chromosome.1131182

    Natural Killer cells protect against mucosal and systemic infection with the enteric pathogen Citrobacter rodentium

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    Natural killer (NK) cells are traditionally considered in the context of tumour surveillance and viral defence but their role in bacterial infections, particularly those caused by enteric pathogens, is less clear. C57BL/6 mice were orally gavaged with Citrobacter rodentium, a murine pathogen related to human diarrheagenic Escherichia coli. We used polyclonal anti-asialo GM1 Ab to actively deplete NK cells in vivo. Bioluminescent imaging and direct counts were used to follow infection. Flow cytometry and immunofluorescence microscopy were used to analyse immune responses. During C. rodentium infection NK cells were recruited to mucosal tissues where they expressed a diversity of immune-modulatory factors. Depletion of NK cells led to higher bacterial loads but less severe colonic inflammation; associated with reduced immune cell recruitment and lower cytokine levels. NK cell depleted mice also developed disseminated systemic infection when compared to control infected mice. NK cells were also cytotoxic to C. rodentium in vitro
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