TY - JOUR A1 - Alzheimer, Mona A1 - Svensson, Sarah L. A1 - König, Fabian A1 - Schweinlin, Matthias A1 - Metzger, Marco A1 - Walles, Heike A1 - Sharma, Cynthia M. T1 - A three-dimensional intestinal tissue model reveals factors and small regulatory RNAs important for colonization with Campylobacter jejuni JF - PLoS Pathogens N2 - The Gram-negative Epsilonproteobacterium Campylobacter jejuni is currently the most prevalent bacterial foodborne pathogen. Like for many other human pathogens, infection studies with C. jejuni mainly employ artificial animal or cell culture models that can be limited in their ability to reflect the in-vivo environment within the human host. Here, we report the development and application of a human three-dimensional (3D) infection model based on tissue engineering to study host-pathogen interactions. Our intestinal 3D tissue model is built on a decellularized extracellular matrix scaffold, which is reseeded with human Caco-2 cells. Dynamic culture conditions enable the formation of a polarized mucosal epithelial barrier reminiscent of the 3D microarchitecture of the human small intestine. Infection with C. jejuni demonstrates that the 3D tissue model can reveal isolate-dependent colonization and barrier disruption phenotypes accompanied by perturbed localization of cell-cell junctions. Pathogenesis-related phenotypes of C. jejuni mutant strains in the 3D model deviated from those obtained with 2D-monolayers, but recapitulated phenotypes previously observed in animal models. Moreover, we demonstrate the involvement of a small regulatory RNA pair, CJnc180/190, during infections and observe different phenotypes of CJnc180/190 mutant strains in 2D vs. 3D infection models. Hereby, the CJnc190 sRNA exerts its pathogenic influence, at least in part, via repression of PtmG, which is involved in flagellin modification. Our results suggest that the Caco-2 cell-based 3D tissue model is a valuable and biologically relevant tool between in-vitro and in-vivo infection models to study virulence of C. jejuni and other gastrointestinal pathogens. KW - in vitro KW - stem cells KW - invasion KW - host KW - adhesion KW - epithelial cells KW - translocation KW - virulence KW - responses KW - microenvironment Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-229454 VL - 16 IS - 2 ER - TY - THES A1 - Zude, Ingmar T1 - Characterization of virulence-associated traits of Escherichia coli bovine mastitis isolates T1 - Charakterisierung Virulenz-assozierter Eigenschaften von Escherichia coli Isolaten boviner Mastitis N2 - Bacterial mastitis is caused by invasion of the udder, bacterial multiplication and induction of inflammatory responses in the bovine mammary gland. Disease severity and the cause of disease are influenced by environmental factors, the cow’s immune response as well as bacterial traits. Escherichia coli (E. coli) is one of the main causes of acute bovine mastitis, but although pathogenic E. coli strains can be classified into different pathotypes, E. coli causing mastitis cannot unambiguously be distinguished from commensal E. coli nor has a common set of virulence factors been described for mastitis isolates. This project focussed on the characterization of virulence- associated traits of E. coli mastitis isolates in comprehensive analyses under conditions either mimicking initial pathogenesis or conditions that E. coli mastitis isolates should encounter while entering the udder. Virulence-associated traits as well as fitness traits of selected bovine mastitis or faecal E. coli strains were identified and analyzed in comparative phenotypic assays. Raw milk whey was introduced to test bacterial fitness in native mammary secretion known to confer antimicrobial effects. Accordingly, E. coli isolates from bovine faeces represented a heterogeneous group of which some isolates showed reduced ability to survive in milk whey whereas others phenotypically resembled mastitis isolates that represented a homogeneous group in that they showed similar survival and growth characteristics in milk whey. In contrast, mastitis isolates did not exhibit such a uniform phenotype when challenged with iron shortage, lactose as sole carbon source and lingual antimicrobial peptide (LAP) as a main defensin of milk. Reduced bacterial fitness could be related to LAP suggesting that bacterial adaptation to an intramammary lifestyle requires resistance to host defensins present in mammary secretions, at least LAP. E. coli strain 1303 and ECC-1470 lack particular virulence genes associated to mastitis isolates. To find out whether differences in gene expression may contribute to the ability of E. coli variants to cause mastitis, the transcriptome of E. coli model mastitis isolates 1303 and ECC-1470 were analyzed to identify candidate genes involved in bacterium-host interaction, fitness or even pathogenicity during bovine mastitis. DNA microarray analysis was employed to assess the transcriptional response of E. coli 1303 and ECC-1470 upon cocultivation with MAC-T immortalized bovine mammary gland epithelial cells to identify candidate genes involved in bacterium-host interaction. Additionally, the cell adhesion and invasion ability of E. coli strain 1303 and ECC-1470 was investigated. The transcriptonal response to the presence of host cells rather suggested competition for nutrients and oxygen between E. coli and MAC-T cells than marked signs of adhesion and invasion. Accordingly, mostly fitness traits that may also contribute to efficient colonization of the E. coli primary habitat, the gut, have been utilized by the mastitis isolates under these conditions. In this study, RNA-Seq was employed to assess the bacterial transcriptional response to milk whey. According to our transcriptome data, the lack of positively deregulated and also of true virulence-associated determinants in both of the mastitis isolates indicated that E. coli might have adapted by other means to the udder (or at least mammary secretion) as an inflammatory site. We identified traits that promote bacterial growth and survival in milk whey. The ability to utilize citrate promotes fitness and survival of E. coli that are thriving in mammary secretions. According to our results, lactoferrin has only weak impact on E. coli in mammary secretions. At the same time bacterial determinants involved in iron assimilation were negatively regulated, suggesting that, at least during the first hours, iron assimilation is not a challenge to E. coli colonizing the mammary gland. It has been hypothesized that cellular iron stores cause temporary independency to extracellular accessible iron. According to our transcriptome data, this hypothesis was supported and places iron uptake systems beyond the speculative importance that has been suggested before, at least during early phases of infection. It has also been shown that the ability to resist extracytoplasmic stress, by oxidative conditions as well as host defensins, is of substantial importance for bacterial survival in mammary secretions. In summary, the presented thesis addresses important aspects of host-pathogen interaction and bacterial conversion to hostile conditions during colonization of the mastitis inflammatory site, the mammary gland. N2 - Bei der bakteriellen Mastitis handelt es sich um eine Infektion der bovinen Milchdrüse, ausgelöst durch Eintritt und Wachstum der Bakterien im Euter der Kuh. Krankheitsverlauf und Ursache werden beeinflusst durch Umweltfaktoren, das Immunsystem des Wirtes und die Eigenschaften des bakteriellen Erregers. Die Spezies Escherichia coli (E. coli) ist einer der häufigsten Erreger der akuten bovinen Mastitis. Generell können pathogene E. coli -Stämme entsprechend ihres Infektionsortes in verschiedene Pathotypen klassifiziert werden, die durch eine individuelle Kombination verschiedener Virulenzfaktoren gekennzeichnet sind. Eine eindeutige Unterscheidung von E. coli –Mastitiserregern und kommensalen E. coli -Stämmen ist bisher nicht beschrieben. Diese Studie befasst sich mit der Charakterisierung virulenz-assozierter Eigenschaften von E. coli –Isolaten der bovinen Mastitis. Dazu wurden Untersuchungen unter Bedingungen durchgeführt, die denen während der Anfangsphase der Mastitis entsprechen. Die Virulenz und Fitness-assoziierten Eigenschaften ausgewählter E. coli Mastitis- und Fäkalisolate wurden in vergleichenden phenotypischen Assays identifiziert und analysiert. Zur Untersuchung der bakteriellen Fitness in Milchdrüsensekreten wurde native Molke mit antimikrobiellen Eigenschaften von Rohmilch genutzt. Dabei stellte sich heraus dass E. coli Fäkalisolate eine heterogene Gruppe bilden. Innerhalb dieser Gruppe wiesen einige Isolate eine verminderte Überlebensrate auf. Andere Fäkalisolate zeigten eine höhere Überlebensrate, ähnlich der Überlebensrate von Mastitiserregern. Im Gegensatz zum ihrem grundsätzlich guten Überleben in Molke zeigten Mastitisisolate keine einheitlichen phänotypischen Merkmale bei Wachstum mit 1) Lactose als einziger Kohlenstoffquelle, 2) Eisenlimitierung, oder 3) unter Einfluss von lingualem antimikrobiellem Peptid (LAP), einem bedeutenden Defensin der Wirtsantwort im Euter. Die verminderte Fähigkeit in Milchdrüsensekreten zu überleben korrelierte mit der konzentrationsabhängigen Überlebensfähigkeit in Gegenwart von LAP. Dies lässt vermuten dass eine Anpassung der Bakterien an die Lebensbedingungen in der bovinen Milchdrüse der Resistenz gegenüber Defensinen (u.a. LAP) bedarf. Den Mastitis-isolaten E. coli 1303 und ECC 1470 fehlen diverse Virulenzgene die bereits mit Mastitis assoziiert werden konnten. Um zu bestimmen ob Unterschiede in der Genexpression beider E. coli Isolate dazu beitragen Mastitis auszulösen, wurden Transkriptomanalysen durchgeführt. Dabei sollten vor allem Kandidatengene bestimmt werden, die an der Wirt-Pathogen-Interaktion beteiligt sind oder zur bakteriellen Fitness oder Virulenz der Erreger beitragen. Auf der Basis von DNA Microarrays wurde die Genexpression von E. coli 1303 und ECC 1470 in Gegenwart von immortalisierten Zellen des bovinen Milchdrüsenepithels (MAC-T) bestimmt. Zusätzlich wurde die Fähigkeit zur Zelladhäsion und Internalisierung beider Isolate untersucht. Die bakterielle Transkriptionsantwort in Gegenwart der Wirtszellen ergab, dass Erreger und Wirtszellen eher um den Bedarf an Nährstoffen und Sauerstoff konkurrierten, anstatt deutliche Anzeichen der Zelladhäsion oder Invasion zu zeigen. Beide Isolate nutzten vornehmlich Fitnesseigenschaften, die auch bei der Besiedlung des Darms als dem primären Habitat von E. coli verwendet werden. In dieser Studie wurde außerdem die Genexpression von E. coli 1303 und ECC 1470 in Reaktion auf Molke aus Rohmilch mittels Gesamt-Transkriptom-Sequenzierung (RNA Seq) untersucht. Die Transkriptomanalyse ergab keine wirklich deregulierten virulenz-assozierten Gene in einer der beiden E. coli Mastitis Isolate. Ferner konnten Eigenschaften identifiziert werden, die zum Wachstum und Überleben in nativer Molke beitragen. Die Fähigkeit, Citrat zu verwerten, begünstigt das erfolgreiche Überleben in Milchdrüsensekten und stellt einen wichtigen Fitnessfaktor dar. Unsere Transkriptomdaten bestätigen dass Lactoferrin nur geringen Einfluss auf das Wachstum, von E. coli in Milchdrüsensekreten, hat. Die Expression bakterieller Determinanten, die an der Aufnahme von Eisen beteiligt sind, wurde herunterreguliert. Dies lässt darauf schließen dass Eisenaufnahme in den ersten Stunden der Kolonisierung durch die Erreger keine essentielle Fitnesseigenschaft darstellt. Vermutlich reicht die intrazelluläre Menge an Eisen aus, um eine zeitweise Unabhängigkeit von extrazellular verfügbarem Eisen zu ermöglichen. Diese These konnte durch unsere Transkriptomdaten gestützt werden und stellt eine wichtige Entdeckung in Bezug auf die Verfügbarkeit von Eisen während der Kolonisierung der Milchdrüse dar. Unsere Daten zeigen, dass die Resistenz gegenüber extrazellulärem Stress durch oxidative Bedingungen und Defensine des Wirtes von großer Bedeutung für das bakterielle Überleben in Milchdrüsensekreten ist. Die vorliegende Thesis befasst sich mit wichtigen Aspekten der Wirt-Pathogen-Interaktion und der Anpassung an die antimikrobiellen Bedingungen während der Kolonisierung der Milchdrüse als Ort der Infektion. KW - Escherichia coli KW - mastitis KW - infection KW - virulence KW - transcriptome analysis KW - Kuh KW - Brustdrüsenentzündung KW - Virulenz Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-100934 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Amich, Jorge A1 - Krappmann, Sven T1 - Deciphering metabolic traits of the fungal pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus: redundancy vs. essentiality JF - Frontiers in Microbiology N2 - Incidence rates of infections caused by environmental opportunistic fungi have risen over recent decades. Aspergillus species have emerged as serious threat for the immunecompromised, and detailed knowledge about virulence-determining traits is crucial for drug target identification. As a prime saprobe, A. fumigatus has evolved to efficiently adapt to various stresses and to sustain nutritional supply by osmotrophy, which is characterized by extracellular substrate digestion followed by efficient uptake of breakdown products that are then fed into the fungal primary metabolism. These intrinsic metabolic features are believed to be related with its virulence ability. The plethora of genes that encode underlying effectors has hampered their in-depth analysis with respect to pathogenesis. Recent developments in Aspergillus molecular biology allow conditional gene expression or comprehensive targeting of gene families to cope with redundancy. Furthermore, identification of essential genes that are intrinsically connected to virulence opens accurate perspectives for novel targets in antifungal therapy. KW - Aspergillus fumigatus KW - aspergillosis KW - virulence KW - conditional promoter replacement KW - nutrients KW - gene family targeting Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-123669 VL - 3 ER - TY - THES A1 - Adenugba, Akinbami Raphael T1 - Functional analysis of the gene organization of the pneumoviral attachment protein G T1 - Funktionelle Analyse der Genorganisation des pneumoviralen Attachment-Protein G N2 - The putative attachment protein G of pneumonia virus of mice (PVM), a member of the Pneumoviruses, is an important virulence factor with so far ambiguous function in a virus-cell as well as in virus-host context. The sequence of the corresponding G gene is characterized by significant heterogeneity between and even within strains, affecting the gene and possibly the protein structure. This accounts in particular for the PVM strain J3666 for which two differing G gene organizations have been described: a polymorphism in nucleotide 65 of the G gene results in the presence of an upstream open reading frame (uORF) that precedes the main ORF in frame (GJ366665A) or extension of the major G ORF for 18 codons (GJ366665U). Therefore, this study was designed to analyse the impact of the sequence variations in the respective G genes of PVM strains J3666 and the reference strain 15 on protein expression, replication and virulence. First, the controversy regarding the consensus sequence of PVM J3666 was resolved. The analysis of 45 distinct cloned fragments showed that the strain separated into two distinct virus populations defined by the sequence and structure of the G gene. This division was further supported by nucleotide polymorphisms in the neighbouring M and SH genes. Sequential passage of this mixed strain in the cell line standardly used for propagation of virus stocks resulted in selection for the GJ366665A-containing population in one of two experiments pointing towards a moderate replicative advantage. The replacement of the G gene of the recombinant PVM 15 with GJ366665A or GJ366665U, respectively, using a reverse genetic approach indicated that the presence of uORF within the GJ366665A significantly reduced the expression of the main G ORF on translational level while the potential extension of the ORF in GJ366665U increased G protein expression. In comparison, the effect of the G gene-structure on virus replication was inconsistent and dependent on cell line and type. While the presence of uORF correlated with a replication advantage in the standardly used BHK-21 cells and primary murine embryonic fibroblasts, replication in the murine macrophage cell line RAW 264.7 did not. In comparison, the GJ366665U variant was not associated with any effect on replication in cultured cells at all. Nonetheless, in-vivo analysis of the recombinant viruses associated the GJ366665U gene variant, and hence an increased G expression, with higher virulence whereas the GJ366665A gene, and therefore an impaired G expression, conferred an attenuated phenotype to the virus. To extend the study to other G gene organizations, a recombinant PVM expressing a G protein without the cytoplasmic domain and for comparison a G-deletion mutant, both known to be attenuated in vivo, were studied. Not noticed before, this structure of the G gene was associated with a 75% reduction in G protein expression and a significant attenuation of replication in macrophage-like cells. This attenuation was even more prominent for the virus lacking G. Taking into consideration the higher reduction in G protein levels compared to the GJ366665A variant indicates that a threshold amount of G is required for efficient replication in these cells. In conclusion, the results gathered indicated that the expression levels of the G protein were modulated by the sequence of the 5’ untranslated region of the gene. At the same time the G protein levels modulated the virulence of PVM. N2 - Das mutmaßliche „attachment“ Protein G des Pneumonievirus der Maus (PVM), einem Mitglied des Genus Pneumovirus, ist ein bedeutender Virulenzfaktor, mit allerdings noch nicht vollständig verstandener Funktion. Dabei zeichnet sich die Sequenz des G-Gens durch Nukleotid-Polymorphismen und damit verbundenen Variationen in der Genorganisation und möglicherweise der Proteinstruktur sowohl zwischen als auch innerhalb von PVM-Stämmen aus. Insbesondere für den PVM-Stamm J3666 wurden zwei verschiedene Organisationen des G-Gens beschrieben: ein Polymorphismus des Nukleotids 65 des G-Genes erzeugt einen neuen „upstream Open reading frame“ (uORF), der dem eigentlichen G-ORF vorausgeht (GJ366665A), oder führt zu einer Verlängerung des eigentlichen G-ORF von G um 18 Kodons (GJ366665U). Ziel dieser Studie war es deshalb, die Auswirkung dieser Sequenzvariabilitäten der für PVM J3666 beschriebenen G-Gene im Vergleich zu dem des Referenzstamms PVM 15 bezüglich Proteinexpression, der Virusreplikation und der Virulenz zu untersuchen. Als erstes wurden die beschriebenen Sequenzunterschiede bezüglich des PVM-Stamms J3666 untersucht. Die Analyse von 45 verschiedenen klonierten Fragmenten von PVM J3666 zeigte, dass es sich bei diesem Stamm eigentlich um zwei separate Viruspopulationen handelt, die sich durch die Sequenz und Struktur des G-Genes definieren lassen. Diese Unterscheidung wird durch weitere Nukleotid-Polymorphismen in den benachbarten Genen, M und SH, gestärkt. Sequenzielle Passagierung dieses gemischten Stammes in der standardmäßig zur Virusanzucht verwendeten BHK-21-Zelllinie resultierte in einem von zwei Experimenten in der Selektion der GJ366665A-Population, das ein Hinweis auf einen moderaten Replikationsvorteil darstellt. Der Austausch des G-Gens des Referenzstamms PVM 15 durch GJ366665A oder GJ366665U mithilfe der Reversen Genetik, zeigte, dass der uORF innerhalb von GJ366665A zu einer deutlich reduzierten Expression des eigentlichen G-ORF führt. Andererseits führte die potenzielle Verlängerung des ORF in GJ366665U zu einer im gleichen Maße erhöhten Expression des G-Proteins. Dagegen war der Einfluss der G-Genorganisation auf die Virusvermehrung in Zellkultur in Abhängigkeit von Zelllinie und Zelltyp inkonsistent. Während ein uORF mit einem Replikationsvorteil in BHK-21-Zellen und primären murinen embryonen Fibroblasten korrelierte, war dies in der murinen Makrophagen-Zelllinie RAW 264.7 nicht zu beobachten. Im Vergleich dazu konnte die GJ366665U-Variante nicht mit einem Einfluss auf die Virusvermehrung in Verbindung gebracht werden. Nichtsdestotrotz, konnte die GJ366665U-Variante, und damit eine erhöhte Expression von G, mit einer gesteigerten Virulenz assoziiert werden, während die GJ366665A-Variante, d. h. eine verringerte G-Expression zur Attenuierung des Virus führte. Die Untersuchungen wurden auf weitere G-Genstrukturen, d.h. ein rekombinantes PVM, rPVM-Gt, das ein N-terminal verkürztes G-Protein exprimiert, ausgeweitet. Zum Vergleich wurde eine Deletionsmutante des kompletten G-Gens, rPVM-ΔG, mit einbezogen. Von beiden Viren war bereits bekannt, dass sie in vivo attenuiert sind. Die Organisation des Gt-Gens war mit einer um 75 % verringerten Expression des entsprechenden Proteins assoziiert, was zuvor nicht beobachtet worden war. Zugleich zeigte rPVM-Gt eine deutliche Attenuierung der Replikation in RAW 264.7-Zellen und primären Mausmakrophagen, die von der G-Deletionsmutante noch übertroffen wurde. Die im Vergleich zu der GJ366665A-Variante deutlich höhere Reduktion der G-Expression dieser beiden G-Mutanten in Betracht ziehend, scheint dies darauf hinzuweisen, dass eine bestimmte Mindestexpression von G für eine effiziente Virusvermehrung in diesen Zellen benötigt wird. Zusammenfassend deuten die erhaltenen Ergebnisse darauf hin, dass die Expression des G-Proteins durch die jeweiligen 5’ nicht-translatierte Region des Gens moduliert wird, was einen neuen Mechanismus für Negativstrang-RNA-Viren darstellt. Zugleich moduliert die Expressionsrate von G die Virulenz von PVM. KW - G glycoprotein KW - protein regulation and expression KW - Pneumoviruses KW - regulation KW - expression KW - replication KW - virulence KW - 5`-UTR KW - PVM KW - RSV Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-128146 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schmidtke, Cornelius A1 - Findeiß, Sven A1 - Sharma, Cynthia M. A1 - Kuhfuss, Juliane A1 - Hoffmann, Steve A1 - Vogel, Jörg A1 - Stadler, Peter F. A1 - Bonas, Ulla T1 - Genome-wide transcriptome analysis of the plant pathogen Xanthomonas identifies sRNAs with putative virulence functions JF - Nucleic Acids Research N2 - The Gram-negative plant-pathogenic bacterium Xanthomonas campestris pv. vesicatoria (Xcv) is an important model to elucidate the mechanisms involved in the interaction with the host. To gain insight into the transcriptome of the Xcv strain 85-10, we took a differential RNA sequencing (dRNA-seq) approach. Using a novel method to automatically generate comprehensive transcription start site (TSS) maps we report 1421 putative TSSs in the Xcv genome. Genes in Xcv exhibit a poorly conserved -10 promoter element and no consensus Shine-Dalgarno sequence. Moreover, 14% of all mRNAs are leaderless and 13% of them have unusually long 5'-UTRs. Northern blot analyses confirmed 16 intergenic small RNAs and seven cis-encoded antisense RNAs in Xcv. Expression of eight intergenic transcripts was controlled by HrpG and HrpX, key regulators of the Xcv type III secretion system. More detailed characterization identified sX12 as a small RNA that controls virulence of Xcv by affecting the interaction of the pathogen and its host plants. The transcriptional landscape of Xcv is unexpectedly complex, featuring abundant antisense transcripts, alternative TSSs and clade-specific small RNAs. KW - SUBSP carotovora KW - regulatory RNA KW - gene-cluster KW - campestris PV vesicatoria KW - escherichia coli KW - determines pathgenicity KW - hypersensitive response KW - ralstonia solanacearum KW - extracellular enzymes KW - secretion systems KW - transcription initiation site KW - RNA sequence analyses KW - messanger RNA KW - plants KW - libraries KW - genome KW - genes KW - gene expression profiling KW - genetic transcription KW - northern blotting KW - untranslated regions KW - xanthomonas KW - xanthomonas campestris KW - bacteria KW - virulence KW - pathogenetic organism KW - RNA KW - small RNA KW - pathogenicity KW - type III secretion system pathways KW - maps KW - consesus KW - host (organism) KW - type III protein secretion system complex Y1 - 2011 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-131781 VL - 40 IS - 5 SP - 2020 EP - 2031 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Palige, Katja A1 - Linde, Jörg A1 - Martin, Ronny A1 - Böttcher, Bettina A1 - Citiulo, Francesco A1 - Sullivan, Derek J. A1 - Weber, Johann A1 - Staib, Claudia A1 - Rupp, Steffen A1 - Hube, Bernhard A1 - Morschhäuser, Joachim A1 - Staib, Peter T1 - Global Transcriptome Sequencing Identifies Chlamydospore Specific Markers in Candida albicans and Candida dubliniensis JF - PLoS ONE N2 - Candida albicans and Candida dubliniensis are pathogenic fungi that are highly related but differ in virulence and in some phenotypic traits. During in vitro growth on certain nutrient-poor media, C. albicans and C. dubliniensis are the only yeast species which are able to produce chlamydospores, large thick-walled cells of unknown function. Interestingly, only C. dubliniensis forms pseudohyphae with abundant chlamydospores when grown on Staib medium, while C. albicans grows exclusively as a budding yeast. In order to further our understanding of chlamydospore development and assembly, we compared the global transcriptional profile of both species during growth in liquid Staib medium by RNA sequencing. We also included a C. albicans mutant in our study which lacks the morphogenetic transcriptional repressor Nrg1. This strain, which is characterized by its constitutive pseudohyphal growth, specifically produces masses of chlamydospores in Staib medium, similar to C. dubliniensis. This comparative approach identified a set of putatively chlamydospore-related genes. Two of the homologous C. albicans and C. dubliniensis genes (CSP1 and CSP2) which were most strongly upregulated during chlamydospore development were analysed in more detail. By use of the green fluorescent protein as a reporter, the encoded putative cell wall related proteins were found to exclusively localize to C. albicans and C. dubliniensis chlamydospores. Our findings uncover the first chlamydospore specific markers in Candida species and provide novel insights in the complex morphogenetic development of these important fungal pathogens. KW - NRG1 KW - staib agar KW - gene KW - morphogenesis KW - expression KW - regulator KW - virulence KW - growth KW - UME6 KW - epidemiology Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-131007 VL - 8 IS - 4 ER - TY - THES A1 - Raffelsbauer, Diana T1 - Identification and characterization of the inlGHE gene cluster of Listeria monocytogenes T1 - Identifizierung und Charakterisierung des inlGHE-Genclusters von Listeria monocytogenes N2 - In the present study, a new gene cluster of Listeria monocytogenes EGD containing three internalin genes was identified and characterized. These genes, termed inlG, inlH and inlE, encode proteins of 490, 548 and 499 amino acids, respectively, which belong to the class of large, surface-bound internalins. Each of these proteins contains a signal peptide, two regions of repeats (Leucine-rich repeats and B repeats), an inter-repeat region and a putative cell wall anchor sequence containing the sorting motiv LPXTG. PCR analysis revealed the presence of the inlGHE gene cluster in most L. monocytogenes serotypes. A similar gene cluster termed inlC2DE localised to the same position on the chromosome was described in a different L. monocytogenes EGD isolate. Sequence comparison of the two clusters indicates that inlG is a new internalin gene, while inlH was generated by a site-specific recombination leading to an in-frame deletion which removed the 3'-terminal end of inlC2 and a 5'-portion of inlD. The genes inlG, inlH and inlE seem to be transcribed extracellularly and independent of PrfA. To study the function of the inlGHE gene cluster several in-frame deletion mutants were constructed which lack the genes of the inlGHE cluster individually or in combination with other inl genes. When tested in the mouse model, the inlGHE mutant showed a significant reduction of bacterial counts in liver and spleen in comparison to the wild type strain, indicating that the inlGHE gene cluster plays an important role in virulence of L. monocytogenes. The ability of this mutant to invade non-phagocytic cells in vitro was however two- to three-fold higher than that of the parental strain. To examine whether deletion of the single genes from the cluster has the same stimulatory effect on invasiveness as deletion of the complete gene cluster, the single in-frame deletion mutants inlG, inlH and inlE were constructed. These mutants were subsequently reverted to the wild type by introducing a copy of the corresponding intact gene into the chromosome by homologous recombination using knock-in plasmids. To determine a putative contribution of InlG, InlH and InlE in combination with other internalins to the entry of L. monocytogenes into mammalian cells, the combination mutants inlA/GHE, inlB/GHE, inlC/GHE, inlA/B/GHE, inlB/C/GHE, inlA/C and inlA/C/GHE were constructed. Transcription of the genes inlA, inlB and inlC in these mutants was studied by RT-PCR. Deletion of inlGHE enhances transcription of inlA and inlB, but not of inlC. This enhancement is not transient but can be observed at different time-points of the bacterial growth curve. Deletion of inlA also increases transcription of inlB and vice-versa. In contrast, the amounts of inlA and inlB transcripts in the single deletion mutants inlG, inlH and inlE were similar to those from the wild type. N2 - In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde ein neues Gencluster von Listeria monocytogenes EGD mit drei Internalingenen identifiziert und charakterisiert. Diese als inlG, inlH und inlE bezeichneten Gene codieren für Proteine mit 490, 548 bzw. 499 Aminosäuren, die zur Klasse der großen, oberflächengebundenen Internaline gehören. Jedes dieser Proteine enthält ein Signalpeptid, zwei Repeat-Regionen (Leucin-reiche Repeats und B-Repeats), eine Inter-Repeat-Region, und eine mögliche Zellwandankersequenz mit dem Motiv LPXTG. PCR-Analyse zeigte das Vorkommen des inlGHE-Genclusters in den meisten L. monocytogenes-Serotypen. Ein ähnliches, als inlC2DE bezeichnetes Gencluster wurde in der gleichen Position auf dem Chromosom eines anderen L. monocytogenes EGD Isolats beschrieben. Ein Sequenzvergleich beider Clusters zeigte, dass inlG ein neues Internalingen ist, während inlH durch eine in-frame-Deletion vom 3'-Ende von inlC2 und einem 5'-Teil von inlD entstanden ist. Die Gene inlG, inlH und inlE werden vorwiegend extrazellulär und PrfA-unabhängig transkribiert. Um die Funktion des inlGHE-Genclusters zu untersuchen, wurden verschiedene in-frame-Deletionsmutanten hergestellt, aus denen die Gene des inlGHE-Clusters entweder einzeln oder in Kombination mit anderen Internalingenen deletiert wurden. Im Maumodell zeigte eine inlGHE-Mutante nach oraler Infektion eine signifikante Reduktion der Bakterienzahl in der Leber und Milz, die auf eine wichtige Rolle des inlGHE-Genclusters in der Virulenz von L. monocytogenes hindeutet. Die Fähigkeit dieser Mutante, in nicht-phagocytische Zellen in vitro einzudringen, ist zwei bis dreifach höher als die des Wildtyp-Stammes. Um zu untersuchen, ob die Deletion von Einzelgenen des inlGHE-Genclusters einen ähnlichen stimulatorischen Effekt auf die Invasivität ausübt wie die Deletion des kompletten Genclusters, wurden die Einzeldeletionsmutanten inlG, inlH and inlE hergestellt. Diese Mutanten wurden anschließend zum Wildtyp revertiert, indem eine Kopie des entsprechenden intakten Gens durch homologe Rekombination ins Chromosom mit Hilfe von Knock-in-Plasmiden eingeführt wurde. Um eine mögliche Rolle von InlG, InlH und InlE in Verbindung mit anderen Internalinen bei der Aufnahme von L. monocytogenes in Säugerzellen zu untersuchen, wurden die Mutanten inlA/GHE, inlB/GHE, inlC/GHE, inlA/B/GHE, inlB/C/GHE, inlA/C and inlA/C/GHE hergestellt. Die Transkription der Gene inlA, inlB and inlC in diesen Mutanten wurde durch RT-PCR untersucht. Deletion von inlGHE erhöht die Transkription von inlA und inlB, aber nicht die von inlC. Diese Erhöhung ist nicht vorübergehend sondern kann zu verschiedenen Zeitpunkten der Wachstumskurve beobachtet werden. Deletion von inlA verstärkt ebenfalls die Transcription von inlB und umgekehrt. Im Gegensatz dazu waren die Mengen an inlA- und inlB-Transkripten in den Einzeldeletionsmutanten inlG, inlH and inlE ähnlich wie die des Wildtyps. KW - Listeria monocytogenes KW - Molekulargenetik KW - Listeria monocytogenes KW - Virulenz KW - Internalin KW - inlGHE KW - Invasion KW - Leucin-reiche repeat protein KW - Listeria monocytogenes KW - virulence KW - internalin KW - inlGHE KW - invasion KW - leucine-rich repeat protein Y1 - 2001 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-1180595 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - El Mouali, Youssef A1 - Gerovac, Milan A1 - Mineikaitė, Raminta A1 - Vogel, Jörg T1 - In vivo targets of Salmonella FinO include a FinP-like small RNA controlling copy number of a cohabitating plasmid JF - Nucleic Acids Research N2 - FinO-domain proteins represent an emerging family of RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) with diverse roles in bacterial post-transcriptional control and physiology. They exhibit an intriguing targeting spectrum, ranging from an assumed single RNA pair (FinP/traJ) for the plasmid-encoded FinO protein, to transcriptome-wide activity as documented for chromosomally encoded ProQ proteins. Thus, the shared FinO domain might bear an unusual plasticity enabling it to act either selectively or promiscuously on the same cellular RNA pool. One caveat to this model is that the full suite of in vivo targets of the assumedly highly selective FinO protein is unknown. Here, we have extensively profiled cellular transcripts associated with the virulence plasmid-encoded FinO in Salmonella enterica. While our analysis confirms the FinP sRNA of plasmid pSLT as the primary FinO target, we identify a second major ligand: the RepX sRNA of the unrelated antibiotic resistance plasmid pRSF1010. FinP and RepX are strikingly similar in length and structure, but not in primary sequence, and so may provide clues to understanding the high selectivity of FinO-RNA interactions. Moreover, we observe that the FinO RBP encoded on the Salmonella virulence plasmid controls the replication of a cohabitating antibiotic resistance plasmid, suggesting cross-regulation of plasmids on the RNA level. KW - antisense RNA KW - Escherichia coli KW - chromosomal genes KW - protein KW - chaperone KW - virulence KW - family KW - HFQ KW - specificity KW - inhibition Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-261072 VL - 49 IS - 9 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Rohmer, Carina A1 - Dobritz, Ronja A1 - Tuncbilek-Dere, Dilek A1 - Lehmann, Esther A1 - Gerlach, David A1 - George, Shilpa Elizabeth A1 - Bae, Taeok A1 - Nieselt, Kay A1 - Wolz, Christiane T1 - Influence of Staphylococcus aureus strain background on Sa3int phage life cycle switches JF - Viruses N2 - Staphylococcus aureus asymptomatically colonizes the nasal cavity of mammals, but it is also a leading cause of life-threatening infections. Most human nasal isolates carry Sa3 phages, which integrate into the bacterial hlb gene encoding a sphingomyelinase. The virulence factor-encoding genes carried by the Sa3-phages are highly human-specific, and most animal strains are Sa3 negative. Thus, both insertion and excision of the prophage could potentially confer a fitness advantage to S. aureus. Here, we analyzed the phage life cycle of two Sa3 phages, Φ13 and ΦN315, in different phage-cured S. aureus strains. Based on phage transfer experiments, strains could be classified into low (8325-4, SH1000, and USA300c) and high (MW2c and Newman-c) transfer strains. High-transfer strains promoted the replication of phages, whereas phage adsorption, integration, excision, or recA transcription was not significantly different between strains. RNASeq analyses of replication-deficient lysogens revealed no strain-specific differences in the CI/Mor regulatory switch. However, lytic genes were significantly upregulated in the high transfer strain MW2c Φ13 compared to strain 8325-4 Φ13. By transcriptional start site prediction, new promoter regions within the lytic modules were identified, which are likely targeted by specific host factors. Such host-phage interaction probably accounts for the strain-specific differences in phage replication and transfer frequency. Thus, the genetic makeup of the host strains may determine the rate of phage mobilization, a feature that might impact the speed at which certain strains can achieve host adaptation. KW - phage KW - virulence KW - induction KW - gene regulation KW - Staphylococcus KW - hemolysin Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-297209 SN - 1999-4915 VL - 14 IS - 11 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schoen, Christoph A1 - Kischkies, Laura A1 - Elias, Johannes A1 - Ampattu, Biju Joseph T1 - Metabolism and virulence in Neisseria meningitidis N2 - A longstanding question in infection biology addresses the genetic basis for invasive behavior in commensal pathogens. A prime example for such a pathogen is Neisseria meningitidis. On the one hand it is a harmless commensal bacterium exquisitely adapted to humans, and on the other hand it sometimes behaves like a ferocious pathogen causing potentially lethal disease such as sepsis and acute bacterial meningitis. Despite the lack of a classical repertoire of virulence genes in N. meningitidis separating commensal from invasive strains, molecular epidemiology suggests that carriage and invasive strains belong to genetically distinct populations. In recent years, it has become increasingly clear that metabolic adaptation enables meningococci to exploit host resources, supporting the concept of nutritional virulence as a crucial determinant of invasive capability. Here, we discuss the contribution of core metabolic pathways in the context of colonization and invasion with special emphasis on results from genome-wide surveys. The metabolism of lactate, the oxidative stress response, and, in particular, glutathione metabolism as well as the denitrification pathway provide examples of how meningococcal metabolism is intimately linked to pathogenesis. We further discuss evidence from genome-wide approaches regarding potential metabolic differences between strains from hyperinvasive and carriage lineages and present new data assessing in vitro growth differences of strains from these two populations. We hypothesize that strains from carriage and hyperinvasive lineages differ in the expression of regulatory genes involved particularly in stress responses and amino acid metabolism under infection conditions. KW - Neisseria meningitidis KW - virulence KW - pathometabolism KW - oxidative stress KW - glutathione KW - γ-glutamyl cycle KW - glutamate dehydrogenase KW - nitrite respiration Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-113118 ER - TY - THES A1 - Makgotlho, Phuti Edward T1 - Molecular characterization of the staphylococcal two component system sae and its role in the regulation of the adhesin Eap under SDS stress stimulation T1 - Die molekulare charakterisierung des zwei komponenten-systems sae in staphylokokken und seiner rolle in der Regulation des Eap adhäsins unter SDS vermittelten stress bedingungen N2 - The Staphylococcus aureus two component system (TCS) sae governs expression of numerous virulence factors, including Eap (extracellular adherence protein), which in turn among other functions also mediates invasion of host cells. The sae TCS is encoded by the saePQRS operon, with saeS coding for the sensor histidine kinase (SaeS) and saeR encoding the response regulator (SaeR). The saeRS system is preceded by two additional open reading frames (ORFs), saeP and saeQ, which are predicted to encode a lipoprotein (SaeP) and a membrane protein (SaeQ), respectively. Earlier, we have shown that SDS-containing subinhibitory concentrations of biocides (Perform®) and SDS alone activate sae transcription and increase cellular invasiveness in S. aureus strain Newman. The effect is associated with an amino acid exchange in the N-terminus of SaeS (L18P), specific to strain Newman. In this work, the role of whether the two additional genes, saePQ coding for the accessory proteins SaeP and SaeQ, respectively, are involved in SDS-mediated saeRS was investigated. It could demonstrated that the lack of the SaeP protein resulted in an increased saeRS transcription without SDS stress in both SaeSL/P variants, while the SDS effect was less pronounced on sae and eap expression compared to the Newman wildtype, suggesting that the SaeP protein represses the sae system. Also, SDS-mediated inductions of sae and eap transcription along with enhanced invasion were found to be dependent on presence of the SaeSP variant in Newman wildtype. On the other hand, the study also shows that the saePQ region of the sae operon is required for fully functional two-component system saeRS under normal growth conditions, but it is not involved in SDS-mediated activation of the saeS signaling and sae-target class I gene, eap. In the second approach, the study investigates whether SDS-induced sae expression and host cell invasion is common among S. aureus strains not carrying the (L18P) point mutation. To demonstrate this strain Newman, its isogenic saeS mutants, and various S. aureus isolates were analysed for sae, eap expression and cellular invasiveness. Among the strains tested, SDS exposure resulted only in an increase of sae transcription, Eap production and cellular invasiveness in strain Newman wild type and MRSA strain ST239-635/93R, the latter without an increase in Eap. Interestingly, the epidemic community-associated MRSA strain, USA300 LAC showed a biphasic response in sae transcription at different growth stages, which, however, was not accompanied by increased invasiveness. All other clinical isolates investigated displayed a decrease of the parameters tested. While in strain Newman the SDS effect was due to the saeSP allele, this was not the case in strain ST239-635/93R and the biphasic USA300 strains. Also, increased invasiveness of ST239-635/93R was found to be independent of Eap production. Furthermore, to investigate the global effect of SDS on sae target gene expression, strain Newman wild-type and Newman ∆sae were treated with SDS and analyzed for their transcription profiles of sae target genes using microarray assays. We could show that subinhibitory concentrations of SDS upregulate and downregulate gene expression of several signaling pathways involved in biosynthetic, metabolic pathways as well as virulence, host cell adherence, stress reponse and many hypothetical proteins. In summary, the study sheds light on the role of the upstream region saePQ in SDS-mediated saeRS and eap expression during S. aureus SDS stress. Most importantly, the study also shows that subinhibitory SDS concentrations have pronounced strain-dependent effects on sae transcription and subsequent host cell invasion in S. aureus, with the latter likely to be mediated in some strains by other factors than the known invasin Eap and FnBP proteins. Moreover, there seems to exist more than the saeSP-mediated mechanism for SDS-induced sae transcription in clinical S. aureus isolates. These results help to further understand and clarify virulence and pathogenesis mechanisms and their regulation in S. aureus. N2 - Das Zwei Komponenten-Systems (TCS) Sae in S. aureus reguliert die Expression einer Vielzahl von Virulenzfaktoren, dazu gehört unter anderem das extrazelluläre Adhärenzprotein Eap, welches neben weiteren Funktionen, die Invasion in eukaryotische Wirtszellen vermittelt. Die Gene des sae TCS sind in einem Operon organisiert (saePQRS), wobei saeS für die sensorische Histidinkinase (SaeS) und saeR für den „Response Regulator“ (SaeR) kodieren. Diesen Genen sind zwei weitere Genabschnitte, saeP und saeQ, vorangestellt, wobei saeP vermutlich für ein Lipoprotein (SaeP) und saeQ für ein Membranprotein (RelQ) kodieren. In einer früheren Arbeit konnten wir zeigen, dass SDS-haltige Biozide (Perform©) unter sub- inhibitorischen Konzentrationen, sowie reines SDS, die sae Transkription aktiviert und dadurch zu einer erhöhten Invasion des S. aureus Stamms Newman in Wirtszellen führt. Dieser Effekt ist assoziiert mit einem spezifischen Aminosäureaustausch im N-terminus von SaeS (L18P) des Stamm Newman. In dieser Arbeit soll nun die Beteiligung der zwei zusätzlichen Gene, saeP und saeQ, an der SDS vermittelten transkriptionellen Induktion von saeR/S untersucht werden. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass ohne SaeP, die saeR/S Transkription in beiden SaeL/P Varianten erhöht war, wobei eine zusätzliche SDS Behandlung hierfür nicht notwendig war. Im Gegenteil, es zeigte sich, dass der SDS Effekt auf die sae und eap Expression in der saeP Mutante deutlich weniger ausgeprägt ist als im Wildtyp Stamm. Das läßt vermuten, dass das Lipoprotein SaeP repremierend auf das sae System einwirkt. Des Weiteren wurde festgestellt, dass die SDS vermittelte transkriptionelle Induktion von sae und eap, zusammen mit der erhöhten Invasion, abhängig vom vorhanden sein der SaeSP Variante im Newman Wildtyp Stamm ist. Die Arbeit zeigt, dass die saePQ Region wichtig ist für die vollständige Funktion des Zwei Komponenten Systems SaeRS unter normalen Wachstumsbedingungen. Jedoch ist diese Region nicht involviert in der Aktivierung von SaeS, mit SDS als Signalgeber, sowie der darauffolgenden Aktivierung des sae Zielgens eap. In einem zweiten Ansatz wurde untersucht, ob die SDS induzierte sae Expression und Wirtszellinvasion auch häufig in S. aureus Stämmen auftritt, welche keine (L18P) Punktmutation besitzen. Dafür wurde Stamm Newman, die isogene saeS Mutante und verschiedene S. aureus Klinikisolate auf ihre sae, eap Expression, sowie zelluläre Invasionsfähigkeit hin analysiert. Von den getesteten Stämmen reagiert nur Wildtyp Stamm Newman und ein MRSA Stamm ST239-635/93R mit gesteigerter sae Transkription, Eap Produktion und zellulärer Invasion. Der MRSA Stamm jedoch ohne erhöhte Eap Produktion. Interessanterweise zeigt der „community- associated“ MRSA Stamm USA300 LAC eine biphasische sae Transkription in verschiedenen Wachstumsphasen, welche jedoch nicht einhergeht mit erhöhter Invasion. Alle anderen Klinikisolate zeigten abnehmende Tendenzen in den getesteten Parametern. Während im Stamm Newman der SDS Effekt auf das saeSP Allel zurückzuführen ist, gilt dies nicht für den Stamm ST239-635/93R, sowie den biphasischen Stamm USA300. Außerdem konnte gezeigt werden, dass die erhöhte Invasion des Stamms ST239-635/93R unabhängig von seiner Eap Produktion ist. Des Weiteren zeigten wir den globalen Effekt von SDS auf die sae Zielgenexpression. Dafür behandelten wir Wildtyp Stamm Newman mit SDS und analysierten die Transkription der sae Zielgene mittels Microarray Analyse. Wir konnten zeigen, dass subinhibitorische SDS Konzentrationen, induzierende als auch repremierende Auswirkungen auf die Genexpression haben. Dabei sind Gene betroffen, die involviert sind in verschiedene Signalwege, Biosynthese/Metabolismus als auch in Virulenz, Wirtzelladhärenz und Stressantwort. Zusammenfassend gibt die Arbeit Aufschluss über die Rolle der „upstream“ Region saePQ hinsichtlich der SDS-abhängigen saeRS und eap Expression in S. aureus. Am wichtigsten ist hierbei die Erkenntnis, das subinhibitorische SDS Konzentrationen einen deutlichen stammabhängigen Effekt auf die sae Transkription und daraus folgernd auf die Wirtszellinvasion von S. aureus haben. Letzteres wird vermutlich in manchen Stämmen durch andere Faktoren als die bekannten Invasinproteine Eap und FnBP vermittelt. Außerdem scheint es in den klinischen S. aureus Isolaten mehr als nur den saeSP abhängigen Mechanismus der sae Induktion durch SDS zu geben. Diese Ergebnisse helfen uns die Virulenz und pathogenen Mechanismen als auch deren Regulation in S. aureus zu verstehen. Die Beobachtungen tragen zu unserem Verständnis bei, wie das sae System Signale der Umgebung detektieren kann. Dies ist bis jetzt eine Fragestellung mit vielen Unbekannten. KW - Staphylococcus aureus KW - Eap KW - Newman strain sae KW - virulence KW - Cellular invasion Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-149403 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Irmer, Henriette A1 - Tarazona, Sonia A1 - Sasse, Christoph A1 - Olbermann, Patrick A1 - Loeffler, Jürgen A1 - Krappmann, Sven A1 - Conesa, Ana A1 - Braus, Gerhard H. T1 - RNAseq analysis of Aspergillus fumigatus in blood reveals a just wait and see resting stage behavior JF - BMC Genomics N2 - Background: Invasive aspergillosis is started after germination of Aspergillus fumigatus conidia that are inhaled by susceptible individuals. Fungal hyphae can grow in the lung through the epithelial tissue and disseminate hematogenously to invade into other organs. Low fungaemia indicates that fungal elements do not reside in the bloodstream for long. Results: We analyzed whether blood represents a hostile environment to which the physiology of A. fumigatus has to adapt. An in vitro model of A. fumigatus infection was established by incubating mycelium in blood. Our model allowed to discern the changes of the gene expression profile of A. fumigatus at various stages of the infection. The majority of described virulence factors that are connected to pulmonary infections appeared not to be activated during the blood phase. Three active processes were identified that presumably help the fungus to survive the blood environment in an advanced phase of the infection: iron homeostasis, secondary metabolism, and the formation of detoxifying enzymes. Conclusions: We propose that A. fumigatus is hardly able to propagate in blood. After an early stage of sensing the environment, virtually all uptake mechanisms and energy-consuming metabolic pathways are shut-down. The fungus appears to adapt by trans-differentiation into a resting mycelial stage. This might reflect the harsh conditions in blood where A. fumigatus cannot take up sufficient nutrients to establish self-defense mechanisms combined with significant growth. KW - Saccharomyces cerevisiae KW - cerebral aspergillosis KW - gene expression KW - Aspergillus fumigatus KW - iron homeostasis KW - invasive pulmonary aspergillosis KW - Candida albicans KW - cell wall KW - lysine biosynthesis KW - human pathogen KW - murine model KW - virulence KW - mRNA-Seq KW - transcriptome KW - human pathogenic fungi KW - secondary metabolite gene cluster KW - detoxification Y1 - 2015 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-151390 VL - 16 IS - 640 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Dandekar, Thomas A1 - Fieselmann, Astrid A1 - Fischer, Eva A1 - Popp, Jasmin A1 - Hensel, Michael A1 - Noster, Janina T1 - Salmonella - how a metabolic generalist adopts an intracellular lifestyle during infection JF - Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology N2 - The human-pathogenic bacterium Salmonella enterica adjusts and adapts to different environments while attempting colonization. In the course of infection nutrient availabilities change drastically. New techniques, "-omics" data and subsequent integration by systems biology improve our understanding of these changes. We review changes in metabolism focusing on amino acid and carbohydrate metabolism. Furthermore, the adaptation process is associated with the activation of genes of the Salmonella pathogenicity islands (SPIs). Anti-infective strategies have to take these insights into account and include metabolic and other strategies. Salmonella infections will remain a challenge for infection biology. KW - enterica serovar Typhimurium KW - bacterial invasion KW - mouse model KW - defenses KW - regulation KW - "-omics" KW - virulence KW - Salmonella-containing vacuole (SCV) KW - metabolism KW - nitric oxide Y1 - 2015 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-149029 VL - 4 IS - 191 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Dandekar, Thomas A1 - Fieselmann, Astrid A1 - Popp, Jasmin A1 - Hensel, Michael T1 - Salmonella enterica: a surprisingly well-adapted intracellular lifestyle JF - Frontiers in Microbiology N2 - The infectious intracellular lifestyle of Salmonella enterica relies on the adaptation to nutritional conditions within the Salmonella-containing vacuole (SCV) in host cells. We summarize latest results on metabolic requirements for Salmonella during infection. This includes intracellular phenotypes of mutant strains based on metabolic modeling and experimental tests, isotopolog profiling using (13)C-compounds in intracellular Salmonella, and complementation of metabolic defects for attenuated mutant strains towards a comprehensive understanding of the metabolic requirements of the intracellular lifestyle of Salmonella. Helpful for this are also genomic comparisons. We outline further recent studies and which analyses of intracellular phenotypes and improved metabolic simulations were done and comment on technical required steps as well as progress involved in the iterative refinement of metabolic flux models, analyses of mutant phenotypes, and isotopolog analyses. Salmonella lifestyle is well-adapted to the SCV and its specific metabolic requirements. Salmonella metabolism adapts rapidly to SCV conditions, the metabolic generalist Salmonella is quite successful in host infection. KW - Salmonella enterica KW - metabolism KW - Salmonella-containing vacuole KW - regulation KW - virulence Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-123135 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Dandekar, Thomas A1 - Fieselmann, Astrid A1 - Fischer, Eva A1 - Popp, Jasmin A1 - Hensel, Michael A1 - Noster, Janina T1 - Salmonella—how a metabolic generalist adopts an intracellular lifestyle during infection JF - Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology N2 - The human-pathogenic bacterium Salmonella enterica adjusts and adapts to different environments while attempting colonization. In the course of infection nutrient availabilities change drastically. New techniques, “-omics” data and subsequent integration by systems biology improve our understanding of these changes. We review changes in metabolism focusing on amino acid and carbohydrate metabolism. Furthermore, the adaptation process is associated with the activation of genes of the Salmonella pathogenicity islands (SPIs). Anti-infective strategies have to take these insights into account and include metabolic and other strategies. Salmonella infections will remain a challenge for infection biology. KW - regulation KW - virulence KW - "-omics" KW - metabolism KW - Salmonella-containing vacuole (SCV) Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-120686 SN - 2235-2988 VL - 4 IS - 191 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Okoro, Chinyere K. A1 - Barquist, Lars A1 - Connor, Thomas R. A1 - Harris, Simon R. A1 - Clare, Simon A1 - Stevens, Mark P. A1 - Arends, Mark J. A1 - Hale, Christine A1 - Kane, Leanne A1 - Pickard, Derek J. A1 - Hill, Jennifer A1 - Harcourt, Katherine A1 - Parkhill, Julian A1 - Dougan, Gordon A1 - Kingsley, Robert A. T1 - Signatures of adaptation in human invasive Salmonella Typhimurium ST313 populations from sub-Saharan Africa JF - PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases N2 - Two lineages of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium) of multi-locus sequence type ST313 have been linked with the emergence of invasive Salmonella disease across sub-Saharan Africa. The expansion of these lineages has a temporal association with the HIV pandemic and antibiotic usage. We analysed the whole genome sequence of 129 ST313 isolates representative of the two lineages and found evidence of lineage-specific genome degradation, with some similarities to that observed in S. Typhi. Individual ST313 S. Typhimurium isolates exhibit a distinct metabolic signature and modified enteropathogenesis in both a murine and cattle model of colitis, compared to S. Typhimurium outside of the ST313 lineages. These data define phenotypes that distinguish ST313 isolates from other S. Typhimurium and may represent adaptation to a distinct pathogenesis and lifestyle linked to an-immuno-compromised human population. KW - genome sequence KW - infection KW - pathogenicity KW - children KW - disease KW - adults KW - identification KW - Escherichia coli KW - virulence Y1 - 2015 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-143779 VL - 9 IS - 3 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Papenfort, Kai A1 - Vogel, Jörg T1 - Small RNA functions in carbon metabolism and virulence of enteric pathogens JF - Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology N2 - Enteric pathogens often cycle between virulent and saprophytic lifestyles. To endure these frequent changes in nutrient availability and composition bacteria possess an arsenal of regulatory and metabolic genes allowing rapid adaptation and high flexibility. While numerous proteins have been characterized with regard to metabolic control in pathogenic bacteria, small non-coding RNAs have emerged as additional regulators of metabolism. Recent advances in sequencing technology have vastly increased the number of candidate regulatory RNAs and several of them have been found to act at the interface of bacterial metabolism and virulence factor expression. Importantly, studying these riboregulators has not only provided insight into their metabolic control functions but also revealed new mechanisms of post-transcriptional gene control. This review will focus on the recent advances in this area of host-microbe interaction and discuss how regulatory small RNAs may help coordinate metabolism and virulence of enteric pathogens. KW - sRNA KW - carbon metabolism KW - Hfq KW - CsrA KW - virulence Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-197520 SN - 2235-2988 VL - 4 IS - 91 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - García-Martínez, Jorge A1 - Brunk, Michael A1 - Avalos, Javier A1 - Terpitz, Ulrich T1 - The CarO rhodopsin of the fungus Fusarium fujikuroi is a light-driven proton pump that retards spore germination JF - Scientific Reports N2 - Rhodopsins are membrane-embedded photoreceptors found in all major taxonomic kingdoms using retinal as their chromophore. They play well-known functions in different biological systems, but their roles in fungi remain unknown. The filamentous fungus Fusarium fujikuroi contains two putative rhodopsins, CarO and OpsA. The gene carO is light-regulated, and the predicted polypeptide contains all conserved residues required for proton pumping. We aimed to elucidate the expression and cellular location of the fungal rhodopsin CarO, its presumed proton-pumping activity and the possible effect of such function on F. fujikuroi growth. In electrophysiology experiments we confirmed that CarO is a green-light driven proton pump. Visualization of fluorescent CarO-YFP expressed in F. fujikuroi under control of its native promoter revealed higher accumulation in spores (conidia) produced by light-exposed mycelia. Germination analyses of conidia from carO\(^{-}\) mutant and carO\(^{+}\) control strains showed a faster development of light-exposed carO-germlings. In conclusion, CarO is an active proton pump, abundant in light-formed conidia, whose activity slows down early hyphal development under light. Interestingly, CarO-related rhodopsins are typically found in plant-associated fungi, where green light dominates the phyllosphere. Our data provide the first reliable clue on a possible biological role of a fungal rhodopsin. KW - microbial rhodopsins KW - intracellular pH KW - membrane proteins KW - mutants KW - virulence KW - channelrhodopsin-2 KW - growth KW - gene KW - expression KW - bacteriorhodopsin Y1 - 2015 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-149049 VL - 5 IS - 7798 ER - TY - THES A1 - Liang, Chunguang T1 - Tools for functional genomics applied to Staphylococci, Listeriae, Vaccinia virus and other organisms N2 - Genome sequence analysis A combination of genome analysis application has been established here during this project. This offers an efficient platform to interactively compare similar genome regions and reveal loci differences. The genes and operons can be rapidly analyzed and local collinear blocks (LCBs) categorized according to their function. The features of interests are parsed, recognized, and clustered into reports. Phylogenetic relationships can be readily examined such as the evolution of critical factors or a certain highly-conserved region. The resulting platform-independent software packages (GENOVA and inGeno), have been proven to be efficient and easy to handle in a number of projects. The capabilities of the software allowed the investigation of virulence factors, e.g., rsbU, strains’ biological design, and in particular pathogenicity feature storage and management. We have successfully investigated the genomes of Staphylococcus aureus strains (COL, N315, 8325, RN1HG, Newman), Listeria spp. (welshimeri, innocua and monocytogenes), E.coli strains (O157:H7 and MG1655) and Vaccinia strains (WR, Copenhagen, Lister, LIVP, GLV-1h68 and parental strains). Metabolic network analysis Our YANAsquare package offers a workbench to rapidly establish the metabolic network of such as Staphylococcous aureus bacteria in genome-scale size as well as metabolic networks of interest such as the murine phagosome lipid signalling network. YANAsquare recruits reactions from online databases using an integrated KEGG browser. This reduces the efforts in building large metabolic networks. The involved calculation routines (METATOOL-derived wrapper or native Java implementation) readily obtain all possible flux modes (EM/EP) for metabolite fluxes within the network. Advanced layout algorithms visualize the topological structure of the network. In addition, the generated structure can be dynamically modified in the graphic interface. The generated network as well as the manipulated layout can be validated and stored (XML file: scheme of SBML level-2). This format can be further parsed and analyzed by other systems biology software, such as CellDesigner. Moreover, the integrated robustness-evaluation routine is able to examine the synthesis rates affected by each single mutation throughout the whole network. We have successfully applied the method to simulate single and multiple gene knockouts, and the affected fluxes are comprehensively revealed. Recently we applied the method to proteomic data and extra-cellular metabolite data of Staphylococci, the physiological changes regarding the flux distribution are studied. Calculations at different time points, including different conditions such as hypoxia or stress, show a good fit to experimental data. Moreover, using the proteomic data (enzyme amounts) calculated from 2D-Gel-EP experiments our study provides a way to compare the fluxome and the enzyme expression. Oncolytic vaccinia virus (VACV) We investigated the genetic differences between the de novo sequence of the recombinant oncolytic GLV-1h68 and other related VACVs, including function predictions for all found genome differences. Our phylogenetic analysis indicates that GLV-1h68 is closest to Lister strains but has lost several ORFs present in its parental LIVP strain, including genes encoding CrmE and a viral Golgi anti-apoptotic protein, v-GAAP. Functions of viral genes were either strain-specific, tissue-specific or host-specific comparing viral genes in the Lister, WR and COP strains. This helps to rationally design more optimized oncolytic virus strains to benefit cancer therapy in human patients. Identified differences from the comparison in open reading frames (ORFs) include genes for host-range selection, virulence and immune modulation proteins, e.g. ankyrin-like proteins, serine proteinase inhibitor SPI-2/CrmA, tumor necrosis factor (TNF) receptor homolog CrmC, semaphorin-like and interleukin-1 receptor homolog proteins. The contribution of foreign gene expression cassettes in the therapeutic and oncolytic virus GLV-1h68 was studied, including the F14.5L, J2R and A56R loci. The contribution of F14.5L inactivation to the reduced virulence is demonstrated by comparing the virulence data of GLV-1h68 with its F14.5L-null and revertant viruses. The comparison suggests that insertion of a foreign gene expression cassette in a nonessential locus in the viral genome is a practical way to attenuate VACVs, especially if the nonessential locus itself contains a virulence gene. This reduces the virulence of the virus without compromising too much the replication competency of the virus, the key to its oncolytic activity. The reduced pathogenicity of GLV-1h68 was confirmed by our experimental collaboration partners in male mice bearing C6 rat glioma and in immunocompetent mice bearing B16-F10 murine melanoma. In conclusion, bioinformatics and experimental data show that GLV-1h68 is a promising engineered VACV variant for anticancer therapy with tumor-specific replication, reduced pathogenicity and benign tissue tropism. N2 - Genom Sequenz Analyse Im Zuge der vorliegenden Doktorarbeit wurden verschiedene Programme zur Genomanalyse kombiniert, um eine effiziente Plattform zum interaktiven Vergleich lokaler Ähnlichkeiten bzw. Unterschiede in Genomen bereitzustellen. Damit können Gene und Operons schnell untersucht und “local collinear blocks” entsprechend ihrer Funktion kategorisiert werden. Phylogenetische Beziehungen, wie beispielsweise die Evolution spezifischer Elemente oder stark konservierter Regionen können leicht überprüft werden. Die hierfür entwickelte plattformunabhängige Software (GENOVA und inGeno) hat sich in mehreren Projekten als effizient und leicht handhabbar bewährt. Die Programme erlauben die Untersuchung von Virulenzfaktoren auf Sequenz- oder Annotationsebene. Während der vorliegenden Doktorarbeit konnten so die Genome von verschiedenen Staphylococcus aureus, Listeria spp., Escherichia coli und Vaccinia Stämmen untersucht werden. Metabolische Netzwerk Analyse Unser “YANAsquare” Programmpaket bietet eine Oberfläche um schnell metabolische Netzwerke vom genomweiten Anzatz bis hinunter zum Einzelnetzwerk zu analysieren. Dafür greift YANA mit Hilfe des integrierten KEGG-Browsers auf Onlinedatenbanken zu, um die notwendigen Informationen zum metabolischen Reaktionsweg bereitzustellen und reduziert so maßgeblich den Arbeitsaufwand beim Beschreiben von Netzwerke. Die implementierten Methoden zur Berechnung (METATOOL, eigene Implementation in Java) des Netzwerkes liefern exakt alle die möglichen Elementarmoden (EM/EP) für die Metabolite zurück. Durch den Einsatz von fortgeschrittenen Layout Algorithmen wird anschliessend die Darstellung der Netzwerktopologie möglich. Außerdem kann in der grafischen Darstellung das generierte Netzwerklayout dynamisch verändert werden. Das Speichern der Daten erfolgt im XML (SBML level-2) Format und erlaubt so die Weiterverwendung in anderen systembiologischen Programmen, wie dem “CellDesigner”. Mit Hilfe einer gen-Knockout Simulations Methode kann der Einfluss von einzelnen Mutationen im gesamten Netzwerk auf die Syntheseraten untersucht werden. Wir konnten mit dieser Methode Einzel- sowie Mehrfachgenknockouts und deren Effekte auf die Elementarmoden analysieren. Die Methode wurde ebenfalls auf Proteomdaten und extrazelluläre Metabolite von Staphylokokken angewandt, um Änderungen bezüglich der Flussverteilung zu untersuchen. Die Simulationen zu verschieden Zeitpunkten und unter verschiedenen Stessbedingungen zeigen große Übereinstimmung mit experimentell erhobenen Daten. Onkolytischer Vaccinia Virus (VACV) Wir haben die genetischen Unterschiede zwischen der de novo Sequenz des rekombinanten onkolytischen Virus GLV-1h68 und anderen VACVs untersucht und gefundene Unterschiede funktionell charakterisiert. Die phylogenetische Analyse zeigt das GLV-1h68 mit dem Lister Stamm am nächsten verwandt ist. Auffällig ist dabei der Verlust von einigen open reading frames (ORFs), die noch im Eltern LIVP Stamm vorhanden sind (CrmE, v-GAAP). Beim Vergleich der Funktion viraler Gene aus Lister, WR und COP Stämmen treten stamm-, gewebe- und wirtsspezifische Gene auf. Diese Tatsache ermöglicht die Optimierung der onkolytischen Virusstämme für den Einsatz bei humanen Krebstherapien. Die beim Vergleich identifizierten Unterschiede zwischen den ORFs enthalten Gene für die Wirtsselektion, Virulenz und immunmodulierende Proteine (Ankyrin ähnliche Proteine, Serine-Proteinasen Inhibitor SPI-2/CrmA, Tumor Nekrose Faktor (TNF) Rezeptorhomolog CrmC, semaphorinähnliche und Interleukin-1 rezeptorhomologe Proteine). An den Loki F14.5L, J2R und A56R des GLV-1h68 Virus wurden die Vorteile der eingesetzten fremden Genexpressionskassetten untersucht. So zeigt GLV-1h68 mit F14.5L-Inaktivierung gegenüber der F14.5L-Revertanten Viren eine reduzierte Virulenz. Das erlaubt die Schlussfolgerung, dass die Insertion von fremden Genexpressionskassetten in nicht-essentielle Loki zur Verminderung der Virulenz von VACVs führt, besonders, wenn der nicht-essentielle Lokus selbst ein Virulenzgen enthält. Das Replikationsvermögen, welches ausschlaggebend für die onkolytische Aktivität des Virus ist, wird trotz der verminderten Virulenz nicht eingeschränkt. Die reduzierte Pathogenität des GLV-1h68 Virus wurde durch experimentelle Daten unserer Kollaborationspartner in männlichen Mäusen mit Ratten C6 Gliom und in immunokompetenten Mäusen mit B16-F10 Mausmelanom nachgewiesen. Zusammenfassend zeigen experimentelle und bioinformatisch gewonnene Daten, dass GLV-1h68 eine vielversprechende VACV Variante für die Krebstherapie mit tumorspezifischer Replikation, verringerter Pathogenität und hoher Gewebsspezifität ist. KW - Genanalyse KW - Bioinformatik KW - Systembiologie KW - bacterial KW - virulence KW - systems biologie KW - genomic KW - algorithm KW - metabolic KW - network KW - pathway KW - flux KW - Bacterial KW - genomics KW - algorithm KW - tool KW - metabolic Y1 - 2009 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-48051 ER -