TY - JOUR A1 - Remes, Bernhard A1 - Berghoff, Bork A. A1 - Förstner, Konrad U. A1 - Klug, Gabriele T1 - Role of oxygen and the OxyR protein in the response to iron limitation in Rhodobacter sphaeroides JF - BMC Genomics N2 - Background: High intracellular levels of unbound iron can contribute to the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) via the Fenton reaction, while depletion of iron limits the availability of iron-containing proteins, some of which have important functions in defence against oxidative stress. Vice versa increased ROS levels lead to the damage of proteins with iron sulphur centres. Thus, organisms have to coordinate and balance their responses to oxidative stress and iron availability. Our knowledge of the molecular mechanisms underlying the co-regulation of these responses remains limited. To discriminate between a direct cellular response to iron limitation and indirect responses, which are the consequence of increased levels of ROS, we compared the response of the alpha-proteobacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides to iron limitation in the presence or absence of oxygen. Results: One third of all genes with altered expression under iron limitation showed a response that was independent of oxygen availability. The other iron-regulated genes showed different responses in oxic or anoxic conditions and were grouped into six clusters based on the different expression profiles. For two of these clusters, induction in response to iron limitation under oxic conditions was dependent on the OxyR regulatory protein. An OxyR mutant showed increased ROS production and impaired growth under iron limitation. Conclusion: Some R. sphaeroides genes respond to iron limitation irrespective of oxygen availability. These genes therefore reflect a "core iron response" that is independent of potential ROS production under oxic, iron-limiting conditions. However, the regulation of most of the iron-responsive genes was biased by oxygen availability. Most strikingly, the OxyR-dependent activation of a subset of genes upon iron limitation under oxic conditions, including many genes with a role in iron metabolism, revealed that elevated ROS levels were an important trigger for this response. OxyR thus provides a regulatory link between the responses to oxidative stress and to iron limitation in R. sphaeroides. KW - oxidative stress KW - Rhodobacter sphaeroides KW - RNAseq KW - OxyR KW - iron limitation KW - transcriptomics KW - dependent gene-expression KW - hydrogen-peroxide KW - escherichia coli Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-115357 SN - 1471-2164 VL - 15 IS - 794 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Lindgreen, Stinus A1 - Umu, Sinan Uğur A1 - Lai, Alicia Sook-Wei A1 - Eldai, Hisham A1 - Liu, Wenting A1 - McGimpsey, Stephanie A1 - Wheeler, Nicole E. A1 - Biggs, Patrick J. A1 - Thomson, Nick R. A1 - Barquist, Lars A1 - Poole, Anthony M. A1 - Gardner, Paul P. T1 - Robust Identification of Noncoding RNA from Transcriptomes Requires Phylogenetically-Informed Sampling JF - PLOS Computational Biology N2 - Noncoding RNAs are integral to a wide range of biological processes, including translation, gene regulation, host-pathogen interactions and environmental sensing. While genomics is now a mature field, our capacity to identify noncoding RNA elements in bacterial and archaeal genomes is hampered by the difficulty of de novo identification. The emergence of new technologies for characterizing transcriptome outputs, notably RNA-seq, are improving noncoding RNA identification and expression quantification. However, a major challenge is to robustly distinguish functional outputs from transcriptional noise. To establish whether annotation of existing transcriptome data has effectively captured all functional outputs, we analysed over 400 publicly available RNA-seq datasets spanning 37 different Archaea and Bacteria. Using comparative tools, we identify close to a thousand highly-expressed candidate noncoding RNAs. However, our analyses reveal that capacity to identify noncoding RNA outputs is strongly dependent on phylogenetic sampling. Surprisingly, and in stark contrast to protein-coding genes, the phylogenetic window for effective use of comparative methods is perversely narrow: aggregating public datasets only produced one phylogenetic cluster where these tools could be used to robustly separate unannotated noncoding RNAs from a null hypothesis of transcriptional noise. Our results show that for the full potential of transcriptomics data to be realized, a change in experimental design is paramount: effective transcriptomics requires phylogeny-aware sampling. KW - protein families database KW - small nucleolar RNAs KW - bacterial genomes KW - comparative genomics KW - dark-matter KW - homology search KW - archaea KW - sequence KW - alignment KW - insights Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-115259 VL - 10 IS - 10 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Rico, Sergio A1 - Yepes, Ana A1 - Rodriguez, Hector A1 - Santamaria, Jorge A1 - Antoraz, Sergio A1 - Krause, Eva M. A1 - Diaz, Margarita A1 - Santamaria, Ramon I. T1 - Regulation of the AbrA1/A2 Two-Component System in Streptomyces coelicolor and the Potential of Its Deletion Strain as a Heterologous Host for Antibiotic Production JF - PLOS ONE N2 - The Two-Component System (TCS) AbrA1/A2 from Streptomyces coelicolor M145 is a negative regulator of antibiotic production and morphological differentiation. In this work we show that it is able to auto-regulate its expression, exerting a positive induction of its own operon promoter, and that its activation is dependent on the presence of iron. The overexpression of the abrA2 response regulator (RR) gene in the mutant DabrA1/A2 results in a toxic phenotype. The reason is an excess of phosphorylated AbrA2, as shown by phosphoablative and phosphomimetic AbrA2 mutants. Therefore, non-cognate histidine kinases (HKs) or small phospho-donors may be responsible for AbrA2 phosphorylation in vivo. The results suggest that in the parent strain S. coelicolor M145 the correct amount of phosphorylated AbrA2 is adjusted through the phosphorylation-dephosphorylation activity rate of the HK AbrA1. Furthermore, the ABC transporter system, which is part of the four-gene operon comprising AbrA1/A2, is necessary to de-repress antibiotic production in the TCS null mutant. Finally, in order to test the possible biotechnological applications of the DabrA1/A2 strain, we demonstrate that the production of the antitumoral antibiotic oviedomycin is duplicated in this strain as compared with the production obtained in the wild type, showing that this strain is a good host for heterologous antibiotic production. Thus, this genetically modified strain could be interesting for the biotechnology industry. KW - signal-transduction systems KW - biosynthetic gene-cluster KW - escherichia coli KW - response regulator KW - oviedomycin KW - expression KW - organization KW - integration KW - bacteria KW - sequence Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-115151 SN - 1932-6203 VL - 9 IS - 10 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Möller, Philip A1 - Overlöper, Aaron A1 - Förstner, Konrad U. A1 - Wen, Tuan-Nan A1 - Sharma, Cynthia M. A1 - Lai, Erh-Min A1 - Narberhaus, Franz T1 - Profound Impact of Hfq on Nutrient Acquisition, Metabolism and Motility in the Plant Pathogen Agrobacterium tumefaciens JF - PLOS ONE N2 - As matchmaker between mRNA and sRNA interactions, the RNA chaperone Hfq plays a key role in riboregulation of many bacteria. Often, the global influence of Hfq on the transcriptome is reflected by substantially altered proteomes and pleiotropic phenotypes in hfq mutants. Using quantitative proteomics and co-immunoprecipitation combined with RNA-sequencing (RIP-seq) of Hfq-bound RNAs, we demonstrate the pervasive role of Hfq in nutrient acquisition, metabolism and motility of the plant pathogen Agrobacterium tumefaciens. 136 of 2544 proteins identified by iTRAQ (isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantitation) were affected in the absence of Hfq. Most of them were associated with ABC transporters, general metabolism and motility. RIP-seq of chromosomally encoded Hfq 3xFlag revealed 1697 mRNAs and 209 non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs) associated with Hfq. 56 ncRNAs were previously undescribed. Interestingly, 55% of the Hfq-bound ncRNAs were encoded antisense (as) to a protein-coding sequence suggesting that A. tumefaciens Hfq plays an important role in asRNA-target interactions. The exclusive enrichment of 296 mRNAs and 31 ncRNAs under virulence conditions further indicates a role for post-transcriptional regulation in A. tumefaciens-mediated plant infection. On the basis of the iTRAQ and RIP-seq data, we assembled a comprehensive model of the Hfq core regulon in A. tumefaciens. KW - regulatory small RNAs KW - messenger-RNA KW - protein HFQ KW - bacillus subtilis KW - RNA CHAPERONE HFQ KW - flagellar basal body KW - escherichia coli KW - stress resistance KW - transport systems KW - Erwinia amylovora Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-114874 VL - 9 IS - 10 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Zukher, Inna A1 - Novikova, Maria A1 - Tikhonov, Anton A1 - Nesterchuk, Mikhail V. A1 - Osterman, Ilya A. A1 - Djordjevic, Marko A1 - Sergiev, Petr V. A1 - Sharma, Cynthia M. A1 - Severinov, Konstantin T1 - Ribosome-controlled transcription termination is essential for the production of antibiotic microcin C JF - Nucleic Acids Research N2 - Microcin C (McC) is a peptide-nucleotide antibiotic produced by Escherichia coli cells harboring a plasmid-borne operon mccABCDE. The heptapeptide MccA is converted into McC by adenylation catalyzed by the MccB enzyme. Since MccA is a substrate for MccB, a mechanism that regulates the MccA/MccB ratio likely exists. Here, we show that transcription from a promoter located upstream of mccA directs the synthesis of two transcripts: a short highly abundant transcript containing the mccA ORF and a longer minor transcript containing mccA and downstream ORFs. The short transcript is generated when RNA polymerase terminates transcription at an intrinsic terminator located in the intergenic region between the mccA and mccB genes. The function of this terminator is strongly attenuated by upstream mcc sequences. Attenuation is relieved and transcription termination is induced when ribosome binds to the mccA ORF. Ribosome binding also makes the mccA RNA exceptionally stable. Together, these two effects-ribosome induced transcription termination and stabilization of the message-account for very high abundance of the mccA transcript that is essential for McC production. The general scheme appears to be evolutionary conserved as ribosome-induced transcription termination also occurs in a homologous operon from Helicobacter pylori. KW - escherichia coli KW - messenger-RNA decay KW - translation KW - expression KW - synthetase KW - enterobacteria KW - inhibitors KW - maturation KW - target KW - stability Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-114839 SN - 0305-1048 VL - 42 IS - 19 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Dimastrogiovanni, Daniela A1 - Fröhlich, Kathrin S. A1 - Bandyra, Katarzyna J. A1 - Bruce, Heather A. A1 - Hohensee, Susann A1 - Vogel, Jörg A1 - Luisi, Ben F. T1 - Recognition of the small regulatory RNA RydC by the bacterial Hfq protein JF - eLife N2 - Bacterial small RNAs (sRNAs) are key elements of regulatory networks that modulate gene expression. The sRNA RydC of Salmonella sp. and Escherichia coli is an example of this class of riboregulators. Like many other sRNAs, RydC bears a 'seed' region that recognises specific transcripts through base-pairing, and its activities are facilitated by the RNA chaperone Hfq. The crystal structure of RydC in complex with E. coli Hfq at 3.48 angstrom resolution illuminates how the protein interacts with and presents the sRNA for target recognition. Consolidating the protein-RNA complex is a host of distributed interactions mediated by the natively unstructured termini of Hfq. Based on the structure and other data, we propose a model for a dynamic effector complex comprising Hfq, small RNA, and the cognate mRNA target. KW - Hfq KW - small RNA KW - natively unstructured protein KW - protein-RNA recognition KW - gene regulation KW - Escherichia coli-Hfq KW - SM-like protein KW - messenger-RNA KW - chaperone Hfq KW - target recognition KW - noncoding RNAs KW - interaction surfaces KW - crystal-structures KW - soluble-RNAs KW - C-Terminus Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-114191 SN - 2050-084X VL - 3 IS - e05375 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Glaser, Jan A1 - Schultheis, Martina A1 - Hazra, Sudipta A1 - Hazra, Banazri A1 - Moll, Heidrun A1 - Schurigt, Uta A1 - Holzgrabe, Ulrike T1 - Antileishmanial Lead Structures from Nature: Analysis of Structure-Activity Relationships of a Compound Library Derived from Caffeic Acid Bornyl Ester N2 - Bioassay-guided fractionation of a chloroform extract of Valeriana wallichii (V. wallichii) rhizomes lead to the isolation and identification of caffeic acid bornyl ester (1) as the active component against Leishmania major (L. major) promastigotes (IC50 = 48.8 µM). To investigate the structure-activity relationship (SAR), a library of compounds based on 1 was synthesized and tested in vitro against L. major and L. donovani promastigotes, and L. major amastigotes. Cytotoxicity was determined using a murine J774.1 cell line and bone marrow derived macrophages (BMDM). Some compounds showed antileishmanial activity in the concentration range of pentamidine and miltefosine which are the standard drugs in use. In the L. major amastigote assay compounds 15, 19 and 20 showed good activity with relatively low cytotoxicity against BMDM, resulting in acceptable selectivity indices. Molecules with adjacent phenolic hydroxyl groups exhibited elevated cytotoxicity against murine cell lines J774.1 and BMDM. The Michael system seems not to be essential for antileishmanial activity. Based on the results compound 27 can be regarded as new lead structure for further structure optimization KW - Valeriana wallichii KW - leishmaniasis KW - caffeic acid bornyl ester KW - structure-activity relationship Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-112835 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Gorski, Stanislaw A. A1 - Vogel, Jörg A1 - Saliba, Antoine-Emmanuel A1 - Westermann, Alexander J. T1 - Single-cell RNA-seq: advances and future challenges N2 - Phenotypically identical cells can dramatically vary with respect to behavior during their lifespan and this variation is reflected in their molecular composition such as the transcriptomic landscape. Singlecell transcriptomics using next-generation transcript sequencing (RNA-seq) is now emerging as a powerful tool to profile cell-to-cell variability on a genomic scale. Its application has already greatly impacted our conceptual understanding of diverse biological processes with broad implications for both basic and clinical research. Different single-cell RNAseq protocols have been introduced and are reviewed here – each one with its own strengths and current limitations. We further provide an overview of the biological questions single-cell RNA-seq has been used to address, the major findings obtained from such studies, and current challenges and expected future developments in this booming field. KW - RNS Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-110993 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hofmann, Elisabeth A1 - Weibel, Stephanie A1 - Szalay, Aladar A. T1 - Combination treatment with oncolytic Vaccinia virus and cyclophosphamide results in synergistic antitumor effects in human lung adenocarcinoma bearing mice N2 - Background The capacity of the recombinant Vaccinia virus GLV-1h68 as a single agent to efficiently treat different human or canine cancers has been shown in several preclinical studies. Currently, its human safety and efficacy are investigated in phase I/II clinical trials. In this study we set out to evaluate the oncolytic activity of GLV-1h68 in the human lung adenocarcinoma cell line PC14PE6-RFP in cell cultures and analyzed the antitumor potency of a combined treatment strategy consisting of GLV-1h68 and cyclophosphamide (CPA) in a mouse model of PC14PE6-RFP lung adenocarcinoma. Methods PC14PE6-RFP cells were treated in cell culture with GLV-1h68. Viral replication and cell survival were determined by plaque assays and 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT) assays, respectively. Subcutaneously implanted PC14PE6-RFP xenografts were treated by systemic injection of GLV-1h68, CPA or a combination of both. Tumor growth and viral biodistribution were monitored and immune-related antigen profiling of tumor lysates was performed. Results GLV-1h68 efficiently infected, replicated in and lysed human PC14PE6-RFP cells in cell cultures. PC14PE6-RFP tumors were efficiently colonized by GLV-1h68 leading to much delayed tumor growth in PC14PE6-RFP tumor-bearing nude mice. Combination treatment with GLV-1h68 and CPA significantly improved the antitumor efficacy of GLV-1h68 and led to an increased viral distribution within the tumors. Pro-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines were distinctly elevated in tumors of GLV-1h68-treated mice. Factors expressed by endothelial cells or present in the blood were decreased after combination treatment. A complete loss in the hemorrhagic phenotype of the PC14PE6-RFP tumors and a decrease in the number of blood vessels after combination treatment could be observed. Conclusions CPA and GLV-1h68 have synergistic antitumor effects on PC14PE6-RFP xenografts. We strongly suppose that in the PC14PE6-RFP model the enhanced tumor growth inhibition achieved by combining GLV-1h68 with CPA is due to an effect on the vasculature rather than an immunosuppressive action of CPA. These results provide evidence to support further preclinical studies of combining GLV-1h68 and CPA in other highly angiogenic tumor models. Moreover, data presented here demonstrate that CPA can be combined successfully with GLV-1h68 based oncolytic virus therapy and therefore might be promising as combination therapy in human clinical trials. KW - Vaccinia virus KW - Chemotherapy KW - Combination therapy KW - Cyclophosphamide KW - Lung cancer Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-110168 ER - TY - THES A1 - Schiller, Roswitha Dorothee T1 - Studien zu Virulenzeigenschaften typischer und atypischer uropathogener Escherichia coli T1 - Studies on virulence properties of typical and atypical uropathogenic Escherichia coli N2 - Die Forschungsergebnisse der letzten Jahre liefern immer mehr Hinweise darauf, dass eine klare Unterscheidung von Fitness- und Virulenzfaktoren in vielen Fällen, insbesondere bei extraintestinal pathogenen Escherichia coli, nicht möglich ist. So lässt sich auch bei Harnwegsinfektionen verursachenden E. coli den bakteriellen und teils stammspezifischen Faktoren oftmals nicht eindeutig eine typische Virulenz- oder Fitness-assoziierte Funktion zuordnen. Zudem werden in neueren Studien immer häufiger atypische uropathogene Isolate von E. coli beschrieben, die in ihrem „Virulenzrepertoire“ deutlich von typischen uropathogenen E. coli (UPEC) abweichen, da sie keine klassischen UPEC-Virulenzfaktoren aufweisen. In dieser Arbeit wurden daher Virulenzeigenschaften typischer als auch atypischer UPEC untersucht. Der Effekt eines bestimmten bakteriellen Faktors auf den Wirtsorganismus wird teilweise indirekt durch sekundäre Modifikation bedingt. Dies offenbart sich beispielsweise am Autotransporterprotein AIDA-I, dessen Konformation durch posttranslationale Glykosylierung stabilisiert wird, wodurch es seine Funktionalität als Adhäsin erhält. Da bisherige Studien zum AIDA-I homologen Autotransporterprotein Antigen 43 (Ag43) auf der Analyse von künstlich glykosyliertem Protein basieren, lag ein Schwerpunkt dieser Arbeit auf der Untersuchung der natürlichen Glykosylierung von Ag43 in UPEC Stamm 536. Es zeigte sich, dass beide Ag43-Varianten von E. coli Stamm 536 natürlicherweise glykosyliert vorliegen, der Grad der Glykosylierung jedoch wesentlich geringer ausfällt als bei natürlich glykosyliertem AIDA-I. Inwieweit die natürliche Glykosylierung von Ag43 zu dessen Funktionalität beiträgt, kann erst durch die Identifizierung der für die Ag43-Glykosylierung verantwortlichen Glykosyltransferase geklärt werden. Die in silico-Analyse des Genoms von UPEC Stamm 536 für potentielle Glykosyltransferasen von Ag43 lieferte neun Kandidatengene. Die Gene wurde teils im Wildtyp-Hintergrund, teils im rfaH-negativen Hintergrund von E. coli Stamm 536 deletiert und die Mutanten im Anschluss phänotypisch charakterisiert. Die Deletion der Kandidatengene waaF, waaG und waaQ, die für Glykosyltransferasen des LPS-Biosynthesesystems kodieren, führte zu den deutlichsten Unterschieden in Bezug auf Motilität, Curli/Zellulose-Produktion, Hämolyseaktivität und Expression von Typ 1 Fimbrien. Der Einfluss des „knock-out“ der Kandidatengene auf die Glykosylierung von Ag43 muss in weiterführenden Studien untersucht werden. Zur Charakterisierung des uropathogenen Virulenzpotentials verschiedener E. coli Stämme in vivo hat sich in den letzten Jahren das murine Modell der aufsteigenden Harnwegsinfektion etabliert. Mit Hilfe dieses Modells wurden in der vorliegenden Arbeit sowohl spezifische Deletionsmutanten prototypischer UPEC als auch atypische E. coli Harnwegsisolate bezüglich ihrer Urovirulenz getestet und verglichen. Bei der Untersuchung der klassischen UPEC lag der Fokus auf der möglichen Urovirulenzmodulation durch die folgenden spezifischen Faktoren: dem Autotransporterprotein Ag43, dem „Response regulator“ UvrY, dem Polyketid Colibactin sowie dem Exopolysaccharid poly-β-1,6-N-Acetylglucosamin (PGA). Für Ag43 war bei der Etablierung einer Harnwegsinfektion keine eindeutige Funktion feststellbar. Es ist jedoch denkbar, dass Ag43 zur Langzeitpersistenz im Harnwegstrakt beitragen kann, was in weiteren Studien belegt werden sollte. Die Expression von UvrY in der natürlichen uvrY-Deletionsmutante UPEC Stamm 536 ließ keine Erhöhung des Urovirulenzpotentials im Mausmodell erkennen. In diesem Zusammenhang konnte allerdings gezeigt werden, dass die Expression des Genotoxins Colibactin in UPEC Stamm 536 dessen Virulenz signifikant herabsetzte. Die Untersuchungen zur Relevanz des Exopolysaccharids PGA belegen deutlich, dass PGA für die Langzeitpersistenz von E. coli im murinen Harnwegstrakt benötigt wird. Für die initiale Kolonisierung scheint PGA hingegen keine Bedeutung zu haben. Für atypische UPEC Isolate, die Charakteristika von STEC und EAEC zeigen und sich in ihrem Virulenzmuster deutlich von prototypischen UPEC unterscheiden, ließ sich im murinen Modell der aufsteigenden Harnwegsinfektion, verglichen mit dem UPEC Modellorganismus 536, ein ähnliches, teils sogar erhöhtes uropathogenes Virulenzpotential nachweisen. Die Ergebnisse der Arbeit untermauern somit die heutige Vorstellung bezüglich der Entwicklung und Etablierung einer Harnwegsinfektion, dass verschiedene E. coli Stämme unterschiedliche (Kontroll-) Mechanismen entwickelt haben, um erfolgreich den Harnwegstrakt kolonisieren und eine Infektion auslösen zu können. Zudem weisen sie darauf hin, dass diese Fähigkeit nicht auf Isolate typischer phylogenetischer UPEC Entwicklungslinien beschränkt und auf das Vorhandensein charakteristischer UPEC Virulenzfaktoren angewiesen ist. N2 - Research findings over the last years indicate that in many cases, including extraintestinal pathogenic Escherichia coli, a clear distinction between fitness and virulence factors is not possible. Accordingly, the classical distinction of often strain-specific virulence- and fitness-related traits of uropathogenic E. coli (UPEC) can often not be made. Furthermore, recent studies describe atypical UPEC isolates. These isolates remarkably differ in their “virulence repertoire” compared to typical UPEC, because they lack classical UPEC-related virulence factors. Therefore, the aim of the present study was the investigation of virulence properties of typical as well as atypical UPEC strains. The effect of a certain bacterial factor upon the host organism is in part indirectly influenced by secondary modifications. For instance, the conformation of the autotransporter protein AIDA-I is stabilized by posttranslational glycosylation which in turn confers its functionality as an adhesin. Prior studies on the AIDA-I homologous autotransporter protein antigen 43 (Ag43) are based on the analysis of the artificially glycosylated protein. Thus, a key aspect of the current work was to elucidate the naturally occurring glycosylation of Ag43 in UPEC strain 536. For both Ag43 variants of E. coli 536 natural glycosylation was detected. However, Ag43 was less glycosylated than naturally glycosylated AIDA-I. The future identification of the glycosyltransferase responsible for natural glycosylation of Ag43 will help to determine the impact of this posttranslational modification on the functionality of Ag43. In silico analysis of the UPEC strain 536 genome regarding potential glycosyltransferases of Ag43 revealed nine candidate genes. Corresponding deletion mutants of the identified genes were constructed in part in the wild type strain background and in part in the rfaH-negative background of UPEC 536. The most prominent differences concerning motility, curli/cellulose production, hemolytic activity and expression of type 1 fimbriae were observed upon deletion of the genes waaF, waaG or waaQ coding for glycosyltransferases of the LPS biosynthesis pathway. The impact of the deleted candidate genes on the glycosylation of Ag43 has to be further investigated. In recent years the murine model of ascending urinary tract infection was established to characterize the uropathogenic potential of E. coli strains in vivo. By means of this model the uropathogenic potential of different specific “knock-out” mutants of prototypic UPEC strains as well as of atypical E. coli urinary tract isolates was tested and compared. The analysis of the impact of specific factors on the uropathogenic potential of classical UPEC strains focused on the autotransporter protein Ag43, the response regulator UvrY, the genotoxin colibactin, and the exopolysaccharide poly-β-1,6-N-acetylglucosamine (PGA). Ag43 did not exhibit a distinct function during the establishment of urinary tract infection in mice. However, it is conceivable that Ag43 can contribute to long-term persistence in the urinary tract, which should be covered in further studies. Expression of UvrY in the natural uvrY-negative UPEC strain 536 did not increase the uropathogenic potential. However, expression of the genotoxin colibactin significantly reduced the urovirulence of UPEC strain 536. The exopolysaccharide PGA was shown to contribute to long-term persistence of UPEC in the murine model of urinary tract infection. For the initial colonization of the urinary tract, PGA seems to be dispensable. The atypical UPEC isolates investigated in this study display typical characteristics of STEC and EAEC and differ significantly in their virulence gene content compared to prototypic UPEC strains. Nevertheless, in the murine model of ascending UTI many atypical UPEC isolates exhibited a comparable and sometimes even increased uropathogenic potential relative to UPEC model strain 536. The results of this work support the current idea regarding the development and establishment of a urinary tract infection that different E. coli strains have evolved diverse (control-) mechanisms to successfully colonize the urinary tract and provoke an infection. In addition, the findings point out that the ability to cause a urinary tract infection is not limited to phylogenetic lineages of classical UPEC isolates and the presence of characteristic UPEC virulence traits. KW - Escherichia coli KW - Harnwegsinfektion KW - Glykosylierung KW - UPEC KW - Autotransporterprotein KW - Glykosyltransferase KW - murines Modell der aufsteigenden Harnwegsinfektion Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-103907 ER -