John Kenneth CraneUniversity at Buffalo, The State University of New York | SUNY Buffalo · Department of Medicine
John Kenneth Crane
MD, PhD
About
116
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Introduction
John Kenneth Crane currently works at the Department of Medicine, University at Buffalo, The State University of New York. John does research in Infectious Diseases and Microbiology. Their current project is 'Hypermutation'.
Additional affiliations
January 2004 - present
April 1994 - present
July 1990 - April 1994
Publications
Publications (116)
Our laboratory recently reported that induction of the SOS response, triggered by SOS-inducing drugs, was accompanied by a large release of DNA from enteric bacteria. The SOS response release had not previously been reported to include release of extracellular DNA from bacterial cells. We followed up on those observations in this current study and...
Supplemental figures for article " Role of Extracellular DNA in Bacterial Response to SOS-Inducing Drugs"
The SOS response is a conserved stress response pathway that is triggered by DNA damage in the bacterial cell. Activation of this pathway can, in turn, cause the rapid appearance of new mutations, sometimes called hypermutation. We compared the ability of various SOS-inducing drugs to trigger the expression of RecA, cause hypermutation, and produce...
Background
Previous reports have differed as to whether nitric oxide inhibits or stimulates the SOS response, a bacterial stress response that is often triggered by DNA damage. The SOS response is an important regulator of production of Shiga toxins (Stx) in Shiga-toxigenic E. coli (STEC). In addition, the SOS response is accompanied by hypermutati...
Colonic epithelium–commensal interactions play a very important role in human health and disease development. Colonic mucus serves as an ecologic niche for a myriad of commensals and provides a physical barrier between the epithelium and luminal content, suggesting that communication between the host and microbes occurs mainly by soluble factors. H...
Several classes of non-antibiotic drugs, including psychoactive drugs, proton-pump inhibitors (PPIs), non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), and others, appear to have strong antimicrobial properties. We considered whether psychoactive drugs induce the SOS response in E. coli bacteria and, consequently, induce Shiga toxins in Shiga-toxigen...
The SOS response to DNA damage is a conserved stress response in Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria. Although this pathway has been studied for years, its relevance is still not familiar to many working in the fields of clinical antibiotic resistance and stewardship. In some conditions, the SOS response favors DNA repair and preserves the gen...
Many surgeons continue to face the clinical dilemma of interpreting a positive aspiration or unexpected positive Cutibacterium acnes (C. acnes) culture. There are factors that complicate the interpretation of positive cultures including variations in both frequency of false positive cultures and virulence properties. As indices of virulence, hemoly...
Introduction:
Cutibacterium acnes is gaining recognition as a leading pathogen after orthopaedic shoulder procedures. Photodynamic therapy, a combination of light and a photosensitizer, has demonstrated antimicrobial activity against C. acnes in the treatment of acne vulgaris. We sought to evaluate the effect of photodynamic therapy using blue ligh...
Background
Enthusiasm for the use of metal nanoparticles in human and veterinary medicine is high. Many articles describe the effects of metal nanoparticles on microbes in vitro, and a smaller number of articles describe effects on the immune system, which is the focus of this review.
Methods
Articles were retrieved by performing literature search...
Background
Cutibacterium acnes (C. acnes) is a common shoulder periprosthetic joint infection (PJI). Blue light (BL) is effectively used in the dermatologic clinical setting against acne vulgaris caused by C. acnes. Photodynamic therapy (PDT) is the use of light source and photosensitizer (PS) to enhance antimicrobial activity. We studied the effec...
https://www.jshoulderelbow.org/article/S1058-2746(18)30861-9/abstract
Background
The SOS response is a conserved response to DNA damage that is found in Gram negative and Gram-positive bacteria. When DNA damage is sustained and severe, activation of error-prone DNA polymerases can induce a higher mutation rate then normally observed, which is called the mutator phenotype or hypermutation. We previously showed that zi...
The SOS response is a conserved response to DNA damage that is found in Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria. When DNA damage is sustained and severe, activation of error-prone DNA polymerases can induce a higher mutation rate than is normally observed, which is called the SOS mutator phenotype or hypermutation. We previously showed that zinc b...
Introduction:
The purpose of this study was to further evaluate the pathogenicity of hemolytic and nonhemolytic phenotypes of Propionibacterium acnes (P acnes) isolates from shoulders of orthopaedic patients.
Methods:
Thirty-one patient records were reviewed, which had a positive P acnes shoulder culture from joint aspiration fluid and/or intrao...
Infections of the central nervous system due to Candida albicans are uncommon and are usually only observed in special circumstances, such as following neurosurgery or penetrating head trauma, in immunosuppressed patients, premature infants or in patients with ventriculoperitoneal shunts. The author reports a case of an immunocompetent man who pres...
Zinc inhibits the virulence of diarrheagenic E. coli by inducing the envelope stress response and inhibiting the SOS response. The SOS response is triggered by damage to bacterial DNA. In Shiga-toxigenic E. coli, the SOS response strongly induces the production of Shiga toxins (Stx) and of the bacteriophages that encode the Stx genes. In E. coli, i...
Ability of Ciprofloxacin to Induce Mutation to Rifampin at 100 mg/L, or 10 times the MIC, in strain JLM281.
Panel A, Rifampin resistance frequency as a function of ciprofloxacin concentration. Panel B, Rif R colonies of JLM281 on LB + 100 mg/L rifampin, showing normal or near-normal colony size. Panel C, ciprofloxacin-induced mutation to rifampin r...
Background. Many authors have noted an increase in the number of recognized cases of invasive infections due to Propionibacterium acnes, especially after shoulder replacement surgery. The increase in case of P. acnes, a non-spore-forming, anaerobic, Gram-positive organism, appears to be due to both an increase in the number of shoulder operations b...
BACKGROUND
Many studies have noted an increase in the number of recognized cases of invasive infections due to Propionibacterium acnes, especially after shoulder replacement surgery. The increase in the number of recognized cases of P. acnes, a nonspore-forming, anaerobic, Gram-positive organism, appears due to both an increase in the number of sho...
In previous work we identified xanthine oxidase (XO) as an important enzyme in the interaction between the host and enteropathogenic and Shiga-toxigenic
E. coli
(EPEC and STEC). Many of the biological effects of XO were due to the hydrogen peroxide produced by this enzyme. We wondered, however, if uric acid generated by XO also had biological effec...
Photo of Bacillus anthracis, Gram stain, 1000 X magnification.
Passive immunotherapy for established infections, as opposed to active immunization to prevent disease, remains a tiny niche in the world of antimicrobial therapies. Many of the passive immunotherapies currently available are directed against bacterial toxins, such as botulism, or are intended for agents of bioterrorism such as anthrax, which fortu...
Elevated minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) of vancomycin against meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and the emergence of heteroresistant S. aureus strains have led to increased use of anti-MRSA antibiotics other than vancomycin. Ceftaroline fosamil is a novel cephalosporin with activity against MRSA, but there are limited clin...
Background
Zinc supplements can treat or prevent enteric infections and diarrheal disease. Many articles on zinc in bacteria, however, highlight the essential nature of this metal for bacterial growth and virulence, suggesting that zinc should make infections worse, not better. To address this paradox, we tested whether zinc might have protective e...
Determining if a Propionibacterium acnes culture is a true infection or a contaminant remains a challenge. We conducted a study to distinguish between a true infection and a contaminated culture based on the P acnes hemolytic phenotype and clinical presentation. All P acnes strains were from orthopedic patients who had undergone arthroplasty or non...
Uric acid can be generated in the gastrointestinal (GI) tract from the breakdown of nucleotides ingested in the diet or from purines released from host cells as a result of pathogen-induced cell damage. Xanthine oxidase (XO) is the enzyme that converts hypoxanthine or xanthine into uric acid, a reaction that also generates hydrogen peroxide. It has...
Xanthine oxidase (XO) has been recognized as an important host defense enzyme for decades. In our recent study in Infection and Immunity, we found that enteropathogenic and Shiga-toxigenic E. coli (EPEC and STEC) were far more resistant to killing by the XO pathway than laboratory E. coli strains used in the past. Although XO plus hypoxanthine subs...
Orthopedic surgeons at our institution have noticed an increase in the number of infections due to Propionibacterium acnes, especially following operations on the shoulder. We collected P. acnes isolates from our hospital microbiology laboratory for 1 year and performed antimicrobial susceptibility testing on 28 strains
from the shoulder. Antibioti...
Basolateral membrane K ⁺ channels establish the electrical driving force for anion secretion by epithelial tissues. We determined the effects of Zn ²⁺ , an inhibitor of anion secretion, on these channels in T84 human colonic epithelial cells. After Cl ⁻ secretion was stimulated in monolayers by chlorophenylthio‐cAMP (50 μM), serosal Zn ²⁺ (2mM, zin...
Xanthine oxidase (XO), also known as xanthine oxidoreductase, has long been considered an important host defense molecule
in the intestine and in breastfed infants. Here, we present evidence that XO is released from and active in intestinal tissues
and fluids in response to infection with enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) and Shiga-toxigenic...
Lasers are of increasing interest to the accelerator community and
include applications as diverse as stripping electrons from hydrogen
atoms, sources for Compton scattering, efficient high repetition rate
lasers for dielectric laser acceleration, peta-watt peak power lasers
for laser wake field and high energy, short pulse lasers for proton and
io...
Dietary supplementation with zinc has been shown to reduce the duration and severity of diarrhoeal disease caused by Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli, common in infants in developing countries. Initially this therapeutic benefit was attributed to the correction of zinc deficiency in malnourished individuals, but recently evidence has emerged that...
Previously, our laboratories reported that zinc inhibited expression of several important virulence factors in enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) and reduced EPEC-induced intestinal damage in vivo. Since EPEC is genetically related to Shiga-toxigenic E. coli (STEC), we wondered whether the beneficial effects of zinc extended to STEC as well....
Small molecules from intestinal cells of mammalian hosts that are infected with diarrheagenic Escherichia coli affect the infectious process and host-pathogen interactions. In developing countries, both typical and atypical enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) are common causes of acute watery diarrhea in young children. ATP, ADP, AMP, and, eventually,...
Enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) is a common cause of diarrhea in children in developing countries. After adhering to intestinal cells, EPEC secretes effector proteins into host cells, causing cell damage and eventually death. We previously showed that EPEC infection triggers the release of ATP from host cells and that ATP is broken down to ADP, AMP...
The basolateral membrane K+ channel, KCNQ1 (KvLQT1, Kv7.1), plays a critical role in anion secretion by gastrointestinal tissues because it establishes an electrical driving force for anion exit. In secretory tissues, KCNQ1 associates with the KCNE3 ancillary subunit to form a voltage-insensitive K+ channel, whereas, in the heart, it associates wit...
The phase-shift technique for measuring group-delay has novel applications for aligning and commissioning grating compressors and balancing dispersion in large, high-energy petawatt and other complex, chirped-pulse amplifier systems.
Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) triggers a large release of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) from host intestinal cells and the extracellular ATP is broken down to adenosine diphosphate (ADP), AMP, and adenosine. Adenosine is a potent secretagogue in the small and large intestine. We suspected that ecto-5'-nucleotidase (CD73, an intestinal enz...
Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) infection triggers the release of ATP from host intestinal cells, and the ATP is broken down to ADP, AMP, and adenosine in the lumen of the intestine. Ecto-5'-nucleotidase (CD73) is the main enzyme responsible for the conversion of 5'-AMP to adenosine, which triggers fluid secretion from host intestinal cell...
Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) and enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) are common causes of diarrhea in children in developing countries. Dual infections with both pathogens have been noted fairly frequently in studies of diarrhea around the world. In previous laboratory work, we noted that cholera toxin and forskolin markedly potentiated EPEC...
We previously reported that enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) infection triggered a large release of ATP from the host cell that was correlated with and dependent on EPEC-induced killing of the host cell. We noted, however, that under some circumstances, EPEC-induced ATP release exceeded that which could be accounted for on the basis of host...
Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) is a common cause of diarrhea in children in developing countries. Protein kinase C (PKC), a serine- and threonine-directed protein kinase, is rapidly activated following EPEC infection and this is accompanied by its translocation to a membrane-bound location where it is tightly bound to phosphatidylserine (...
The use of short laser pulses to generate high peak intensity, ultra-short x-ray pulses enables exciting new experimental capabilities, such as femtosecond pump-probe experiments used to temporally resolve material structural dynamics on atomic time scales. Such high brightness x-ray sources would allow the probing of very dense materials at extrem...
An ultra fast, sub-picosecond resolution streak camera has been recently developed at the LLNL. The camera is a versatile instrument with a wide operating wavelength range. The temporal resolution of up to 300 fs can be achieved, with routine operation at 500 fs. The streak camera has been operated in a wide wavelength range from IR to x-rays up to...
The Picosecond Laser-Electron Inter-Action for the Dynamic Evaluation of Structures (PLEIADES) facility, is a unique, novel, tunable (10-200 keV), ultrafast (ps-fs), hard x-ray source that greatly extends the parameter range reached by existing rd generation sources, both in terms of x-ray energy range, pulse duration, and peak brightness at high e...
The small interaction area required for Thomson x-ray sources necessitates the production of high brightness electron beams and the use of very strong final focus optics. We report on the details of the electron beam production, transport and final focus for the PLEIADES Thomson X-ray Source at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, including the...
For visible laser wavelengths, at intensities exceeding 10^17 W/cm^2,
Compton scattering becomes a nonlinear process, whereby the probability
of coherent multiphoton scattering is large, and the effects of
radiation pressure dominate the electron dynamics during the
interaction. This process has been studied in the single-particle
plane-wave limit^...
Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) causes severe, watery diarrhea in children. We investigated ATP release during EPEC-mediated killing of human cell lines and whether released adenine nucleotides function as secretory mediators. EPEC triggered a release of ATP from all human cell lines tested: HeLa, COS-7, and T84 (colon cells) as measured u...
Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) causes diarrhoea in children in developing countries. Many EPEC genes involved in virulence are contained within the locus of enterocyte effacement (LEE), a large pathogenicity island. One of the genes at the far righthand end of the LEE encodes EspF, an EPEC secreted protein of unknown function. EspF, like...
The effect of butyrate on the response to guanylin and Escherichia coli heat-stable enterotoxin, STa, was assessed in T84 cells and Caco-2 cells, cultured colon cell lines possessing the guanylyl cyclase C which is the receptor for these peptides. Butyrate treatment of these cells resulted in an apparent increase in cyclic GMP (cGMP) accumulation w...
Food poisoning syndromes caused by four different bacteria are described. For all types, food kept at a permissive temperature allows growth of the vegetative forms of the bacteria and production of a toxin or toxins. The key features of these syndromes, as well as possible new trends of concern, are summarized in Table 1.
We report a case of Mycobacterium bovis BCG vertebral osteomyelitis in a 79-year-old man 2.5 years after intravesical BCG therapy for bladder cancer. The recovered isolate resembled M. tuberculosis biochemically, but resistance to pyrazinamide (PZA) rendered that diagnosis suspect. High-pressure liquid chromatographic studies confirmed the diagnosi...
Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) is a cause of prolonged watery diarrhea in children in developing countries. The ability of EPEC to kill host cells was investigated in vitro in assays using two human cultured cell lines, HeLa (cervical) and T84 (colonic). EPEC killed epithelial cells as assessed by permeability to the vital dyes trypan blu...
The earliest report of toxic shock syndrome (TSS) was in 1927 by Franklin Stevens, who reported on two patients with staphylococcal induced pharyngitis associated with what appeared to be scarlet fever.1 In the head and neck, TSS has been associated with nasal surgery, pharyngitis, and deep space abscesses. This paper presents a case report of TSS...
Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) consists of a group of diarrhea-producing E. coli strains, common in developing countries, which do not produce classical toxins and are not truly invasive. EPEC strains adhere to mammalian cells in an intimate fashion, trigger a localized increase in intracellular calcium levels, and elevate inositol phosph...
The heat-stable enterotoxin STa of E. coli causes diarrhea by binding to and stimulating intestinal membrane-bound guanylyl cyclase, triggering production of cyclic GMP. Agents which stimulate protein kinase C (PKC), including phorbol esters, synergistically enhance STa effects on cGMP and secretion. We investigated whether PKC causes phosphorylati...
Enterotoxin-producing Escherichia coli are major causes of pediatric diarrhea in developing countries. The heat-stable enterotoxin of Escherichia coli (STa) causes diarrhea by virtue of its ability to bind to and stimulate intestinal membrane-bound guanylate cyclase, generating cyclic GMP (cGMP). Previous work showed that a fucosylated oligosacchar...
Enterotoxin-produdng Escherichia coli are major causes of pediatrie diarrhea in developing countries. The heat-stable enterotoxin of Escherichia coli (STa) causes diarrheaby virtue of its abilityto bind to and stimulate intestinal membrane-boundguanylate cyclase, generating cyclic GMP(cGMP).Previous work showed that a fucosylated oligosaccharide fr...