Article
Mycobacterial shuttle vectors designed for high-level protein expression in infected macrophages.
The Departments of Immunology.
Applied and environmental microbiology (impact factor:
3.69).
07/2012;
78(19):6829-37.
DOI:10.1128/AEM.01674-12
pp.6829-37
Source: PubMed
- Citations (4)
-
Cited In (0)
-
Article: The role of the granuloma in expansion and dissemination of early tuberculous infection.
[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Granulomas, organized aggregates of immune cells, form in response to persistent stimuli and are hallmarks of tuberculosis. Tuberculous granulomas have long been considered host-protective structures formed to contain infection. However, work in zebrafish infected with Mycobacterium marinum suggests that granulomas contribute to early bacterial growth. Here we use quantitative intravital microscopy to reveal distinct steps of granuloma formation and assess their consequence for infection. Intracellular mycobacteria use the ESX-1/RD1 virulence locus to induce recruitment of new macrophages to, and their rapid movement within, nascent granulomas. This motility enables multiple arriving macrophages to efficiently find and phagocytose infected macrophages undergoing apoptosis, leading to rapid, iterative expansion of infected macrophages and thereby bacterial numbers. The primary granuloma then seeds secondary granulomas via egress of infected macrophages. Our direct observations provide insight into how pathogenic mycobacteria exploit the granuloma during the innate immune phase for local expansion and systemic dissemination.Cell 02/2009; 136(1):37-49. · 32.40 Impact Factor -
Article: Protein kinase G from pathogenic mycobacteria promotes survival within macrophages.
[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Pathogenic mycobacteria resist lysosomal delivery after uptake into macrophages, allowing them to survive intracellularly. We found that the eukaryotic-like serine/threonine protein kinase G from pathogenic mycobacteria was secreted within macrophage phagosomes, inhibiting phagosome-lysosome fusion and mediating intracellular survival of mycobacteria. Inactivation of protein kinase G by gene disruption or chemical inhibition resulted in lysosomal localization and mycobacterial cell death in infected macrophages. Besides identifying a target for the control of mycobacterial infections, these findings suggest that pathogenic mycobacteria have evolved eukaryotic-like signal transduction mechanisms capable of modulating host cell trafficking pathways.Science 07/2004; 304(5678):1800-4. · 31.20 Impact Factor -
Article: An improved GFP cloning cassette designed for prokaryotic transcriptional fusions.
[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: A new gfp cloning cassette designed for prokaryotic transcriptional fusions has been constructed. This cassette consists of gfp (containing the S65T 'red-shift' [Heim et al. (1995) Nature 373, 663-664] and F64L 'protein solubility' [Cormack et al. (1996) Gene 173, 33-38] mutations) flanked by convenient restriction sites, a translational enhancer, and a consensus ribosome binding site with an optimized spacer region. gfp fusion strains containing this cassette demonstrate from 40- to 80-fold greater fluorescence intensity than wild-type gfp fusion strains. Additionally, this cassette confers sufficient fluorescence to recipient cells to be used in low copy-number plasmids, with promoters conferring low levels of transcription, and in bacterial taxa other than Escherichia, such as Pseudomonas.Gene 07/1997; 191(2):149-53. · 2.34 Impact Factor
Data provided are for informational purposes only. Although carefully collected, accuracy cannot be guaranteed.
The impact factor represents a rough estimation of the journal's impact factor and does not reflect the actual
current impact factor.
Publisher conditions are provided by RoMEO. Differing provisions from the publisher's actual policy or licence
agreement may be applicable.
Keywords
attenuate IL-6-driven GFP expression
diverse mycobacterial strains
easy visualization
ESAT-6 expression
green fluorescent protein expression
high-level fluorescent protein expression
high-level protein expression
IL-6 pathway
innate inflammatory pathways
innate inflammatory response
M. smegmatis
modified vector
Mycobacterial shuttle vectors
Mycobacterium smegmatis
new tools
parental vector
pathogenic mechanisms
pSUM-protein expression vector
stable cell line fluoresces
various mycobacterial species