Myriam Gominet

University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, OK, USA

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Publications (10)39.81 Total impact

  • Article: Activity of the Bacillus thuringiensis NprR-NprX cell-cell communication system is coordinated to the physiological stage through a complex transcriptional regulation.
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    ABSTRACT: NprR is a quorum sensor of the RNPP family found in bacteria of the Bacillus cereus group. In association with its cognate peptide NprX, NprR controls the expression of genes essential for survival and sporulation of Bacillus thuringiensis during its necrotrophic development in insects. Here, we report that the nprR-nprX genes are not autoregulated and are cotranscribed from a σ(A) -dependent promoter (P(A) ) located upstream from nprR. The transcription from P(A) starts at the onset of the stationary phase and is controlled by two transcriptional regulators: CodY and PlcR. The nutritional repressor CodY represses nprR-nprX transcription during the exponential growth phase and the quorum sensor PlcR activates nprR-nprX transcription at the onset of stationary phase. We show that nprX is also transcribed independently of nprR from two promoters, P(H) and P(E) , dependent on the sporulation-specific sigma factors, σ(H) and σ(E) respectively. Both promoters ensure nprX transcription during late stationary phase while transcription from P(A) has decreased. These results show that the activity of the NprR-NprX quorum sensing system is tightly coordinated to the physiological stage throughout the developmental process of the Bacillus.
    Molecular Microbiology 02/2013; · 5.01 Impact Factor
  • Article: A cell-cell communication system regulates protease production during sporulation in bacteria of the Bacillus cereus group.
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    ABSTRACT: In sporulating Bacillus, major processes like virulence gene expression and sporulation are regulated by communication systems involving signalling peptides and regulators of the RNPP family. We investigated the role of one such regulator, NprR, in bacteria of the Bacillus cereus group. We show that NprR is a transcriptional regulator whose activity depends on the NprX signalling peptide. In association with NprX, NprR activates the transcription of an extracellular protease gene (nprA) during the first stage of the sporulation process. The transcription start site of the nprA gene has been identified and the minimal region necessary for full activation has been characterized by promoter mutagenesis. We demonstrate that the NprX peptide is secreted, processed and then reimported within the bacterial cell. Once inside the cell, the mature form of NprX, presumably the SKPDIVG heptapeptide, directly binds to NprR allowing nprA transcription. Alignment of available NprR sequences from different species of the B. cereus group defines seven NprR clusters associated with seven NprX heptapeptide classes. This cell-cell communication system was found to be strain-specific with a possible cross-talk between some pherotypes. The phylogenic relationship between NprR and NprX suggests a coevolution of the regulatory protein and its signalling peptide.
    Molecular Microbiology 09/2011; 82(3):619-33. · 5.01 Impact Factor
  • Article: Acyl depsipeptide (ADEP) resistance in Streptomyces.
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    ABSTRACT: ADEP, a molecule of the acyl depsipeptide family, has an antibiotic activity with a unique mode of action. ADEP binding to the ubiquitous protease ClpP alters the structure of the enzyme. Access of protein to the ClpP proteolytic chamber is therefore facilitated and its cohort regulatory ATPases (ClpA, ClpC, ClpX) are not required. The consequent uncontrolled protein degradation in the cell appears to kill the ADEP-treated bacteria. ADEP is produced by Streptomyces hawaiiensis. Most sequenced genomes of Streptomyces have five clpP genes, organized as two distinct bicistronic operons, clpP1clpP2 and clpP3clpP4, and a single clpP5 gene. We investigated whether the different Clp proteases are all sensitive to ADEP. We report that ClpP1 is a target of ADEP whereas ClpP3 is largely insensitive. In wild-type Streptomyces lividans, clpP3clpP4 expression is constitutively repressed and the reason for the maintenance of this operon in Streptomyces has been elusive. ClpP activity is indispensable for survival of actinomycetes; we therefore tested whether the clpP3clpP4 operon, encoding an ADEP-insensitive Clp protease, contributes to a mechanism of ADEP resistance by target substitution. We report that in S. lividans, inactivation of ClpP1ClpP2 production or protease activity is indeed a mode of resistance to ADEP although it is neither the only nor the most frequent mode of resistance. The ABC transporter SclAB (orthologous to the Streptomyces coelicolor multidrug resistance pump SCO4959-SCO4960) is also able to confer ADEP resistance, and analysis of strains with sclAB deletions indicates that there are also other mechanisms of ADEP resistance.
    Microbiology 06/2011; 157(Pt 8):2226-34. · 3.06 Impact Factor
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    Article: The PlcR virulence regulon of Bacillus cereus.
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    ABSTRACT: PlcR is a Bacillus cereus transcriptional regulator, which activates gene expression by binding to a nucleotidic sequence called the 'PlcR box'. To build a list of all genes included in the PlcR regulon, a consensus sequence was identified by directed mutagenesis. The reference strain ATCC14579 sequenced genome was searched for occurrences of this consensus sequence to produce a virtual regulon. PlcR control of these genes was confirmed by comparing gene expression in the reference strain and its isogenic Delta-plcR strain using DNA microarrays, lacZ fusions and proteomics methods. The resulting list included 45 genes controlled by 28 PlcR boxes. Forty of the PlcR controlled proteins were exported, of which 22 were secreted in the extracellular medium and 18 were bound or attached to cell wall structures (membrane or peptidoglycan layer). The functions of these proteins were related to food supply (phospholipases, proteases, toxins), cell protection (bacteriocins, toxins, transporters, cell wall biogenesis) and environment-sensing (two-component sensors, chemotaxis proteins, GGDEF family regulators). Four genes coded for cytoplasmic regulators. The PlcR regulon appears to integrate a large range of environmental signals, including food deprivation and self cell-density, and regulate the transcription of genes designed to overcome obstacles that hinder B. cereus growth within the host: food supply, host barriers, host immune defenses, and competition with other bacterial species. PlcR appears to be a key component in the efficient adaptation of B. cereus to its host environment.
    PLoS ONE 02/2008; 3(7):e2793. · 4.09 Impact Factor
  • Article: Post-translational control of the Streptomyces lividans ClgR regulon by ClpP.
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    ABSTRACT: It has been shown previously that expression of the Streptomyces lividans clpP1P2 operon, encoding proteolytic subunits of the Clp complex, the clpC1 gene, encoding the ATPase subunit, and the lon gene, encoding another ATP-dependent protease, are all activated by ClgR. The ClgR regulon also includes the clgR gene itself. It is shown here that the degradation of ClgR and Lon is ClpP1/P2-dependent and that the two C-terminal alanines of these new substrates are involved in their stability. The ClpC1 protein, which does not end with two alanines, is also accumulated in a clpP1P2 mutant. The results presented here support the idea that ClpP1/P2 ensure post-translational control of ClgR regulon members, including ClgR itself.
    Microbiology 05/2006; 152(Pt 4):1021-7. · 3.06 Impact Factor
  • Article: Bacillus endophthalmitis: roles of bacterial toxins and motility during infection.
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    ABSTRACT: Bacillus endophthalmitis is a highly explosive infection of the eye that commonly results in rapid inflammation and vision loss, if not loss of the eye itself, within a few days. Quorum-sensing-controlled toxins are essential to virulence during infection. Another unique characteristic of this disease is the ability of Bacillus to replicate rapidly and migrate to all parts of the eye. This study was conducted to determine the combined roles of toxins and motility during Bacillus endophthalmitis. Rabbit eyes were injected intravitreally with approximately 100 cfu of wild type, nonmotile, or nonmotile/quorum-sensing-deficient Bacillus thuringiensis. Infection courses were analyzed by biomicroscopy, histology, electroretinography, and quantitation of bacteria and inflammatory cells. Infection with wild type B. thuringiensis resulted in complete retinal function loss by 18 hours after infection, whereas nonmotile B. thuringiensis infections required 30 hours to achieve a reduction of >90% in retinal function. Further attenuation of infection resulted from infection with the nonmotile/quorum-sensing-deficient B. thuringiensis strain, with approximately 90% retinal function loss occurring at 36 hours. Overall, the nonmotile and nonmotile/quorum-sensing-deficient mutants were significantly less virulent than wild-type B. thuringiensis. The results demonstrate that, in addition to quorum-sensing-controlled toxin production, bacterial migration within the eye contributed to the rapidly fulminant and destructive course of Bacillus endophthalmitis. Motility and quorum-sensing may therefore represent possible targets for the development of therapies designed to attenuate the devastating effects of Bacillus in the eye during endophthalmitis.
    Investigative Ophthalmology &amp Visual Science 10/2005; 46(9):3233-8. · 3.60 Impact Factor
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    Article: Distinct mutations in PlcR explain why some strains of the Bacillus cereus group are nonhemolytic.
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    ABSTRACT: Bacillus thuringiensis, Bacillus cereus, and Bacillus anthracis are closely related species belonging to the Bacillus cereus group. B. thuringiensis and B. cereus generally produce extracellular proteins, including phospholipases and hemolysins. Transcription of the genes encoding these factors is controlled by the pleiotropic regulator PlcR. Disruption of plcR in B. cereus and B. thuringiensis drastically reduces the hemolytic, lecithinase, and cytotoxic properties of these organisms. B. anthracis does not produce these proteins due to a nonsense mutation in the plcR gene. We screened 400 B. thuringiensis and B. cereus strains for their hemolytic and lecithinase properties. Eight Hly- Lec- strains were selected and analyzed to determine whether this unusual phenotype was due to a mutation similar to that found in B. anthracis. Sequence analysis of the DNA region including the plcR and papR genes of these strains and genetic complementation of the strains with functional copies of plcR and papR indicated that different types of mutations were responsible for these phenotypes. We also found that the plcR genes of three B. anthracis strains belonging to different phylogenetic groups contained the same nonsense mutation, suggesting that this mutation is a distinctive trait of this species.
    Journal of Bacteriology 07/2004; 186(11):3531-8. · 3.83 Impact Factor
  • Article: Relationship of plcR-regulated factors to Bacillus endophthalmitis virulence.
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    ABSTRACT: The explosive, destructive course of Bacillus endophthalmitis has been attributed to the production of toxins during infection. In this study we analyzed the contribution of toxins controlled by the global regulator plcR to the pathogenesis of experimental Bacillus endophthalmitis. Isogenic plcR-deficient mutants of Bacillus cereus and Bacillus thuringiensis were constructed by insertional inactivation of plcR by the kanamycin resistance cassette, aphA3. Rabbit eyes were injected intravitreally with approximately 100 CFU of wild-type B. cereus or B. thuringiensis or a plcR-deficient mutant. The evolution of endophthalmitis resulting from each plcR-deficient mutant was considerably slower than that caused by each wild-type strain. Retinal function was not eliminated until 42 h postinfection in rabbits with endophthalmitis caused by the plcR-deficient mutants, whereas wild-type infections resulted in a complete loss of retinal function within 18 h. The intraocular inflammatory cell influx and retinal destruction in plcR-deficient endophthalmitis approached the severity observed in wild-ype infections, but not until 36 h postinfection. Gross and histological examinations of eyes infected with plcR mutants demonstrated that the anterior and posterior segment changes were muted compared to the changes observed in eyes infected with the wild types. The loss of plcR-regulated factors significantly attenuated the severity of Bacillus endophthalmitis. The results therefore suggest that plcR may represent a target for which adjunct therapies could be designed for the prevention of blindness during Bacillus endophthalmitis.
    Infection and Immunity 07/2003; 71(6):3116-24. · 4.16 Impact Factor
  • Article: Requirement of flhA for swarming differentiation, flagellin export, and secretion of virulence-associated proteins in Bacillus thuringiensis.
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    ABSTRACT: Bacillus thuringiensis is being used worldwide as a biopesticide, although increasing evidence suggests that it is emerging as an opportunistic human pathogen. While phospholipases, hemolysins, and enterotoxins are claimed to be responsible for B. thuringiensis virulence, there is no direct evidence to indicate that the flagellum-driven motility plays a role in parasite-host interactions. This report describes the characterization of a mini-Tn10 mutant of B. thuringiensis that is defective in flagellum filament assembly and in swimming and swarming motility as well as in the production of hemolysin BL and phosphatidylcholine-preferring phospholipase C. The mutant strain was determined to carry the transposon insertion in flhA, a flagellar class II gene encoding a protein of the flagellar type III export apparatus. Interestingly, the flhA mutant of B. thuringiensis synthesized flagellin but was impaired in flagellin export. Moreover, a protein similar to the anti-sigma factor FlgM that acts in regulating flagellar class III gene transcription was not detectable in B. thuringiensis, thus suggesting that the flagellar gene expression hierarchy of B. thuringiensis differs from that described for Bacillus subtilis. The flhA mutant of B. thuringiensis was also defective in the secretion of hemolysin BL and phosphatidylcholine-preferring phospholipase C, although both of these virulence factors were synthesized by the mutant. Since complementation of the mutant with a plasmid harboring the flhA gene restored swimming and swarming motility as well as secretion of toxins, the overall results indicate that motility and virulence in B. thuringiensis may be coordinately regulated by flhA, which appears to play a crucial role in the export of flagellar as well as nonflagellar proteins.
    Journal of Bacteriology 01/2003; 184(23):6424-33. · 3.83 Impact Factor
  • Article: Contribution of membrane-damaging toxins to Bacillus endophthalmitis pathogenesis.
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    ABSTRACT: Membrane-damaging toxins are thought to be responsible for the explosive clinical course of Bacillus endophthalmitis. This study analyzed the contribution of phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC) and phosphatidylcholine-specific phospholipase C (PC-PLC) to the pathogenesis of experimental Bacillus endophthalmitis. Isogenic mutants were constructed by insertion of lacZ into Bacillus thuringiensis genes encoding PI-PLC (plcA) and PC-PLC (plcB). Rabbit eyes were injected intravitreally with 2 log(10) CFU of strain BT407 (wild type), the PI-PLC mutant (BTplcA::lacZ), or the PC-PLC mutant (BTplcB::lacZ). The rates of decrease in retinal responses of eyes infected with the isogenic mutants were similar to that of wild type, with all infections resulting in elimination of retinal function by 18 h. Strain BT407 caused a significant increase in the latency of retinal responses at 6 h, but strains BTplcA::lacZ and BTplcB::lacZ did not. All strains elicited significant inflammatory cell influx into the anterior chamber by 12 h. Histologically, eyes infected with each strain were indistinguishable throughout the infection course. In this model, neither PI-PLC nor PC-PLC had an effect on the course or severity of experimental Bacillus endophthalmitis. Alterations in retinal responses early in infection may mark the beginnings of specific photoreceptor or glial cell dysfunction.
    Infection and Immunity 11/2002; 70(10):5381-9. · 4.16 Impact Factor