Virginia L Miller

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA

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Publications (39)238.44 Total impact

  • Article: Proteolytic processing of the Yersinia pestis YapG autotransporter by the omptin protease Pla and the contribution of YapG to murine plague pathogenesis.
    Mary C Lane, Jonathan D Lenz, Virginia L Miller
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    ABSTRACT: Autotransporter protein secretion represents one of the simplest forms of secretion across Gram-negative bacterial membranes. Once secreted, autotransporter proteins either remain tethered to the bacterial surface or are released following proteolytic cleavage. Autotransporters possess a diverse array of virulence-associated functions such as motility, cytotoxicity, adherence, and autoaggregation. To better understand the role of autotransporters in disease, our research is focused on the autotransporters of Yersinia pestis, the etiologic agent of plague. Y. pestis strain CO92 has nine functional conventional autotransporters, referred to as Yaps for Yersinia autotransporter proteins. Three Yaps have been directly implicated in virulence using established mouse models of plague infection (YapE, YapJ and YapK). While previous studies from our laboratory showed that most of the CO92 Yaps are cell associated, YapE and YapG are processed and released by the omptin protease Pla. In this study, we identify the Pla cleavage sites in YapG that result in many released forms of YapG in Y. pestis, but not in the evolutionarily related gastrointestinal pathogen, Yersinia pseudotuberculosis, which lacks Pla. Furthermore, we show that YapG does not contribute to Y. pestis virulence in established mouse models of bubonic and pneumonic infection. As Y. pestis has a complex life cycle involving a wide range of mammalian hosts and a flea vector for transmission, it remains to be elucidated whether YapG has a measureable role in any other stage of plague disease.
    Journal of Medical Microbiology 05/2013; · 2.50 Impact Factor
  • Article: A Phenotype at Last: Essential Role for the Yersinia enterocolitica Ysa Type III Secretion System in a Drosophila S2 cell model.
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    ABSTRACT: The highly pathogenic Yersinia enterocolitica strains have a chromosomally encoded type III secretion system (T3SS) that is only expressed and functional in vitro when the bacteria are cultured at 26°C. Mutations that render this system non-functional are slightly attenuated in the mouse model of infection only following an oral inoculation and only at early time points post-infection. The discrepancy between the temperature required for Ysa gene expression and the physiological temperature required for mammalian model systems has made defining the role of this T3SS challenging. Therefore, we explored the use of Drosophila S2 cells as a model system for studying Ysa function. We show here that Y. enterocolitica is capable of infecting S2 cells and replicating intracellularly to high levels, an unusual feature of this pathogen. Importantly, we show that the Ysa T3SS is required for robust intracellular replication. A secretion-deficient mutant lacking the secretin gene, ysaC, is defective in replication within S2 cells, marking the first demonstration of a pronounced Ysa-dependent virulence phenotype. Establishment of S2 cells as a model for Y. enterocolitica infection provides a versatile tool to elucidate the role of the Ysa T3SS in the life cycle of this gastrointestinal pathogen.
    Infection and immunity 04/2013; · 4.21 Impact Factor
  • Article: Bioluminescence imaging to track bacterial dissemination of Yersinia pestis using different routes of infection in mice.
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    ABSTRACT: Plague is caused by Yersinia pestis, a bacterium that disseminates inside of the host at remarkably high rates. Plague bacilli disrupt normal immune responses in the host allowing for systematic spread that is fatal if left untreated. How Y. pestis disseminates from the site of infection to deeper tissues is unknown. Dissemination studies for plague are typically performed in mice by determining the bacterial burden in specific organs at various time points. To follow bacterial dissemination during plague infections in mice we tested the possibility of using bioluminescence imaging (BLI), an alternative non-invasive approach. Fully virulent Y. pestis was transformed with a plasmid containing the luxCDABE genes, making it able to produce light; this lux-expressing strain was used to infect mice by subcutaneous, intradermal or intranasal inoculation. We successfully obtained images from infected animals and were able to follow bacterial dissemination over time for each of the three different routes of inoculation. We also compared the radiance signal from animals infected with a wild type strain and a Δcaf1ΔpsaA mutant that we previously showed to be attenuated in colonization of the lymph node and systemic dissemination. Radiance signals from mice infected with the wild type strain were larger than values obtained from mice infected with the mutant strain (linear regression of normalized values, P < 0.05). We demonstrate that BLI is useful for monitoring dissemination from multiple inoculation sites, and for characterization of mutants with defects in colonization or dissemination.
    BMC Microbiology 07/2012; 12:147. · 3.04 Impact Factor
  • Article: Evolution and Virulence Contributions of the Autotransporter Proteins YapJ and YapK of Yersinia pestis CO92 and Their Homologs in Y. pseudotuberculosis IP32953.
    Jonathan D Lenz, Brenda R S Temple, Virginia L Miller
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    ABSTRACT: Yersinia pestis, the causative agent of plague, evolved from the gastrointestinal pathogen Yersinia pseudotuberculosis. Both species have numerous type Va autotransporters, most of which appear to be highly conserved. In Y. pestis CO92, the autotransporter genes yapK and yapJ share a high level of sequence identity. By comparing yapK and yapJ to three homologous genes in Y. pseudotuberculosis IP32953 (YPTB0365, YPTB3285, and YPTB3286), we show that yapK is conserved in Y. pseudotuberculosis, while yapJ is unique to Y. pestis. All of these autotransporters exhibit >96% identity in the C terminus of the protein and identities ranging from 58 to 72% in their N termini. By extending this analysis to include homologous sequences from numerous Y. pestis and Y. pseudotuberculosis strains, we determined that these autotransporters cluster into a YapK (YPTB3285) class and a YapJ (YPTB3286) class. The YPTB3286-like gene of most Y. pestis strains appears to be inactivated, perhaps in favor of maintaining yapJ. Since autotransporters are important for virulence in many bacterial pathogens, including Y. pestis, any change in autotransporter content should be considered for its impact on virulence. Using established mouse models of Y. pestis infection, we demonstrated that despite the high level of sequence identity, yapK is distinct from yapJ in its contribution to disseminated Y. pestis infection. In addition, a mutant lacking both of these genes exhibits an additive attenuation, suggesting nonredundant roles for yapJ and yapK in systemic Y. pestis infection. However, the deletion of the homologous genes in Y. pseudotuberculosis does not seem to impact the virulence of this organism in orogastric or systemic infection models.
    Infection and immunity 07/2012; 80(10):3693-705. · 4.21 Impact Factor
  • Article: Low copy expression vectors for use in Yersinia sp. and related organisms.
    Markus W Obrist, Virginia L Miller
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    ABSTRACT: In Yersinia, the most commonly used expression vectors for genetic studies such as gene complementation do not effectively allow for both induction and repression of gene expression. Additionally, there is no expression system available that can be induced in bacteria growing in vitro as well as in vivo, e.g. in eukaryotic cell lines or in living animal models. Here, we present a series of novel inducible low copy expression vectors that are well suited for use in the Yersinia species. Their tet operator/promoter/repressor system makes them distinct from other vectors, and gene transcription in bacteria can easily be induced by addition of anhydrotetracyline (ATc) either to the growth medium, to tissue culture medium during bacterial infections of cell lines or by injection into animals infected with bacteria. Researchers can choose between two different antibiotic resistances (kanamycin or spectinomycin), between two copy numbers (5 or 12-22) as well as between two different versions for expression from either the native RBS and ATG or RBS and ATG encoded in the plasmid. The whole vector series contains the same multi-cloning site from pBluescript II KS+ that allows for easy subcloning. Moreover, these vectors are built in a modular fashion that makes it simple to adapt them for other purposes. Finally, in addition to their use in Yersinia they are suitable for use in many other Enterobacteriaceae.
    Plasmid 03/2012; 68(1):33-42. · 1.52 Impact Factor
  • Article: Expression during host infection and localization of Yersinia pestis autotransporter proteins.
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    ABSTRACT: Yersinia pestis CO92 has 12 open reading frames encoding putative conventional autotransporters (yaps), nine of which appear to produce functional proteins. Here, we demonstrate the ability of the Yap proteins to localize to the cell surface of both Escherichia coli and Yersinia pestis and show that a subset of these proteins undergoes processing by bacterial surface omptins to be released into the supernatant. Numerous autotransporters have been implicated in pathogenesis, suggesting a role for the Yaps as virulence factors in Y. pestis. Using the C57BL/6 mouse models of bubonic and pneumonic plague, we determined that all of these genes are transcribed in the lymph nodes during bubonic infection and in the lungs during pneumonic infection, suggesting a role for the Yaps during mammalian infection. In vitro transcription studies did not identify a particular environmental stimulus responsible for transcriptional induction. The primary sequences of the Yaps reveal little similarity to any characterized autotransporters; however, two of the genes are present in operons, suggesting that the proteins encoded in these operons may function together. Further work aims to elucidate the specific functions of the Yaps and clarify the contributions of these proteins to Y. pestis pathogenesis.
    Journal of bacteriology 08/2011; 193(21):5936-49. · 3.94 Impact Factor
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    Article: The dependence of the Yersinia pestis capsule on pathogenesis is influenced by the mouse background.
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    ABSTRACT: Yersinia pestis is a highly pathogenic Gram-negative organism and the causative agent of bubonic and pneumonic plague. Y. pestis is capable of causing major epidemics; thus, there is a need for vaccine targets and a greater understanding of the role of these targets in pathogenesis. Two prime Y. pestis vaccine candidates are the usher-chaperone fimbriae Psa and Caf. Herein we report that Y. pestis requires, in a nonredundant manner, both PsaA and Caf1 to achieve its full pathogenic ability in both pneumonic and bubonic plague in C57BL/6J mice. Deletion of psaA leads to a decrease in the organ bacterial burden and to a significant increase in the 50% lethal dose (LD₅₀) after subcutaneous infection. Deletion of caf1 also leads to a significant decrease in the organ bacterial burden but more importantly leads to a significantly greater increase in the LD₅₀ than was observed for the ΔpsaA mutant strain after subcutaneous infection of C57BL/6J mice. Furthermore, the degree of attenuation of the Δcaf1 mutant strain is mouse background dependent, as the Δcaf1 mutant strain was attenuated to a lesser degree in BALB/cJ mice by the subcutaneous route than in C57BL/6J mice. This observation that the degree of requirement for Caf1 is dependent on the mouse background indicates that the virulence of Y. pestis is dependent on the genetic makeup of its host and provides further support for the hypothesis that PsaA and Caf1 have different targets.
    Infection and immunity 02/2011; 79(2):644-52. · 4.21 Impact Factor
  • Article: Identification of YsrT and evidence that YsrRST constitute a unique phosphorelay system in Yersinia enterocolitica.
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    ABSTRACT: Two-component systems (TCS) and phosphorelay systems are mechanisms used by bacteria and fungi to quickly adapt to environmental changes to produce proteins necessary for survival in new environments. Bacterial pathogens use TCS and phosphorelay systems to regulate genes necessary to establish infection within their hosts, including type III secretion systems (T3SS). The Yersinia enterocolitica ysa T3SS is activated in response to NaCl by YsrS and YsrR, a putative hybrid sensor kinase and a response regulator, respectively. Hybrid TCS consist of a sensor kinase that typically has three well-conserved sites of phosphorylation: autophosphorylation site H1, D1 within a receiver domain, and H2 in the histidine phosphotransferase (HPt) domain. From H2, the phosphoryl group is transferred to D2 on the response regulator. A curious feature of YsrS is that it lacks the terminal HPt domain. We report here the identification of the HPt-containing protein (YsrT) that provides this activity for the Ysr system. YsrT is an 82-residue protein predicted to be cytosolic and α-helical in nature and is encoded by a gene adjacent to ysrS. To demonstrate predicted functions of YsrRST as a phosphorelay system, we introduced alanine substitutions at H1, D1, H2, and D2 and tested the mutant proteins for the ability to activate a ysaE-lacZ reporter. As expected, substitutions at H1, H2, and D2 resulted in a loss of activation of ysaE expression. This indicates an interruption of normal protein function, most likely from loss of phosphorylation. A similar result was expected for D1; however, an intriguing "constitutive on" phenotype was observed. In addition, the unusual feature of a separate HPt domain led us to compare the sequences surrounding the ysrS-ysrT junction in several Yersinia strains. In every strain examined, ysrT is a separate gene, leading to speculation that there is a functional advantage to YsrT being an independent protein.
    Journal of bacteriology 11/2010; 192(22):5887-97. · 3.94 Impact Factor
  • Article: Synchronous gene expression of the Yersinia enterocolitica Ysa type III secretion system and its effectors.
    Kimberly A Walker, Virginia L Miller
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    ABSTRACT: Type III secretion systems (T3SSs) are complex units that consist of many proteins. Often the proteins are encoded as a cohesive unit on virulence plasmids, but several systems have their various components dispersed around the chromosome. The Yersinia enterocolitica Ysa T3SS is such a system, where the apparatus genes, some regulatory genes, and four genes encoding secreted proteins (ysp genes) are contained in a single locus. The remaining ysp genes and at least one additional regulator are found elsewhere on the chromosome. Expression of ysa genes requires conditions of high ionic strength, neutral/basic pH, and low temperatures (26 degrees C) and is stimulated by exposure to solid surfaces. The AraC-like regulator YsaE and the dual-function chaperone/regulator SycB are required to stimulate the sycB promoter, which transcribes sycB and probably yspBCDA as well. The putative phosphorelay proteins YsrRS (located at the distal end of the ysa locus) and RcsB, the response regulator of the RcsBCD phosphorelay system, are required to initiate transcription at the ysaE promoter, which drives transcription of many apparatus genes. In this work, we sought to determine which ysp genes were coordinately regulated with the genes within the ysa locus. We found that six unlinked ysp genes responded to NaCl and required YsaE/SycB, YsrRS, and RcsB for expression. Three ysp genes had unique patterns, one of which was unaffected by all elements tested except NaCl. Thus, while the ysp genes were likely to have been acquired independently, most have acquired a synchronous regulatory pattern.
    Journal of bacteriology 02/2009; 191(6):1816-26. · 3.94 Impact Factor
  • Article: A novel autotransporter adhesin is required for efficient colonization during bubonic plague.
    Matthew B Lawrenz, Jonathan D Lenz, Virginia L Miller
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    ABSTRACT: Many proteins secreted by the type V secretion system (autotransporters) have been linked to virulence in gram-negative bacteria. Several putative conventional autotransporters are present in the Yersinia pestis genome, but only one, YapE, is conserved in the other pathogenic Yersinia species. Here, we introduce YapE and demonstrate that it is secreted via a type V mechanism. Inactivation of yapE in Y. pestis results in decreased efficiency in colonization of tissues during bubonic infection. Coinfection with wild-type bacteria only partially compensates for this defect. Analysis of the host immune response suggests that YapE is required for either efficient colonization at the inoculation site or dissemination to draining lymph nodes. YapE also demonstrates adhesive properties capable of mediating interactions with bacteria and eukaryotic cells. These findings support a role for YapE in modulating host-pathogen interactions that are important for colonization of the mammalian host.
    Infection and immunity 11/2008; 77(1):317-26. · 4.21 Impact Factor
  • Article: YspM, a newly identified Ysa type III secreted protein of Yersinia enterocolitica.
    Sarah E Witowski, Kimberly A Walker, Virginia L Miller
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    ABSTRACT: Yersinia enterocolitica has three type three secretion systems, the flagellar, the plasmid Ysc type III secretion system (T3SS), and the chromosomal Ysa T3SS. The Ysc T3SS, through the proteins it secretes (Yops), prevents phagocytosis of Y. enterocolitica and is required for disease processes in the mouse host. Recent data demonstrate a role for the Ysa T3SS during initial colonization of the mouse via secretion of Ysps (Yersinia secreted proteins). This work characterizes the discovery of a newly identified Ysa type III secreted protein, YspM. Expression of yspM is regulated by temperature, NaCl concentration, and other known regulators of the ysa system. In addition, YspM is translocated into host cells via the Ysa T3SS. YspM is homologous to proteins classified as GDSL bacterial lipases, which possess a catalytic triad of amino acids (Ser, Asp, and His) located in three of five blocks of amino acid identity. Sequence analysis of the JB580v strain of Y. enterocolitica shows that, due to a premature stop codon, it no longer encodes the fifth block of amino acid identity containing the predicted catalytic histidine. However, seven other biotype 1B strains sequenced did possess the domain. A functional difference between the forms was revealed when YspM was expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Yeast growth was uninhibited when YspM from JB580v was expressed but greatly inhibited when YspM from Y295 (YspM(Y295)) was expressed. Site-directed mutagenesis of the histidine of YspM(Y295) ablated the toxic effects. These results indicate that YspM is secreted by the Ysa T3SS and that, possibly due to lipase activity, it targets eukaryotic cellular component(s).
    Journal of bacteriology 10/2008; 190(22):7315-25. · 3.94 Impact Factor
  • Article: The RovA regulons of Yersinia enterocolitica and Yersinia pestis are distinct: evidence that many RovA-regulated genes were acquired more recently than the core genome.
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    ABSTRACT: RovA is a transcriptional activator of Yersinia invasin, an outer membrane protein involved in bacterial attachment and invasion across the intestinal epithelium. In Y. enterocolitica, a rovA mutant is attenuated for virulence compared with either wild-type or inv mutant strains, indicating that RovA may regulate additional virulence factors. Here, we used microarray analysis to define the RovA regulon. Curiously, there was little overlap between the RovA regulons of Y. enterocolitica and Y. pestis despite the fact that RovA itself is highly conserved between the two species. Some of these differences are explained by the observation that a number of RovA-regulated loci in Y. enterocolitica do not have orthologues in Y. pestis and vice versa, suggesting that RovA established regulatory control over genetic material acquired after the divergence of the species. Electromobility shift assays demonstrated that 15 of these RovA-regulated loci directly interact with RovA, and 11 of these promoters had similar affinity as observed for the inv promoter. H-NS and YmoA are believed to form a transcriptional repression complex on the inv promoter, and several studies indicate that RovA and H-NS have overlapping DNA binding sites. H-NS and YmoA regulated a subset of the RovA-regulated loci. Furthermore, H-NS directly bound to 14 of the 15 promoters bound by RovA. From these data, we hypothesize that RovA generally behaves as an anti-H-NS factor to alleviate transcriptional repression in Y. enterocolitica. A number of recent studies have presented data and a model suggesting that H-NS functions as a transcriptional silencer of horizontally acquired genes. This repression can be selectively relieved by regulators such as RovA, and the observation that nearly all RovA-activated genes are repressed by H-NS is consistent with this model.
    Molecular Microbiology 11/2007; 66(1):189-205. · 5.01 Impact Factor
  • Article: Comparative analysis of the regulation of rovA from the pathogenic yersiniae.
    Matthew B Lawrenz, Virginia L Miller
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    ABSTRACT: RovA is a MarR/SlyA-type regulator that mediates the transcription of inv in Yersinia enterocolitica and Y. pseudotuberculosis. In Y. pseudotuberculosis, rovA transcription is controlled primarily by H-NS and RovA, which bind to similar regions within the rovA promoter. At 37 degrees C, rovA transcription is repressed by H-NS. Transcription of rovA results when RovA relieves H-NS-mediated repression. The region of the rovA promoter that H-NS and RovA bind is not conserved in the Y. enterocolitica promoter. Using green fluorescent protein reporters, we determined that the Y. enterocolitica rovA (rovA(Yent)) promoter is weaker than the Y. pseudotuberculosis promoter. However, despite the missing H-NS/RovA binding site in the rovA(Yent) promoter, H-NS and RovA are still involved in the regulation of rovA(Yent). DNA binding studies suggest that H-NS and RovA bind with a higher affinity to the Y. pseudotuberculosis/Y. pestis rovA (rovA(Ypstb/Ypestis)) promoter than to the rovA(Yent) promoter. Furthermore, H-NS appears to bind to two regions in a cooperative fashion within the rovA(Yent) promoter that is not observed with the rovA(Ypstb/Ypestis) promoter. Finally, using a transposon mutagenesis approach, we identified a new positive regulator of rovA in Y. enterocolitica, LeuO. In Escherichia coli, LeuO regulates gene expression via changes in levels of RpoS and H-NS, but LeuO-mediated regulation of rovA(Yent) appears to be independent of either of these two proteins. Together, these data demonstrate that while the rovA regulatory factors are conserved in Yersinia, divergence of Y. enterocolitica and Y. pseudotuberculosis/Y. pestis during evolution has resulted in modifications in the mechanisms that are responsible for controlling rovA transcription.
    Journal of Bacteriology 09/2007; 189(16):5963-75. · 3.83 Impact Factor
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    Article: Herpesvirus latency confers symbiotic protection from bacterial infection.
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    ABSTRACT: All humans become infected with multiple herpesviruses during childhood. After clearance of acute infection, herpesviruses enter a dormant state known as latency. Latency persists for the life of the host and is presumed to be parasitic, as it leaves the individual at risk for subsequent viral reactivation and disease. Here we show that herpesvirus latency also confers a surprising benefit to the host. Mice latently infected with either murine gammaherpesvirus 68 or murine cytomegalovirus, which are genetically highly similar to the human pathogens Epstein-Barr virus and human cytomegalovirus, respectively, are resistant to infection with the bacterial pathogens Listeria monocytogenes and Yersinia pestis. Latency-induced protection is not antigen specific but involves prolonged production of the antiviral cytokine interferon-gamma and systemic activation of macrophages. Latency thereby upregulates the basal activation state of innate immunity against subsequent infections. We speculate that herpesvirus latency may also sculpt the immune response to self and environmental antigens through establishment of a polarized cytokine environment. Thus, whereas the immune evasion capabilities and lifelong persistence of herpesviruses are commonly viewed as solely pathogenic, our data suggest that latency is a symbiotic relationship with immune benefits for the host.
    Nature 06/2007; 447(7142):326-9. · 36.28 Impact Factor
  • Article: General and specific host responses to bacterial infection in Peyer's patches: a role for stromelysin-1 (matrix metalloproteinase-3) during Salmonella enterica infection.
    Scott A Handley, Virginia L Miller
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    ABSTRACT: Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (S. typhimurium) and Yersinia enterocolitica are enteric pathogens capable of colonizing and inducing inflammatory responses in Peyer's patches (PPs) and mesenteric lymph nodes (MLNs). Although the tissue colonization pattern is similar between these two pathogens, their pathogenic lifestyles are quite different. For example, while S. typhimurium is primarily an intracellular pathogen, Y. enterocolitica survives primarily extracellularly. We determined and compared the transcriptional changes occurring in response to S. typhimurium and Y. enterocolitica colonization of PP using Affymetrix GeneChip technology. Both pathogens elicited a general inflammatory response indicated by the upregulation of cytokines and chemokines. However, specific differences were also observed, most notably in the transcriptional regulation of gamma interferon (IFN-gamma) and IFN-gamma-regulated genes in response to S. typhimurium but not Y. enterocolitica. Of particular note, a group of genes encoding matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) had increased transcript numbers in the PPs following infection with both pathogens. The experiments described here compare oral S. typhimurium or Y. enterocolitica infection in stromelysin-1 (MMP-3)-deficient mice (mmp-3(-/-)) with mice possessing functional MMP-3 (mmp-3(+/+)). There was little difference in the survival of MMP-3-deficient mice infected with Y. enterocolitica when compared with littermate controls. Surprisingly though, mmp-3(-/-) mice were markedly more resistant to S. typhimurium infection than the control mice. S. typhimurium was able to colonize mmp-3(-/-) mice, albeit in a delayed fashion, to equivalent levels as mmp-3(+/+) mice. Nevertheless, significantly lower levels of inflammatory cytokines were detected in tissues and serum in the mmp-3(-/-) mice in comparison with mmp-3(+/+) mice. We hypothesize that MMP-3 is involved in initiating an early and lethal cytokine response to S. typhimurium colonization.
    Molecular Microbiology 05/2007; 64(1):94-110. · 5.01 Impact Factor
  • Article: Yersiniabactin is a virulence factor for Klebsiella pneumoniae during pulmonary infection.
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    ABSTRACT: Iron acquisition systems are essential for the in vivo growth of bacterial pathogens. Despite the epidemiological importance of Klebsiella pneumoniae, few experiments have examined the importance of siderophores in the pathogenesis of this species. A previously reported signature-tagged mutagenesis screen identified an attenuated strain that featured an insertional disruption in ybtQ, which encodes a transporter for the siderophore yersiniabactin. We used this finding as a starting point to evaluate the importance of siderophores in the physiology and pathogenesis of K. pneumoniae. Isogenic strains carrying in-frame deletions in genes required for the synthesis of either enterobactin or yersiniabactin were constructed, and the growth of these mutants was examined both in vitro and in vivo using an intranasal infection model. The results suggest divergent functions for each siderophore in different environments, with enterobactin being more important for growth in vitro under iron limitation than in vivo and the reverse being true for the yersiniabactin locus. These observations represent the first examination of isogenic mutants in iron acquisition systems for K. pneumoniae and may indicate that the acquisition of nonenterobactin siderophores is an important step in the evolution of virulent enterobacterial strains.
    Infection and Immunity 04/2007; 75(3):1463-72. · 4.16 Impact Factor
  • Article: Environmental stimuli affecting expression of the Ysa type three secretion locus.
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    ABSTRACT: Yersinia enterocolitica has two type III secretion systems (TTSS): The well characterized Ysc-Yop system and the relatively uncharacterized Ysa-Ysp system. Detection of Ysps in culture supernatants has only been observed in vitro when cultures are grown at low temperature (26 degrees C) and in high salt (290mM NaCl). Previous reports demonstrated that expression from the ysaE promoter was activated by high salt. In this study, we report a new environmental stimulus for ysa gene expression; in the presence of high salt, growth on solid surface stimulates expression 7-fold compared to growth in high salt broth. These new data indicate that, in the presence of salt, solid surface is an extremely robust signal for the Ysa system.
    Advances in experimental medicine and biology 02/2007; 603:211-6. · 1.09 Impact Factor
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    Article: A plasminogen-activating protease specifically controls the development of primary pneumonic plague.
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    ABSTRACT: Primary pneumonic plague is transmitted easily, progresses rapidly, and causes high mortality, but the mechanisms by which Yersinia pestis overwhelms the lungs are largely unknown. We show that the plasminogen activator Pla is essential for Y. pestis to cause primary pneumonic plague but is less important for dissemination during pneumonic plague than during bubonic plague. Experiments manipulating its temporal expression showed that Pla allows Y. pestis to replicate rapidly in the airways, causing a lethal fulminant pneumonia; if unexpressed, inflammation is aborted, and lung repair is activated. Inhibition of Pla expression prolonged the survival of animals with the disease, offering a therapeutic option to extend the period during which antibiotics are effective.
    Science 02/2007; 315(5811):509-13. · 31.20 Impact Factor
  • Article: YtxR, a conserved LysR-like regulator that induces expression of genes encoding a putative ADP-ribosyltransferase toxin homologue in Yersinia enterocolitica.
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    ABSTRACT: Yersinia enterocolitica causes human gastroenteritis, and many isolates have been classified as either "American" or "non-American" strains based on their geographic prevalence and virulence properties. In this study we describe identification of a transcriptional regulator that controls expression of the Y. enterocolitica ytxAB genes. The ytxAB genes have the potential to encode an ADP-ribosylating toxin with similarity to pertussis toxin. However, a ytxAB null mutation did not affect virulence in mice. Nevertheless, the ytxAB genes are conserved in many Y. enterocolitica strains. Interestingly, American and non-American strains have different ytxAB alleles encoding proteins that are only 50 to 60% identical. To obtain further insight into the ytxAB locus, we investigated whether it is regulated as part of a known or novel regulon. Transposon mutagenesis identified a LysR-like regulator, which we designated YtxR. Expression of ytxR from a nonnative promoter increased Phi(ytxA-lacZ) operon fusion expression up to 35-fold. YtxR also activated expression of its own promoter. DNase I footprinting showed that a His(6)-YtxR fusion protein directly interacted with the ytxA and ytxR control regions at similar distances upstream of their probable transcription initiation sites, identified by primer extension. Deletion analysis demonstrated that removal of the regions protected by His(6)-YtxR in vitro eliminated YtxR-dependent induction in vivo. The ytxAB locus is not present in most Yersinia species. In contrast, ytxR is conserved in multiple Yersinia species, as well as in the closely related organisms Photorhabdus luminescens and Photorhabdus asymbiotica. These observations suggest that YtxR may play a conserved role involving regulation of other genes besides ytxAB.
    Journal of Bacteriology 01/2007; 188(23):8033-43. · 3.83 Impact Factor
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    Article: Comparison of the host responses to wild-type and cpsB mutant Klebsiella pneumoniae infections.
    Matthew S Lawlor, Scott A Handley, Virginia L Miller
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    ABSTRACT: Previously, we established an intranasal mouse model of Klebsiella pneumoniae infection and validated its utility using a highly virulent wild-type strain and an avirulent capsular polysaccharide mutant. In the present study we compare the host responses to both infections by examining cytokine production, cellular infiltration, pulmonary histology, and intranasal immunization.
    Infection and Immunity 10/2006; 74(9):5402-7. · 4.16 Impact Factor

Institutions

  • 2010–2012
    • University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
      • Department of Genetics
      Chapel Hill, NC, USA
  • 2002–2009
    • Washington University in St. Louis
      • Department of Molecular Microbiology
      Saint Louis, MO, USA
  • 2008
    • University of Washington Seattle
      • Department of Microbiology
      Seattle, WA, USA
  • 2004
    • Universitätsklinikum Münster
      • Institut für Infektiologie
      Münster, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
  • 2001
    • University of California, Los Angeles
      • Department of Microbiology, Immunology & Molecular Genetics
      Los Angeles, CA, USA