7 resultados para Molecular biology|Microbiology|Oceanography
em Duke University
Resumo:
Bacterial colonization of the upper respiratory tract is the first step in the pathogenesis of nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae (NTHi) disease. Examination of the determinants of NTHi colonization process has been hampered by the lack of an appropriate animal model. To address this, we have developed a model of NTHi colonization in adult rhesus macaques that involves intranasal inoculation of 1x105 CFU and results in persistent colonization of the upper respiratory tract for at least three weeks with no signs of disease, mimicking asymptomatic colonization of humans. Using this model, we assessed the contributions to colonization of the HMW1 and HMW2 adhesive proteins. In competition experiments, the parent strain expressing both HMW1 and HMW2 was able to efficiently out-compete an isogenic mutant strain expressing neither HMW1 nor HMW2. In experiments involving inoculation of single isogenic derivatives of NTHi strain 12, the strains expressing HMW1 or HMW2 or both were able to colonize efficiently, while the strain expressing neither HMW1 nor HMW2 colonized inefficiently. Furthermore, colonization resulted in antibody production against HMW1 and HMW2 in one-third of the animals, demonstrating that colonization can be an immunizing event. In conclusion, we have established that NTHi is capable of colonizing the upper respiratory tract of rhesus macaques, in some cases associated with stimulation of an immune response. The HMW1 and HMW2 adhesive proteins play a major role in the process of colonization.
After establishing that the HMW1 and HMW2 proteins are colonization factors we further investigated the determinants of HMW1 function. HMW1 is encoded in the same genetic locus as two other proteins, HMW1B and HMW1C, with which HMW1 must interact in order to be functional. Interaction with HMW1C in the cytoplasm results in the glycosylation of HMW1. By employing homologues of HMW1C that glycosylate HMW1 in slightly different patterns we show that the pattern of modification is critical to HMW1 function. Structural analysis showed a change in protein structure when the pattern of HMW1 modification differed. We also identified two specific sites which must be glycosylated for HMW1 to function properly. These point mutations did not have a significant effect on protein structure, suggesting that glycosylation at those specific sites is instead necessary for interaction of HMW1 with its receptor. HMW1B is an outer membrane pore through which HMW1 is transported to reach the bacterial cell surface. We observed that HMW1 isolated from the cytoplasm has a different structure than HMW1 isolated from the bacterial cell surface. By forcing HMW1 to be secreted in a non-HMW1B dependent manner, we show that secretion alone is not sufficient for HMW1 to obtain a functional structure. This leads us to hypothesize that there is something specific in the interaction between HMW1 and HMW1B that aids in proper HMW1 folding.
The NTHi HMW1C glycosyltransferase mediates unconventional N-linked glycosylation of HMW1. In this system, HMW1 is modified in the cytoplasm by sequential transfer of hexose residues. To determine if this mechanism of N-linked glycosylation is employed by species other than NTHi, we examined Kingella kingae and Aggregatibacter aphrophilus homologues of HMW1C. We found both homologues to be functional glycosyltransferases and identified their substrates as the K. kingae Knh and the A. aphrophilus EmaA trimeric autotransporter proteins. LC-MS/MS analysis revealed multiple sites of N-linked glycosylation on Knh and EmaA. Without glycosylation, Knh and EmaA failed to facilitate wild type levels of bacterial autoaggregation or adherence to human epithelial cells, establishing that glycosylation is essential for proper protein function.
Resumo:
Polarization is important for the function and morphology of many different cell types. The keys regulators of polarity in eukaryotes are the Rho-family GTPases. In the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which must polarize in order to bud and to mate, the master regulator is the highly conserved Rho GTPase, Cdc42. During polarity establishment, active Cdc42 accumulates at a site on the plasma membrane characterizing the “front” of the cell where the bud will emerge. The orientation of polarization is guided by upstream cues that dictate the site of Cdc42 clustering. However, in the absence of upstream cues, yeast can still polarize in a random direction during symmetry breaking. Symmetry breaking suggests cells possess an autocatalytic polarization mechanism that can amplify stochastic fluctuations of polarity proteins through a positive feedback mechanism.
Two different positive feedback mechanisms have been proposed to polarize Cdc42 in budding yeast. One model posits that Cdc42 activation must be localized to a site at the plasma membrane. Another model posits that Cdc42 delivery must be localized to a particular site at the plasma membrane. Although both mechanisms could work in parallel to polarize Cdc42, it is unclear which mechanism is critical to polarity establishment. We directly tested the predictions of the two positive feedback models using genetics and live microscopy. We found that localized Cdc42 activation is necessary for polarity establishment.
While this explains how active Cdc42 localizes to a particular site at the plasma membrane, it does not address how Cdc42 concentrates at that site. Several different mechanisms have been proposed to concentrate Cdc42. The GDI can extract Cdc42 from membranes and selective mobilize GDP-Cdc42 in the cytoplasm. It was proposed that selectively mobilizing GDP-Cdc42 in combination with local activation could locally concentrate total Cdc42 at the polarity site. Although the GDI is important for rapid Cdc42 accumulation at the polarity site, it is not essential to Cdc42 concentration. It was proposed that delivery of Cdc42 by actin-mediated vesicle can act as a backup pathway to concentrate Cdc42. However, we found no evidence for an actin-dependent concentrating pathway. Live microscopy experiments reveal that prenylated proteins are not restricted to membranes, and can enter the cytoplasm. We found that the GDI-independent concentrating pathway still requires Cdc42 to exchange between the plasma membrane and the cytoplasm, which is supported by computational modeling. In the absence of the GDI, we found that Cdc42 GAP became essential for polarization. We propose that the GAP limits GTP-Cdc42 leak into the cytoplasm, which would be prohibitive to Cdc42 polarization.
Resumo:
Cryptococcus neoformans is an opportunistic fungal pathogen that causes significant disease worldwide. Even though this fungus has not evolved specifically to cause human disease, it has a remarkable ability to adapt to many different environments within its infected host. C. neoformans adapts by utilizing conserved eukaryotic and fungal-specific signaling pathways to sense and respond to stresses within the host. Upon infection, two of the most significant environmental changes this organism experiences are elevated temperature and high pH.
Conserved Rho and Ras family GTPases are central regulators of thermotolerance in C. neoformans. Many GTPases require prenylation to associate with cellular membranes and function properly. Using molecular genetic techniques, microscopy, and infection models, I demonstrated that the prenyltransferase, geranylgeranyl transferase I (GGTase I) is required for thermotolerance and pathogenesis. Using fluorescence microscopy, I found that only a subset of conserved GGTase I substrates requires this enzyme for membrane localization. Therefore, the C. neoformans GGTase I may recognize its substrate in a slightly different manner than other eukaryotic organisms.
The alkaline response transcription factor, Rim101, is a central regulator of stress-response genes important for adapting to the host environment. In particular, Rim101 regulates cell surface alterations involved in immune avoidance. In other fungi, Rim101 is activated by alkaline pH through a conserved signaling pathway, but this pathway had yet been characterized in C. neoformans. Using molecular genetic techniques, I identified and analyzed the conserved members of the Rim pathway. I found that it was only partially conserved in C. neoformans, missing the components that sense pH and initiate pathway activation. Using a genetic screen, I identified a novel Rim pathway component named Rra1. Structural prediction and genetic epistasis experiments suggest that Rra1 may serve as the Rim pathway pH sensor in C. neoformans and other related basidiomycete fungi.
To explore the relevance of Rim pathway signaling in the interaction of C neoformans with its host, I characterized the Rim101-regulated cell wall changes that prevent immune detection. Using HPLC, enzymatic degradation, and cell wall stains, I found that the rim101Δ mutation resulted in increased cell wall chitin exposure. In vitro co-culture assays demonstrated that increased chitin exposure is associated with enhanced activation of macrophages and dendritic cells. To further test this association, I demonstrated that other mutant strains with increased chitin exposure induce macrophage and dendritic cell responses similar to rim101Δ. We used primary macrophages from mutant mouse lines to demonstrate that members of both the Toll-like receptor and C-type lectin receptor families are involved in detecting strains with increased chitin exposure. Finally, in vivo immunological experiments demonstrated that the rim101Δ strain induced a global inflammatory immune response in infected mouse lungs, expanding upon our previous in vivo rim101Δ studies. These results demonstrate that cell wall organization largely determines how fungal cells are detected by the immune system.
Resumo:
Maintenance of vascular homeostasis is an active process that is dependent on continuous signaling by the quiescent endothelial cells (ECs) that line mature vessels. Defects in vascular homeostasis contribute to numerous disorders of significant clinical impact including hypertension and atherosclerosis. The signaling pathways that are active in quiescent ECs are distinct from those that regulate angiogenesis but are comparatively poorly understood. Here we demonstrate that the previously uncharacterized scaffolding protein Caskin2 is a novel regulator of EC quiescence and that loss of Caskin2 in mice results in elevated blood pressure at baseline. Caskin2 is highly expressed in ECs from various vascular beds both in vitro and in vivo. When adenovirally expressed in vitro, Caskin2 inhibits EC proliferation and migration but promotes survival during hypoxia and nutrient deprivation. Likewise, loss of Caskin2 in vivo promotes increased vascular branching and permeability in mouse and zebrafish models. Caskin2 knockout mice are born in normal Mendelian ratios and appear grossly normal during early adulthood. However, they have consistently elevated systolic and diastolic blood pressure at baseline and significant context-dependent abnormalities in systemic metabolism (e.g., body weight, fat deposition, and glucose homeostasis). Although the precise molecular mechanisms of these effects remain unclear, we have shown that Caskin2 interacts with several proteins known to have important roles in endothelial biology and cardiovascular disease including the serine/threonine phosphatase PP1, the endothelial receptor Tie1, and eNOS, which is a critical regulator of vascular homeostasis. Ongoing work seeks to further characterize the functions of Caskin2 and its mechanisms of action with a focus on how Caskin2-mediated regulation of endothelial phenotype relates to its systemic effects on cardiovascular and metabolic function.
Resumo:
The lungs are vital organs whose airways are lined with a continuous layer of epithelial cells. Epithelial cells in the distal most part of the lung, the alveolar space, are specialized to facilitate gas exchange. Proximal to the alveoli is the airway epithelium, which provides an essential barrier and is the first line of defense against inhaled toxicants, pollutants, and pathogens. Although the postnatal lung is a quiescent organ, it has an inherent ability to regenerate in response to injury. Proper balance between maintaining quiescence and undergoing repair is crucial, with imbalances in these processes leading to fibrosis or tumor development. Stem and progenitor cells are central to maintaining balance, given that they proliferate and renew both themselves and the various differentiated cells of the lung. However, the precise mechanisms regulating quiescence and repair in the lungs are largely unknown. In this dissertation, ionizing radiation is used as a physiologically relevant injury model to better understand the repair process of the airway epithelium. We use in vitro and in vivo mouse models to study the response of a secretory progenitor, the club cell, to various doses and qualities of ionizing radiation. Exposure to radiation found in space environments and in some types of radiotherapy caused clonal expansion of club cells specifically in the most distal branches of the airway epithelium, indicating that the progenitors residing in the terminal bronchioles are radiosensitive. This clonal expansion is due to an increase in p53-dependent apoptosis, senescence, and mitotic defects. Through the course of this work, we discovered that p53 is not only involved in radiation response, but is also a novel regulator of airway epithelial homeostasis. p53 acts in a gene dose-dependent manner to regulate the composition of airway epithelium by maintaining quiescence and regulating differentiation of club progenitor cells in the steady-state lung. The work presented in this dissertation represents an advance in our understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying maintenance of airway epithelial progenitor cells as well as their repair following ionizing radiation exposure.
Resumo:
CD4+ T cells play a crucial in the adaptive immune system. They function as the central hub to orchestrate the rest of immunity: CD4+ T cells are essential governing machinery in antibacterial and antiviral responses by facilitating B cell affinity maturation and coordinating the innate and adaptive immune systems to boost the overall immune outcome; on the contrary, hyperactivation of the inflammatory lineages of CD4+ T cells, as well as the impairments of suppressive CD4+ regulatory T cells, are the etiology of various autoimmunity and inflammatory diseases. The broad role of CD4+ T cells in both physiological and pathological contexts prompted me to explore the modulation of CD4+ T cells on the molecular level.
microRNAs (miRNAs) are small RNA molecules capable of regulating gene expression post-transcriptionally. miRNAs have been shown to exert substantial regulatory effects on CD4+ T cell activation, differentiation and helper function. Specifically, my lab has previously established the function of the miR-17-92 cluster in Th1 differentiation and anti-tumor responses. Here, I further analyzed the role of this miRNA cluster in Th17 differentiation, specifically, in the context of autoimmune diseases. Using both gain- and loss-of-function approaches, I demonstrated that miRNAs in miR-17-92, specifically, miR-17 and miR-19b in this cluster, is a crucial promoter of Th17 differentiation. Consequently, loss of miR-17-92 expression in T cells mitigated the progression of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis and T cell-induced colitis. In combination with my previous data, the molecular dissection of this cluster establishes that miR-19b and miR-17 play a comprehensive role in promoting multiple aspects of inflammatory T cell responses, which underscore them as potential targets for oligonucleotide-based therapy in treating autoimmune diseases.
To systematically study miRNA regulation in effector CD4+ T cells, I devised a large-scale miRNAome profiling to track in vivo miRNA changes in antigen-specific CD4+ T cells activated by Listeria challenge. From this screening, I identified that miR-23a expression tightly correlates with CD4+ effector expansion. Ectopic expression and genetic deletion strategies validated that miR-23a was required for antigen-stimulated effector CD4+ T cell survival in vitro and in vivo. I further determined that miR-23a targets Ppif, a gatekeeper of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (ROS) release that protects CD4+ T cells from necrosis. Necrosis is a type of cell death that provokes inflammation, and it is prominently triggered by ROS release and its consequent oxidative stress. My finding that miR-23a curbs ROS-mediated necrosis highlights the essential role of this miRNA in maintaining immune homeostasis.
A key feature of miRNAs is their ability to modulate different biological aspects in different cell populations. Previously, my lab found that miR-23a potently suppresses CD8+ T cell cytotoxicity by restricting BLIMP1 expression. Since BLIMP1 has been found to inhibit T follicular helper (Tfh) differentiation by antagonizing the master transcription factor BCL6, I investigated whether miR-23a is also involved in Tfh differentiation. However, I found that miR-23a does not target BLIMP1 in CD4+ T cells and loss of miR-23a even fostered Tfh differentiation. This data indicate that miR-23a may target other pathways in CD4+ T cells regarding the Tfh differentiation pathway.
Although the lineage identity and regulatory networks for Tfh cells have been defined, the differentiation path of Tfh cells remains elusive. Two models have been proposed to explain the differentiation process of Tfh cells: in the parallel differentiation model, the Tfh lineage is segregated from other effector lineages at the early stage of antigen activation; alternatively, the sequential differentiation model suggests that naïve CD4+ T cells first differentiate into various effector lineages, then further program into Tfh cells. To address this question, I developed a novel in vitro co-culture system that employed antigen-specific CD4+ T cells, naïve B cells presenting cognate T cell antigen and BAFF-producing feeder cells to mimic germinal center. Using this system, I were able to robustly generate GC-like B cells. Notably, well-differentiated Th1 or Th2 effector cells also quickly acquired Tfh phenotype and function during in vitro co-culture, which suggested a sequential differentiation path for Tfh cells. To examine this path in vivo, under conditions of classical Th1- or Th2-type immunizations, I employed a TCRβ repertoire sequencing technique to track the clonotype origin of Tfh cells. Under both Th1- and Th2- immunization conditions, I observed profound repertoire overlaps between the Teff and Tfh populations, which strongly supports the proposed sequential differentiation model. Therefore, my studies establish a new platform to conveniently study Tfh-GC B cell interactions and provide insights into Tfh differentiation processes.
Resumo:
The use of DNA as a polymeric building material transcends its function in biology and is exciting in bionanotechnology for applications ranging from biosensing, to diagnostics, and to targeted drug delivery. These applications are enabled by DNA’s unique structural and chemical properties, embodied as a directional polyanion that exhibits molecular recognition capabilities. Hence, the efficient and precise synthesis of high molecular weight DNA materials has become key to advance DNA bionanotechnology. Current synthesis methods largely rely on either solid phase chemical synthesis or template-dependent polymerase amplification. The inherent step-by-step fashion of solid phase synthesis limits the length of the resulting DNA to typically less than 150 nucleotides. In contrast, polymerase based enzymatic synthesis methods (e.g., polymerase chain reaction) are not limited by product length, but require a DNA template to guide the synthesis. Furthermore, advanced DNA bionanotechnology requires tailorable structural and self-assembly properties. Current synthesis methods, however, often involve multiple conjugating reactions and extensive purification steps.
The research described in this dissertation aims to develop a facile method to synthesize high molecular weight, single stranded DNA (or polynucleotide) with versatile functionalities. We exploit the ability of a template-independent DNA polymerase−terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT) to catalyze the polymerization of 2’-deoxyribonucleoside 5’-triphosphates (dNTP, monomer) from the 3’-hydroxyl group of an oligodeoxyribonucleotide (initiator). We termed this enzymatic synthesis method: TdT catalyzed enzymatic polymerization, or TcEP.
Specifically, this dissertation is structured to address three specific research aims. With the objective to generate high molecular weight polynucleotides, Specific Aim 1 studies the reaction kinetics of TcEP by investigating the polymerization of 2’-deoxythymidine 5’-triphosphates (monomer) from the 3’-hydroxyl group of oligodeoxyribothymidine (initiator) using in situ 1H NMR and fluorescent gel electrophoresis. We found that TcEP kinetics follows the “living” chain-growth polycondensation mechanism, and like in “living” polymerizations, the molecular weight of the final product is determined by the starting molar ratio of monomer to initiator. The distribution of the molecular weight is crucially influenced by the molar ratio of initiator to TdT. We developed a reaction kinetics model that allows us to quantitatively describe the reaction and predict the molecular weight of the reaction products.
Specific Aim 2 further explores TcEP’s ability to transcend homo-polynucleotide synthesis by varying the choices of initiators and monomers. We investigated the effects of initiator length and sequence on TcEP, and found that the minimum length of an effective initiator should be 10 nucleotides and that the formation of secondary structures close to the 3’-hydroxyl group can impede the polymerization reaction. We also demonstrated TcEP’s capacity to incorporate a wide range of unnatural dNTPs into the growing chain, such as, hydrophobic fluorescent dNTP and fluoro modified dNTP. By harnessing the encoded nucleotide sequence of an initiator and the chemical diversity of monomers, TcEP enables us to introduce molecular recognition capabilities and chemical functionalities on the 5’-terminus and 3’-terminus, respectively.
Building on TcEP’s synthesis capacities, in Specific Aim 3 we invented a two-step strategy to synthesize diblock amphiphilic polynucleotides, in which the first, hydrophilic block serves as a macro-initiator for the growth of the second block, comprised of natural and/or unnatural nucleotides. By tuning the hydrophilic length, we synthesized the amphiphilic diblock polynucleotides that can self-assemble into micellar structures ranging from star-like to crew-cut morphologies. The observed self-assembly behaviors agree with predictions from dissipative particle dynamics simulations as well as scaling law for polyelectrolyte block copolymers.
In summary, we developed an enzymatic synthesis method (i.e., TcEP) that enables the facile synthesis of high molecular weight polynucleotides with low polydispersity. Although we can control the nucleotide sequence only to a limited extent, TcEP offers a method to integrate an oligodeoxyribonucleotide with specific sequence at the 5’-terminus and to incorporate functional groups along the growing chains simultaneously. Additionally, we used TcEP to synthesize amphiphilic polynucleotides that display self-assemble ability. We anticipate that our facile synthesis method will not only advance molecular biology, but also invigorate materials science and bionanotechnology.