139 resultados para Biology, Genetics|Biology, Microbiology


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Background. It is estimated that hospitals spend between 28 and 33 billion dollars per year as a result of hospital-acquired infections. (Scott, 2009) The costs continue to rise despite the guidance and controls provided by hospital infection control staff to reduce patient exposures to fungal spores and other infectious agents. With all processes and controls in place, the vented elevator shaft represents an unprotected opening from the top of the building to the lower floors. The hypothesis for this prospective study is that there is a positive correlation between the number of Penicillium/Aspergillus-like spores, Cladosporium, ascospores, basidiospores in spores/m3 as individual spore categories found in the hoistway vent of an elevator shaft and the levels of the same spores, sampled near-simultaneously in the outdoor intake of the elevator shaft. Specific aims of this study include determining if external Penicillium/Aspergillus-like spores are entering the healthcare facility via the elevator shaft and hoistway vents. Additional aims include determining levels of Penicillium/Aspergillus-like spores outdoors, in the elevator shafts, and indoors in areas possibly affected by elevator shaft air; and, finally, to evaluate whether any effect is observed due to the installation of a hoistway vent damper, installed serendipitously during this study. ^ Methods. Between April 2010 and September 2010, a total of 3,521 air samples were collected, including 363 spore trap samples analyzed microscopically for seven spore types, and polymerase chain reaction analyses on 254 air samples. 2178 particle count measurements, 363 temperature readings and 363 relative humidity readings were also obtained from 7 different locations potentially related to the path of air travel inside and near a centrally-located and representative elevator shaft. ^ Results. Mean Penicillium/Aspergillus-like spore values were higher outside the building (530 spores/m3 of air) than inside the hoistway (22.8 spores/m3) during the six month study. Mean values inside the hospital were lower than outside throughout the study, ranging from 15 to 73 spores/m3 of air. Mean Penicillium/Aspergillus-like spore counts inside the hoistway decreased from 40.1 spores/m3 of air to 9 spores/m3 of air following the installation of a back draft damper between the outside air and the elevator shaft. Comparison of samples collected outside the building and inside the hoistway vent prior to installing the damper indicated a strong positive correlation (Spearman's Rho=0.8008, p=0.0001). The similar comparison following the damper installation indicated a moderate non-significant inverse correlation (Spearman's rho = −0.2795, p=0.1347). ^ Conclusion. Elevator shafts are one pathway for mold spores to enter a healthcare facility. A significant correlation was detected between spores and particle counts inside the hoistway and outside prior to changes in the ventilation system. The insertion of the back draft damper appeared to lower the spore counts inside the hoistway and inside the building. The mold spore counts in air outside the study building were higher in the period following the damper installation while the levels inside the hoistway and hospital decreased. Cladosporium and Penicillium/Aspergillus -like spores provided a method for evaluating indoor air quality as a natural tracer from outside the building to inside the building. Ascospores and basidiospores were not a valuable tracer due to low levels of detection during this study. ^ Installation of a back draft damper provides additional protection for the indoor environment of a hospital or healthcare facility, including in particular patients who may be immunocompromised. Current design standards and references do not require the installation of a back draft damper, but evaluation of adding language to relevant building codes should be considered. The data indicate a reduction in levels of Penicillium/Aspergillus -like spores, particle counts and a reduction in relative humidity inside of the elevator shaft after damper installation.^

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Diarrhea remains a significant cause of worldwide morbidity and mortality. Over 4 million children die of diarrhea annually. Although antibiotics can be used as prophylaxis or for treatment of diarrhea, concern remains over antibiotic resistance. Rifaximin is a semi-synthetic rifamycin derivative that can be used to treat symptoms of infectious diarrhea, inflammatory bowel syndrome, bacterial overgrowth of the small bowel, pouchitis, and fulminant ulcerative colitis. Rifaximin is of particular interest because it is poorly adsorbed in the intestines, shows no indication of inducing bacterial resistance, and has minimal effect on intestinal flora. In order to better understand how rifaximin functions, we sought to compare the protein expression profile of cells pretreated with rifaximin, as compared to cells treated with acetone, rifamycin (control antibiotic), or media (untreated). 2-D gel electrophoresis identified 38 protein spots that were up- or down-regulated by over 2-fold in rifaximin treated cells compared to controls. 16 of these spots were down-regulated, including keratin, annexin A5, intestinal-type alkaline phosphatase, histone h4, and histone-binding protein RbbP4. 22 spots were up-regulated, including heat shock protein HSP 90 alpha, alkaline phosphatase, and fascin. Many of the identified proteins are associated with cell structure and cytoskeleton, transcription and translation, and cellular metabolism. A better understanding of the functionality of rifaximin will identify additional potential uses for rifaximin and determine for whom the drug is best suited. ^

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Background: Family members of Enterobacteriaceae are found in small numbers associated with acute diarrhea. These species are sometimes mistaken for ETEC. ^ Methods: Forty-four non-E. coli species from travelers' diarrhea are compared to 30 strains of Escherichia coli (ETEC) and 30 strains of normal flora E. coli. Tissue culture supernatants were assayed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for amounts of IL-8, IL-1, and IL-1ra. Amounts of heat-stable (ST) and heat-labile (LT) enterotoxins were assayed from cell culture supernatants by enzyme-linked immunoassay. PCR was use to determine which species was positive colonization factor antigens, CFA/I, CS3, and CS6. ^ Results: Normal flora E. coli significantly induced the production of more IL-8 than non- E. coli and ETEC. Normal E. coli also induced the production of more IL-1and IL-1ra than ETEC. Non-E. coli produced more ST than ETEC. A small percentage of enterotoxigenic non- E. coli gram negatives and ETEC were positive for CFA/I and CS6. None of the strains were positive for CS3. ^ Conclusions: Non-E. coli enterotoxigenic gram negatives were similar to ETEC in their virulence factors. Identification and further study of these non-E.coli strains is important for understanding their pathogenic role in acute diarrhea.^

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Study Objective: Identify the most frequent risk factors of Community Acquired-MRSA (CA-MRSA) Skin and Soft-tissue Infections (SSTIs) using a case series of patients and characterize them by age, race/ethnicity, gender, abscess location, druguse and intravenous drug-user (IVDU), underlying medical conditions, homelessness, treatment resistance, sepsis, those whose last healthcare visit was within the last 12 months, and describe the susceptibility pattern from this central Texas population that have come into the University Medical Center Brackenridge (UMCB) Emergency Department (ED). ^ Methods: This study was a retrospective case-series medical record review involving a convenience sample of patients in 2007 from an urban public hospital's ED in Texas that had a SSTI that tested positive for MRSA. All positive MRSA cultures underwent susceptibility testing to determine antibiotic resistance. The demographic and clinical variables that were independently associated with MRSA were determined by univariate and multivariate analysis using logistic regression to calculate odds ratios (OR), 95% confidence intervals, and significance (p≤ 0.05). ^ Results: In 2007, there were 857 positive MRSA cultures. The demographics were: males 60% and females 40%, with the average age of 36.2 (std. dev. =13) the study population consisted of non-Hispanic white (42%), Hispanics (38%), and non-Hispanic black (18.8%). Possible risk factors addressed included using recreational drugs (not including IVDU) (27%) homelessness (13%), diabetes status (12.6%) or having an infectious disease, and IVDU (10%). The most frequent abscess location was the leg (26.6%), followed by the arm and torso (both 13.7%). Eighty-three percent of patients had one prominent susceptibility pattern that had a susceptibility rate for the following antibiotics: trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMX) and vancomycin had 100%, gentamicin 99%, clindamycin 96%, tetracycline 96%, and erythromycin 56%. ^ Conclusion: The ED is becoming an important area for disease transmission between the sterile hospital environment and the outside environment. As always, it is important to further research in the ED in an effort to better understand MRSA transmission and antibiotic resistance, as well as to keep surveillance for the introduction of new opportunistic pathogens into the population. ^

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The main aim of this study was to look at the association of Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) and HIV. A secondary goal was to look at the trend of CDI-related deaths in Texas from 1999-2011. To evaluate the coinfection of CDI and HIV, we looked at 2 datasets provided by CHS-TDSHS, for 13 years of study period from 1999-2011: 1) Texas death certificate data and 2) Texas hospital discharge data. An ancillary source of data was national level death data from CDC. We did a secondary data analysis and reported the age-adjusted death rates (mortality) and hospital discharge frequencies (morbidity) for CDI, HIV and for CDI+HIV coinfection.^ Since the turn of the century, CDI has reemerged as an important public health challenge due to the emergence of hypervirulent epidemic strains. From 1999-2011, there has been a significant upward trend in CDI-related death rates; in the state of Texas alone, CDI mortality rate has increased 8.7 fold in this time period at the rate of 0.2 deaths per year per 100,000 individuals. On the contrary, mortality due to HIV has decreased by 46% and has been trending down. The demographic groups in Texas with the highest CDI mortality rates were elderly aged 65+, males, whites and hospital inpatients. The epidemiology of C. difficile has changed in such a way that it is not only staying confined to these traditional high-risk groups, but is also being increasingly reported in low-risk populations such as healthy people in the community (community acquired C. difficile), and most recently immunocompromised patients. Among the latter, HIV can worsen the adverse health outcomes of CDI and vice versa. In patients with CDI and HIV coinfection, higher mortality and morbidity was found in young & middle-aged adults, blacks and males, the same demographic population that is at higher risk for HIV. As with typical CDI, the coinfection was concentrated in the hospital inpatients. Of all the CDI-related deaths in USA from 1999-2010, in the 25-44 year age group, 13% had HIV infection. Of all CDI-related inpatient hospital discharges in Texas from 1999-2011, in patients 44 years and younger, 17% had concomitant HIV infection. Therefore, HIV is a possible novel emerging risk factor for CDI.^

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BACKGROUND: Weight has been implicated as a risk factor for symptomatic community-acquired methicillin resistant Staphylococcus Aureus (CA-MRSA). Information from Texas Children's Hospital (TCH) in Houston, TX was used to implement a case-control study to assess weight-for-age percentile (WFA), race and seasonal exposure as risk factors. ^ METHODS: A retrospective chart review to collect data from TCH was conducted covering the time period January 1st, 2008 to May 31st, 2011. Cases were confirmed and identified by the infectious disease department and were matched on a 1:1 ratio to controls that were seen by the emergency department for non-infected fractures from June 1st, 2008 to May 31st, 2011. Data abstraction was performed using TCH's electronic medical records (EMR) system (EPIC ®). ^ RESULTS: Of 702 CA-MRSA identified cases, ages 9 to 16.99, 564 (80.3%) had the variable `weight' present in their EMR, were not duplicates and not determined to be outliers. Cases were randomly matched to a pool of available controls (n=1864) according to age and gender, yielding 539 1:1 matched pairs (95.5% case matching success) with a total study sample size, N=1078. Case median age was 13.38 years with the majority being White (66.05%) and male (59.4%). Adjusted conditional logistic regression analysis of the matched pairs identified the following risk factors to presenting with CA-MRSA infection among pediatric patients, ages 9 to 16.99 years: a) Individual weight in the highest (75th-99.9th) WFA quartile (OR=1.36; 95% confidence interval [CI]=1.06-1.74; P= 0.016), b) Infection during summer months (OR: 1.69; 95% CI=1.2-2.38; P= 0.003), c) patients of African American race/ethnicity (OR= 1.48; 95% CI=1.13-1.95; P= 0.004). ^ CONCLUSIONS: Pediatric patients, 9 to 16.99 years of age, in the highest WFA quartile (75th-99.9th), or of African-American race had an associated increased risk of presenting with CA-MRSA infection. Furthermore, children in this population were at a higher risk of contracting CA-MRSA infection during the summer season.^

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ts1 is a neurovirulent spontaneous temperature-sensitive mutant of Moloney murine leukemia virus TB (MoMuLV-TB). MoMuLV-TB causes T-cell lymphoma or lymphoid leukemia in mice after a long latency period whereas ts1 causes a progressive hindlimb paralytic disease after a much shorter latency period. In previous studies, it had been shown that the temperature-sensitive defect resided in the $env$ gene. At the restrictive temperature, the envelope precursor polyprotein, gPr80$\sp{env}$, is inefficiently processed intracellularly into a heterodimer consisting of two cleavage products, gp70 and Prp15E. This inefficient processing is correlated with neurovirulence. In this study, the nucleotide sequences of the env genes for both ts1 and MoMuLV-TB were determined, and the encoded amino acid sequences were deduced from the DNA sequences. There were four unique amino acid substitutions in the gPr80$\sp{env}$ of ts1. In order to determine which unique amino acid was responsible for the phenotypic characteristics of ts1, a set of hybrid genomes was constructed by exchanging restriction fragments between ts1 and MoMuLV-TB. NIH 3T3 cells were transfected with the hybrid genomes to obtain infectious hybrid viruses. Assays of the hybrid viruses showed that a Val-25$\to$Ile substitution in gPr80$\sp{env}$ was responsible for the temperature sensitivity, inefficient processing, and neurovirulence of ts1. In further studies, the Ile-25 in gPr80$\sp{env}$ was substituted with Thr, Ala, Leu, Gly, and Glu by site-directed mutagenesis to generate a new set of mutant viruses, i.e., ts1-T, -A, -L, -G, and -E, respectively. The rank order of the mutants for temperature sensitivity was: ts1-E $>$ ts1-G $>$ ts1-L $>$ ts1-A $>$ ts1 $>$ ts1-T. The degree of temperature sensitivity of each of the mutants also correlated with the degree of inefficient processing of gPr80$\sp{env}$. The mutant viruses were assayed for neurovirulence. ts1-T caused whole body tremor, ts1-A caused hindlimb paralysis, ts1-L caused paraparesis, but ts1-G and -E were not neurovirulent. These results show that inefficient processing of gPr80$\sp{env}$ is correlated with neurovirulence, but if processing of gPr80$\sp{env}$ is too inefficient there is no neurovirulence. Furthermore, the disease profile of each of the neurovirulent viruses depends on the degree of inefficient processing of gPr80$\sp{env}$. ^

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Viral systems have contributed tremendously to the understanding of eukaryotic molecular biology. The proportional pattern of retroviral RNA expression offers many clues into the alternative splicing of cellular transcripts. The MuSVts110 virus presents an unusual expression system, where the mechanistic combination of RNA splicing and cellular transformation can be physiologically manipulated. Splicing of MuSVts110 pre-mRNA occurs inefficiently (30%-50%) at 33$\sp\circ$C or below and is subdued at 39$\sp\circ$C ($<$5%). Like most alternatively spliced cellular and retroviral transcripts, the MuSVts110 pre-mRNA contains cis-acting intron and exon sequences that attenuate splicing. These include a splicing inhibitory sequence at the 3$\prime$ end of the MuSVts110 v-mos exon, called the E2 Distal Element (E2DE), and a sub-optimal 3$\prime$ splice site. The E2DE directly inhibits MuSVts110 RNA splicing in a sequence-specific fashion at 39$\sp\circ$C but not at 28$\sp\circ$C, potentially through the association of cellular factors. Inefficient MuSVts110 splicing is pre-dominantly attributed to the utilization of multiple weak branchpoint sequences located between $-113$ and $-34$ nucleotides upstream of the 3$\prime$ splice site. The molecular control of MuSVts110 splicing, represented primarily by scattered multiple inefficient branchpoint sequences that are conditionally modulated by the E2DE at higher growth temperatures, is discussed. ^

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Agrobacterium tumefaciens is a plant pathogen with the unique ability to export oncogenic DNA-protein complexes (T-complexes) to susceptible plant cells and cause crown gall tumors. Delivery of the T-complexes across the bacterial membranes requires eleven VirB proteins and VirD4, which are postulated to form a transmembrane transporter. This thesis examines the subcellular localization and oligomeric structure of the 87-kDa VirB4 protein, which is one of three essential ATPases proposed to energize T-complex transport and/or assembly. Results of subcellular localization studies showed that VirB4 is tightly associated with the cytoplasmic membrane, suggesting that it is a membrane-spanning protein. The membrane topology of VirB4 was determined by using a nested deletion strategy to generate random fusions between virB4 and the periplasmically-active alkaline phosphatase, $\sp\prime phoA$. Analysis of PhoA and complementary $\beta$-galactosidase reporter fusions identified two putative periplasmically-exposed regions in VirB4. A periplasmic exposure of one of these regions was further confirmed by protease susceptibility assays using A. tumefaciens spheroplasts. To gain insight into the structure of the transporter, the topological configurations of other VirB proteins were also examined. Results from hydropathy analyses, subcellular localization, protease susceptibility, and PhoA reporter fusion studies support a model that all of the VirB proteins localize at one or both of the bacterial membranes. Immunoprecipitation and Co$\sp{2+}$ affinity chromatography studies demonstrated that native VirB4 (87-kDa) and a functional N-terminally tagged HIS-VirB4 derivative (89-kDa) interact and that the interaction is independent of other VirB proteins. A $\lambda$ cI repressor fusion assay supplied further evidence for VirB4 dimer formation. A VirB4 dimerization domain was localized to the N-terminal third of the protein, as judged by: (i) transdominance of an allele that codes for this region of VirB4; (ii) co-retention of a His-tagged N-terminal truncation derivative and native VirB4 on Co$\sp{2+}$ affinity columns; and (iii) dimer formation of the N-terminal third of VirB4 fused to the cI repressor protein. Taken together, these findings are consistent with a model that VirB4 is topologically configured as an integral cytoplasmic membrane protein with two periplasmic domains and that VirB4 assembles as homodimers via an N-terminal dimerization domain. Dimer formation is postulated to be essential for stabilization of VirB4 monomers during T-complex transporter assembly. ^

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The Reoviridae virus family is a group of economically and pathologically important viruses that have either single-, double-, or triple-shelled protein layers enclosing a segmented double stranded RNA genome. Each virus particle in this family has its own viral RNA dependent RNA polymerase and the enzymatic activities necessary for the mature RNA synthesis. Based on the structure of the inner most cores of the viruses, the Reoviridae viruses can be divided into two major groups. One group of viruses has a smooth surfaced inner core, surrounded by complete outer shells of one or two protein layers. The other group has an inner core decorated with turrets on the five-fold vertices, and could either completely lack or have incomplete outer protein layers. The structural difference is one of the determinant factors for their biological differences during the infection. ^ Cytoplasmic polyhedrosis virus (CPV) is a single-shelled, turreted virus and the structurally simplest member in Reoviridae. It causes specific chronic infections in the insect gut epithelial cells. Due to its wide range of insect hosts, CPV has been engineered as a potential insecticide for use in fruit and vegetable farming. Its unique structural simplicity, unparalleled capsid stability and ease of purification make CPV an ideal model system for studying the structural basis of dsRNA virus assembly at the highest possible resolution by electron cryomicroscopy (cryoEM) and three-dimensional (3D) reconstruction. ^ In this thesis work, I determined the first 3D structure of CPV capsids using 100 kV cryoEM. At an effective resolution of 17 Å, the full capsid reveals a 600-Å diameter, T = 1 icosahedral shell decorated with A and B spikes at the 5-fold vertices. The internal space of the empty CPV is unoccupied except for 12 mushroom-shaped densities that are attributed to the transcriptional enzyme complexes. The inside of the full capsid is packed with icosahedrally-ordered viral genomic RNA. The interactions of viral RNA with the transcriptional enzyme complexes and other capsid proteins suggest a mechanism for RNA transcription and subsequent release. ^ Second, the interactions between the turret proteins (TPs) and the major capsid shell protein (CSPs) have been identified through 3D structural comparisons of the intact CPV capsids with the spikeless CPV capsids, which were generated by chemical treatments. The differential effects of these chemical treatment experiments also indicated that CPV has a significantly stronger structural integrity than other dsRNA viruses, such as the orthoreovirus subcores, which are normally enclosed within outer protein shells. ^ Finally, we have reconstructed the intact CPV to an unprecendented 8 Å resolution from several thousand of 400kV cryoEM images. The 8 Å structure reveals interactions among the 120 molecules of each of the capsid shell protein (CSP), the large protrusion protein (LPP), and 60 molecules of the turret protein (TP). A total of 1980 α-helices and 720 β-sheets have been identified in these capsid proteins. The CSP structure is largely conserved, with the majority of the secondary structures homologous to those observed in the x-ray structures of corresponding proteins of other reoviruses, such as orthoreovirus and bluetongue virus. The three domains of TP are well positioned to play multifunctional roles during viral transcription. The completely non-equivalent interactions between LPP and CSP and those between the anchoring domain of TP and CSP account for the unparalleled stability of this structurally simplest member of the Reoviridae. ^

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Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the causative agent of tuberculosis, is a facultative intracellular pathogen that uses the host mononuclear phagocyte as a niche for survival and replication during infection. Complement component C3 has previously been shown to enhance the binding of M. tuberculosis to mononuclear phagocytes. Using a C3 ligand affinity blot protocol, we identified a 30 kDa C3-binding protein in M. tuberculosis as heparin-binding hemagglutinin (HbhA). HbhA was found to be a hydrophobic protein that localized to the cell membrane/cell wall fraction of M. tuberculosis, and this protein has previously been shown by others to be located on the surface of M. tuberculosis. The C3-binding activity of HbhA was localized to the C-terminus of the protein, which consists of lysine-alanine repeats. Full-length recombinant HbhA coated onto latex beads was shown to mediate the adherence of the beads to murine macrophage-like cells in both a C3-dependent and a C3-independent manner. An in-frame 576 by deletion in the hbhA gene was created in a virulent strain of M. tuberculosis using a PCR technique known as gene splicing by overlap extension (SOEing). Using the ΔhbhA mutant, HbhA was found not to be necessary for growth of M. tuberculosis in laboratory media or in macrophage-like cells, nor is HbhA required for adherence of M. tuberculosis to macrophage-like cells. HbhA is, however, required for infectivity of M. tuberculosis in mice. Mice infected with the ΔhbhA mutant show decreased growth in the lungs, liver, and spleen compared to mice infected with the wild-type strain. Using the ΔhbhA mutant strain, we were able to purify and identify a second 30-kDa C3-binding protein, HupB. These data demonstrate that HbhA is required for the in vivo but not the in vitro survival of M. tuberculosis and that HbhA is not necessary for the adherence of M. tuberculosis to the macrophage-like cells used in these studies. The expression of two proteins that bind human C3 may aid in the efficient binding of M. tuberculosis to complement receptors for uptake into mononuclear cells, or may influence other aspects of the host-parasite interaction. ^

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Extracellular signals regulate fungal development and, to sense and respond to these cues, fungi evolved signal transduction pathways similar to those in mammalian systems. In fungi, heterotrimeric G proteins, composed of α, β, and γ subunits, transduce many signals, such as pheromones and nutrients, intracellularly to alter adenylyl cyclase and MAPK cascades activity. ^ Previously, the Gα proteins GNA-1 and GNA-2 were characterized in regulating development in the fungus Neurospora crassa. R. A. Baasiri isolated a third Gα, gna-3, and P. S. Rowley generated Δgna-3 mutants. GNA-3 belongs to a fungal Gα family that regulates cAMP metabolism and virulence. The Δ gna-3 sexual cycle is defective in homozygous crosses, producing inviable spores. Δgna-3 mutants have reduced aerial hyphae formation and derepressed asexual sporulation (conidiation), causing accumulation of asexual spores (conidia). These defects are similar to an adenylyl cyclase mutant, cr-1; cAMP supplementation suppressed Δ gna-3 and cr-1. Inappropriate conidiation and expression of a conidiation gene, con-10, were higher in Δ gna-3 than cr-1 submerged cultures; peptone suppressed conidiation. Adenylyl cyclase activity and expression demonstrated that GNA-3 regulates enzyme levels. ^ A Δgna-1 cr-1 was analyzed with F. D. Ivey to differentiate GNA-1 roles in cAMP-dependent and -independent pathways. Δ gna-1 cr-1 defects were worse than cr-1 and refractory to cAMP, suggesting that GNA-1 is necessary for sensing extracellular CAMP. Submerged culture conidiation was highest in Δgna-1 cr-1, and only high cell density Δgna-1 cultures conidiated, which correlated with con-10 levels. Transcription of a putative heat shock cognate protein was highest in Δgna-1 cr-1. ^ Functional relationships between the three Gαs was analyzed by constructing Δgna-1 Δgna-2 Δ gna-3, Δgna-1 Δgna-3, and Δgna-2 Δgna-3 strains. Δ gna-2 Δgna-3 strains exhibited intensified Δ gna-3 phenotypes; Δgna-1 Δgna-2 Δgna-3 and Δgna-1 Δ gna-3 strains were identical to Δgna-1 cr-1 on plates and were non-responsive to cAMP. The highest levels of conidiation and con-10 were detected in submerged cultures of Δ gna-1 Δgna-2 Δgna-3 and Δgna-1 Δgna-3 mutants, which was partially suppressed by peptone supplementation. Stimulation of adenylyl cyclase is completely deficient in Δgna-1 Δ gna-2 Δgna-3 and Δgna-1 Δ gna-3 strains. Δgna-3 and Δ gna-1 Δgna-3 aerial hyphae and conidiation defects were suppressed by mutation of a PKA regulatory subunit. ^

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Borrelia burgdorferi, a spirochete and the causative agent of Lyme disease, infects both mammals and ticks. Its genome, sequenced in 1997, consists of one linear chromosome and over 20 linear and circular plasmids. Continuous passage of organisms in culture causes them to lose certain plasmids and also results in loss of infectivity in mammals. In this work, 19 B. burgdorferi clonal isolates were examined for infectivity in mice and for plasmid content utilizing polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Two plasmids, a 28 kilobase (kb) linear plasmid (Ip28-1) and a 25 kb linear plasmid (Ip25) were found to be required for full infectivity. Previous studies had demonstrated that Ip28-1 contains the vls locus, which is involved in antigenic variation and immune evasion. Gene BBE22 on Ip25 is predicted to encode the nicotinamidase PncA, an enzyme that converts nicotinamide to nicotinic acid as part of a pathway for NAD synthesis. To examine the potential role of BBE22 in infectivity, a shuttle vector containing BBE22 (pBBE22) was constructed and used to transform B. burgdorferi clone 5A13, which contains all plasmids except lp25. Transformation with pBBE22 restored infectivity of clone 5A13 in mice, whereas 5A13 transformed with the shuttle vector alone was not infectious. To determine whether BBE22 acts as a nicotinamidase in vivo, a Salmonella typhimurium pncA− nadB− transposon mutant was transformed with pBBE22 or with pQE30:BBE22, which contained BBE22 in an E. coli expression vector. Both constructs complemented the Salmonella mutant, permitting growth in minimal media plus nicotinamide. Salmonella cells over-expressing BBE22 also exhibited nicotinamidase activity, as determined by ammonia production in the presence of nicotinamide. Site-directed mutagenesis of BBE22 at the predicted active site (resulting in a Cys120Ala substitution) abrogated the ability to restore infectivity to B. burgdorferi 5A13 and to complement the pncA mutation in S. typhimurium. These studies indicate that BBE22 is a nicotinamidase required for NAD synthesis and survival of B. burgdorferi in mammals. This is also the first demonstration of ‘molecular Koch's postulates’ in B. burgdorferi, i.e. that a specific gene is essential for infectivity of the Lyme disease spirochete. ^

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Light absorption is an important process for energy production and sensory perception in many organisms. In the filamentous fungus, Neurospora crassa, blue-light is an important regulator of both asexual and sexual development, but the identity of the blue-light receptor is unknown. The work presented in this dissertation initiated the characterization of the putative N. crassa opsin photoreceptor, NOP-1. Opsins were thought to exist only in the archaea and mammals until the discovery of nop-1. All opsins have the same conserved structure of seven transmembrane helical domains with a lysine residue in the seventh helix specific for forming a Schiff-base linkage with retinal. The predicted NOP-1 protein sequence is equally similar to archaeal rhodopsins and a newly identified fungal opsin-related protein group (ORPs). ORPs maintain the seven transmembrane helical structure of opsins, but lack the conserved lysine residue for binding retinal. An ORP gene, orp-1 was identified in N. crassa and this work includes the cloning and sequence analysis of this gene. Characterization of NOP-1 function in N. crassa development began with the construction of a Δnop-1 deletion mutant. Extensive phenotypic analysis of Δnop-1 mutants revealed only subtle defects during development primarily under environmental conditions that induce a stress response. NOP-1 was overexpressed in the heterologous system Pichia pastoris, and it was demonstrated that NOP-1 protein bound all-trans retinal to form a green-light absorbing pigment (λmax = 534 nm) with a photochemical reaction cycle similar to archaeal sensory rhodopsins. nop-1 gene expression was monitored during N. crassa development. nop-1 transcript is highly expressed during asexual sporulation (conidiation) and transcript levels are abundant in the later stages of conidial development. nop-1 expression is not regulated by blue-light or elevated temperatures. Potential functions for NOP-1 were discovered through the transcriptional analysis of conidiation-associated genes in Δnop-1 mutants. NOP-1 exhibits antagonistic transcriptional regulation of conidiation-associated genes late in conidial development, by enhancing the carotenogenic gene, al-2 and repressing the conidiation-specific genes, con-10 and con-13. ^

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Infection by human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) is a multi-step process, and detailed analyses of the various events critical for productive infection are necessary to clearly understanding the infection process and identifying novel targets for therapeutic interventions. Evidence from this study reveals binding of the viral envelope protein to host cell glycosphingolipids (GSLs) as a novel event necessary for the orderly progression of the host cell-entry and productive infection by HIV-1. Data obtained from co-immunoprecipitation analyses and confocal microscopy showed that the ability of viral envelope to interact with the co-receptor CXCR4 and productive infection of HIV-1 were inhibited in cells rendered GSL-deficient, while both these activities were restored after reconstitution of the cells with specific GSLs like GM3. Furthermore, evidence was obtained using peptide-inhibitors of HIV-1 infection to show that binding of a specific region within the V3-loop of the envelope protein gp120 to the host cell GSLs is the trigger necessary for the CD4-bound gp120 to recruit the CXCR4 co-receptor. Infection-inhibitory activity of the V3 peptides was compromised in GSL-deficient cells, but could be restored by reconstitution of GSLs. Based on these findings, a revised model for HIV-1 infection is proposed that accounts for the established interactions between the viral envelope and host cell receptors while enumerating the importance of the new findings that fill the gap in the current knowledge of the sequential events for the HIV-1 entry. According to this model, post-CD4 binding of the HIV-1 envelope surface protein gp120 to host cell GSLs, mediated by the gp120-V3 region, enables formation of the gp120-CD4-GSL-CXCR4 immune-complex and productive infection. The identification of cellular GSLs as an additional class of co-factors necessary for HIV-1 infection is important for enhancing the basic knowledge of the HIV-1 entry that can be exploited for developing novel antiviral therapeutic strategies. ^