Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 16 de 16
Filter
Add more filters










Publication year range
1.
mBio ; 11(2)2020 03 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32156803

ABSTRACT

Clostridioides difficile is an important nosocomial pathogen that causes approximately 500,000 cases of C. difficile infection (CDI) and 29,000 deaths annually in the United States. Antibiotic use is a major risk factor for CDI because broad-spectrum antimicrobials disrupt the indigenous gut microbiota, decreasing colonization resistance against C. difficile Vancomycin is the standard of care for the treatment of CDI, likely contributing to the high recurrence rates due to the continued disruption of the gut microbiota. Thus, there is an urgent need for the development of novel therapeutics that can prevent and treat CDI and precisely target the pathogen without disrupting the gut microbiota. Here, we show that the endogenous type I-B CRISPR-Cas system in C. difficile can be repurposed as an antimicrobial agent by the expression of a self-targeting CRISPR that redirects endogenous CRISPR-Cas3 activity against the bacterial chromosome. We demonstrate that a recombinant bacteriophage expressing bacterial genome-targeting CRISPR RNAs is significantly more effective than its wild-type parent bacteriophage at killing C. difficile both in vitro and in a mouse model of CDI. We also report that conversion of the phage from temperate to obligately lytic is feasible and contributes to the therapeutic suitability of intrinsic C. difficile phages, despite the specific challenges encountered in the disease phenotypes of phage-treated animals. Our findings suggest that phage-delivered programmable CRISPR therapeutics have the potential to leverage the specificity and apparent safety of phage therapies and improve their potency and reliability for eradicating specific bacterial species within complex communities, offering a novel mechanism to treat pathogenic and/or multidrug-resistant organisms.IMPORTANCEClostridioides difficile is a bacterial pathogen responsible for significant morbidity and mortality across the globe. Current therapies based on broad-spectrum antibiotics have some clinical success, but approximately 30% of patients have relapses, presumably due to the continued perturbation to the gut microbiota. Here, we show that phages can be engineered with type I CRISPR-Cas systems and modified to reduce lysogeny and to enable the specific and efficient targeting and killing of C. difficilein vitro and in vivo. Additional genetic engineering to disrupt phage modulation of toxin expression by lysogeny or other mechanisms would be required to advance a CRISPR-enhanced phage antimicrobial for C. difficile toward clinical application. These findings provide evidence into how phage can be combined with CRISPR-based targeting to develop novel therapies and modulate microbiomes associated with health and disease.


Subject(s)
Bacteriophages/genetics , CRISPR-Cas Systems/genetics , Clostridioides difficile/genetics , Animals , CRISPR-Associated Proteins/genetics , Enterocolitis, Pseudomembranous/microbiology , Enterocolitis, Pseudomembranous/therapy , Female , Genetic Engineering , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL
2.
Biophys J ; 115(2): 242-250, 2018 07 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29338841

ABSTRACT

Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron (Bt) is a prominent member of the human gut microbiota with an extensive capacity for glycan harvest. This bacterium expresses a five-protein complex in the outer membrane, called the starch utilization system (Sus), which binds, degrades, and imports starch into the cell. Sus is a model system for the many glycan-targeting polysaccharide utilization loci found in Bt and other members of the Bacteroidetes phylum. Our previous work has shown that SusG, a lipidated amylase in the outer membrane, explores the entire cell surface but diffuses more slowly as it interacts with starch. Here, we use a combination of single-molecule tracking, super-resolution imaging, reverse genetics, and proteomics to show that SusE and SusF, two proteins that bind starch, are immobile on the cell surface even when other members of the system are knocked out and under multiple different growth conditions. This observation suggests a new paradigm for protein complex formation: binding proteins form immobile complexes that transiently associate with a mobile enzyme partner.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Starch/metabolism , Bacteroidaceae/cytology , Bacteroidaceae/metabolism , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Protein Binding
3.
Biophys J ; 110(10): 2241-51, 2016 May 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27224489

ABSTRACT

By following single fluorescent molecules in a microscope, single-particle tracking (SPT) can measure diffusion and binding on the nanometer and millisecond scales. Still, although SPT can at its limits characterize the fastest biomolecules as they interact with subcellular environments, this measurement may require advanced illumination techniques such as stroboscopic illumination. Here, we address the challenge of measuring fast subcellular motion by instead analyzing single-molecule data with spatiotemporal image correlation spectroscopy (STICS) with a focus on measurements of confined motion. Our SPT and STICS analysis of simulations of the fast diffusion of confined molecules shows that image blur affects both STICS and SPT, and we find biased diffusion rate measurements for STICS analysis in the limits of fast diffusion and tight confinement due to fitting STICS correlation functions to a Gaussian approximation. However, we determine that with STICS, it is possible to correctly interpret the motion that blurs single-molecule images without advanced illumination techniques or fast cameras. In particular, we present a method to overcome the bias due to image blur by properly estimating the width of the correlation function by directly calculating the correlation function variance instead of using the typical Gaussian fitting procedure. Our simulation results are validated by applying the STICS method to experimental measurements of fast, confined motion: we measure the diffusion of cytosolic mMaple3 in living Escherichia coli cells at 25 frames/s under continuous illumination to illustrate the utility of STICS in an experimental parameter regime for which in-frame motion prevents SPT and tight confinement of fast diffusion precludes stroboscopic illumination. Overall, our application of STICS to freely diffusing cytosolic protein in small cells extends the utility of single-molecule experiments to the regime of fast confined diffusion without requiring advanced microscopy techniques.


Subject(s)
Cytosol/metabolism , Diffusion , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Luminescent Proteins/metabolism , Single Molecule Imaging/methods , Spectrum Analysis/methods , Algorithms , Computer Simulation , Imaging, Three-Dimensional/methods , Microscopy, Fluorescence/methods , Models, Biological , Motion
4.
Chemphyschem ; 17(10): 1435-40, 2016 05 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26888309

ABSTRACT

Single-molecule fluorescence super-resolution imaging and tracking provide nanometer-scale information about subcellular protein positions and dynamics. These single-molecule imaging experiments can be very powerful, but they are best suited to high-copy number proteins where many measurements can be made sequentially in each cell. We describe artifacts associated with the challenge of imaging a protein expressed in only a few copies per cell. We image live Bacillus subtilis in a fluorescence microscope, and demonstrate that under standard single-molecule imaging conditions, unlabeled B. subtilis cells display punctate red fluorescent spots indistinguishable from the few PAmCherry fluorescent protein single molecules under investigation. All Bacillus species investigated were strongly affected by this artifact, whereas we did not find a significant number of these background sources in two other species we investigated, Enterococcus faecalis and Escherichia coli. With single-molecule resolution, we characterize the number, spatial distribution, and intensities of these impurity spots.


Subject(s)
Bacillus subtilis/metabolism , Enterococcus faecalis/metabolism , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Microscopy, Fluorescence/methods , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism
5.
Mol Cell ; 60(3): 374-84, 2015 Nov 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26481664

ABSTRACT

We characterize the interaction of RecA with membranes in vivo and in vitro and demonstrate that RecA binds tightly to the anionic phospholipids cardiolipin (CL) and phosphatidylglycerol (PG). Using computational models, we identify two regions of RecA that interact with PG and CL: (1) the N-terminal helix and (2) loop L2. Mutating these regions decreased the affinity of RecA to PG and CL in vitro. Using 3D super-resolution microscopy, we demonstrate that depleting Escherichia coli PG and CL altered the localization of RecA foci and hindered the formation of RecA filament bundles. Consequently, E. coli cells lacking aPLs fail to initiate a robust SOS response after DNA damage, indicating that the membrane acts as a scaffold for nucleating the formation of RecA filament bundles and plays an important role in the SOS response.


Subject(s)
Cardiolipins/metabolism , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Escherichia coli Proteins/metabolism , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Phosphatidylglycerols/metabolism , Rec A Recombinases/metabolism , Cardiolipins/genetics , Cell Membrane/genetics , DNA Damage , DNA, Bacterial/genetics , DNA, Bacterial/metabolism , Escherichia coli/genetics , Escherichia coli Proteins/genetics , Phosphatidylglycerols/genetics , Protein Structure, Secondary , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Rec A Recombinases/genetics , SOS Response, Genetics/physiology
7.
Soft Matter ; 10(1): 88-95, 2014 Jan 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24652584

ABSTRACT

This paper reports an investigation of dynamical behaviors of motile rod-shaped bacteria within anisotropic viscoelastic environments defined by lyotropic liquid crystals (LCs). In contrast to passive microparticles (including non-motile bacteria) that associate irreversibly in LCs via elasticity-mediated forces, we report that motile Proteus mirabilis bacteria form dynamic and reversible multi-cellular assemblies when dispersed in a lyotropic LC. By measuring the velocity of the bacteria through the LC (8.8 ± 0.2 µm s(-1)) and by characterizing the ordering of the LC about the rod-shaped bacteria (tangential anchoring), we conclude that the reversibility of the inter-bacterial interaction emerges from the interplay of forces generated by the flagella of the bacteria and the elasticity of the LC, both of which are comparable in magnitude (tens of pN) for motile Proteus mirabilis cells. We also measured the dissociation process, which occurs in a direction determined by the LC, to bias the size distribution of multi-cellular bacterial complexes in a population of motile Proteus mirabilis relative to a population of non-motile cells. Overall, these observations and others reported in this paper provide insight into the fundamental dynamic behaviors of bacteria in complex anisotropic environments and suggest that motile bacteria in LCs are an exciting model system for exploration of principles for the design of active materials.


Subject(s)
Liquid Crystals/chemistry , Proteus mirabilis/chemistry , Thermodynamics , Cells, Cultured , Proteus mirabilis/cytology , Proteus mirabilis/genetics
8.
Soft Matter ; 9(18): 4368-4380, 2013 May 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23930134

ABSTRACT

The interaction of bacteria with surfaces has important implications in a range of areas, including bioenergy, biofouling, biofilm formation, and the infection of plants and animals. Many of the interactions of bacteria with surfaces produce changes in the expression of genes that influence cell morphology and behavior, including genes essential for motility and surface attachment. Despite the attention that these phenotypes have garnered, the bacterial systems used for sensing and responding to surfaces are still not well understood. An understanding of these mechanisms will guide the development of new classes of materials that inhibit and promote cell growth, and complement studies of the physiology of bacteria in contact with surfaces. Recent studies from a range of fields in science and engineering are poised to guide future investigations in this area. This review summarizes recent studies on bacteria-surface interactions, discusses mechanisms of surface sensing and consequences of cell attachment, provides an overview of surfaces that have been used in bacterial studies, and highlights unanswered questions in this field.

9.
J Bacteriol ; 195(2): 368-77, 2013 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23144253

ABSTRACT

Proteus mirabilis is an opportunistic pathogen that is frequently associated with urinary tract infections. In the lab, P. mirabilis cells become long and multinucleate and increase their number of flagella as they colonize agar surfaces during swarming. Swarming has been implicated in pathogenesis; however, it is unclear how energetically costly changes in P. mirabilis cell morphology translate into an advantage for adapting to environmental changes. We investigated two morphological changes that occur during swarming--increases in cell length and flagellum density--and discovered that an increase in the surface density of flagella enabled cells to translate rapidly through fluids of increasing viscosity; in contrast, cell length had a small effect on motility. We found that swarm cells had a surface density of flagella that was ∼5 times larger than that of vegetative cells and were motile in fluids with a viscosity that inhibits vegetative cell motility. To test the relationship between flagellum density and velocity, we overexpressed FlhD(4)C(2), the master regulator of the flagellar operon, in vegetative cells of P. mirabilis and found that increased flagellum density produced an increase in cell velocity. Our results establish a relationship between P. mirabilis flagellum density and cell motility in viscous environments that may be relevant to its adaptation during the infection of mammalian urinary tracts and movement in contact with indwelling catheters.


Subject(s)
Flagella/physiology , Locomotion , Proteus mirabilis/cytology , Proteus mirabilis/physiology , Trans-Activators/biosynthesis , Environmental Microbiology , Gene Expression , Trans-Activators/genetics
10.
Curr Biol ; 22(14): 1339-43, 2012 Jul 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22727695

ABSTRACT

Ever since Hershey and Chase used phages to establish DNA as the carrier of genetic information in 1952, the precise mechanisms of phage DNA translocation have been a mystery. Although bulk measurements have set a timescale for in vivo DNA translocation during bacteriophage infection, measurements of DNA ejection by single bacteriophages have only been made in vitro. Here, we present direct visualization of single bacteriophages infecting individual Escherichia coli cells. For bacteriophage λ, we establish a mean ejection time of roughly 5 min with significant cell-to-cell variability, including pausing events. In contrast, corresponding in vitro single-molecule ejections are more uniform and finish within 10 s. Our data reveal that when plotted against the amount of DNA ejected, the velocity of ejection for two different genome lengths collapses onto a single curve. This suggests that in vivo ejections are controlled by the amount of DNA ejected. In contrast, in vitro DNA ejections are governed by the amount of DNA left inside the capsid. This analysis provides evidence against a purely intrastrand repulsion-based mechanism and suggests that cell-internal processes dominate. This provides a picture of the early stages of phage infection and sheds light on the problem of polymer translocation.


Subject(s)
Bacteriophage lambda/metabolism , DNA, Viral/metabolism , Bacteriophage lambda/genetics , Biological Transport, Active , DNA, Viral/chemistry , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Escherichia coli/virology , Genome, Viral , Microscopy, Fluorescence , Organic Chemicals/chemistry
11.
Mol Microbiol ; 84(5): 874-91, 2012 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22548341

ABSTRACT

Although bacterial cells are known to experience large forces from osmotic pressure differences and their local microenvironment, quantitative measurements of the mechanical properties of growing bacterial cells have been limited. We provide an experimental approach and theoretical framework for measuring the mechanical properties of live bacteria. We encapsulated bacteria in agarose with a user-defined stiffness, measured the growth rate of individual cells and fit data to a thin-shell mechanical model to extract the effective longitudinal Young's modulus of the cell envelope of Escherichia coli (50-150 MPa), Bacillus subtilis (100-200 MPa) and Pseudomonas aeruginosa (100-200 MPa). Our data provide estimates of cell wall stiffness similar to values obtained via the more labour-intensive technique of atomic force microscopy. To address physiological perturbations that produce changes in cellular mechanical properties, we tested the effect of A22-induced MreB depolymerization on the stiffness of E. coli. The effective longitudinal Young's modulus was not significantly affected by A22 treatment at short time scales, supporting a model in which the interactions between MreB and the cell wall persist on the same time scale as growth. Our technique therefore enables the rapid determination of how changes in genotype and biochemistry affect the mechanical properties of the bacterial envelope.


Subject(s)
Bacillus subtilis/physiology , Bacteriological Techniques/methods , Culture Media/chemistry , Elasticity , Escherichia coli/physiology , Hydrogels , Pseudomonas aeruginosa/physiology , Bacillus subtilis/growth & development , Biomechanical Phenomena , Escherichia coli/growth & development , Models, Theoretical , Pseudomonas aeruginosa/growth & development
12.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 48(10): 1595-7, 2012 Feb 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22039586

ABSTRACT

Polyacrylamide hydrogels can be used as chemically and physically defined substrates for bacterial cell culture, and enable studies of the influence of surfaces on cell growth and behaviour.


Subject(s)
Acrylic Resins/chemistry , Bacteria/cytology , Bacteria/growth & development , Molecular Structure
13.
J Am Chem Soc ; 133(15): 5966-75, 2011 Apr 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21434644

ABSTRACT

This manuscript describes the fabrication of arrays of spatially confined chambers embossed in a layer of poly(ethylene glycol) diacrylate (PEGDA) and their application to studying quorum sensing between communities of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. We hypothesized that biofilms may produce stable chemical signaling gradients in close proximity to surfaces, which influence the growth and development of nearby microcolonies into biofilms. To test this hypothesis, we embossed a layer of PEGDA with 1.5-mm wide chambers in which P. aeruginosa biofilms grew, secreted homoserine lactones (HSLs, small molecule regulators of quorum sensing), and formed spatial and temporal gradients of these compounds. In static growth conditions (i.e., no flow), nascent biofilms secreted N-(3-oxododecanoyl) HSL that formed a gradient in the hydrogel and was detected by P. aeruginosa cells that were ≤8 mm away. Diffusing HSLs increased the growth rate of cells in communities that were <3 mm away from the biofilm, where the concentration of HSL was >1 µM, and had little effect on communities farther away. The HSL gradient had no observable influence on biofilm structure. Surprisingly, 0.1-10 µM of N-(3-oxododecanoyl) HSL had no effect on cell growth in liquid culture. The results suggest that the secretion of HSLs from a biofilm enhances the growth of neighboring cells in contact with surfaces into communities and may influence their composition, organization, and diversity.


Subject(s)
Pseudomonas aeruginosa/physiology , Quorum Sensing , 4-Butyrolactone/analogs & derivatives , 4-Butyrolactone/metabolism , Biofilms/growth & development , Hydrogels/metabolism , Polyethylene Glycols/metabolism , Pseudomonas aeruginosa/growth & development
14.
J Org Chem ; 75(20): 6820-9, 2010 Oct 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20843100

ABSTRACT

The A-rings of calcitriol (1α,25-dihydroxyvitamin D(3)) and 1α-hydroxy-3-deoxyvitamin D(3) were synthesized using the furan approach. The critical steps in the synthesis of the A-ring of calcitriol involved an asymmetric carbonyl-ene reaction of 3-methylene-2,3-dihydrofuran with 3-(tert-butyldimethylsiloxy)propanal, a diastereoselective Friedel-Crafts hydroxyalkylation, an oxidation of the 2,3-disubstituted furan to give a γ-hydroxybutenolide, and a Peterson olefination. The A-ring (Z)-dienol of calcitriol was synthesized in 12 steps from 3-(tert-butyldimethylsiloxy)propanal in 17% yield.


Subject(s)
Calcitriol/analogs & derivatives , Calcitriol/chemical synthesis , Furans/chemistry , Calcitriol/chemistry , Molecular Structure , Stereoisomerism
15.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 76(4): 1241-50, 2010 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20023074

ABSTRACT

This paper describes a new approach for labeling intact flagella using the biarsenical dyes FlAsH and ReAsH and imaging their spatial and temporal dynamics on live Escherichia coli cells in swarming communities of bacteria by using epifluorescence microscopy. Using this approach, we observed that (i) bundles of flagella on swarmer cells remain cohesive during frequent collisions with neighboring cells, (ii) flagella on nonmotile swarmer cells at the leading edge of the colony protrude in the direction of the uncolonized agar surface and are actively rotated in a thin layer of fluid that extends outward from the colony, and (iii) flagella form transient interactions with the flagella of other swarmer cells that are in close proximity. This approach opens a window for observing the dynamics of cells in communities that are relevant to ecology, industry, and biomedicine.


Subject(s)
Arsenicals , Escherichia coli/physiology , Escherichia coli/ultrastructure , Flagella/physiology , Flagella/ultrastructure , Fluorescent Dyes , Base Sequence , Binding Sites/genetics , Biophysical Phenomena , DNA Primers/genetics , DNA, Bacterial/genetics , Ecosystem , Escherichia coli/genetics , Flagella/genetics , Genes, Bacterial , Genetic Engineering , Microscopy, Fluorescence , Movement/physiology , Recombination, Genetic
16.
J Org Chem ; 70(7): 2862-5, 2005 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15787589

ABSTRACT

[reaction: see text] The Kishner reduction of 2-furylhydrazone gives 2-methylene-2,3-dihydrofuran as the major abnormal reduction product. 2-Methylene-2,3-dihydrofuran is an excellent ene in the carbonyl-ene reaction, reacting with a variety of aldehydes. Most notable was the asymmetric carbonyl-ene reaction of 2-methylene-2,3-dihydrofuran and decanal using Ti(OCH(CH3)2)4/(S)-BINOL to give the corresponding alcohol in 66% yield and 94% ee. The reaction of 2-methylene-2,3-dihydrofuran with 2 equiv of 1,4-benzoquinone unexpectedly gave a monoalkylated 1,4-hydroquinone/1,4-benzoquinone electron donor-acceptor complex.

SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...