Urinary tract infections (UTIs) cause a substantial health care burden. UTIs (i) are most often caused by uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC), (ii) primarily affect otherwise healthy females (50% of women will have a UTI), (iii) are associated with significant morbidity and economic impact, (iv) can become chronic, and (v) are highly recurrent. A history of UTI is a significant risk factor for a recurrent UTI (rUTI). In otherwise healthy women, an acute UTI leads to a 25 to 50% chance of rUTI within months of the initial infection. Interestingly, rUTIs are commonly caused by the same strain of E. coli that led to the initial infection, arguing that there exist host-associated reservoirs, like the gastrointestinal tract and underlying bladder tissue, that can seed rUTIs. Additionally, catheter-associated UTIs (CAUTI), caused by Enterococcus and Staphylococcus as well as UPEC, represent a major health care concern. The host’s response of depositing fibrinogen at the site of infection has been found to be critical to establishing CAUTI. The Drug Resistance Index, an evaluation of antibiotic resistance, indicates that UTIs have become increasingly difficult to treat since the mid-2000s. Thus, UTIs are a “canary in the coal mine,” warning of the possibility of a return to the preantibiotic era, where some common infections are untreatable with available antibiotics. Numerous alternative strategies for both the prevention and treatment of UTIs are being pursued, with a focus on the development of vaccines and small-molecule inhibitors targeting virulence factors, in the hopes of reducing the burden of urogenital tract infections in an antibiotic-sparing manner.
Temperature is a primary driver of microbial community composition and taxonomic diversity; however, it is unclear to what extent temperature affects characteristics of central carbon metabolic pathways (CCMPs) at the community level. In this study, 16S rRNA gene amplicon and metagenome sequencing were combined with 13 C-labeled metabolite probing of the CCMPs to assess community carbon metabolism along a temperature gradient (60–95°C) in Great Boiling Spring, NV. 16S rRNA gene amplicon diversity was inversely proportional to temperature, and Archaea were dominant at higher temperatures. KO richness and diversity were also inversely proportional to temperature, yet CCMP genes were similarly represented across the temperature gradient and many individual metagenome-assembled genomes had complete pathways. In contrast, genes encoding cellulosomes and many genes involved in plant matter degradation and photosynthesis were absent at higher temperatures. In situ 13 C-CO 2 production from labeled isotopomer pairs of glucose, pyruvate, and acetate suggested lower relative oxidative pentose phosphate pathway activity and/or fermentation at 60°C, and a stable or decreased maintenance energy demand at higher temperatures. Catabolism of 13 C-labeled citrate, succinate, L-alanine, L-serine, and L-cysteine was observed at 85°C, demonstrating broad heterotrophic activity and confirming functioning of the TCA cycle. Together, these results suggest that temperature-driven losses in biodiversity and gene content in geothermal systems may not alter CCMP function or maintenance energy demands at a community level.
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Multidrug-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii infections are an urgent clinical problem and can cause difficult-to-treat nosocomial infections. During such infections, like catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTI), A. baumannii rely on adhesive, extracellular fibers, called chaperone-usher pathway (CUP) pili for critical binding interactions. The A. baumannii uropathogenic strain, UPAB1, and the pan-European subclone II isolate, ACICU, use the CUP pili Abp1 and Abp2 (previously termed Cup and Prp, respectively) in tandem to establish CAUTIs, specifically to facilitate bacterial adherence and biofilm formation on the implanted catheter. Abp1 and Abp2 pili are tipped with two domain tip adhesins, Abp1D and Abp2D, respectively. We discovered that both adhesins bind fibrinogen, a critical host wound response protein that is released into the bladder upon catheterization and is subsequently deposited on the catheter. The crystal structures of the Abp1D and Abp2D receptor-binding domains were determined and revealed that they both contain a large, distally oriented pocket, which mediates binding to fibrinogen and other glycoproteins. Genetic, biochemical, and biophysical studies revealed that interactions with host proteins are governed by several critical residues in and along the edge of the binding pocket, one of which regulates the structural stability of an anterior loop motif. K34, located outside of the pocket but interacting with the anterior loop, also regulates the binding affinity of the protein. This study illuminates the mechanistic basis of the critical fibrinogen-coated catheter colonization step in A. baumannii CAUTI pathogenesis.
Thermoflexus hugenholtzii JAD2T, the only cultured representative of the Chloroflexota order Thermoflexales, is abundant in Great Boiling Spring (GBS), NV, United States, and close relatives inhabit geothermal systems globally. However, no defined medium exists for T. hugenholtzii JAD2T and no single carbon source is known to support its growth, leaving key knowledge gaps in its metabolism and nutritional needs. Here, we report comparative genomic analysis of the draft genome of T. hugenholtzii JAD2T and eight closely related metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) from geothermal sites in China, Japan, and the United States, representing “Candidatus Thermoflexus japonica,” “Candidatus Thermoflexus tengchongensis,” and “Candidatus Thermoflexus sinensis.” Genomics was integrated with targeted exometabolomics and 13C metabolic probing of T. hugenholtzii. The Thermoflexus genomes each code for complete central carbon metabolic pathways and an unusually high abundance and diversity of peptidases, particularly Metallo- and Serine peptidase families, along with ABC transporters for peptides and some amino acids. The T. hugenholtzii JAD2T exometabolome provided evidence of extracellular proteolytic activity based on the accumulation of free amino acids. However, several neutral and polar amino acids appear not to be utilized, based on their accumulation in the medium and the lack of annotated transporters. Adenine and adenosine were scavenged, and thymine and nicotinic acid were released, suggesting interdependency with other organisms in situ. Metabolic probing of T. hugenholtzii JAD2T using 13C-labeled compounds provided evidence of oxidation of glucose, pyruvate, cysteine, and citrate, and functioning glycolytic, tricarboxylic acid (TCA), and oxidative pentose-phosphate pathways (PPPs). However, differential use of position-specific 13C-labeled compounds showed that glycolysis and the TCA cycle were uncoupled. Thus, despite the high abundance of Thermoflexus in sediments of some geothermal systems, they appear to be highly focused on chemoorganotrophy, particularly protein degradation, and may interact extensively with other microorganisms in situ.
Catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTIs) contribute greatly to the burden of healthcare associated infections. Acinetobacter baumannii is a Gram-negative bacterium with high levels of antibiotic resistance that is of increasing concern as a CAUTI pathogen. A. baumannii expresses fibrinogen-binding adhesins (Abp1D and Abp2D) that mediate colonization and biofilm formation on catheters, which become coated with fibrinogen upon insertion. We developed a protein subunit vaccine against Abp1DRBD and Abp2DRBD and showed that vaccination significantly reduced bladder bacterial titers in a mouse model of CAUTI. We then determined that immunity to Abp2DRBD alone was sufficient for protection. Mechanistically, we defined the B cell response to Abp2DRBD vaccination and demonstrated that immunity was transferrable to naïve mice through passive immunization with Abp2DRBD-immune sera. This work represents a novel strategy in the prevention of A. baumannii CAUTI and has an important role to play in the global fight against antimicrobial resistance.
Interactions between biochemical functional groups are fundamental to biopolymer self-assembly processes and enzyme-substrate binding and ligand binding, and a key determinant of biopolymer structure and function. To date little quantitative information has been available about their strengths and contributions to stability. Interactions of small solutes have been shown to be composed of additive contributions from interactions of one solute with individual function groups on the other solute (one way interactions). Here we test the hypothesis that solute-solute interactions in water can be dissected using additivity and either an ASA or weighted group-based analysis into contributions from group-group interactions (two way analysis). Data for preferential interactions (m 23 values) of amides with other amides and with aromatics and nucleobases as well as for interactions of alcohols and polyols with aromatics and nucleobases are obtained by osmometry and solubility assays and interpreted to obtain two way potentials (alpha values) for the group group interactions. Some of the most favorable interactions are those that correspond to hydrogen bonding between NH and C=O groups like those in protein 2 o structures and in DNA/RNA duplexes. The interaction of aromatic C with amide O is very favorable, providing a second example of a favorable n-p* interaction, like that of amide C with amide O (Ref 1). Interactions of amides with Na þ and K þ salts of Hofmeister anions reveal that interactions of these salts with hydrocarbon C and amide N, follow the Hofmeister order (KSCN > KCl > KF; NaClO 4 > NaCl > Na 2 SO 4 ). These data quantify interaction of these salts with the most important protein groups and are useful to interpret or predict Hofmeister effects on protein unfolding m-values. In proteins phenylalanine, tyrosine, and tryptophan can be involved in cation-pi and pi-pi interactions. The importance of these interactions for protein structure and functioning is well recognized but measuring their strength experimentally is problematic. The chemical aminoacylation strategy combined with the Xenopus oocyte expression system was developed by the Dougherty group at Caltech for the production of proteins labeled with fluorinated aromatic amino acids involved in cation-pi interactions. This elegant expression system only yields ng quantities of proteins, limiting the scope to channel-forming proteins analyzed via patch-clamp. We developed a protein expression platform for the evaluation of pi-pi and cation-pi interactions involving tryptophan. This Lactococcus lactis based expression system can produce mg amounts of a set of 6 proteins, each carrying a different electron density in the tryptophan side chain. It was used to express variants of the multidrug repressor protein LmrR. LmrR regulates the druginduced expression of the ABC type multidrug efflux transporter LmrCD. LmrR was crystallized in its drug-free state and in complex with aromatic substrates showing each substrate is sandwiched between two tryptophan resid...
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