Project description:Invasive pneumococcal disease is preceded by asymptomatic colonization of the human nasopharynx by Streptococcus pneumoniae. Progression from colonization to invasion is a watershed in the host-pathogen interaction, and exposes the pneumococcus to markedly different microenvironments. This in turn, requires alterations in gene expression profile to adapt to the new niche. One apparent adaptive mechanism is reversible phase variation between “transparent” and “opaque” colony opacity phenotypes. Transparent phase variants colonize the nasopharynx more efficiently than opaque variants of the same strain, while opaque variants exhibit higher systemic virulence. Previous studies have reported quantitative differences in surface components such as the capsule, teichoic acid and certain surface proteins between the two phenotypes, but the underlying regulatory mechanism is not understood. In the present study, we found no differences in expression of key surface proteins between opaque and transparent variants of S. pneumoniae strain D39, but opaque cells produced five-fold more capsular polysaccharide. Subsequent microarray and real-time RT-PCR analysis showed no differences in capsule gene expression, but several genes involved in uridine monophosphate (UMP) biosynthesis were up-regulated in the opaque phenotype. This correlated with significant increases in the intracellular concentrations of both UMP and UDP-glucose, which are essential precursors for capsule biosynthesis. Our data suggest a novel mechanism for pneumococcal capsule regulation, in which rate-limiting precursor pathways are modulated rather than the capsule biosynthetic genes themselves. Keywords: Phase variants
Project description:Galactose promotes pneumococcal biofilms in vivo 15 mRNA profiles of Streptococcus pneumoniae samples that were grown under different conditions were generated using deep sequencing.
Project description:Streptococcus pneumoniae (pneumococcus) is a major human respiratory pathogen and the leading cause of bacterial pneumonia worldwide. Small regulatory RNAs (sRNAs), which often act by post-transcriptionally regulating gene expression, have been shown to be crucial for the virulence of S. pneumoniae and other bacterial pathogens. Over 170 putative sRNAs have been identified in S. pneumoniae TIGR4 strain (serotype 4) through transcriptomic studies, and a subset of these sRNAs have been further implicated in regulating pneumococcal pathogenesis. However, there was little overlap in the sRNAs identified among these studies, which indicated that the approaches used for sRNA identification were not sufficiently sensitive and robust and that there were likely many more undiscovered sRNAs encoded in the S. pneumoniae genome. Here, we sought to comprehensively identify sRNAs in Avery's virulent S. pneumoniae strain D39 using two independent RNA-seq based approaches. We developed an unbiased method for identifying novel sRNAs from bacterial RNA-seq data and have further tested the specificity of our analysis program towards identifying sRNAs encoded by both strains D39 and TIGR4. Interestingly, the genes for 15% of the putative sRNAs identified in strain TIGR4 including ones previously implicated in virulence were not present in strain D39 genome suggesting that the differences in sRNA repertoires between these two serotypes may contribute to their strain-specific virulence properties. Finally, this study has identified 67 new sRNA candidates in strain D39, 28 out of which have been further validated, raising the total number of sRNAs that have been identified in strain D39 to 112.
Project description:Streptococcus pneumoniae (pneumococcus) is a major human respiratory pathogen and a leading cause of bacterial pneumonia worldwide. Small regulatory RNAs (sRNAs), which often act by post-transcriptionally regulating gene expression, have been shown to be crucial for the virulence of S. pneumoniae and other bacterial pathogens. Over 170 putative sRNAs have been identified in S. pneumoniae TIGR4 strain (serotype 4) through transcriptomic studies, and a subset of these sRNAs have been further implicated in regulating pneumococcal pathogenesis. However, there is little overlap in the sRNAs identified among these studies, which indicates that the approaches used for sRNA identification were not sufficiently sensitive and robust and that there are likely many more undiscovered sRNAs encoded in the S. pneumoniae genome. Here, we sought to comprehensively identify sRNAs in Avery's virulent S. pneumoniae strain D39 using two independent RNA-seq based approaches. We developed an unbiased method for identifying novel sRNAs from bacterial RNA-seq data and have further tested the specificity of our analysis program towards identifying sRNAs encoded by both strains D39 and TIGR4. Interestingly, the genes for 15% of the putative sRNAs identified in strain TIGR4 including ones previously implicated in virulence are not present in strain D39 genome suggesting that the differences in sRNA repertoires between these two serotypes may contribute to their strain-specific virulence properties. Finally, this study has identified 67 new sRNA candidates in strain D39, 28 out of which have been further validated, raising the total number of sRNAs that have been identified in strain D39 to 112.
Project description:Streptococcus pneumoniae is a Gram positive bacterium that causes severe invasive infection such as pneumonia, septicemia, meningitis and otitis media especially in children, the elderly and immune-compromised patients. Pneumococcal colonization and disease is often associated with biofilm formation. Bacteria in biofilms exhibit elevated resistance both to antibiotics and to host defense systems, which often results in persistent and difficult-to-treat infections. Therefore, the ongoing treat to human health posed by pneumococcal biofilms has prompted extensive research aimed to identify alternative targets and new antimicrobial agents that are effective against bacteria biofilms. The effective anti-biofilm strategies should include inhibition of microbial adhesion to the surface and of colonization, interference with the signal molecules modulating biofilm development and the disaggregation of the biofilm matrix. In this study, we examine the effect of DAM inhibitor small molecule pyrimidine-diones on streptococcus pneumoniae D-39 strain growth (planktonic and biofilm) and evaluate the changes in global gene expression using c-DNA microarray. The microarray analysis was performed on total RNA extracted from biofilms grown in 24-well microtiter plate with 7µm/ml pyrimidine-diones small molecule and control biofilms (biofilms grown without pyrimidine-diones small molecule). To validate the results of microarray, real-time RT-PCR was performed on 12 differentially expressed genes from six different functional groups. cDNA-microarray analysis detected a total of 259 genes that were significantly differentially expressed in biofilm growth with pyrimidine-diones small molecule. 204 genes were significantly down expressed and 55 genes were significantly up expressed in biofilms grown with 7µm/ml pyrimidine-diones small molecule. Among the 204 down expressed genes, 45 were hypothetical protein encoding gene and 159 were functional protein encoding genes. Of 55 up-regulated genes 21 were hypothetical genes and 34 were functional protein encoding genes. The functional annotation showed that gene involve in fatty acid metabolism, cell division, cell cycles, DNA metabolism, cell assembly were significantly down regulated and galactose metabolism related gene were up-expressed in biofilm grown with pyrimidine-diones small molecule.
Project description:we characterized the zebrafish innate immune response to pneumococcus through a whole-genome level transcriptome analysis. The analysis revealed the induction of genes coding for pro-inflammatory cytokines, chemokines, acute phase proteins, and antimicrobial peptides, indicating a well-conserved innate immune response to the human pathogen pneumococcus in zebrafish embryos. To gain understanding of the genetic factors associated with the increased risk for severe pneumococcal infection in humans, we carried out a medium-scale forward genetic screen in zebrafish. We identified a mutant fish line, which showed compromised defense against pneumococcus in septic larval infection model. Poor survival upon infection was associated with increased bacterial counts indicating defect in resistance. The transcriptome analysis of the mutant zebrafish embryos revealed otherwise normal innate immune response to pneumococcal infection but a deficient expression of a gene homologous for human C-reactive protein (CRP).
Project description:Streptococcus pneumoniae is opportunistic bacteria cause’s acute otitis media (AOM) in children. It colonizes the nasopharynx in the form of biofilms, and these biofilms act as reservoir, and are vital for pneumococcal infections. The pneumococcal biofilms are regulated by LuxS/AI-2 media quorum sensing. In this study, we confirmed the role of LuxS/AI-2 for in vitro formation of biofilms, assessed the effects of the absence of LuxS/AI-2 signaling, for pneumococcal middle ear infection and identified global genes regulated by LuxS/AI-2 during formation of pneumococcal biofilms. In the cDNA-microarray analysis, 117 genes were differentially expressed in D39 luxS mutant when compared with D39 wild type. Among the 66 genes encoding putative proteins and previously characterized proteins, 60 were significantly down-regulated and 6 were significantly up-regulated. The functional annotation revealed that genes involve in DNA replication and repair, ATP synthesis, capsule biosynthesis, cell division and cell cycle, signal transduction, transcription regulation, competence, virulence, and carbohydrate metabolism were down-regulated in the absence of LuxS/AI-2.
Project description:We report the complete genome sequence of Streptococcus pneumoniae EF3030, a serotype 19F isolate that colonizes the nasopharynx of mice while being mostly noninvasive. Such attributes make this strain highly attractive in pneumococcal carriage studies. The availability of its complete genomic sequence is likely to advance studies in the field.