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Dive into the research topics where Adela Straskova is active.

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Featured researches published by Adela Straskova.


Infection and Immunity | 2013

Tetratricopeptide Repeat Motifs in the World of Bacterial Pathogens: Role in Virulence Mechanisms

Lukas Cerveny; Adela Straskova; Vera Dankova; Anetta Härtlova; Martina Ceckova; Frantisek Staud; Jiri Stulik

ABSTRACT The tetratricopeptide repeat (TPR) structural motif is known to occur in a wide variety of proteins present in prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms. The TPR motif represents an elegant module for the assembly of various multiprotein complexes, and thus, TPR-containing proteins often play roles in vital cell processes. As the TPR profile is well defined, the complete TPR protein repertoire of a bacterium with a known genomic sequence can be predicted. This provides a tremendous opportunity for investigators to identify new TPR-containing proteins and study them in detail. In the past decade, TPR-containing proteins of bacterial pathogens have been reported to be directly related to virulence-associated functions. In this minireview, we summarize the current knowledge of the TPR-containing proteins involved in virulence mechanisms of bacterial pathogens while highlighting the importance of TPR motifs for the proper functioning of class II chaperones of a type III secretion system in the pathogenesis of Yersinia, Pseudomonas, and Shigella.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2009

Proteome Analysis of an Attenuated Francisella tularensis dsbA Mutant: Identification of Potential DsbA Substrate Proteins

Adela Straskova; Ivona Pávková; Marek Link; Anna-Lena Forslund; Kerstin Kuoppa; Laila Noppa; Michal Kroca; Alena Fucikova; Jana Klimentova; Zuzana Krocova; Åke Forsberg; Jiri Stulik

Francisella tularensis (F. tularensis) is highly infectious for humans via aerosol route and untreated infections with the highly virulent subsp. tularensis can be fatal. Our knowledge regarding key virulence determinants has increased recently but is still somewhat limited. Surface proteins are potential virulence factors and therapeutic targets, and in this study, we decided to target three genes encoding putative membrane lipoproteins in F. tularensis LVS. One of the genes encoded a protein with high homology to the protein family of disulfide oxidoreductases DsbA. The two other genes encoded proteins with homology to the VacJ, a virulence determinant of Shigella flexneri. The gene encoding the DsbA homologue was verified to be required for survival and replication in macrophages and importantly also for in vivo virulence in the mouse infection model for tularemia. Using a combination of classical and shotgun proteome analyses, we were able to identify several proteins that accumulated in fractions enriched for membrane-associated proteins in the dsbA mutant. These proteins are substrate candidates for the DsbA disulfide oxidoreductase as well as being responsible for the virulence attenuation of the dsbA mutant.


Microbes and Infection | 2012

Deletion of IglH in virulent Francisella tularensis subsp. holarctica FSC200 strain results in attenuation and provides protection against the challenge with the parental strain.

Adela Straskova; Lukas Cerveny; Petra Spidlova; Vera Dankova; Davor Belčić; Marina Šantić; Jiri Stulik

Francisella tularensis, the causative agent of tularemia, is a highly infectious intracellular pathogen with no licensed vaccine available today. The recent search for genome sequences involved in F. tularensis virulence mechanisms led to the identification of the 30-kb region defined as a Francisella pathogenicity island (FPI). In our previous iTRAQ study we described the concerted upregulation of some FPI proteins in different F. tularensis strains cultivated under stress conditions. Among them we identified the IglH protein whose role in Francisella virulence has not been characterized yet. In this work we deleted the iglH gene in a European clinical isolate of F. tularensis subsp. holarctica FSC200. We showed that the iglH gene is necessary for intracellular growth and escape of F. tularensis from phagosomes. We also showed that the iglH mutant is avirulent in a mouse model of infection and persists in the organs for about three weeks after infection. Importantly, mice vaccinated by infection with the iglH mutant were protected against subcutaneous challenge with the fully virulent parental FSC200 strain. This is the first report of a defined subsp. holarctica FPI deletion strain that provides protective immunity against subsequent subcutaneous challenge with a virulent isolate of F. tularensis subsp. holarctica.


Microbiology | 2013

Francisella tularensis subsp. holarctica DsbA homologue: a thioredoxin-like protein with chaperone function.

Monika Schmidt; Jana Klimentova; Pavel Rehulka; Adela Straskova; Petra Spidlova; Barbora Szotáková; Jiri Stulik; Ivona Pávková

Francisella tularensis is a highly infectious facultative intracellular bacterium and aetiological agent of tularaemia. The conserved hypothetical lipoprotein with homology to thiol/disulphide oxidoreductase proteins (FtDsbA) is an essential virulence factor in F. tularensis. Its protein sequence has two different domains: the DsbA_Com1_like domain (DSBA), with the highly conserved catalytically active site CXXC and cis-proline residue; and the domain amino-terminal to FKBP-type peptidyl-prolyl isomerases (FKBP_N). To establish the role of both domains in tularaemia infection models, site-directed and deletion mutagenesis affecting the active site (AXXA), the cis-proline (P286T) and the FKBP_N domain (ΔFKBP_N) were performed. The generated mutations led to high attenuation with the ability to induce full or partial host protective immunity. Recombinant protein analysis revealed that the active site CXXC as well as the cis-proline residue and the FKBP_N domain are necessary for correct thiol/disulphide oxidoreductase activity. By contrast, only the DSBA domain (and not the FKBP_N domain) seems to be responsible for the in vitro chaperone activity of the FtDsbA protein.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2013

Comparative proteome profiling of host–pathogen interactions: insights into the adaptation mechanisms of Francisella tularensis in the host cell environment

Ivona Pávková; Martin Brychta; Adela Straskova; Monika Schmidt; Ales Macela; Jiří Stulík

The intracellular pathogens have the unique capacity to sense the host cell environment and to respond to it by alteration in gene expression and protein synthesis. Proteomic analysis of bacteria exposed directly to the host cell milieu might thus greatly contribute to the elucidation of processes leading to bacterial adaptation and proliferation inside the host cell. Here we have performed a global proteome analysis of a virulent Francisella tularensis subsp. holarctica strain during its intracellular cycle within the macrophage-like murine cell line J774.2 using the metabolic pulse-labeling of bacterial proteins with 35S-methionine and 35S-cysteine in various periods of infection. The two-dimensional gel analysis revealed macrophage-induced bacterial proteome changes in which 64 identified proteins were differentially expressed in comparison to controls grown in tissue culture medium. Nevertheless, activation of macrophages with interferon gamma before in vitro infection decreased the number of detected alterations in protein levels. Thus, these proteomic data indicate the F. tularensis ability to adapt to the intracellular hostile environment that is, however, diminished by prior interferon gamma treatment of host cells.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2016

Inactivation of Francisella tularensis Gene Encoding Putative ABC Transporter Has a Pleiotropic Effect upon Production of Various Glycoconjugates

Vera Dankova; Lucie Balonova; Marek Link; Adela Straskova; Valeria Sheshko; Jiri Stulik

Francisella tularensis, an intracellular pathogen causing the disease tularemia, utilizes surface glycoconjugates such as lipopolysaccharide, capsule, and capsule-like complex for its protection against inhospitable conditions of the environment. Francisella species also possess a functional glycosylation apparatus by which specific proteins are O-glycosidically modified. We here created a mutant with a nonfunctional FTS_1402 gene encoding for a putative glycan flippase and studied the consequences of its disruption. The mutant strain expressed diminished glycosylation similarly to, but to a lesser extent than, that of the oligosaccharyltransferase-deficient ΔpglA mutant. In contrast to ΔpglA, inactivation of FTS_1402 had a pleiotropic effect, leading to alteration in glycosylation and, importantly, to decrease in lipopolysaccharide, capsule, and/or capsule-like complex production, which were reflected by distinct phenotypes in host-pathogen associated properties and virulence potential of the two mutant strains. Disruption of FTS_1402 resulted in enhanced sensitivity to complement-mediated lysis and reduced virulence in mice that was independent of diminished glycosylation. Importantly, the mutant strain induced a protective immune response against systemic challenge with homologous wild-type FSC200 strain. Targeted disruption of genes shared by multiple metabolic pathways may be considered a novel strategy for constructing effective live, attenuated vaccines.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2014

Quantitative Proteomics Analysis of Macrophage-Derived Lipid Rafts Reveals Induction of Autophagy Pathway at the Early Time of Francisella tularensis LVS Infection

Anetta Härtlova; Marek Link; Jana Balounová; Martina Benešová; Ulrike Resch; Adela Straskova; Margarita Sobol; Anatoly Philimonenko; Pavel Hozák; Zuzana Krocova; Nelson O. Gekara; Dominik Filipp; Jiri Stulik

Francisella tularensis is a highly infectious intracellular pathogen that has evolved an efficient strategy to subvert host defense response to survive inside the host. The molecular mechanisms regulating these host-pathogen interactions and especially those that are initiated at the time of the bacterial entry via its attachment to the host plasma membrane likely predetermine the intracellular fate of pathogen. Here, we provide the evidence that infection of macrophages with F. tularensis leads to changes in protein composition of macrophage-derived lipid rafts, isolated as detergent-resistant membranes (DRMs). Using SILAC-based quantitative proteomic approach, we observed the accumulation of autophagic adaptor protein p62 at the early stages of microbe-host cell interaction. We confirmed the colocalization of the p62 with ubiquitinated and LC3-decorated intracellular F. tularensis microbes with its maximum at 1 h postinfection. Furthermore, the infection of p62-knockdown host cells led to the transient increase in the intracellular number of microbes up to 4 h after in vitro infection. Together, these data suggest that the activation of the autophagy pathway in F. tularensis infected macrophages, which impacts the early phase of microbial proliferation, is subsequently circumvented by ongoing infection.


Fems Immunology and Medical Microbiology | 2015

Francisella tularensis type B ΔdsbA mutant protects against type A strain and induces strong inflammatory cytokine and Th1-like antibody response in vivo

Adela Straskova; Petra Spidlova; Sherry Mou; Patricia L. Worsham; Daniela Putzova; Ivona Pávková; Jiri Stulik

Francisella tularensis subspecies tularensis is a highly virulent intracellular bacterial pathogen, causing the disease tularemia. However, a safe and effective vaccine for routine application against F. tularensis has not yet been developed. We have recently constructed the deletion mutants for the DsbA homolog protein (ΔdsbA/FSC200) and a hypothetical protein IglH (ΔiglH/FSC200) in the type B F. tularensis subsp. holarctica FSC200 strain, which exerted different protection capacity against parental virulent strain. In this study, we further investigated the immunological correlates for these different levels of protection provided by ΔdsbA/FSC200 and ΔiglH/FSC200 mutants. Our results show that ΔdsbA/FSC200 mutant, but not ΔiglH/FSC200 mutant, induces an early innate inflammatory response leading to strong Th1-like antibody response. Furthermore, vaccination with ΔdsbA/FSC200 mutant, but not with ΔiglH/FSC200, elicited protection against the subsequent challenge with type A SCHU S4 strain in mice. An immunoproteomic approach was used to map a spectrum of antigens targeted by Th1-like specific antibodies, and more than 80 bacterial antigens, including novel ones, were identified. Comparison of tularemic antigens recognized by the ΔdsbA/FSC200 post-vaccination and the SCHU S4 post-challenge sera then revealed the existence of 22 novel SCHU S4 specific antibody clones.


Infection and Immunity | 2014

Characterization of Tetratricopeptide Repeat-Like Proteins in Francisella tularensis and Identification of a Novel Locus Required for Virulence

Vera Dankova; Lucie Balonova; Adela Straskova; Petra Spidlova; Daniela Putzova; Todd M. Kijek; Joel A. Bozue; Christopher K. Cote; Sherry Mou; Patricia L. Worsham; Barbora Szotáková; Lukas Cerveny; Jiri Stulik

ABSTRACT Francisella tularensis is a highly infectious bacterium that causes the potentially lethal disease tularemia. This extremely virulent bacterium is able to replicate in the cytosolic compartments of infected macrophages. To invade macrophages and to cope with their intracellular environment, Francisella requires multiple virulence factors, which are still being identified. Proteins containing tetratricopeptide repeat (TPR)-like domains seem to be promising targets to investigate, since these proteins have been reported to be directly involved in virulence-associated functions of bacterial pathogens. Here, we studied the role of the FTS_0201, FTS_0778, and FTS_1680 genes, which encode putative TPR-like proteins in Francisella tularensis subsp. holarctica FSC200. Mutants defective in protein expression were prepared by TargeTron insertion mutagenesis. We found that the locus FTS_1680 and its ortholog FTT_0166c in the highly virulent Francisella tularensis type A strain SchuS4 are required for proper intracellular replication, full virulence in mice, and heat stress tolerance. Additionally, the FTS_1680-encoded protein was identified as a membrane-associated protein required for full cytopathogenicity in macrophages. Our study thus identifies FTS_1680/FTT_0166c as a new virulence factor in Francisella tularensis.


Military Medical Science Letters | 2012

INTRACELLULAR PATHOGENESIS OF FRANCISELLA TULARENSIS

Adela Straskova; Jiri Stulik

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Lukas Cerveny

Charles University in Prague

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Vera Dankova

Charles University in Prague

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Frantisek Staud

Charles University in Prague

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Martina Ceckova

Charles University in Prague

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Barbora Szotáková

Charles University in Prague

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