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Dive into the research topics where Alla K. Golomidova is active.

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Featured researches published by Alla K. Golomidova.


Virology | 2012

Isolation and characterization of a novel indigenous intestinal N4-related coliphage vB_EcoP_G7C

Eugene Kulikov; Andrew M. Kropinski; Alla K. Golomidova; Erika J. Lingohr; Vadim M. Govorun; Marina V. Serebryakova; Nikolai S. Prokhorov; Maria A. Letarova; Anatolij Manykin; Alexandra Strotskaya; Andrey V. Letarov

Lytic coliphage vB_EcoP_G7C and several other highly related isolates were obtained repeatedly from the samples of horse feces held in the same stable thus representing a component of the normal indigenous intestinal communities in this population of animals. The genome of G7C consists of 71,759 bp with terminal repeats of about 1160 bp, yielding approximately 73 kbp packed DNA size. Seventy-eight potential open reading frames, most of them unique to N4-like viruses, were identified and annotated. The overall layout of functional gene groups was close to that of the original N4 phage, with some important changes in late gene area including new tail fiber proteins containing hydrolytic domains. Structural proteome analysis confirmed all the predicted subunits of the viral particle. Unlike N4 itself, phage G7C did not exhibit a lysis-inhibited phenotype.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2007

The diversity of coliphages and coliforms in horse feces reveals a complex pattern of ecological interactions

Alla K. Golomidova; Eugene Kulikov; Alina Isaeva; Anatoly Manykin; Andrey V. Letarov

ABSTRACT The diversity of coliphages and indigenous coliform strains (ICSs) simultaneously present in horse feces was investigated by culture-based and molecular methods. The richness of coliforms (as estimated by the Chao1 method) is about 1,000 individual ICSs distinguishable by genomic fingerprinting present in a single sample of feces. This unexpectedly high value indicates that some factor limits the competition of coliform bacteria in the horse gut microbial system. In contrast, the diversity of phages active against any selected ICS is generally limited to one to three viral genotypes present in the sample. The sensitivities of different ICSs to simultaneously present coliphages overlap only slightly; the phages isolated from the same sample on different ICSs are usually unrelated. As a result, the titers of phages in fecal extract as determined for different Escherichia coli strains and ICSs may differ by several orders of magnitude. Summarizing all the data, we propose that coliphage infection may provide a selection pressure that maintains the high level of coliform diversity, restricting the possibility of a few best competitors outgrowing other ICSs. We also observed high-magnitude temporal variations of coliphage titers as determined using an E. coli C600 test culture in the same animal during a 16-day period of monitoring. No correlation with total coliform count was observed. These results are in good agreement with our hypothesis.


Viruses | 2014

Genomic Sequencing and Biological Characteristics of a Novel Escherichia Coli Bacteriophage 9g, a Putative Representative of a New Siphoviridae Genus

Eugene Kulikov; Alla K. Golomidova; Maria A. Letarova; Elena S. Kostryukova; Alexandr S. Zelenin; Nikolai S. Prokhorov; Andrey V. Letarov

Bacteriophage 9g was isolated from horse feces using Escherichia coli C600 as a host strain. Phage 9g has a slightly elongated capsid 62 × 76 nm in diameter and a non-contractile tail about 185 nm long. The complete genome sequence of this bacteriophage consists of 56,703 bp encoding 70 predicted open reading frames. The closest relative of phage 9g is phage PhiJL001 infecting marine alpha-proteobacterium associated with Ircinia strobilina sponge, sharing with phage 9g 51% of amino acid identity in the main capsid protein sequence. The DNA of 9g is resistant to most restriction endonucleases tested, indicating the presence of hypermodified bases. The gene cluster encoding a biosynthesis pathway similar to biosynthesis of the unusual nucleoside queuosine was detected in the phage 9g genome. The genomic map organization is somewhat similar to the typical temperate phage gene layout but no integrase gene was detected. Phage 9g efficiently forms stable associations with its host that continues to produce the phage over multiple passages, but the phage can be easily eliminated via viricide treatment indicating that no true lysogens are formed. Since the sequence, genomic organization and biological properties of bacteriophage 9g are clearly distinct from other known Enterobacteriaceae phages, we propose to consider it as the representative of a novel genus of the Siphoviridae family.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2015

Variations in O-Antigen Biosynthesis and O-Acetylation Associated with Altered Phage Sensitivity in Escherichia coli 4s

Yuriy A. Knirel; Nikolai S. Prokhorov; Alexander S. Shashkov; Olga G. Ovchinnikova; Evelina L. Zdorovenko; Bin Liu; Elena S. Kostryukova; Andrey K. Larin; Alla K. Golomidova; Andrey V. Letarov

The O polysaccharide of the lipopolysaccharide (O antigen) of Gram-negative bacteria often serves as a receptor for bacteriophages that can make the phage dependent on a given O-antigen type, thus supporting the concept of the adaptive significance of the O-antigen variability in bacteria. The O-antigen layer also modulates interactions of many bacteriophages with their hosts, limiting the access of the viruses to other cell surface receptors. Here we report variations of O-antigen synthesis and structure in an environmental Escherichia coli isolate, 4s, obtained from horse feces, and its mutants selected for resistance to bacteriophage G7C, isolated from the same fecal sample. The 4s O antigen was found to be serologically, structurally, and genetically related to the O antigen of E. coli O22, differing only in side-chain α-D-glucosylation in the former, mediated by a gtr locus on the chromosome. Spontaneous mutations of E. coli 4s occurring with an unusually high frequency affected either O-antigen synthesis or O-acetylation due to the inactivation of the gene encoding the putative glycosyltransferase WclH or the putative acetyltransferase WclK, respectively, by the insertion of IS1-like elements. These mutations induced resistance to bacteriophage G7C and also modified interactions of E. coli 4s with several other bacteriophages conferring either resistance or sensitivity to the host. These findings suggest that O-antigen synthesis and O-acetylation can both ensure the specific recognition of the O-antigen receptor following infection by some phages and provide protection of the host cells against attack by other phages.


Viruses | 2016

Branched Lateral Tail Fiber Organization in T5-Like Bacteriophages DT57C and DT571/2 is Revealed by Genetic and Functional Analysis

Alla K. Golomidova; Eugene E. Kulikov; Nikolai S. Prokhorov; Ricardo С. Guerrero-Ferreira; Yuriy A. Knirel; Elena S. Kostryukova; Karina K. Tarasyan; Andrey V. Letarov

The T5-like siphoviruses DT57C and DT571/2, isolated from horse feces, are very closely related to each other, and most of their structural proteins are also nearly identical to T5 phage. Their LTFs (L-shaped tail fibers), however, are composed of two proteins, LtfA and LtfB, instead of the single Ltf of bacteriophage T5. In silico and mutant analysis suggests a possible branched structure of DT57C and DT571/2 LTFs, where the LtfB protein is connected to the phage tail via the LtfA protein and with both proteins carrying receptor recognition domains. Such adhesin arrangement has not been previously recognized in siphoviruses. The LtfA proteins of our phages are found to recognize different host O-antigen types: E. coli O22-like for DT57C phage and E. coli O87 for DT571/2. LtfB proteins are identical in both phages and recognize another host receptor, most probably lipopolysaccharide (LPS) of E. coli O81 type. In these two bacteriophages, LTF function is essential to penetrate the shield of the host’s O-antigens. We also demonstrate that LTF-mediated adsorption becomes superfluous when the non-specific cell protection by O-antigen is missing, allowing the phages to bind directly to their common secondary receptor, the outer membrane protein BtuB. The LTF independent adsorption was also demonstrated on an O22-like host mutant missing O-antigen O-acetylation, thus showing the biological value of this O-antigen modification for cell protection against phages.


Genome Announcements | 2018

Complete Genome Sequence of Bacteriophage St11Ph5, Which Infects Uropathogenic Escherichia coli Strain up11

Alla K. Golomidova; Eugene Kulikov; Vladislav V. Babenko; Elena S. Kostryukova; Andrey V. Letarov

ABSTRACT Bacteriophage St11Ph5 was isolated from a sewage sample on a particularly phage-resistant uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC) up11 host strain. It appeared to be closely related to bacteriophage G7C, isolated from horse feces; however, it carries a highly divergent host recognition module.


Genome Announcements | 2018

Complete Genome Sequence of Escherichia coli Bacteriophage PGT2

Alla K. Golomidova; Eugene Kulikov; Anna V. Kudryavtseva; Andrey V. Letarov

ABSTRACT Bacteriophage PGT2 was isolated from horse feces by using an uncharacterized Escherichia coli strain, 7s, isolated from the same sample as the host. Bacteriophage PGT2 and a related phage, phiKT, which was previously isolated from the same source, are likely to represent a new genus within the Autographivirinae subfamily of the Podoviridae family of viruses.


Biochemistry | 2018

O-Antigens of Escherichia coli Strains O81 and HS3-104 Are Structurally and Genetically Related, Except O-Antigen Glucosylation in E. coli HS3-104

Evelina L. Zdorovenko; Yaxin Wang; A. S. Shashkov; T. Chen; Olga G. Ovchinnikova; B. Liu; Alla K. Golomidova; V. V. Babenko; Andrey V. Letarov; Yuriy A. Knirel

Glycerophosphate-containing O-specific polysaccharides (OPSs) were obtained by mild acidic degradation of lipopolysaccharides isolated from Escherichia coli type strain O81 and E. coli strain HS3-104 from horse feces. The structures of both OPSs and of the oligosaccharide derived from the strain O81 OPS by treatment with 48% HF were studied by monosaccharide analysis and one- and two-dimensional 1H- and 13C-NMR spectroscopy. Both OPSs had similar structures and differed only in the presence of a side-chain glucose residue in the strain HS3-104 OPS. The genes and the organization of the O-antigen biosynthesis gene cluster in both strains are almost identical with the exception of the gtr gene cluster responsible for glucosylations in the strain HS3-104, which is located elsewhere in the genome.


Microbiology | 2017

Effect of O-acetylation of O antigen of Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide on the nonspecific barrier function of the outer membrane

Eugene Kulikov; J. Majewska; Nikolai S. Prokhorov; Alla K. Golomidova; E. V. Tatarskiy; Andrey V. Letarov

Comparison of the methods for determination of permeability of the outer membrane of Escherichia coli strain 4s and its mutants was carried out. The studied isogenic strains E. coli 4s were obtained by selection of spontaneous mutants according to their sensitivity to bacteriophages recognizing the surface O antigen of the outer membrane lipopolysaccharide as a primary receptor. The variants differed in the presence and (de)acetylation of the lipopolysaccharide O antigen. A peptide antibiotic polymyxin, plasmid DNA, and lysozyme were used as probes. The role of acetylation of the O antigen of the lipopolysaccaride of E. coli outer membrane in modification of its permeability (correlating with bacteriophage sensitivity of the cells) was confirmed. Kinetic analysis using lysozyme was shown to be the optimal method for determination of the barrier function of E. coli outer membrane.


Archives of Virology | 2015

Complete genome sequences of T5-related Escherichia coli bacteriophages DT57C and DT571/2 isolated from horse feces.

Alla K. Golomidova; Eugene Kulikov; Nikolai S. Prokhorov; Ricardo C. Guerrero-Ferreira; Vladimir N. Ksenzenko; Karina K. Tarasyan; Andrey V. Letarov

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Andrey V. Letarov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Eugene Kulikov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Yuriy A. Knirel

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Elena S. Kostryukova

Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology

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Karina K. Tarasyan

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Maria A. Letarova

Russian Academy of Sciences

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