Barbro Lindmark
Umeå University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Barbro Lindmark.
Cell | 2003
Sun Nyunt Wai; Barbro Lindmark; Tomas Söderblom; Akemi Takade; Marie Westermark; Jan Oscarsson; Jana Jass; Agneta Richter-Dahlfors; Yoshimitsu Mizunoe; Bernt Eric Uhlin
The ClyA protein is a pore-forming cytotoxin expressed by Escherichia coli and some other enterobacteria. It confers cytotoxic activity toward mammalian cells, but it has remained unknown how ClyA is surface exposed and exported from bacterial cells. Outer-membrane vesicles (OMVs) released from the bacteria were shown to contain ClyA protein. ClyA formed oligomeric pore assemblies in the OMVs, and the cytotoxic activity toward mammalian cells was considerably higher than that of ClyA protein purified from the bacterial periplasm. The redox status of ClyA correlated with its ability to form the oligomeric pore assemblies. In bacterial cells with a defective periplasmic disulphide oxidoreductase system, the ClyA protein was phenotypically expressed in a constitutive manner. The results define a vesicle-mediated transport mechanism in bacteria, and our findings show that the localization of proteins to OMVs directly may contribute to the activation and delivery of pathogenic effector proteins.
Molecular Microbiology | 2008
Tianyan Song; Franziska Mika; Barbro Lindmark; Zhi Liu; Stefan Schild; Anne L. Bishop; Jun Zhu; Andrew Camilli; Jörg Vogel; Sun Nyunt Wai
We discovered a new small non‐coding RNA (sRNA) gene, vrrA of Vibrio cholerae O1 strain A1552. A vrrA mutant overproduces OmpA porin, and we demonstrate that the 140 nt VrrA RNA represses ompA translation by base‐pairing with the 5′ region of the mRNA. The RNA chaperone Hfq is not stringently required for VrrA action, but expression of the vrrA gene requires the membrane stress sigma factor, σE, suggesting that VrrA acts on ompA in response to periplasmic protein folding stress. We also observed that OmpA levels inversely correlated with the number of outer membrane vesicles (OMVs), and that VrrA increased OMV production comparable to loss of OmpA. VrrA is the first sRNA known to control OMV formation. Moreover, a vrrA mutant showed a fivefold increased ability to colonize the intestines of infant mice as compared with the wild type. There was increased expression of the main colonization factor of V. cholerae, the toxin co‐regulated pili, in the vrrA mutant as monitored by immunoblot detection of the TcpA protein. VrrA overproduction caused a distinct reduction in the TcpA protein level. Our findings suggest that VrrA contributes to bacterial fitness in certain stressful environments, and modulates infection of the host intestinal tract.
BMC Microbiology | 2009
Barbro Lindmark; Pramod Kumar Rompikuntal; Karolis Vaitkevicius; Tianyan Song; Yoshimitsu Mizunoe; Bernt Eric Uhlin; Patricia Guerry; Sun Nyunt Wai
BackgroundBackground: Cytolethal distending toxin (CDT) is one of the well-characterized virulence factors of Campylobacter jejuni, but it is unknown how CDT becomes surface-exposed or is released from the bacterium to the surrounding environment.ResultsOur data suggest that CDT is secreted to the bacterial culture supernatant via outer membrane vesicles (OMVs) released from the bacteria. All three subunits (the CdtA, CdtB, and CdtC proteins) were detected by immunogold labeling and electron microscopy of OMVs. Subcellular fractionation of the bacteria indicated that, apart from the majority of CDT detected in the cytoplasmic compartment, appreciable amounts (20-50%) of the cellular pool of CDT proteins were present in the periplasmic compartment. In the bacterial culture supernatant, we found that a majority of the extracellular CDT was tightly associated with the OMVs. Isolated OMVs could exert the cell distending effects typical of CDT on a human intestinal cell line, indicating that CDT is present there in a biologically active form.ConclusionOur results strongly suggest that the release of outer membrane vesicles is functioning as a route of C. jejuni to deliver all the subunits of CDT toxin (CdtA, CdtB, and CdtC) to the surrounding environment, including infected host tissue.
PLOS ONE | 2009
Takahiko Ishikawa; Pramod Kumar Rompikuntal; Barbro Lindmark; Debra L. Milton; Sun Nyunt Wai
Background The type VI secretion system (T6SS) has emerged as a protein secretion system important to several Gram-negative bacterial species. One of the common components of the system is Hcp, initially described as a hemolysin co-regulated protein in a serotype O17 strain of Vibrio cholerae. Homologs to V. cholerae hcp genes have been found in all characterized type VI secretion systems and they are present also in the serotype O1 strains of V. cholerae that are the cause of cholera diseases but seemed to have non-functional T6SS. Methodology/Principal Findings The serotype O1 V. cholerae strain A1552 was shown to express detectable levels of Hcp as determined by immunoblot analyses using polyclonal anti-Hcp antiserum. We found that the expression of Hcp was growth phase dependent. The levels of Hcp in quorum sensing deficient mutants of V. cholerae were compared with the levels in wild type V. cholerae O1 strain A1552. The expression of Hcp was positively and negatively regulated by the quorum sensing regulators HapR and LuxO, respectively. In addition, we observed that expression of Hcp was dependent on the cAMP-CRP global transcriptional regulatory complex and required the RpoN sigma factor. Conclusion/Significance Our results show that serotype O1 strains of V. cholerae do express Hcp which is regarded as one of the important T6SS components and is one of the secreted substrates in non-O1 non-O139 V. cholerae isolates. We found that expression of Hcp was strictly regulated by the quorum sensing system in the V. cholerae O1 strain. In addition, the expression of Hcp required the alternative sigma factor RpoN and the cAMP-CRP global regulatory complex. Interestingly, the environmental isolates of V. cholerae O1 strains that showed higher levels of the HapR quorum sensing regulator in comparison with our laboratory standard serotype O1 strain A1552 where also expressing higher levels of Hcp.
FEBS Journal | 2008
Karolis Vaitkevicius; Pramod Kumar Rompikuntal; Barbro Lindmark; Rimas Vaitkevicius; Tianyan Song; Sun Nyunt Wai
The Vibrio metalloprotease PrtV was purified from the culture supernatant of a Vibrio cholerae derivative that is deficient in several other secreted peptidases, including the otherwise abundant hemagglutinin/protease HapA. The PrtV is synthesized as a 102 kDa protein, but undergoes several N‐ and C‐terminal processing steps during V. cholerae envelope translocation and prolonged incubation. Purified V. cholerae PrtV protease forms of 81 or 73 kDa were stabilized by calcium ions. Removal of calcium resulted in further rapid autoproteolysis. The two major products of autoproteolysis of the PrtV protease were approximately 37 and 18 kDa and could not be separated under non‐denaturing conditions, indicating they are interacting domains. In an assay using cultured cells of the human intestinal cell line HCT8, the PrtV protein showed a cytotoxic effect leading to cell death. Using human blood plasma as a source of potential substrates of mammalian origin for the PrtV protease, we found that the extracellular matrix components fibronectin and fibrinogen were degraded by the enzyme. Additional tests with individual protein substrates revealed that plasminogen was also a possible target for the PrtV protease.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006
Karolis Vaitkevicius; Barbro Lindmark; Gangwei Ou; Tianyan Song; Claudia Toma; Masaaki Iwanaga; Jun Zhu; Agneta Andersson; Marie-Louise Hammarström; Simon Tuck; Sun Nyunt Wai
Journal of Shellfish Research | 2012
Betty Collin; Ann-Sofi Rehnstam-Holm; Barbro Lindmark; Amit Pal; Sun Nyunt Wai; Bodil Hernroth
Archive | 2012
Pramod Kumar Rompikuntal; Monika K. Åhlund; Barbro Lindmark; Tanya L. Johnson; Maria Sandkvist; Richard Lundmark; Bernt Eric Uhlin; Sun Nyunt Wai
Archive | 2010
Karolis Vaitkevicius; Barbro Lindmark; Pramod Kumar Rompikuntal; Sucharit Bhakdi; Tianyan Song; Sun Nyunt Wai
Archive | 2009
Barbro Lindmark; Amit Pal; Pramod Kumar Rompikuntal; Mitesh Dongre; Goutam Chowdhury; Betty Collin; Ann-Sofi Rehnstam-Holm; T. Ramamurthy; Sun Wai