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Dive into the research topics where Bihua C. Huang is active.

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Featured researches published by Bihua C. Huang.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Salmonella Degrades the Host Glycocalyx Leading to Altered Infection and Glycan Remodeling

Narine Arabyan; Dayoung Park; Soraya Foutouhi; Allison M. Weis; Bihua C. Huang; Cynthia C. Williams; Prerak T. Desai; Jigna Shah; Richard Jeannotte; Nguyet Kong; Carlito B. Lebrilla; Bart C. Weimer

Complex glycans cover the gut epithelial surface to protect the cell from the environment. Invasive pathogens must breach the glycan layer before initiating infection. While glycan degradation is crucial for infection, this process is inadequately understood. Salmonella contains 47 glycosyl hydrolases (GHs) that may degrade the glycan. We hypothesized that keystone genes from the entire GH complement of Salmonella are required to degrade glycans to change infection. This study determined that GHs recognize the terminal monosaccharides (N-acetylneuraminic acid (Neu5Ac), galactose, mannose, and fucose) and significantly (p < 0.05) alter infection. During infection, Salmonella used its two GHs sialidase nanH and amylase malS for internalization by targeting different glycan structures. The host glycans were altered during Salmonella association via the induction of N-glycan biosynthesis pathways leading to modification of host glycans by increasing fucosylation and mannose content, while decreasing sialylation. Gene expression analysis indicated that the host cell responded by regulating more than 50 genes resulting in remodeled glycans in response to Salmonella treatment. This study established the glycan structures on colonic epithelial cells, determined that Salmonella required two keystone GHs for internalization, and left remodeled host glycans as a result of infection. These data indicate that microbial GHs are undiscovered virulence factors.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2016

Genomic Comparison of Campylobacter spp. and Their Potential for Zoonotic Transmission between Birds, Primates, and Livestock

Allison M. Weis; Dylan B. Storey; Conor C. Taff; Andrea K. Townsend; Bihua C. Huang; Nguyet Kong; Kristin A. Clothier; Abigail Spinner; Barbara A. Byrne; Bart C. Weimer

ABSTRACT Campylobacter is the leading cause of human gastroenteritis worldwide. Wild birds, including American crows, are abundant in urban, suburban, and agricultural settings and are likely zoonotic vectors of Campylobacter. Their proximity to humans and livestock increases the potential spreading of Campylobacter via crows between the environment, livestock, and humans. However, no studies have definitively demonstrated that crows are a vector for pathogenic Campylobacter. We used genomics to evaluate the zoonotic and pathogenic potential of Campylobacter from crows to other animals with 184 isolates obtained from crows, chickens, cows, sheep, goats, humans, and nonhuman primates. Whole-genome analysis uncovered two distinct clades of Campylobacter jejuni genotypes; the first contained genotypes found only in crows, while a second genotype contained “generalist” genomes that were isolated from multiple host species, including isolates implicated in human disease, primate gastroenteritis, and livestock abortion. Two major β-lactamase genes were observed frequently in these genomes (oxa-184, 55%, and oxa-61, 29%), where oxa-184 was associated only with crows and oxa-61 was associated with generalists. Mutations in gyrA, indicative of fluoroquinolone resistance, were observed in 14% of the isolates. Tetracycline resistance (tetO) was present in 22% of the isolates, yet it occurred in 91% of the abortion isolates. Virulence genes were distributed throughout the genomes; however, cdtC alleles recapitulated the crow-only and generalist clades. A specific cdtC allele was associated with abortion in livestock and was concomitant with tetO. These findings indicate that crows harboring a generalist C. jejuni genotype may act as a vector for the zoonotic transmission of Campylobacter. IMPORTANCE This study examined the link between public health and the genomic variation of Campylobacter in relation to disease in humans, primates, and livestock. Use of large-scale whole-genome sequencing enabled population-level assessment to find new genes that are linked to livestock disease. With 184 Campylobacter genomes, we assessed virulence traits, antibiotic resistance susceptibility, and the potential for zoonotic transfer to observe that there is a “generalist” genotype that may move between host species.


Mbio | 2017

Fallacy of the Unique Genome: Sequence Diversity within Single Helicobacter pylori Strains

Jenny Draper; Lori M. Hansen; David L. Bernick; Samar Abedrabbo; Jason G. Underwood; Nguyet Kong; Bihua C. Huang; Allison M. Weis; Bart C. Weimer; Arnoud H. M. van Vliet; Nader Pourmand; Jay V. Solnick; Kevin Karplus; Karen M. Ottemann

ABSTRACT Many bacterial genomes are highly variable but nonetheless are typically published as a single assembled genome. Experiments tracking bacterial genome evolution have not looked at the variation present at a given point in time. Here, we analyzed the mouse-passaged Helicobacter pylori strain SS1 and its parent PMSS1 to assess intra- and intergenomic variability. Using high sequence coverage depth and experimental validation, we detected extensive genome plasticity within these H. pylori isolates, including movement of the transposable element IS607, large and small inversions, multiple single nucleotide polymorphisms, and variation in cagA copy number. The cagA gene was found as 1 to 4 tandem copies located off the cag island in both SS1 and PMSS1; this copy number variation correlated with protein expression. To gain insight into the changes that occurred during mouse adaptation, we also compared SS1 and PMSS1 and observed 46 differences that were distinct from the within-genome variation. The most substantial was an insertion in cagY, which encodes a protein required for a type IV secretion system function. We detected modifications in genes coding for two proteins known to affect mouse colonization, the HpaA neuraminyllactose-binding protein and the FutB α-1,3 lipopolysaccharide (LPS) fucosyltransferase, as well as genes predicted to modulate diverse properties. In sum, our work suggests that data from consensus genome assemblies from single colonies may be misleading by failing to represent the variability present. Furthermore, we show that high-depth genomic sequencing data of a population can be analyzed to gain insight into the normal variation within bacterial strains. IMPORTANCE Although it is well known that many bacterial genomes are highly variable, it is nonetheless traditional to refer to, analyze, and publish “the genome” of a bacterial strain. Variability is usually reduced (“only sequence from a single colony”), ignored (“just publish the consensus”), or placed in the “too-hard” basket (“analysis of raw read data is more robust”). Now that whole-genome sequences are regularly used to assess virulence and track outbreaks, a better understanding of the baseline genomic variation present within single strains is needed. Here, we describe the variability seen in typical working stocks and colonies of pathogen Helicobacter pylori model strains SS1 and PMSS1 as revealed by use of high-coverage mate pair next-generation sequencing (NGS) and confirmed by traditional laboratory techniques. This work demonstrates that reliance on a consensus assembly as “the genome” of a bacterial strain may be misleading. IMPORTANCE Although it is well known that many bacterial genomes are highly variable, it is nonetheless traditional to refer to, analyze, and publish “the genome” of a bacterial strain. Variability is usually reduced (“only sequence from a single colony”), ignored (“just publish the consensus”), or placed in the “too-hard” basket (“analysis of raw read data is more robust”). Now that whole-genome sequences are regularly used to assess virulence and track outbreaks, a better understanding of the baseline genomic variation present within single strains is needed. Here, we describe the variability seen in typical working stocks and colonies of pathogen Helicobacter pylori model strains SS1 and PMSS1 as revealed by use of high-coverage mate pair next-generation sequencing (NGS) and confirmed by traditional laboratory techniques. This work demonstrates that reliance on a consensus assembly as “the genome” of a bacterial strain may be misleading.


Genome Announcements | 2017

Large-Scale Release of Campylobacter Draft Genomes: Resources for Food Safety and Public Health from the 100K Pathogen Genome Project.

Allison M. Weis; Bihua C. Huang; Dylan B. Storey; Nguyet Kong; Poyin Chen; Narine Arabyan; Brent Gilpin; Carl Mason; Andrea K. Townsend; Woutrina A. Smith; Barbara A. Byrne; Conor C. Taff; Bart C. Weimer

ABSTRACT Campylobacter is a food-associated bacterium and a leading cause of foodborne illness worldwide, being associated with poultry in the food supply. This is the initial public release of 202 Campylobacter genome sequences as part of the 100K Pathogen Genome Project. These isolates represent global genomic diversity in the Campylobacter genus.


Genome Announcements | 2016

Draft Genome Sequences of Campylobacter jejuni Strains That Cause Abortion in Livestock

Allison M. Weis; Kristin A. Clothier; Bihua C. Huang; Nguyet Kong; Bart C. Weimer

ABSTRACT Campylobacter jejuni is an intestinal bacterium that can cause abortion in livestock. This publication announces the public release of 15 Campylobacter jejuni genome sequences from isolates linked to abortion in livestock. These isolates are part of the 100K Pathogen Genome Project and are from clinical cases at the University of California (UC) Davis.


Genome Announcements | 2017

Implication of sialidases in Salmonella infection: Genome release of sialidase knockout strains from salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium LT2

Narine Arabyan; Allison M. Weis; Bihua C. Huang; Bart C. Weimer

ABSTRACT Sialidases, which are widely distributed in nature, cleave the α-ketosidic bond of terminal sialic acid residue. These emerging virulence factors degrade the host glycan. We report here the release of seven sialidase and one sialic acid transporter deletion in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium strain LT2, which are important in cellular invasion during infection.


Genome Announcements | 2017

Draft Genome Sequence of Multidrug-Resistant Abortive Campylobacter jejuni from Northern California

Allison M. Weis; Kristin A. Clothier; Bihua C. Huang; Nguyet Kong; Bart C. Weimer

ABSTRACT Campylobacter jejuni is an enteric bacterium that can cause abortion in livestock. This is the release of a multidrug-resistant Campylobacter jejuni genome from an isolate that caused an abortion in a cow in northern California. This isolate is part of the 100K Pathogen Genome Project.


Genome Announcements | 2017

Shigella draft genome sequences: Resources for food safety and public health

Allison M. Weis; Brent Gilpin; Bihua C. Huang; Nguyet Kong; Poyin Chen; Bart C. Weimer

ABSTRACT Shigella is a major foodborne pathogen that infects humans and nonhuman primates and is the major cause of dysentery and reactive arthritis worldwide. This is the initial public release of 16 Shigella genome sequences from four species sequenced as part of the 100K Pathogen Genome Project.


Genome Announcements | 2017

Draft Genome Sequences of 1,183 Salmonella Strains from the 100K Pathogen Genome Project

Nguyet Kong; Matthew Davis; Narine Arabyan; Bihua C. Huang; Allison M. Weis; Poyin Chen; Kao Thao; Whitney Ng; Ning Chin; Soraya Foutouhi; Azarene Foutouhi; James H. Kaufman; Yi Xie; Dylan B. Storey; Bart C. Weimer

ABSTRACT Salmonella is a common food-associated bacterium that has substantial impact on worldwide human health and the global economy. This is the public release of 1,183 Salmonella draft genome sequences as part of the 100K Pathogen Genome Project. These isolates represent global genomic diversity in the Salmonella genus.


Genome Announcements | 2017

Amylases and their importance during glycan degradation: Genome sequence release of Salmonella amylase knockout strains

Narine Arabyan; Bihua C. Huang; Bart C. Weimer

ABSTRACT Amylases catalyze the cleavage of α-d-1,4 and α-d-1,6-glycosidic bonds in starch and related carbohydrates. Amylases are widely distributed in nature and are important in carbohydrate metabolism. This is the release of four single and two double deletions in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium LT2 that are important for glycan degradation during infection.

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Bart C. Weimer

University of California

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Nguyet Kong

University of California

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Narine Arabyan

University of California

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Poyin Chen

University of California

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