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Dive into the research topics where Bruce A. Vallance is active.

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Featured researches published by Bruce A. Vallance.


Immunity | 2010

Control of intestinal homeostasis, colitis, and colitis-associated colorectal cancer by the inflammatory caspases.

Jeremy Dupaul-Chicoine; Garabet Yeretssian; Karine Doiron; Kirk S. Bergstrom; Christian R. McIntire; Philippe M. LeBlanc; Charles Meunier; Claire Turbide; Philippe Gros; Nicole Beauchemin; Bruce A. Vallance; Maya Saleh

Inflammatory caspases are essential effectors of inflammation and cell death. Here, we investigated their roles in colitis and colorectal cancer and report a bimodal regulation of intestinal homeostasis, inflammation and tumorigenesis by caspases-1 and -12. Casp1(-/-) mice exhibited defects in mucosal tissue repair and succumbed rapidly after dextran sulfate sodium administration. This phenotype was rescued by administration of exogenous interleukin-18 and was partially reproduced in mice deficient in the inflammasome adaptor ASC. Casp12(-/-) mice, in which the inflammasome is derepressed, were resistant to acute colitis and showed signs of enhanced repair. Together with their increased inflammatory response, the enhanced repair response of Casp12(-/-) mice rendered them more susceptible to colorectal cancer induced by azoxymethane (AOM)+DSS. Taken together, our results indicate that the inflammatory caspases are critical in the induction of inflammation in the gut after injury, which is necessary for tissue repair and maintenance of immune tolerance.


PLOS Pathogens | 2010

Muc2 Protects against Lethal Infectious Colitis by Disassociating Pathogenic and Commensal Bacteria from the Colonic Mucosa

Kirk S. B. Bergstrom; Vanessa Kissoon-Singh; Deanna L. Gibson; Caixia Ma; Marinieve Montero; Ho Pan Sham; Natasha Ryz; Tina Huang; Anna Velcich; B. Brett Finlay; Kris Chadee; Bruce A. Vallance

Despite recent advances in our understanding of the pathogenesis of attaching and effacing (A/E) Escherichia coli infections, the mechanisms by which the host defends against these microbes are unclear. The goal of this study was to determine the role of goblet cell-derived Muc2, the major intestinal secretory mucin and primary component of the mucus layer, in host protection against A/E pathogens. To assess the role of Muc2 during A/E bacterial infections, we inoculated Muc2 deficient (Muc2−/−) mice with Citrobacter rodentium, a murine A/E pathogen related to diarrheagenic A/E E. coli. Unlike wildtype (WT) mice, infected Muc2−/− mice exhibited rapid weight loss and suffered up to 90% mortality. Stool plating demonstrated 10–100 fold greater C. rodentium burdens in Muc2−/− vs. WT mice, most of which were found to be loosely adherent to the colonic mucosa. Histology of Muc2−/− mice revealed ulceration in the colon amid focal bacterial microcolonies. Metabolic labeling of secreted mucins in the large intestine demonstrated that mucin secretion was markedly increased in WT mice during infection compared to uninfected controls, suggesting that the host uses increased mucin release to flush pathogens from the mucosal surface. Muc2 also impacted host-commensal interactions during infection, as FISH analysis revealed C. rodentium microcolonies contained numerous commensal microbes, which was not observed in WT mice. Orally administered FITC-Dextran and FISH staining showed significantly worsened intestinal barrier disruption in Muc2−/− vs. WT mice, with overt pathogen and commensal translocation into the Muc2−/− colonic mucosa. Interestingly, commensal depletion enhanced C. rodentium colonization of Muc2−/− mice, although colonic pathology was not significantly altered. In conclusion, Muc2 production is critical for host protection during A/E bacterial infections, by limiting overall pathogen and commensal numbers associated with the colonic mucosal surface. Such actions limit tissue damage and translocation of pathogenic and commensal bacteria across the epithelium.


Science | 2012

Regulated Virulence Controls the Ability of a Pathogen to Compete with the Gut Microbiota

Nobuhiko Kamada; Yun Gi Kim; Ho Pan Sham; Bruce A. Vallance; José L. Puente; Eric C. Martens; Gabriel Núñez

Establishing an Enteric Infection Complex and highly regulated interactions are required to keep the peace between the bacteria that reside in our gut and the immune system. How do pathogenic bacteria, such as the strains of Escherichia coli that cause gastroenteritis, get a foothold to establish an infection, and what is the role of resident bacteria in this process? Kamada et al. (p. 1325, published online 10 May; see the Perspective by Sperandio) infected mice orally with Citrobacter rodentium and found that mice with normal commensal microflora, which were better able to contain the infection than mice that lacked the commensals, which were not able to clear the infection. Virulence genes and nutritional requirements determine the course of a gastroenteric bacterial infection in mice. The virulence mechanisms that allow pathogens to colonize the intestine remain unclear. Here, we show that germ-free animals are unable to eradicate Citrobacter rodentium, a model for human infections with attaching and effacing bacteria. Early in infection, virulence genes were expressed and required for pathogen growth in conventionally raised mice but not germ-free mice. Virulence gene expression was down-regulated during the late phase of infection, which led to relocation of the pathogen to the intestinal lumen where it was outcompeted by commensals. The ability of commensals to outcompete C. rodentium was determined, at least in part, by the capacity of the pathogen and commensals to grow on structurally similar carbohydrates. Thus, pathogen colonization is controlled by bacterial virulence and through competition with metabolically related commensals.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Dissemination of invasive Salmonella via bacterial-induced extrusion of mucosal epithelia

Leigh A. Knodler; Bruce A. Vallance; Jean Celli; Seth Winfree; Bryan J. Hansen; Marinieve Montero; Olivia Steele-Mortimer

Salmonella enterica is an intracellular bacterial pathogen that resides and proliferates within a membrane-bound vacuole in epithelial cells of the gut and gallbladder. Although essential to disease, how Salmonella escapes from its intracellular niche and spreads to secondary cells within the same host, or to a new host, is not known. Here, we demonstrate that a subpopulation of Salmonella hyperreplicating in the cytosol of epithelial cells serves as a reservoir for dissemination. These bacteria are transcriptionally distinct from intravacuolar Salmonella. They are induced for the invasion-associated type III secretion system and possess flagella; hence, they are primed for invasion. Epithelial cells laden with these cytosolic bacteria are extruded out of the monolayer, releasing invasion-primed and -competent Salmonella into the lumen. This extrusion mechanism is morphologically similar to the process of cell shedding required for turnover of the intestinal epithelium. In contrast to the homeostatic mechanism, however, bacterial-induced extrusion is accompanied by an inflammatory cell death characterized by caspase-1 activation and the apical release of IL-18, an important cytokine regulator of gut inflammation. Although epithelial extrusion is obviously beneficial to Salmonella for completion of its life cycle, it also provides a mechanistic explanation for the mucosal inflammation that is triggered during Salmonella infection of the gastrointestinal and biliary tracts.


Infection and Immunity | 2001

Locus of Enterocyte Effacement from Citrobacter rodentium: Sequence Analysis and Evidence for Horizontal Transfer among Attaching and Effacing Pathogens

Wanyin Deng; Yuling Li; Bruce A. Vallance; B. Brett Finlay

ABSTRACT The family of attaching and effacing (A/E) bacterial pathogens, which includes diarrheagenic enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) and enterohemorrhagic E.coli (EHEC), remains a significant threat to human and animal health. These bacteria intimately attach to host intestinal cells, causing the effacement of brush border microvilli. The genes responsible for this phenotype are encoded in a pathogenicity island called the locus of enterocyte effacement (LEE). Citrobacter rodentium is the only known murine A/E pathogen and serves as a small animal model for EPEC and EHEC infections. Here we report the full DNA sequence of C. rodentium LEE and provide a comparative analysis with the published LEEs from EPEC, EHEC, and the rabbit diarrheagenic E. colistrain RDEC-1. Although C. rodentium LEE shows high similarities throughout the entire sequence and shares all 41 open reading frames with the LEE from EPEC, EHEC, and RDEC-1, it is unique in its location of the rorf1 androrf2/espG genes and the presence of several insertion sequences (IS) and IS remnants. The LEE of EPEC and EHEC is inserted into the selC tRNA gene. In contrast, theCitrobacter LEE is flanked on one side by an operon encoding an ABC transport system, and an IS element and sequences homologous to Shigella plasmid R100 and EHEC pO157 flank the other. The presence of plasmid sequences next to C.rodentium LEE suggests that the prototype LEE resided on a horizontally transferable plasmid. Additional sequence analysis reveals that the 3-kb plasmid in C.rodentium is nearly identical to p9705 in EHEC O157:H7, suggesting that horizontal plasmid transfer among A/E pathogens has occurred. Our results indicate that the LEE has been acquired byC. rodentium and A/E E.coli strains independently during evolution.


Infection and Immunity | 2011

Antibiotic Treatment Alters the Colonic Mucus Layer and Predisposes the Host to Exacerbated Citrobacter rodentium-Induced Colitis

Marta Wlodarska; Benjamin P. Willing; K. M. Keeney; Alfredo Menendez; Kirk S. B. Bergstrom; Navkiran Gill; Shannon L. Russell; Bruce A. Vallance; B. Brett Finlay

ABSTRACT Antibiotics are often used in the clinic to treat bacterial infections, but the effects of these drugs on microbiota composition and on intestinal immunity are poorly understood. Citrobacter rodentium was used as a model enteric pathogen to investigate the effect of microbial perturbation on intestinal barriers and susceptibility to colitis. Streptomycin and metronidazole were used to induce alterations in the composition of the microbiota prior to infection with C. rodentium. Metronidazole pretreatment increased susceptibility to C. rodentium-induced colitis over that of untreated and streptomycin-pretreated mice, 6 days postinfection. Both antibiotic treatments altered microbial composition, without affecting total numbers, but metronidazole treatment resulted in a more dramatic change, including a reduced population of Porphyromonadaceae and increased numbers of lactobacilli. Disruption of the microbiota with metronidazole, but not streptomycin treatment, resulted in an increased inflammatory tone of the intestine characterized by increased bacterial stimulation of the epithelium, altered goblet cell function, and thinning of the inner mucus layer, suggesting a weakened mucosal barrier. This reduction in mucus thickness correlates with increased attachment of C. rodentium to the intestinal epithelium, contributing to the exacerbated severity of C. rodentium-induced colitis in metronidazole-pretreated mice. These results suggest that antibiotic perturbation of the microbiota can disrupt intestinal homeostasis and the integrity of intestinal defenses, which protect against invading pathogens and intestinal inflammation.


Infection and Immunity | 2005

Salmonella enterica Serovar Typhimurium Pathogenicity Island 2 Is Necessary for Complete Virulence in a Mouse Model of Infectious Enterocolitis

Bryan Coburn; Yuling Li; David Owen; Bruce A. Vallance; B. Brett Finlay

ABSTRACT Salmonella species cause a wide range of disease in multiple hosts. Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium causes self-limited intestinal disease in humans and systemic typhoid-like illness in susceptible mice. The prevailing dogma in murine S. enterica serovar Typhimurium pathogenesis is that distinct virulence mechanisms—Salmonella pathogenicity islands 1 and 2 (SPI1 and SPI2)—perform distinct roles in pathogenesis, the former being important for invasion and intestinal disease and the latter important for intracellular survival and systemic persistence and disease. Although evidence from bovine infections has suggested that SPI2 has a role in ileal disease, there is no evidence that SPI2 is important for inflammation in a disease that more closely recapitulates human colitis. Using S. enterica serovar Typhimurium strains that lack functional type III secretion systems, we demonstrate that SPI2 is essential for complete virulence in murine infectious enterocolitis. Using a recently characterized murine model (M. Barthel,S. Hapfelmeier, L. Quintanilla-Martinez, M. Kremer, M. Rohde, M. Hogardt, K. Pfeffer, H. Russmann, and W. D. Hardt, Infect. Immun. 71:2839-2858, 2003), we demonstrate that SPI1 mutants are unable to cause intestinal disease 48 h after infection and that SPI2-deficient bacteria also cause significantly attenuated typhlitis. We show that at the peak of inflammation in the cecum, SPI2 mutants induce diminished intercellular adhesion molecule 1 expression and neutrophil recruitment but that wild-type and mutant Salmonella are similarly distributed in the lumen of the infected organ. Finally, we demonstrate that attenuation of intestinal inflammation is accompanied by resolution of typhlitis in the mutant, but not wild-type, infections. Collectively, these results indicate that SPI2 is needed for enterocolitis, as well as for systemic disease.


Molecular Microbiology | 2003

Citrobacter rodentium translocated intimin receptor (Tir) is an essential virulence factor needed for actin condensation, intestinal colonization and colonic hyperplasia in mice

Wanyin Deng; Bruce A. Vallance; Yuling Li; José L. Puente; B. Brett Finlay

Citrobacter rodentium infection of mice serves as a relevant small animal model to study enterohaemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) and enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) infections in man. Enteropathogenic E. coli and EHEC translocate Tir into the host cytoplasmic membrane, where it serves as the receptor for the bacterial adhesin intimin and plays a central role in actin condensation beneath the adherent bacterium. In this report, we examined the function of C. rodentium Tir both in vitro and in vivo. Similar to EPEC, C. rodentium Tir is tyrosine phosphorylated and is essential for actin condensation. Citrobacter Tir and EPEC Tir are functionally interchangeable and both require tyrosine phosphorylation to mediate actin rearrangements. In contrast, Citrobacter Tir supports actin nucleation in EHEC independent of tyrosine phosphorylation, while EHEC Tir cannot replace Citrobacter Tir for this function. This indicates that C. rodentium and EPEC use an actin nucleating mechanism different from EHEC. We also found that Tir is expressed and translocated into mouse enterocytes in vivo by C. rodentium during infections. This represents the first direct demonstration of a type III effector translocated in vivo into a natural host by any pathogen. In addition, we showed that Tir, but not its tyrosine phosphorylation, is essential for C. rodentium to colonize the large bowel and induce attaching/effacing (A/E) lesions and colonic hyperplasia in mice, and that both EPEC Tir and EHEC Tir can substitute for Citrobacter Tir for these activities in vivo. These results thus demonstrate that Tir is an essential virulence factor in this infection model. The data also show that the function of Tir tyrosine phosphorylation and its subsequent actin nucleating activity are not essential for C. rodentium colonization of the mouse gut nor for inducing A/E lesions and colonic hyperplasia, thereby uncoupling colonization and disease from actin condensation for this A/E pathogen.


Infection and Immunity | 2004

Clearance of Citrobacter rodentium Requires B Cells but Not Secretory Immunoglobulin A (IgA) or IgM Antibodies

Christian Maaser; Michael P. Housley; Mitsutoshi Iimura; Jennifer R. Smith; Bruce A. Vallance; B. Brett Finlay; John R. Schreiber; Nissi M. Varki; Martin F. Kagnoff; Lars Eckmann

ABSTRACT Citrobacter rodentium, a murine model pathogen for human enteropathogenic Escherichia coli, predominantly colonizes the lumen and mucosal surface of the colon and cecum and causes crypt hyperplasia and mucosal inflammation. Mice infected with C. rodentium develop a secretory immunoglobulin A (IgA) response, but the role of B cells or secretory antibodies in host defense is unknown. To address this question, we conducted oral C. rodentium infections in mice lacking B cells, IgA, secreted IgM, polymeric Ig receptor (pIgR), or J chain. Normal mice showed peak bacterial numbers in colon and feces at 1 week and bacterial eradication after 3 to 4 weeks. B-cell-deficient mice were equally susceptible initially but could not control infection subsequently. Tissue responses showed marked differences, as infection of normal mice was accompanied by transient crypt hyperplasia and mucosal inflammation in the colon and cecum at 2 but not 6 weeks, whereas B-cell-deficient mice had few mucosal changes at 2 weeks but severe epithelial hyperplasia with ulcerations and mucosal inflammation at 6 weeks. The functions of B cells were not mediated by secretory antibodies, since mice lacking IgA or secreted IgM or proteins required for their transport into the lumen, pIgR or J chain, cleared C. rodentium normally. Nonetheless, systemic administration of immune sera reduced bacterial numbers significantly in normal and pIgR-deficient mice, and depletion of IgG abrogated this effect. These results indicate that host defense against C. rodentium depends on B cells and IgG antibodies but does not require production or transepithelial transport of IgA or secreted IgM.


Cellular Microbiology | 2008

MyD88 signalling plays a critical role in host defence by controlling pathogen burden and promoting epithelial cell homeostasis during Citrobacter rodentium‐induced colitis

Deanna L. Gibson; Caixia Ma; Kirk S. Bergstrom; Jingtian T. Huang; C. Man; Bruce A. Vallance

Myeloid differentiation factor (MyD)88, an adaptor protein shared by the Toll‐interleukin 1 receptor superfamily, plays a critical role in host defence during many systemic bacterial infections by inducing protective inflammatory responses that limit bacterial growth. However, the role of innate responses during gastrointestinal (GI) infections is less clear, in part because the GI tract is tolerant to commensal antigens. The current study investigated the role of MyD88 following infection by the murine bacterial pathogen, Citrobacter rodentium. MyD88‐deficient mice suffered a lethal colitis coincident with colonic mucosal ulcerations and bleeding. Their susceptibility was associated with an overwhelming bacterial burden and selectively impaired immune responses in colonic tissues, which included delayed inflammatory cell recruitment, reduced iNOS and abrogated production of TNF‐α and IL‐6 from MyD88‐deficient macrophages and colons cultured ex vivo. Immunostaining for Ki67 and BrDU revealed that MyD88 signalling mediated epithelial hyper‐proliferation in response to C. rodentium infection. Thus, MyD88‐deficient mice could not promote epithelial cell turnover and repair, leading to deep bacterial invasion of colonic crypts, intestinal barrier dysfunction and, ultimately, widespread mucosal ulcerations. In conclusion, MyD88 signalling within the GI tract plays a critical role in mediating host defence against an enteric bacterial pathogen, by controlling bacterial numbers and promoting intestinal epithelial homeostasis.

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B. Brett Finlay

University of British Columbia

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Kevan Jacobson

University of British Columbia

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Caixia Ma

University of British Columbia

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Ho Pan Sham

University of British Columbia

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Martin Stahl

University of British Columbia

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Wanyin Deng

University of British Columbia

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Kirk S. Bergstrom

University of British Columbia

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Shauna M. Crowley

University of British Columbia

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