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Dive into the research topics where Bryan J. Cottrell is active.

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Featured researches published by Bryan J. Cottrell.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2004

Survival of cold-stressed Campylobacter jejuni on ground chicken and chicken skin during frozen storage

Saumya Bhaduri; Bryan J. Cottrell

ABSTRACT Campylobacter jejuni is prevalent in poultry, but the effect of combined refrigerated and frozen storage on its survival, conditions relevant to poultry processing and storage, has not been evaluated. Therefore, the effects of refrigeration at 4°C, freezing at −20°C, and a combination of refrigeration and freezing on the survival of C. jejuni in ground chicken and on chicken skin were examined. Samples were enumerated using tryptic soy agar containing sheeps blood and modified cefoperazone charcoal deoxycholate agar. Refrigerated storage alone for 3 to 7 days produced a reduction in cell counts of 0.34 to 0.81 log10 CFU/g in ground chicken and a reduction in cell counts of 0.31 to 0.63 log10 CFU/g on chicken skin. Declines were comparable for each sample type using either plating medium. Frozen storage, alone and with prerefrigeration, produced a reduction in cell counts of 0.56 to 1.57 log10 CFU/g in ground chicken and a reduction in cell counts of 1.38 to 3.39 log10 CFU/g on chicken skin over a 2-week period. The recovery of C. jejuni following freezing was similar on both plating media. The survival following frozen storage was greater in ground chicken than on chicken skin with or without prerefrigeration. Cell counts after freezing were lower on chicken skin samples that had been prerefrigerated for 7 days than in those that had been prerefrigerated for 0, 1, or 3 days. This was not observed for ground chicken samples, possibly due to their composition. C. jejuni survived storage at 4 and −20°C with either sample type. This study indicates that, individually or in combination, refrigeration and freezing are not a substitute for safe handling and proper cooking of poultry.


Microbiology | 2013

Phage insertion in mlrA and variations in rpoS limit curli expression and biofilm formation in Escherichia coli serotype O157: H7.

Gaylen A. Uhlich; Chin-Yi Chen; Bryan J. Cottrell; Christopher S. Hofmann; Edward G. Dudley; Terence P. Strobaugh; Ly-Huong Nguyen

Biofilm formation in Escherichia coli is a tightly controlled process requiring the expression of adhesive curli fibres and certain polysaccharides such as cellulose. The transcriptional regulator CsgD is central to biofilm formation, controlling the expression of the curli structural and export proteins and the diguanylate cyclase adrA, which indirectly activates cellulose production. CsgD itself is highly regulated by two sigma factors (RpoS and RpoD), multiple DNA-binding proteins, small regulatory RNAs and several GGDEF/EAL proteins acting through c-di-GMP. One such transcription factor MlrA binds the csgD promoter to enhance the RpoS-dependent transcription of csgD. Bacteriophage, often carrying the stx1 gene, utilize an insertion site in the proximal mlrA coding region of E. coli serotype O157 : H7 strains, and the loss of mlrA function would be expected to be the major factor contributing to poor curli and biofilm expression in that serotype. Using a bank of 55 strains of serotype O157 : H7, we investigated the consequences of bacteriophage insertion. Although curli/biofilm expression was restored in many of the prophage-bearing strains by a wild-type copy of mlrA on a multi-copy plasmid, more than half of the strains showed only partial or no complementation. Moreover, the two strains carrying an intact mlrA were found to be deficient in biofilm formation. However, RpoS mutations that attenuated or inactivated RpoS-dependent functions such as biofilm formation were found in >70 % of the strains, including the two strains with an intact mlrA. We conclude that bacteriophage interruption of mlrA and RpoS mutations provide major obstacles limiting curli expression and biofilm formation in most serotype O157 : H7 strains.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Phenotypic and Genotypic Characterization of Biofilm Forming Capabilities in Non-O157 Shiga Toxin-Producing Escherichia coli Strains

Chin-Yi Chen; Christopher S. Hofmann; Bryan J. Cottrell; Terence P. Strobaugh; George C. Paoli; Ly-Huong Nguyen; Xianghe Yan; Gaylen A. Uhlich

The biofilm life style helps bacteria resist oxidative stress, desiccation, antibiotic treatment, and starvation. Biofilm formation involves a complex regulatory gene network controlled by various environmental signals. It was previously shown that prophage insertions in mlrA and heterogeneous mutations in rpoS constituted major obstacles limiting biofilm formation and the expression of extracellular curli fibers in strains of Escherichia coli serotype O157:H7. The purpose of this study was to test strains from other important serotypes of Shiga toxin-producing E. coli (STEC) (O26, O45, O103, O111, O113, O121, and O145) for similar regulatory restrictions. In a small but diverse collection of biofilm-forming and non-forming strains, mlrA prophage insertions were identified in only 4 of the 19 strains (serotypes O103, O113, and O145). Only the STEC O103 and O113 strains could be complemented by a trans-copy of mlrA to restore curli production and Congo red (CR) dye affinity. RpoS mutations were found in 5 strains (4 serotypes), each with low CR affinity, and the defects were moderately restored by a wild-type copy of rpoS in 2 of the 3 strains attempted. Fourteen strains in this study showed no or weak biofilm formation, of which 9 could be explained by prophage insertions or rpoS mutations. However, each of the remaining five biofilm-deficient strains, as well as the two O145 strains that could not be complemented by mlrA, showed complete or nearly complete lack of motility. This study indicates that mlrA prophage insertions and rpoS mutations do limit biofilm and curli expression in the non-serotype O157:H7 STEC but prophage insertions may not be as common as in serotype O157:H7 strains. The results also suggest that lack of motility provides a third major factor limiting biofilm formation in the non-O157:H7 STEC. Understanding biofilm regulatory mechanisms will prove beneficial in reducing pathogen survival and enhancing food safety.


Fems Immunology and Medical Microbiology | 2016

Multiple mechanisms responsible for strong Congo-red-binding variants of Escherichia coli O157:H7 strains.

Chin-Yi Chen; Ly-Huong Nguyen; Bryan J. Cottrell; Peter L. Irwin; Gaylen A. Uhlich

High variability in the expression of csgD-dependent, biofilm-forming and adhesive properties is common among Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli. Although many strains of serotype O157:H7 form little biofilm, conversion to stronger biofilm phenotypes has been observed. In this study, we screened different strains of serotype O157:H7 for the emergence of strong Congo-red (CR) affinity/biofilm-forming properties and investigated the underlying genetic mechanisms. Two major mechanisms which conferred stronger biofilm phenotypes were identified: mutations (insertion, deletion, single nucleotide change) in rcsB region and stx-prophage excision from the mlrA site. Restoration of the native mlrA gene (due to prophage excision) resulted in strong biofilm properties to all variants. Whereas RcsB mutants showed weaker CR affinity and biofilm properties, it provided more possibilities for phenotypic presentations through heterogenic sequence mutations.


Microbiology | 2012

Peroxide resistance in Escherichia coli serotype O157:H7 biofilms is regulated by both RpoS- dependent and -independent mechanisms

Gaylen A. Uhlich; Chin-Yi Chen; Bryan J. Cottrell; Peter L. Irwin; John G. Phillips

In many Escherichia coli serotype O157 : H7 strains, defences against peroxide damage include the peroxiredoxin AhpCF and three catalases: KatG (catalase/peroxidase), KatE (catalase) and the plasmid-encoded KatP (catalase/peroxidase). AhpC and KatG basal expression is maintained by RpoS, and AhpC, KatG and KatP are all induced by OxyR/σ(70) in exponential phase. KatE is regulated by RpoS during stationary growth and is independent of OxyR. In a previous study we used mutant strains of ATCC 43895 (EDL933) with deletions of katG, ahpC, katE and katP in all possible combinations to characterize peroxide resistance during both exponential and 18-24 h growth in Luria-Bertani broth at 37 °C. In this study, we used triple deletion strains that isolated each catalase/peroxidase gene to investigate their role in the peroxide resistance of biofilm-forming variant 43895OR in 48 and 72 h biofilms. We also used quantitative real-time reverse transcriptase PCR and translational lacZ fusions to study gene expression. Peroxide resistance was greater (P<0.05) in biofilm cells than in planktonic cells, and full resistance required rpoS but not oxyR. In 72 h biofilms, katG and katE were the major protective genes. katG, ahpC and katE peroxide protection had both rpoS-dependent and rpoS-independent components, but katP protection was independent of rpoS. H(2)O(2) challenge induced (P<0.05) katG, ahpC and katP expression in biofilm cells, suggesting that peroxide induction of the OxyR-dependent resistance genes may contribute to the RpoS-independent protection in Shiga toxin-producing E. coli biofilms.


Microbiology | 2017

Genome amplification and promoter mutation expand the range of csgD-dependent biofilm responses in an STEC population

Gaylen A. Uhlich; Chin-Yi Chen; Bryan J. Cottrell; Elisa Andreozzi; Peter L. Irwin; Ly-Huong Nguyen

Expression of the major biofilm components of E. coli, curli fimbriae and cellulose, requires the CsgD transcription factor. A complex regulatory network allows environmental control of csgD transcription and biofilm formation. However, most clinical serotype O157 : H7 strains contain prophage insertions in the csgD regulator, mlrA, or mutations in other regulators that restrict csgD expression. These barriers can be circumvented by certain compensating mutations that restore higher csgD expression. One mechanism is via csgD promoter mutations that switch sigma factor utilization. Biofilm-forming variants utilizing RpoD rather than RpoS have been identified in glycerol freezer stocks of the non-biofilm-forming food-borne outbreak strain, ATCC 43894. In this study we used whole genome sequencing and RNA-seq to study genotypic and transcriptomic differences between those strains. In addition to defining the consequences of the csgD promoter switch and identifying new csgD-controlled genes, we discovered a region of genome amplification in our laboratory stock of 43894 (designated 43894OW) that contributed to the regulation of csgD-dependent properties.


Genome Announcements | 2017

Whole-Genome Sequence of Escherichia coli Serotype O157:H7 Strain PA20.

Gaylen A. Uhlich; George C. Paoli; Xinmin Zhang; Edward G. Dudley; Hillary M. Figler; Bryan J. Cottrell; Elisa Andreozzi

ABSTRACT Escherichia coli serotype O157:H7 strain PA20 is a Pennsylvania Department of Health clinical isolate. It has been used to study biofilm formation in O157:H7 clinical isolates, where the high incidence of prophage insertions in the mlrA transcription factor disrupts traditional csgD biofilm regulation. Here, we report the complete PA20 genome sequence.


PLOS ONE | 2018

Sulfamethoxazole – Trimethoprim represses csgD but maintains virulence genes at 30°C in a clinical Escherichia coli O157:H7 isolate

Gaylen A. Uhlich; Elisa Andreozzi; Bryan J. Cottrell; Erin Reichenberger; Xinmin Zhang; George C. Paoli

The high frequency of prophage insertions in the mlrA gene of clinical serotype O157:H7 isolates renders such strains deficient in csgD-dependent biofilm formation but prophage induction may restore certain mlrA properties. In this study we used transcriptomics to study the effect of high and low sulfamethoxazole–trimethoprim (SMX-TM) concentrations on prophage induction, biofilm regulation, and virulence gene expression in strain PA20 under environmental conditions following 5-hour and 12-hour exposures in broth or on agar. SMX-TM at a sub-lethal concentration induced strong RecA expression resulting in concentration- and time-dependent major transcriptional shifts with emphasis on up-regulation of genes within horizontally-transferred chromosomal regions (HTR). Neither high or low levels of SMX-TM stimulated csgD expression at either time point, but both levels resulted in slight repression. Full expression of Ler-dependent genes paralleled expression of group 1 pch homologues in the presence of high glrA. Finally, stx2 expression, which is strongly dependent on prophage induction, was enhanced at 12 hours but repressed at five hours, in spite of early SOS initiation by the high SMX-TM concentration. Our findings indicate that, similar to host conditions, exposure to environmental conditions increased the expression of virulence genes in a clinical isolate but genes involved in the protective biofilm response were repressed.


Genome Announcements | 2016

Whole-Genome Sequence of Escherichia coli Serotype O157:H7 Strain EDL932 (ATCC 43894)

Gaylen A. Uhlich; George C. Paoli; Chin-Yi Chen; Bryan J. Cottrell; Xinmin Zhang; Xianghe Yan

ABSTRACT The genome sequence of Escherichia coli serotype O157:H7 EDL933, a ground beef isolate from a 1983 hemorrhagic colitis outbreak, is a standard reference for comparative genomic studies of Shiga toxin-producing E. coli strains. Here, we report the genome sequence of a patient stool isolate from that outbreak, strain EDL932.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 1997

Use of a single procedure for selective enrichment, isolation, and identification of plasmid-bearing virulent Yersinia enterocolitica of various serotypes from pork samples.

Saumya Bhaduri; Bryan J. Cottrell; Allan R. Pickard

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Gaylen A. Uhlich

United States Department of Agriculture

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Chin-Yi Chen

United States Department of Agriculture

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Saumya Bhaduri

United States Department of Agriculture

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Ly-Huong Nguyen

United States Department of Agriculture

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Elisa Andreozzi

Agricultural Research Service

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George C. Paoli

United States Department of Agriculture

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Peter L. Irwin

United States Department of Agriculture

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Christopher S. Hofmann

United States Department of Agriculture

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Edward G. Dudley

Pennsylvania State University

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Terence P. Strobaugh

United States Department of Agriculture

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