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Dive into the research topics where Cheryl A. Dooley is active.

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Featured researches published by Cheryl A. Dooley.


Molecular Microbiology | 2000

Three temporal classes of gene expression during the Chlamydia trachomatis developmental cycle

Edward I. Shaw; Cheryl A. Dooley; Elizabeth R. Fischer; M. A. Scidmore; Kenneth A. Fields; Ted Hackstadt

The obligate intracellular bacterium Chlamydia trachomatis has a unique developmental cycle that involves functionally and morphologically distinct cell types adapted for extracellular survival and intracellular multiplication. Infection is initiated by an environmentally resistant cell type called an elementary body (EB). Over the first several hours of infection, EBs differentiate into a larger replicative form, termed the reticulate body (RB). Late in the infectious process, RBs asynchronously begin to differentiate back to EBs, which accumulate within the lumen of the inclusion until released from the host cell for subsequent rounds of infection. In an effort to characterize temporal gene expression in relation to the chlamydial developmental cycle, we have used quantitative–competitive polymerase chain reaction (QC‐PCR) and reverse transcription (RT)‐PCR techniques. These analyses demonstrate that C. trachomatis double their DNA content every 2–3 h, with synthesis beginning between 2 and 4 h after infection. We determined the onset of transcription of specific temporal classes of developmentally expressed genes. RT‐PCR analysis was performed on several genes encoding key enzymes or components of essential biochemical pathways and functions. This comparison encompassed approximately 8% of open reading frames on the C. trachomatis genome. In analysis of total RNA samples harvested at 2, 6, 12 and 20 h after infection, using conditions under which a single chlamydial transcript per infected cell is detected, three major temporal classes of gene expression were resolved. Initiation of transcription appears to occur in three temporal classes which we have operationally defined as: early, which are detected by 2 h after infection during the germination of EBs to RBs; mid‐cycle, which appear between 6 and 12 h after infection and represent transcripts expressed during the growth and multiplication of RBs; or late, which appear between 12 and 20 h after infection and represent those genes transcribed during the terminal differentiation of RBs to EBs. Collectively, the data suggest that chlamydial early gene functions are weighted toward initiation of macromolecular synthesis and the establishment of their intracellular niche by modification of the inclusion membrane. Surprisingly, representative enzymes of intermediary metabolism and structural proteins do not appear to be transcribed until 10–12 h after infection; coinciding with the onset of observed binary fission of RBs. Late gene functions appear to be predominately those associated with the terminal differentiation of RBs back to EBs.


Molecular Microbiology | 2003

Chlamydia trachomatis type III secretion: evidence for a functional apparatus during early-cycle development

K. A. Fields; David J. Mead; Cheryl A. Dooley; Ted Hackstadt

The obligate intracellular bacterium Chlamydia trachomatis occupies a parasitophorous vacuole termed an inclusion. During its intracellular developmental cycle, C. trachomatis maintains this intracellular niche, presumably by expressing a type III secretion system, which deploys a set of host cell‐interactive proteins including inclusion membrane‐localized proteins termed Incs. Some Incs are expressed and secreted by 2 h (early cycle) after infection, whereas the expression of type III‐specific genes is not detectable until 6–12 h (mid‐cycle). To resolve this paradox, we investigated the presence of a type III apparatus on elementary bodies (EBs) that might function early in infection. We demonstrate the existence of the type III secretory apparatus by matrix‐assisted laser desorption ionization time‐of‐flight (MALDI‐TOF) and immunoblot analyses of purified EB extracts. Immunoblots using polyclonal antibodies specific for the core apparatus component CdsJ identified this protein in both EB and reticulate body (RB) extracts. Furthermore, CdsJ‐specific signals were detected by immunoblot of whole infected‐culture extracts and by indirect immunofluorescence of infected monolayers at times before the detection of cdsJ‐specific message. Finally, expression of IncC, expressed by 2 h after infection during C. trachomatis infections, in Yersinia pseudotuberculosis resulted in its secretion via the Yersinia type III apparatus. Based on these data, we propose a model in which type III secretion pores are present on EBs and mediate secretion of early Incs and possible additional effectors. Mid‐cycle expression of type III genes would then replenish secretion apparatus on vegetative RBs and serve as a source of secretion pores for subsequently formed EBs.


Molecular Microbiology | 1999

Identification and characterization of a Chlamydia trachomatis early operon encoding four novel inclusion membrane proteins.

Marci A. Scidmore-Carlson; Edward I. Shaw; Cheryl A. Dooley; Elizabeth R. Fischer; Ted Hackstadt

Chlamydia trachomatis is a bacterial obligate intracellular parasite that replicates within a vacuole, termed an inclusion, that does not fuse with lysosomes. Within 2 h after internalization, the C. trachomatis inclusion ceases to interact with the endocytic pathway and, instead, becomes fusogenic with exocytic vesicles containing exogenously synthesized NBD‐sphingomyelin. Both fusion of exocytic vesicles and long‐term avoidance of lysosomal fusion require early chlamydial gene expression. Modification of the chlamydial inclusion probably occurs through the expression and insertion of chlamydial protein(s) into the inclusion membrane. To identify candidate inclusion membrane proteins, antisera were raised against a total membrane fraction purified from C. trachomatis‐infected HeLa cells. By indirect immunofluorescence, this antisera recognized the inclusion membrane and, by immunoblot analysis, recognized three chlamydial‐specific antigens of approximate molecular weights 15, 18 and 21 kDa. IncG, encoding an 18 kDa and 21 kDa doublet chlamydial antigen, was identified by screening a C. trachomatis, serovar L2, genomic expression library. Three additional genes, incD, incE and incF, were co‐transcribed with incG. Monospecific antisera against each of the four genes of this operon demonstrated that the gene products were localized to the chlamydial inclusion membrane. Immediately downstream from the operon containing incD–G was the C. trachomatis homologue of incA. Like IncD, E, F and G, C. trachomatis IncA is also localized to the inclusion membrane. Reverse transcriptase–polymerase chain reaction (RT–PCR) analysis demonstrated that IncD–G, but not incA, are transcribed within the first 2 h after internalization, making them candidates for chlamydial factors required for the modification of the nascent chlamydial inclusion.


Infection and Immunity | 2005

Tyrosine Phosphorylation of the Chlamydial Effector Protein Tarp Is Species Specific and Not Required for Recruitment of Actin

Dawn R. Clifton; Cheryl A. Dooley; Scott S. Grieshaber; Reynaldo A. Carabeo; Kenneth A. Fields; Ted Hackstadt

ABSTRACT Chlamydiae are obligate intracellular pathogens that efficiently induce their endocytosis by susceptible eukaryotic host cells. Recently, a Chlamydia trachomatis type III secreted effector protein, Tarp, was found to be translocated and tyrosine phosphorylated at the site of entry and associated with the recruitment of actin that coincides with endocytosis. C. trachomatis Tarp possesses up to six direct repeats of approximately 50 amino acids each. The majority of the tyrosine residues are found within this repeat region. Here we have ectopically expressed distinct domains of Tarp in HeLa 229 cells and demonstrated that tyrosine phosphorylation occurs primarily within the repeat region, while recruitment of actin is mediated by the C-terminal domain of the protein. A comparison of other sequenced chlamydial genomes revealed that each contains an ortholog of Tarp, although Chlamydia muridarum, Chlamydophila caviae, and Chlamydophila pneumoniae Tarp lack the large repeat region. Immunofluorescence and immunoblotting using an antiphosphotyrosine antibody show no evidence of phosphotyrosine at the site of entry of C. muridarum, C. caviae, and C. pneumoniae, although each species similarly recruits actin. Ectopic expression of full-length C. trachomatis and C. caviae Tarp confirmed that both recruit actin but only C. trachomatis Tarp is tyrosine phosphorylated. The data indicate that the C-terminal domain of Tarp is essential for actin recruitment and that tyrosine phosphorylation may not be an absolute requirement for actin recruitment. The results further suggest the potential for additional, unknown signal transduction pathways associated specifically with C. trachomatis.


Traffic | 2004

Requirement for the Rac GTPase in Chlamydia trachomatis Invasion of Non-phagocytic Cells

Rey A. Carabeo; Scott S. Grieshaber; Aaron Hasenkrug; Cheryl A. Dooley; Ted Hackstadt

Chlamydiae are gram‐negative obligate intracellular pathogens to which access to an intracellular environment is paramount to their survival and replication. To this end, chlamydiae have evolved extremely efficient means of invading nonphagocytic cells. To elucidate the host cell machinery utilized by Chlamydia trachomatis in invasion, we examined the roles of the Rho GTPase family members in the internalization of chlamydial elementary bodies. Upon binding of elementary bodies on the cell surface, actin is rapidly recruited to the sites of internalization. Members of the Rho GTPase family are frequently involved in localized recruitment of actin. Clostridial Toxin B, which is a known enzymatic inhibitor of Rac, Cdc42 and Rho GTPases, significantly reduced chlamydial invasion of HeLa cells. Expression of dominant negative constructs in HeLa cells revealed that chlamydial uptake was dependent on Rac, but not on Cdc42 or RhoA. Rac but not Cdc42 was found to be activated by chlamydial attachment. The effect of dominant negative Rac expression on chlamydial uptake is manifested through the inhibition of actin recruitment to the sites of chlamydial entry. Studies utilizing Green Fluorescent Protein fusion constructs of Rac, Cdc42 and RhoA, showed Rac to be the sole member of the Rho GTPase family recruited to the site of chlamydial entry.


PLOS Pathogens | 2010

The Conserved Tarp Actin Binding Domain Is Important for Chlamydial Invasion

Travis J. Jewett; Natalie J. Miller; Cheryl A. Dooley; Ted Hackstadt

The translocated actin recruiting phosphoprotein (Tarp) is conserved among all pathogenic chlamydial species. Previous reports identified single C. trachomatis Tarp actin binding and proline rich domains required for Tarp mediated actin nucleation. A peptide antiserum specific for the Tarp actin binding domain was generated and inhibited actin polymerization in vitro and C. trachomatis entry in vivo, indicating an essential role for Tarp in chlamydial pathogenesis. Sequence analysis of Tarp orthologs from additional chlamydial species and C. trachomatis serovars indicated multiple putative actin binding sites. In order to determine whether the identified actin binding domains are functionally conserved, GST-Tarp fusions from multiple chlamydial species were examined for their ability to bind and nucleate actin. Chlamydial Tarps harbored variable numbers of actin binding sites and promoted actin nucleation as determined by in vitro polymerization assays. Our findings indicate that Tarp mediated actin binding and nucleation is a conserved feature among diverse chlamydial species and this function plays a critical role in bacterial invasion of host cells.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2008

Chlamydia trachomatis tarp is phosphorylated by src family tyrosine kinases.

Travis J. Jewett; Cheryl A. Dooley; David J. Mead; Ted Hackstadt

The translocated actin recruiting phosphoprotein (Tarp) is injected into the cytosol shortly after Chlamydia trachomatis attachment to a target cell and subsequently phosphorylated by an unidentified tyrosine kinase. A role for Tarp phosphorylation in bacterial entry is unknown. In this study, recombinant C. trachomatis Tarp was employed to identify the host cell kinase(s) required for phosphorylation. Each tyrosine rich repeat of L2 Tarp harbors a sequence similar to a Src and Abl kinase consensus target. Furthermore, purified p60-src, Yes, Fyn, and Abl kinases were able to phosphorylate Tarp. Mutagenesis of potential tyrosines within a single tyrosine rich repeat peptide indicated that both Src and Abl kinases phosphorylate the same residues suggesting that C. trachomatis Tarp may serve as a substrate for multiple host cell kinases. Surprisingly, chemical inhibition of Src and Abl kinases prevented Tarp phosphorylation in culture and had no measurable effect on bacterial entry into host cells.


Cellular Microbiology | 2007

Rac interacts with Abi‐1 and WAVE2 to promote an Arp2/3‐dependent actin recruitment during chlamydial invasion

Rey A. Carabeo; Cheryl A. Dooley; Scott S. Grieshaber; Ted Hackstadt

Chlamydiae are Gram‐negative obligate intracellular pathogens to which access to an intracellular environment is fundamental to their development. Chlamydial attachment to host cells induces the activation of the Rac GTPase, which is required for the localization of WAVE2 at the sites of chlamydial entry. Co‐immunoprecipitation experiments demonstrated that Chlamydia trachomatis infection promoted the interaction of Rac with WAVE2 and Abi‐1, but not with IRSp53. siRNA depletion of WAVE2 and Abi‐1 abrogated chlamydia‐induced actin recruitment and significantly reduced the uptake of the pathogen by the depleted cells. Chlamydia invasion also requires the Arp2/3 complex as demonstrated by its localization to the sites of chlamydial attachment and the reduced efficiency of chlamydial invasion in cells overexpressing the VCA domain of the neural Wiskott–Aldrich syndrome protein. Thus, C. trachomatis activates Rac and promotes its interaction with WAVE2 and Abi‐1 to activate the Arp2/3 complex resulting in the induction of actin cytoskeletal rearrangements that are required for invasion.


Microbiology | 2011

The trans-Golgi SNARE syntaxin 6 is recruited to the chlamydial inclusion membrane.

Elizabeth R. Moore; David J. Mead; Cheryl A. Dooley; Janet Sager; Ted Hackstadt

Chlamydia trachomatis is an obligate intracellular pathogen that replicates within a parasitophorous vacuole termed an inclusion. The chlamydial inclusion is isolated from the endocytic pathway but fusogenic with Golgi-derived exocytic vesicles containing sphingomyelin and cholesterol. Sphingolipids are incorporated into the chlamydial cell wall and are considered essential for chlamydial development and viability. The mechanisms by which chlamydiae obtain eukaryotic lipids are poorly understood but require chlamydial protein synthesis and presumably modification of the inclusion membrane to initiate this interaction. A polarized cell model of chlamydial infection has demonstrated that chlamydiae preferentially intercept basolaterally directed, sphingomyelin-containing exocytic vesicles. Here we examine the localization and potential function of trans-Golgi and/or basolaterally associated soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor attachment protein receptor (SNARE) proteins in chlamydia-infected cells. The trans-Golgi SNARE protein syntaxin 6 is recruited to the chlamydial inclusion in a manner that requires chlamydial protein synthesis and is conserved among all chlamydial species examined. The localization of syntaxin 6 to the chlamydial inclusion requires a tyrosine motif or plasma membrane retrieval signal (YGRL). Thus in addition to expression of at least two inclusion membrane proteins that contain SNARE-like motifs, chlamydiae also actively recruit eukaryotic SNARE-family proteins.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Role for chlamydial inclusion membrane proteins in inclusion membrane structure and biogenesis.

Jeffrey Mital; Natalie J. Miller; David W. Dorward; Cheryl A. Dooley; Ted Hackstadt

The chlamydial inclusion membrane is extensively modified by the insertion of type III secreted effector proteins. These inclusion membrane proteins (Incs) are exposed to the cytosol and share a common structural feature of a long, bi-lobed hydrophobic domain but little or no primary amino acid sequence similarity. Based upon secondary structural predictions, over 50 putative inclusion membrane proteins have been identified in Chlamydia trachomatis. Only a limited number of biological functions have been defined and these are not shared between chlamydial species. Here we have ectopically expressed several C. trachomatis Incs in HeLa cells and find that they induce the formation of morphologically distinct membranous vesicular compartments. Formation of these vesicles requires the bi-lobed hydrophobic domain as a minimum. No markers for various cellular organelles were observed in association with these vesicles. Lipid probes were incorporated by the Inc-induced vesicles although the lipids incorporated were dependent upon the specific Inc expressed. Co-expression of Inc pairs indicated that some colocalized in the same vesicle, others partially overlapped, and others did not associate at all. Overall, it appears that Incs may have an intrinsic ability to induce membrane formation and that individual Incs can induce membranous structures with unique properties.

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Ted Hackstadt

National Institutes of Health

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David J. Mead

Rocky Mountain Laboratories

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Elizabeth R. Fischer

National Institutes of Health

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Janet Sager

Rocky Mountain Laboratories

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Nicholas F. Noriea

Rocky Mountain Laboratories

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