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Dive into the research topics where Craig A. Bloch is active.

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Featured researches published by Craig A. Bloch.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1997

Transmission of Uropathogens between Sex Partners

Betsy Foxman; Lixin Zhang; Patricia Tallman; Bonnie C. Andree; Ann M. Geiger; James S. Koopman; Brenda W. Gillespie; Karen Palin; Jack D. Sobel; Christopher K. Rode; Craig A. Bloch; Carl F. Marrs

Epidemiologic evidence and several case reports suggest that Escherichia coli causing urinary tract infection (UTI) may be transmitted between sex partners. In order to test this hypothesis, urinary, vaginal, and fecal E. coli isolates from 19 women with UTI were compared with E. coli found in random initial voids from their most recent male sex partner. E. coli was isolated from 4 of 19 male sex partners. In each case, the E. coli isolated from the man was identical by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis and bacterial virulence profile to the urinary E. coli from his sex partner.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1997

Discovery of Disseminated J96-like Strains of Uropathogenic Escherichia coli O4:H5 Containing Genes for Both PapGJ96 (Class I) and PrsGJ96 (Class III) Gal(α1-4)Gal-Binding Adhesins

James R. Johnson; Thomas A. Russo; Flemming Scheutz; Jennifer J. Brown; Lixin Zhang; Karen Palin; Christopher K. Rode; Craig A. Bloch; Carl F. Marrs; Betsy Foxman

The pyelonephritis-associated adhesin gene papG of Escherichia coli occurs in three variants. Whereas the class II and class III variants are common among human urinary tract infection isolates, the class I allele, despite being the first cloned, has previously been found only in source strain J96. Five strains have been discovered from geographically diverse locales that, like J96, contain both the class I and class III papG alleles. One strain caused bacteremia, whereas 4 caused cystitis. Like J96, all 5 had group III capsule genes, expressed the H5 flagellar antigen and the F13 fimbrial antigen, and exhibited similar genomic patterns and virulence factor profiles. These findings demonstrate that the class I papG allele is not unique to J96 but is present in a group of extraintestinal isolates of E. coli O4:H5 that represent a disseminated virulent clonal group.


Gene | 1998

Subdivision of the Escherichia coli K-12 genome for sequencing: manipulation and DNA sequence of transposable elements introducing unique restriction sites.

Jacques Mahillon; Heather A. Kirkpatrick; Heidi L Kijenski; Craig A. Bloch; Christopher K. Rode; George F. Mayhew; Debra J. Rose; Guy Plunkett; Valerie Burland; Frederick R. Blattner

A transposon-based method of introducing unique restriction sites was used for subdivision of the Escherichia coli genome into a contiguous series of large non-overlapping segments spanning 2.5Mb. The segments, sizes ranging from 150 to 250kb, were isolated from the chromosome using the inserted restriction sites and shotgun cloned into an M13 vector for DNA sequencing. These shotgun sizes proved easily manageable, allowing the genomic sequence of E. coli to be completed more efficiently and rapidly than was possible by previously available methods. The 9bp duplication generated during transposition was used as a tag for accurate splicing of the segments; no further sequence redundancy at the junction sites was needed. The system is applicable to larger genomes even if they are not already well-characterized. We present the technology for segment sequencing, results of applying this method to E. coli, and the sequences of the transposon cassettes.


Infection and Immunity | 2000

Integrated Genomic Map from Uropathogenic Escherichia coli J96

Lyla J. Melkerson-Watson; Christopher K. Rode; Lixin Zhang; Betsy Foxman; Craig A. Bloch

ABSTRACT Escherichia coli J96 is a uropathogen having both broad similarities to and striking differences from nonpathogenic, laboratoryE. coli K-12. Strain J96 contains three large (>100-kb) unique genomic segments integrated on the chromosome; two are recognized as pathogenicity islands containing urovirulence genes. Additionally, the strain possesses a fourth smaller accessory segment of 28 kb and two deletions relative to strain K-12. We report an integrated physical and genetic map of the 5,120-kb J96 genome. The chromosome contains 26 NotI, 13 BlnI, and 7 I-CeuI macrorestriction sites. Macrorestriction mapping was rapidly accomplished by a novel transposon-based procedure: analysis of modified minitransposon insertions served to align the overlapping macrorestriction fragments generated by three different enzymes (each sharing a common cleavage site within the insert), thus integrating the three different digestion patterns and ordering the fragments. The resulting map, generated from a total of 54 mini-Tn10insertions, was supplemented with auxanography and Southern analysis to indicate the positions of insertionally disrupted aminosynthetic genes and cloned virulence genes, respectively. Thus, it contains not only physical, macrorestriction landmarks but also the loci for eight housekeeping genes shared with strain K-12 and eight acknowledged urovirulence genes; the latter confirmed clustering of virulence genes at the large unique accessory chromosomal segments. The 115-kb J96 plasmid was resolved by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis inNotI digests. However, because the plasmid lacks restriction sites for the enzymes BlnI and I-CeuI, it was visualized in BlnI and I-CeuI digests only of derivatives carrying plasmid inserts artificially introducing these sites. Owing to an I-SceI site on the transposon, the plasmid could also be visualized and sized from plasmid insertion mutants after digestion with this enzyme. The insertional strains generated in construction of the integrated genomic map provide useful physical and genetic markers for further characterization of the J96 genome.


Gene | 1997

New ultrarare restriction site-carrying transposons for bacterial genomics.

Jacques Mahillon; Christopher K. Rode; Catherine Léonard; Craig A. Bloch

Electrophoretic separation of macrorestriction fragments containing a particular genomic interval has until recently depended on fortuitously placed native rare restriction sites. We present new IS10-based transposons carrying the yeast intron-encoded I-SceI restriction site which is absent from most prokaryotic and eukaryotic genomes. Construction of the plasmid vectors containing them is described. Analysis by conventional or Pulsed Field gel electrophoresis of the DNA fragments generated by the I-SceI digestion reveals the physical distance between genomic insertions of these transposons: use of the same approach to subdivide the chromosome of Escherichia coli K-12 into equivalently sized contiguous/nonoverlapping I-SceI fragments is demonstrated. Because coordinates for the loci delimited by their insertions can be readily determined in different isolates by either physical or genetic manipulations, these transposons allow sufficient flexibility for species-wide bacterial genomics.


Journal of Medical Microbiology | 1997

Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis genomic fingerprinting of hospital Escherichia coli bacteraemia isolates

R. A. Blackwood; Rode Ck; C. L. Pierson; Craig A. Bloch

Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), because of the increased sensitivity it affords over other methods of bacterial genotyping, represents a potentially powerful tool for the characterisation of isolates from hospital infections. Genomic fingerprinting by PFGE was applied to all clinical isolates of Escherichia coli obtained from blood during a 6-month period (78 isolates, 58 patients) at the University of Michigan Medical Center. The rare-restriction patterns of these isolates, in contrast to those of isolates from the E. coli reference collection (ECOR), were not randomly distributed through the E. coli species. Four related clusters, which represented c. 21% of the blood isolates, were identified. Two of these genotypic clusters were also clustered temporally, their members all being isolated within the same 2-week period, while the other two clusters spanned the study period. These observations indicate in-hospital endemic vectors or the occurrence of specialised E. coli lineages that are capable of invading the bloodstream and exploiting in-hospital vectors, or both.


Science | 1997

The Complete Genome Sequence of Escherichia coli K-12

Frederick R. Blattner; Guy Plunkett; Craig A. Bloch; Nicole T. Perna; Valerie Burland; Monica Riley; Julio Collado-Vides; Jeremy D. Glasner; Christopher K. Rode; George F. Mayhew; Jason Gregor; Nelson Wayne Davis; Heather A. Kirkpatrick; Michael A. Goeden; Debra J. Rose; Bob Mau; Ying Shao


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1998

“Black holes” and bacterial pathogenicity: A large genomic deletion that enhances the virulence of Shigella spp. and enteroinvasive Escherichia coli

Anthony T. Maurelli; Reinaldo E. Fernández; Craig A. Bloch; Christopher K. Rode; Alessio Fasano


Cancer Research | 1994

Bcl-2 Inhibits Chemotherapy-induced Apoptosis in Neuroblastoma

Mukund G. Dole; Gabriel Núñez; Audrea K. Merchant; Jonathan Maybaum; Christopher K. Rode; Craig A. Bloch; Valerie P. Castle


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1995

Virulence Characteristics of Escherichia coli Causing First Urinary Tract Infection Predict Risk of Second Infection

Betsy Foxman; Lixin Zhang; Patricia Tallman; Karen Palin; Christopher K. Rode; Craig A. Bloch; Brenda W. Gillespie; Carl F. Marrs

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Lixin Zhang

University of Michigan

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Anthony T. Maurelli

Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences

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Karen Palin

University of Michigan

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Reinaldo E. Fernández

Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences

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