Danielle I. Young
Aberystwyth University
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Featured researches published by Danielle I. Young.
Molecular Microbiology | 2002
Galina V. Mukamolova; Obolbek Turapov; Danielle I. Young; Arseny S. Kaprelyants; Douglas B. Kell; Michael Young
Mycobacterium tuberculosis and its close relative, Mycobacterium bovis (BCG) contain five genes whose predicted products resemble Rpf from Micrococcus luteus. Rpf is a secreted growth factor, active at picomolar concentrations, which is required for the growth of vegetative cells in minimal media at very low inoculum densities, as well as the resuscitation of dormant cells. We show here that the five cognate proteins from M. tuberculosis have very similar characteristics and properties to those of Rpf. They too stimulate bacterial growth at picomolar (and in some cases, subpicomolar) concentrations. Several lines of evidence indicate that they exert their activity from an extra‐cytoplasmic location, suggesting that they are also involved in intercellular signalling. The five M. tuberculosis proteins show cross‐species activity against M. luteus, Mycobacterium smegmatis and M. bovis (BCG). Actively growing cells of M. bovis (BCG) do not respond to these proteins, whereas bacteria exposed to a prolonged stationary phase do. Affinity‐purified antibodies inhibit bacterial growth in vitro, suggesting that sequestration of these proteins at the cell surface might provide a means to limit or even prevent bacterial multiplication in vivo. The Rpf family of bacterial growth factors may therefore provide novel opportunities for preventing and controlling mycobacterial infections.
Molecular Microbiology | 2000
Adriana Ravagnani; Katrin C. B. Jennert; Elisabeth Steiner; Raik Grünberg; James R. Jefferies; Shane R. Wilkinson; Danielle I. Young; Edward C. Tidswell; David P. Brown; Philip Youngman; J. Gareth Morris; Michael Young
The spo0A genes of Clostridium beijerinckii NCIMB 8052 and Clostridium cellulolyticum ATCC 35319 were isolated and characterized. The C‐terminal DNA‐binding domains of the predicted products of spo0A from these two organisms, as well as 16 other taxonomically diverse species of Bacillus and Clostridium, show extensive amino acid sequence conservation (56% identity, 65% similarity over 104 residues). A 12‐amino‐acid motif (SRVERAIRHAIE) that forms the putative DNA recognition helix is particularly highly conserved, suggesting a common DNA target. Insertional inactivation of spo0A in C. beijerinckii blocked the formation of solvents (as well as spores and granulose). Sequences resembling Spo0A‐binding motifs (TGNCGAA) are found in the promoter regions of several of the genes whose expression is modulated at the onset of solventogenesis in Clostridium acetobutylicum and C. beijerinckii. These include the upregulated adc gene, encoding acetoacetate decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.4), and the downregulated ptb gene, encoding phosphotransbutyrylase (EC 2.3.1.c). In vitro gel retardation experiments using C. acetobutylicum adc and C. beijerinckii ptb promoter fragments and recombinant Bacillus subtilis and C. beijerinckii Spo0A suggested that adc and ptb are directly controlled by Spo0A. The binding affinity was reduced when the 0A boxes were destroyed, and enhanced when they were modified to conform precisely to the consensus sequence. In vivo analysis of wild‐type and mutagenized promoters transcriptionally fused to the gusA reporter gene in C. beijerinckii validated this hypothesis. Post‐exponential phase expression from the mutagenized adc promoter was substantially reduced, whereas expression from the mutagenized ptb promoter was not shut down at the end of exponential growth.
Infection and Immunity | 2005
Katrina J. Downing; Vladimir V. Mischenko; Margarita O. Shleeva; Danielle I. Young; Michael Young; Arseny S. Kaprelyants; Alexander S. Apt; Valerie Mizrahi
ABSTRACT Mycobacterium tuberculosis contains five genes, rpfA through rpfE, that bear significant homology to the resuscitation-promoting factor (rpf) gene of Micrococcus luteus, whose product is required to resuscitate the growth of dormant cultures of M. luteus and is essential for the growth of this organism. Previous studies have shown that deletion of any one of the five rpf-like genes did not affect the growth or survival of M. tuberculosis in vitro. In conjunction with the results of whole-genome expression profiling, this finding was indicative of their functional redundancy. In this study, we demonstrate that the single deletion mutants are phenotypically similar to wild-type M. tuberculosis H37Rv in vivo. The deletion of individual rpf-like genes had no discernible effect on the growth or long-term survival of M. tuberculosis in liquid culture, and the ability to resuscitate spontaneously from a nonculturable state in a most probable number assay was also unaffected for the three strains tested (the ΔrpfB, ΔrpfD, and ΔrpfE strains). In contrast, two multiple strains, KDT8 (ΔrpfA-mutation ΔrpfC ΔrpfB) and KDT9 (ΔrpfA ΔrpfC ΔrpfD), which lack three of the five rpf-like genes, were significantly yet differentially attenuated in a mouse infection model. These mutants were also unable to resuscitate spontaneously in vitro, demonstrating the importance of the Rpf-like proteins of M. tuberculosis in resuscitation from the nonculturable state. These results strongly suggest that the biological functions of the five rpf-like genes of M. tuberculosis are not wholly redundant and underscore the potential utility of these proteins as targets for therapeutic intervention.
Molecular Microbiology | 2011
Elisabeth Steiner; Angel E. Dago; Danielle I. Young; John T. Heap; Nigel P. Minton; James A. Hoch; Michael Young
The phosphorylated Spo0A transcription factor controls the initiation of endospore formation in Clostridium acetobutylicum, but genes encoding key phosphorelay components, Spo0F and Spo0B, are missing in the genome. We hypothesized that the five orphan histidine kinases of C. acetobutylicum interact directly with Spo0A to control its phosphorylation state. Sequential targeted gene disruption and gene expression profiling provided evidence for two pathways for Spo0A activation, one dependent on a histidine kinase encoded by cac0323, the other on both histidine kinases encoded by cac0903 and cac3319. Purified Cac0903 and Cac3319 kinases autophosphorylated and transferred phosphoryl groups to Spo0A in vitro, confirming their role in Spo0A activation in vivo. A cac0437 mutant hyper‐sporulated, suggesting that Cac0437 is a modulator that prevents sporulation and maintains cellular Spo0A∼P homeostasis during growth. Accordingly, Cac0437 has apparently lost the ability to autophosphorylate in vitro; instead it catalyses the ATP‐dependent dephosphorylation of Spo0A∼P releasing inorganic phosphate. Direct phosphorylation of Spo0A by histidine kinases and dephosphorylation by kinase‐like proteins may be a common feature of the clostridia that may represent the ancestral state before the great oxygen event some 2.4 billion years ago, after which additional phosphorelay proteins were recruited in the evolutionary lineage that led to the bacilli.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2014
Obolbek Turapov; Simon J. Waddell; Bernard Burke; Sarah Glenn; Asel A. Sarybaeva; Griselda Tudo; Gilles Labesse; Danielle I. Young; Michael Young; Peter W. Andrew; Philip D. Butcher; Martin Cohen-Gonsaud; Galina V. Mukamolova
ABSTRACT Antimicrobials targeting cell wall biosynthesis are generally considered inactive against nonreplicating bacteria. Paradoxically, we found that under nonpermissive growth conditions, exposure of Mycobacterium bovis BCG bacilli to such antimicrobials enhanced their survival. We identified a transcriptional regulator, RaaS (for regulator of antimicrobial-assisted survival), encoded by bcg1279 (rv1219c) as being responsible for the observed phenomenon. Induction of this transcriptional regulator resulted in reduced expression of specific ATP-dependent efflux pumps and promoted long-term survival of mycobacteria, while its deletion accelerated bacterial death under nonpermissive growth conditions in vitro and during macrophage or mouse infection. These findings have implications for the design of antimicrobial drug combination therapies for persistent infectious diseases, such as tuberculosis.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014
Obolbek Turapov; Simon J. Waddell; Bernard Burke; Sarah Glenn; Asel A. Sarybaeva; Griselda Tudo; Gilles Labesse; Danielle I. Young; Michael Young; Peter W. Andrew; Philip D. Butcher; Martin Cohen-Gonsaud; Galina V. Mukamolova
Background: RaaS mediates mycobacterial survival in nonpermissive growth conditions by controlling expression of ATP-dependent efflux pumps. Results: Oleoyl-CoA regulates binding of the RaaS transcription factor to DNA and thus expression of the RaaS regulon and RaaS-mediated persistence. Conclusion: The activity of bacterial efflux is regulated by metabolites that are produced during active growth. Significance: Dysregulation of efflux pumps results in killing of persisting mycobacteria with low metabolic activity. We have recently shown that RaaS (regulator of antimicrobial-assisted survival), encoded by Rv1219c in Mycobacterium tuberculosis and by bcg_1279c in Mycobacterium bovis bacillus Calmette-Guérin, plays an important role in mycobacterial survival in prolonged stationary phase and during murine infection. Here, we demonstrate that long chain acyl-CoA derivatives (oleoyl-CoA and, to lesser extent, palmitoyl-CoA) modulate RaaS binding to DNA and expression of the downstream genes that encode ATP-dependent efflux pumps. Moreover, exogenously added oleic acid influences RaaS-mediated mycobacterial improvement of survival and expression of the RaaS regulon. Our data suggest that long chain acyl-CoA derivatives serve as biological indicators of the bacterial metabolic state. Dysregulation of efflux pumps can be used to eliminate non-growing mycobacteria.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1998
Galina V. Mukamolova; Arseny S. Kaprelyants; Danielle I. Young; Michael Young; Douglas B. Kell
Microbiology | 2000
Katrin C. B. Jennert; Chantal Tardif; Danielle I. Young; Michael Young
Tuberculosis | 2004
K.J. Downing; J.C. Betts; Danielle I. Young; R.A. McAdam; F. Kelly; Michael Young; Valerie Mizrahi
Fems Microbiology Reviews | 1995
Shane R. Wilkinson; Danielle I. Young; J. Gareth Morris; Michael Young