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Dive into the research topics where David E. Heinrichs is active.

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Featured researches published by David E. Heinrichs.


Molecular Microbiology | 1998

Molecular basis for structural diversity in the core regions of the lipopolysaccharides of Escherichia coli and Salmonella enterica

David E. Heinrichs; Jeremy A. Yethon; Chris Whitfield

Bacterial lipopolysaccharides (LPS) are unique and complex glycolipids that provide characteristic components of the outer membranes of Gram‐negative bacteria. In LPS of the Enterobacteriaceae, the core oligosaccharide links a highly conserved lipid A to the antigenic O‐polysaccharide. Structural diversity in the core oligosaccharide is limited by the constraints imposed by its essential role in outer membrane stability and provides a contrast to the hypervariable O‐antigen. The genetics of core oligosaccharide biosynthesis in Salmonella and Escherichia coli K‐12 have served as prototypes for studies on the LPS and lipo‐oligosaccharides from a growing range of bacteria. However, despite the wealth of knowledge, there remains a number of unanswered questions, and direct experimental data are not yet available to define the precise mechanism of action of many gene products. Here we present a comparative analysis of the recently completed sequences of the major core oligosaccharide biosynthesis gene clusters from the five known core types in E. coli and the Ra core type of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium and discuss advances in the understanding of the related biosynthetic pathways. Differences in these clusters reflect important structural variations in the outer core oligosaccharides and provide a basis for ascribing functions to the genes in these model clusters, whereas highly conserved regions within these clusters suggest a critical and unalterable function for the inner region of the core.


Molecular Microbiology | 2007

Haem recognition by a Staphylococcus aureus NEAT domain

Jason C. Grigg; Christie Vermeiren; David E. Heinrichs; Michael E. P. Murphy

Successful pathogenic organisms have developed mechanisms to thrive under extreme levels of iron restriction. Haem‐iron represents the largest iron reservoir in the human body and is a significant source of iron for some bacterial pathogens. NEAT (NEAr Transporter) domains are found exclusively in a family of cell surface proteins in Gram‐positive bacteria. Many NEAT domain‐containing proteins, including IsdA in Staphylococcus aureus, are implicated in haem binding. Here, we show that overexpression of IsdA in S. aureus enhances growth and an inactivation mutant of IsdA has a growth defect, compared with wild type, when grown in media containing haem as the sole iron source. Furthermore, the haem‐binding property of IsdA is contained within the NEAT domain. Crystal structures of the apo‐IsdA NEAT domain and in complex with haem were solved and reveal a clathrin adapter‐like β‐sandwich fold with a large hydrophobic haem‐binding pocket. Haem is bound with the propionate groups directed at the molecular surface and the iron is co‐ordinated solely by Tyr166. The phenol groups of Tyr166 and Tyr170 form an H‐bond that may function in regulating haem binding and release. An analysis of IsdA structure‐sequence alignments indicate that conservation of Tyr166 is a predictor of haem binding by NEAT domains.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Demonstration of the Iron-regulated Surface Determinant (Isd) Heme Transfer Pathway in Staphylococcus aureus

Naomi Muryoi; Michael T. Tiedemann; Mark Pluym; Johnson Cheung; David E. Heinrichs; Martin J. Stillman

In this study, we report experimental results that provide the first complete challenge of a proposed model for heme acquisition by Staphylococcus aureus via the Isd pathway first put forth by Mazmanian, S. K., Skaar, E. P., Gaspar, A. H., Humayun, M., Gornicki, P., Jelenska, J., Joachmiak, A., Missiakas, D. M., and Schneewind, O. (2003) Science 299, 906–909. The heme-binding NEAT domains of Isd proteins IsdA, IsdB (domain 2), IsdC, and HarA/IsdH (domain 3), and the heme-binding IsdE protein, were overexpressed and purified in apo (heme-free) form. Absorption and magnetic circular dichroism spectral data, together with electrospray ionization mass spectrometry were used to unambiguously identify that heme transfers from NEAT-A through NEAT-C to IsdE. Heme transfer was demonstrated to occur in a unidirectional fashion in the sequence NEAT-B2 → NEAT-A → NEAT-C → IsdE or, alternatively, initiating from NEAT-H3 instead of NEAT-B2: NEAT-H3 → NEAT-A → NEAT-C → IsdE. Under the conditions of our experiments, only NEAT-H3 and NEAT-B2 could transfer bidirectionally, which is in the reverse direction as well, and only with each other. Whereas apo-IsdE readily accepted heme from holo-NEAT-C, it would not accept heme from holo-NEAT-A. Heme transfer to IsdE requires the presence of holo-NEAT-C, in agreement with the proposal that IsdC serves as the central conduit of the heme transfer pathway. These experimental findings corroborate the heme transfer model first proposed by the Schneewind group. Our data show that heme transport from the wall-anchored IsdH/IsdB proteins proceeds directly to IsdE at the membrane and, for this to occur, we propose that specific protein-protein interactions must take place.


Infection and Immunity | 2000

Distribution of Core Oligosaccharide Types in Lipopolysaccharides from Escherichia coli

Karen L. Amor; David E. Heinrichs; Emilisa Frirdich; Kim Ziebell; Roger P. Johnson; Chris Whitfield

ABSTRACT In the lipopolysaccharides of Escherichia coli there are five distinct core oligosaccharide (core OS) structures, designated K-12 and R1 to R4. The objective of this work was to determine the prevalences of these core OS types within the species. Unique sequences in the waa (core OS biosynthesis) gene operon were used to develop a PCR-based system that facilitated unequivocal determination of the core OS types in isolates of E. coli. This system was applied to the 72 isolates in the E. coli ECOR collection, a compilation of isolates that is considered to be broadly representative of the genetic diversity of the species. Fifty (69.4%) of the ECOR isolates contained the R1 core OS, 8 (11.1%) were representatives of R2, 8 (11.1%) were R3, 2 (2.8%) were R4, and only 4 (5.6%) were K-12. R1 is the only core OS type found in all four major phylogenetic groups (A, B1, B2, and D) in the ECOR collection. Virulent extraintestinal pathogenic E. coli isolates tend to be closely related to group B2 and, to a lesser extent, group D isolates. All of the ECOR representatives from the B2 and D groups had the R1 core OS. In contrast, commensal E. coli isolates are more closely related to group A, which contains isolates representing each of the five core OS structures. R3 was the only core OS type found in 38 verotoxigenic E. coli (VTEC) isolates from humans and cattle belonging to the common enterohemorrhagic E. coliserogroups O157, O111, and O26. Although isolates from other VTEC serogroups showed more core OS diversity, the R3 type (83.1% of all VTEC isolates) was still predominant. When non-VTEC commensal isolates from cattle were analyzed, it was found that most possessed the R1 core OS type.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2000

Identification and Characterization of a Membrane Permease Involved in Iron-Hydroxamate Transport in Staphylococcus aureus

M. Tom Sebulsky; Dan Hohnstein; Meredith D. Hunter; David E. Heinrichs

Staphylococcus aureus was shown to transport iron complexed to a variety of hydroxamate type siderophores, including ferrichrome, aerobactin, and desferrioxamine. An S. aureus mutant defective in the ability to transport ferric hydroxamate complexes was isolated from a Tn917-LTV1 transposon insertion library after selection on iron-limited media containing aerobactin and streptonigrin. Chromosomal DNA flanking the Tn917-LTV1 insertion was identified by sequencing of chromosomal DNA isolated from the mutant. This information localized the transposon insertion to a gene whose predicted product shares significant similarity with FhuG of Bacillus subtilis. DNA sequence information was then used to clone a larger fragment of DNA surrounding the fhuG gene, and this resulted in the identification of an operon of three genes, fhuCBG, all of which show significant similarities to ferric hydroxamate uptake (fhu) genes in B. subtilis. FhuB and FhuG are highly hydrophobic, suggesting that they are embedded within the cytoplasmic membrane, while FhuC shares significant homology with ATP-binding proteins. Given this, the S. aureus FhuCBG proteins were predicted to be part of a binding protein-dependent transport system for ferric hydroxamates. Exogenous iron levels were shown to regulate ferric hydroxamate uptake in S. aureus. This regulation is attributable to Fur in S. aureus because a strain containing an insertionally inactivated fur gene showed maximal levels of ferric hydroxamate uptake even when the cells were grown under iron-replete conditions. By using the Fur titration assay, it was shown that the Fur box sequences upstream of fhuCBG are recognized by the Escherichia coli Fur protein.


Molecular Microbiology | 2002

Transferrin binding in Staphylococcus aureus: involvement of a cell wall-anchored protein

John M. Taylor; David E. Heinrichs

The ability to gain access to iron is pivotal for bacterial pathogens during infection. Although much is known about iron acquisition systems in Gram‐negative bacteria, comparatively little is known about how Gram‐positive pathogens access iron from host iron sources. A previous study showed that, in the Gram‐positive human pathogen Staphylococcus aureus, a cell surface‐associated glyceraldehyde‐3‐phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) enzyme (Gap, or Tpn) is capable of binding human transferrin, representing a potential means by which this bacterium is able to access iron in vivo. We have investigated this property of S. aureus further and shown that, in S. aureus RN6390, GAPDH is expressed on the S. aureus cell surface independent of exogenous iron concentrations, and that overexpressed and purified Gap, although retaining GAPDH activity, has no affinity for human transferrin. Moreover, although a S. aureus gap mutant was devoid of surface‐associated and cytoplasmic GAPDH activity, it retained the ability to bind human transferrin, equivalent to wild type. We concluded from these results that the Gap protein is not involved in S. aureus binding to human transferrin. We identified the transferrin‐binding protein as a novel cell wall‐anchored protein, designated StbA for staphylococcal transferrin‐binding protein A, which shared no significant similarities with any other bacterial transferrin‐binding proteins. StbA contained a C‐terminal cell wall‐anchoring motif (LPKTG), and expression of StbA in the cell wall was strictly controlled by exogenous iron concentrations. The stbA gene is found within a 7 kb region in the S. aureus chromosome that contains a total of six iron‐regulated genes. Immediately downstream from stbA is an iron‐regulated gene whose product was predicted to be another cell wall‐anchored protein with no significant similarity to proteins with characterized functions. Transcribed in the opposite direction from stbA is a four‐gene operon whose expression is also regulated by iron. While the deduced products of the first two genes lack similarity to known proteins, the last two genes encode, respectively, putative lipoprotein and permease components of an ABC transporter that shares significant similarities with several iron(III) ABC transporters in a variety of bacteria.


Nature Medicine | 2009

Toll-like receptor 2 ligands on the staphylococcal cell wall downregulate superantigen-induced T cell activation and prevent toxic shock syndrome

Thu A. Chau; Michelle L. McCully; William Brintnell; Gary An; Katherine J. Kasper; Enrique D. Vinés; Paul Kubes; S. M. Mansour Haeryfar; John K. McCormick; Ewa Cairns; David E. Heinrichs; Joaquín Madrenas

Staphylococcal superantigens are pyrogenic exotoxins that cause massive T cell activation leading to toxic shock syndrome and death. Despite the strong adaptive immune response induced by these toxins, infections by superantigen-producing staphylococci are very common clinical events. We hypothesized that this may be partly a result of staphylococcal strains having developed strategies that downregulate the T cell response to these toxins. Here we show that the human interleukin-2 response to staphylococcal superantigens is inhibited by the simultaneous presence of bacteria. Such a downregulatory effect is the result of peptidoglycan-embedded molecules binding to Toll-like receptor 2 and inducing interleukin-10 production and apoptosis of antigen-presenting cells. We corroborated these findings in vivo by showing substantial prevention of mortality after simultaneous administration of staphylococcal enterotoxin B with either heat-killed staphylococci or Staphylococcus aureus peptidoglycan in mouse models of superantigen-induced toxic shock syndrome.


Infection and Immunity | 2010

Staphylococcus aureus Fur Regulates the Expression of Virulence Factors That Contribute to the Pathogenesis of Pneumonia

Victor J. Torres; Ahmed S. Attia; William J. Mason; M. Indriati Hood; Brian D. Corbin; Federico C. Beasley; Kelsi L. Anderson; Devin L. Stauff; W. Hayes McDonald; Lisa J. Zimmerman; David B. Friedman; David E. Heinrichs; Paul M. Dunman; Eric P. Skaar

ABSTRACT The tremendous success of Staphylococcus aureus as a pathogen is due to the controlled expression of a diverse array of virulence factors. The effects of host environments on the expression of virulence factors and the mechanisms by which S. aureus adapts to colonize distinct host tissues are largely unknown. Vertebrates have evolved to sequester nutrient iron from invading bacteria, and iron availability is a signal that alerts pathogenic microorganisms when they enter the hostile host environment. Consistent with this, we report here that S. aureus senses alterations in the iron status via the ferric uptake regulator (Fur) and alters the abundance of a large number of virulence factors. These Fur-mediated changes protect S. aureus against killing by neutrophils, and Fur is required for full staphylococcal virulence in a murine model of infection. A potential mechanistic explanation for the impact of Fur on virulence is provided by the observation that Fur coordinates the reciprocal expression of cytolysins and a subset of immunomodulatory proteins. More specifically, S. aureus lacking fur exhibits decreased expression of immunomodulatory proteins and increased expression of cytolysins. These findings reveal that Fur is involved in initiating a regulatory program that organizes the expression of virulence factors during the pathogenesis of S. aureus pneumonia.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2004

Involvement of SirABC in Iron-Siderophore Import in Staphylococcus aureus

Suzanne Dale; M. Tom Sebulsky; David E. Heinrichs

Staphylococcus aureus SirA was previously identified as a lipoprotein, and SirB and SirC are thought to encode the transmembrane domains of an ABC transporter. Sir proteins show similarity to iron-siderophore transporters in several bacteria. Here, we show that the iron-regulated sirABC operon is divergently transcribed from the sbn operon that encodes enzymes involved in the synthesis of staphylobactin, a recently described siderophore produced by S. aureus. Mutation of either sirA or sirB increased the resistance of iron-starved S. aureus to streptonigrin and resulted in compromised growth in iron-restricted, but not iron-rich, media. We also demonstrated that sirA and sirB mutants are compromised in the ability to transport iron complexed to staphylobactin but are not compromised for uptake of other iron complexes, such as ferric hydroxamates, ferric enterobactin, or ferric citrate. SirA- and SirB-deficient S. aureus, however, retain the ability to produce staphylobactin. Moreover, we found that transcription from the sbn operon was increased, relative to the wild type, in both sirA and sirB knockout strains, likely in response to an increased level of iron starvation in these cells. These results provide evidence of a role for these proteins in iron import in S. aureus and for full fitness of the bacterium in iron-restricted environments and demonstrate a function for S. aureus genes encoding proteins involved in the transport of an endogenously produced siderophore.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2001

Identification and Characterization of fhuD1 and fhuD2, Two Genes Involved in Iron-Hydroxamate Uptake in Staphylococcus aureus

M. Tom Sebulsky; David E. Heinrichs

Staphylococcus aureus can utilize several hydroxamate siderophores for growth under iron-restricted conditions. Previous findings have shown that S. aureus possesses a cytoplasmic membrane-associated traffic ATPase that is involved in the specific transport of iron(III)-hydroxamate complexes. In this study, we have identified two additional genes, termed fhuD1 and fhuD2, whose products are involved in this transport process in S. aureus. We have shown that fhuD2 codes for a posttranslationally modified lipoprotein that is anchored in the cytoplasmic membrane, while the deduced amino acid sequence predicts the same for fhuD1. The predicted FhuD1 and FhuD2 proteins share 41.0% identity and 56.4% total similarity with each other, 45.9 and 49.1% total similarity with the FhuD homolog in Bacillus subtilis, and 29.3 and 24.6% total similarity with the periplasmic FhuD protein from Escherichia coli. Insertional inactivation and gene replacement of both genes showed that while FhuD2 is involved in the transport of iron(III) in complex with ferrichrome, ferrioxamine B, aerobactin, and coprogen, FhuD1 shows a more limited substrate range, capable of only iron(III)-ferrichrome and iron(III)-ferrioxamine B transport in S. aureus. Nucleotide sequences present upstream of both fhuD1 and fhuD2 predict the presence of consensus Fur binding sequences. In agreement, transcription of both genes was negatively regulated by exogenous iron levels through the activity of the S. aureus Fur protein.

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Michael E. P. Murphy

University of British Columbia

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Christie Vermeiren

University of Western Ontario

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Jason C. Grigg

University of British Columbia

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Jessica R. Sheldon

University of Western Ontario

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Martin J. Stillman

University of Western Ontario

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Johnson Cheung

University of Western Ontario

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Martin J. McGavin

University of Western Ontario

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Cristina L. Marolda

University of Western Ontario

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