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Dive into the research topics where Douglas E. Berg is active.

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Featured researches published by Douglas E. Berg.


Nature | 1997

The complete genome sequence of the gastric pathogen Helicobacter pylori

Jean-F. Tomb; Owen White; Anthony R. Kerlavage; Rebecca A. Clayton; Granger Sutton; Robert D. Fleischmann; Karen A. Ketchum; Hans-Peter Klenk; Steven R. Gill; Brian A. Dougherty; Karen E. Nelson; John Quackenbush; Lixin Zhou; Ewen F. Kirkness; Scott N. Peterson; Brendan J. Loftus; Delwood Richardson; Robert J. Dodson; Hanif G. Khalak; Anna Glodek; Keith McKenney; Lisa M. Fitzegerald; Norman H. Lee; Mark D. Adams; Erin Hickey; Douglas E. Berg; Jeanine D. Gocayne; Teresa Utterback; Jeremy Peterson; Jenny M. Kelley

Helicobacter pylori, strain 26695, has a circular genome of 1,667,867 base pairs and 1,590 predicted coding sequences. Sequence analysis indicates that H. pylori has well-developed systems for motility, for scavenging iron, and for DNA restriction and modification. Many putative adhesins, lipoproteins and other outer membrane proteins were identified, underscoring the potential complexity of host–pathogen interaction. Based on the large number of sequence-related genes encoding outer membrane proteins and the presence of homopolymeric tracts and dinucleotide repeats in coding sequences, H. pylori, like several other mucosal pathogens, probably uses recombination and slipped-strand mispairing within repeats as mechanisms for antigenic variation and adaptive evolution. Consistent with its restricted niche, H. pylori has a few regulatory networks, and a limited metabolic repertoire and biosynthetic capacity. Its survival in acid conditions depends, in part, on its ability to establish a positive inside-membrane potential in low pH.


Molecular Microbiology | 2002

Analyses of the cag pathogenicity island of Helicobacter pylori

Natalia S. Akopyants; Sandra W. Clifton; Dangeruta Kersulyte; Jean E. Crabtree; Bryan E. Youree; C.Adonis Reece; Nick O. Bukanov; E. Susan Drazek; Bruce A. Roe; Douglas E. Berg

Most strains of Helicobacter pylori from patients with peptic ulcer disease or intestinal‐type gastric cancer carry cagA, a gene that encodes an immunodominant protein of unknown function, whereas many of the strains from asymptomatically infected persons lack this gene. Recent studies showed that the cagA gene lies near the right end of a ≈37 kb DNA segment (a pathogenicity island, or PAI) that is unique to cagA+ strains and that the cag PAI was split in half by a transposable element insertion in the reference strain NCTC11638. In complementary experiments reported here, we also found the same cag PAI, and sequenced a 39 kb cosmid clone containing the left ‘cagII’ half of this PAI. Encoded in cagII were four proteins each with homology to four components of multiprotein complexes of Bordetella pertussis (‘Ptl’), Agrobacterium tumefaciens (‘Vir’), and conjugative plasmids (‘Tra’) that help deliver pertussis toxin and T (tumour inducing) and plasmid DNA, respectively, to target eukaryotic or prokaryotic cells, and also homologues of eukaryotic proteins that are involved in cytoskeletal structure. To the left of cagII in this cosmid were genes for homologues of HslU (heat‐shock protein) and Era (essential GTPase); to the right of cagII were homologues of genes for a type I restriction endonuclease and ion transport functions. Deletion of the cag PAI had no effect on synthesis of the vacuolating cytotoxin, but this deletion and several cag insertion mutations blocked induction of synthesis of proinflammatory cytokine IL‐8 in gastric epithelial cells. Comparisons among H. pylori strains indicated that cag PAI gene content and arrangement are rather well conserved. We also identified two genome rearrangements with end‐points in the cag PAI. One, in reference strain NCTC11638, involved IS605, a recently described transposable element (as also found by others). Another rearrangement, in 3 of 10 strains tested (including type strain NCTC11637), separated the normally adjacent cagA and picA genes and did not involve IS605. Our results are discussed in terms of how cag‐encoded proteins might help trigger the damaging inflammatory responses in the gastric epithelium and possible contributions of DNA rearrangements to genome evolution.


The ISME Journal | 2007

Culture independent analysis of ileal mucosa reveals a selective increase in invasive Escherichia coli of novel phylogeny relative to depletion of Clostridiales in Crohn's disease involving the ileum

Martin Baumgart; Belgin Dogan; Mark Rishniw; Gil Weitzman; Brian P. Bosworth; Rhonda K. Yantiss; Renato H. Orsi; Martin Wiedmann; Patrick L. McDonough; Sung Guk Kim; Douglas E. Berg; Y.H. Schukken; Ellen J. Scherl; Kenneth W. Simpson

Intestinal bacteria are implicated increasingly as a pivotal factor in the development of Crohns disease, but the specific components of the complex polymicrobial enteric environment driving the inflammatory response are unresolved. This study addresses the role of the ileal mucosa-associated microflora in Crohns disease. A combination of culture-independent analysis of bacterial diversity (16S rDNA library analysis, quantitative PCR and fluorescence in situ hybridization) and molecular characterization of cultured bacteria was used to examine the ileal mucosa-associated flora of patients with Crohns disease involving the ileum (13), Crohns disease restricted to the colon (CCD) (8) and healthy individuals (7). Analysis of 16S rDNA libraries constructed from ileal mucosa yielded nine clades that segregated according to their origin (P<0.0001). 16S rDNA libraries of ileitis mucosa were enriched in sequences for Escherichia coli (P<0.001), but relatively depleted in a subset of Clostridiales (P<0.05). PCR of mucosal DNA was negative for Mycobacterium avium subspecies paratuberculosis, Shigella and Listeria. The number of E. coli in situ correlated with the severity of ileal disease (ρ 0.621, P<0.001) and invasive E. coli was restricted to inflamed mucosa. E. coli strains isolated from the ileum were predominantly novel in phylogeny, displayed pathogen-like behavior in vitro and harbored chromosomal and episomal elements similar to those described in extraintestinal pathogenic E. coli and pathogenic Enterobacteriaceae. These data establish that dysbiosis of the ileal mucosa-associated flora correlates with an ileal Crohns disease (ICD) phenotype, and raise the possibility that a selective increase in a novel group of invasive E. coli is involved in the etiopathogenesis to Crohns disease involving the ileum.


Molecular Microbiology | 1999

Recombination and clonal groupings within Helicobacter pylori from different geographical regions

Mark Achtman; Takeshi Azuma; Douglas E. Berg; Yoshiyuki Ito; Giovanna Morelli; Zhi Jun Pan; Sebastian Suerbaum; Stuart A. Thompson; Arle Van Der Ende; Leen Jan Van Doorn

A collection of 20 strains of Helicobacter pylori from several regions of the world was studied to better understand the population genetic structure and diversity of this species. Sequences of fragments from seven housekeeping genes (atpA, efp, mutY, ppa, trpC, ureI, yphC ) and two virulence‐associated genes (cagA, vacA) showed high levels of synonymous sequence variation (mean percentage Ks of 10–27%) and lower levels of non‐synonymous variation (mean percentage Ka of 0.2–5.6%). Cluster analysis of pairwise differences between alleles revealed the existence of two weakly clonal groupings, which included half of the strains investigated. All six strains isolated from Japanese and coastal Chinese were assigned to the ‘Asian’ clonal grouping, probably reflecting descent from a distinct common ancestor. The clonal groupings were not totally uniform; recombination, as measured by the homoplasy test and compatibility matrices, was extremely common within all genes tested, except cagA. The fact that clonal descent could still be discerned despite such frequent recombination possibly reflects founder effects and geographical separation and/or selection for particular alleles of these genes.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2001

Helicobacter pylori genetic diversity and risk of human disease

Martin J. Blaser; Douglas E. Berg

Microbes residing on a mucosal surface may communicate in complex ways with their neighboring host tissue. Signals derived from a bacterium may include metabolites or specific host-directed substances such as secreted toxins, or they may result from direct contact with host cells. Conversely, certain host activities or responses may be considered as signals to the microbe, including production of molecules that can be used by the microbe as substrates, release of defense molecules (e.g., antibodies, defensins, mucus), or organ-specific physiologic traits, including peristalsis and acid secretion in the stomach. In the case of Helicobacter pylori, a common resident of the human stomach, these bidirectional signals appear to have coevolved over long periods such that, in most cases, carriage of H. pylori is, if not mutually beneficial, at least well tolerated by the human host. Here, we examine the relationship of H. pylori and humans in the context of these diverse signals.


Molecular Microbiology | 1998

Metronidazole resistance in Helicobacter pylori is due to null mutations in a gene (rdxA) that encodes an oxygen‐insensitive NADPH nitroreductase

Avery Goodwin; Dangeruta Kersulyte; Gary Sisson; Sander Veldhuyzen van Zanten; Douglas E. Berg; Paul S. Hoffman

Metronidazole (Mtz) is a critical component of combination therapies that are used against Helicobacter pylori, the major cause of peptic ulcer disease. Many H. pylori strains are Mtz resistant (MtzR), however, and here we show that MtzR results from loss of oxygen‐insensitive NADPH nitroreductase activity. The underlying gene (called ‘rdxA’) was identified in several steps: transformation of Mtz‐susceptible (MtzS) H. pylori with cosmids from a MtzR strain, subcloning, polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and DNA sequencing. We also found that (i) E. coli (normally MtzR) was rendered MtzS by a functional H. pylori rdxA gene; (ii) introduction of rdxA on a shuttle vector plasmid into formerly MtzRH. pylori rendered it MtzS; and (iii) replacement of rdxA in MtzSH. pylori with an rdxA::camR null insertion allele resulted in a MtzR phenotype. The 630 bp rdxA genes of five pairs of H. pylori isolates from infections that were mixed (MtzR/MtzS), but uniform in overall genotype, were sequenced. In each case, the paired rdxA genes differed from one another by one to three base substitutions. Typical rdxA genes from unrelated isolates differ by ≈ 5% in DNA sequence. Therefore, the near identity of rdxA genes from paired MtzR and MtzS isolates implicates de novo mutation, rather than horizontal gene transfer in the development of MtzR. Horizontal gene transfer could readily be demonstrated under laboratory conditions with mutant rdxA alleles. RdxA is a homologue of the classical nitroreductases (CNRs) of the enteric bacteria, but differs in cysteine content (6 vs. 1 or 2 in CNRs) and isoelectric point (pI = 7.99 vs. 5.4–5.6), which might account for its reduction of low redox drugs such as Mtz. We suggest that many rdxA (MtzR) mutations may have been selected by prior use of Mtz against other infections. H. pylori itself is an early risk factor for gastric cancer; the possibility that its carcinogenic effects are exacerbated by Mtz use, which is frequent in many societies, or the reduction of nitroaromatic compounds to toxic, mutagenic and carcinogenic products, may be of significant concern in public health.


Molecular Microbiology | 1999

Emergence of recombinant strains of Helicobacter pylori during human infection

Dangeruta Kersulyte; Henrikas Chalkauskas; Douglas E. Berg

Genetic recombination can be important evolutionarily in speeding the adaptation of organisms to new environments and in purging deleterious mutations. Here, we describe polymerase chain reaction (PCR), hybridization and DNA sequence‐based evidence of six such exchanges between two strains of Helicobacter pylori during natural mixed infection of a patient in Lithuania. One parent strain contained the 37 kb long, virulence‐associated cag pathogenicity island (PAI), and the other strain lacked this PAI. Most H. pylori from the patient had descended from the cag+ parent, but had become cag− during infection. This had resulted from transfer of DNA containing the ‘empty site’ allele from the cag− strain and homologous recombination, not from excision of the cag PAI without DNA transfer. Other cases of recombination involved genes for an outer membrane protein (omp5 and omp29; also called HP0227 and HP1342) and a putative phosphoenolpyruvate synthase (ppsA ; HP0121). Replacement of a short patch of DNA sequence (36–124 bp) was also seen. As the chance of forming any given recombinant is small, the abundance of recombinants in this patient suggests selection for particular recombinant genotypes during years of chronic infection. We suggest that genetic exchange among unrelated H. pylori strains, as documented here, is important because of the diversity of this gastric pathogen and its human hosts. Certain H. pylori recombinants may grow better in a given host than either parent. The vigour of growth, in turn, could impact on the severity of disease that infection can elicit.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2000

Differences in Genotypes of Helicobacter pylori from Different Human Populations

Dangeruta Kersulyte; Asish K. Mukhopadhyay; Billie Velapatiño; Wan-Wen Su; Zhi-Jun Pan; Claudia Garcia; Virginia Hernandez; Yanet Valdez; Rajesh S. Mistry; Robert H. Gilman; Yuan Yuan; Hua Gao; Teresa Alarcón; Manuel López-Brea; G. Balakrish Nair; Abhijit Chowdhury; Simanti Datta; Teruko Nakazawa; Reidwaan Ally; Isidore Segal; Benjamin C.Y. Wong; Shiu Kum Lam; Farzad O. Olfat; Thomas Borén; Lars Engstrand; Olga Torres; Roberto Schneider; Julian E. Thomas; Steven J. Czinn; Douglas E. Berg

DNA motifs at several informative loci in more than 500 strains of Helicobacter pylori from five continents were studied by PCR and sequencing to gain insights into the evolution of this gastric pathogen. Five types of deletion, insertion, and substitution motifs were found at the right end of the H. pylori cag pathogenicity island. Of the three most common motifs, type I predominated in Spaniards, native Peruvians, and Guatemalan Ladinos (mixed Amerindian-European ancestry) and also in native Africans and U.S. residents; type II predominated among Japanese and Chinese; and type III predominated in Indians from Calcutta. Sequences in the cagA gene and in vacAm1 type alleles of the vacuolating cytotoxin gene (vacA) of strains from native Peruvians were also more like those from Spaniards than those from Asians. These indications of relatedness of Latin American and Spanish strains, despite the closer genetic relatedness of Amerindian and Asian people themselves, lead us to suggest that H. pylori may have been brought to the New World by European conquerors and colonists about 500 years ago. This thinking, in turn, suggests that H. pylori infection might have become widespread in people quite recently in human evolution.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2000

Distinctiveness of genotypes of Helicobacter pylori in Calcutta, India.

Asish K. Mukhopadhyay; Dangeruta Kersulyte; Jin-Yong Jeong; Simanti Datta; Yoshiyuki Ito; Abhijit Chowdhury; Sujit Chowdhury; Amal Santra; Swapan Bhattacharya; Takeshi Azuma; G. B. Nair; Douglas E. Berg

The genotypes of 78 strains of Helicobacter pylori from Calcutta, India (55 from ulcer patients and 23 from more-benign infections), were studied, with a focus on putative virulence genes and neutral DNA markers that were likely to be phylogenetically informative. PCR tests indicated that 80 to 90% of Calcutta strains carried the cag pathogenicity island (PAI) and potentially toxigenic vacAs1 alleles of the vacuolating cytotoxin gene (vacA), independent of disease status. This was higher than in the West (where cag PAI(+) vacAs1 genotypes are disease associated) but lower than in east Asia. The iceA2 gene was weakly disease associated in Calcutta, whereas in the West the alternative but unrelated iceA1 gene at the same locus is weakly disease associated. DNA sequence motifs of vacAm1 (middle region) alleles formed a cluster that was distinct from those of east Asia and the West, whereas the cagA sequences of Calcutta and Western strains were closely related. An internal deletion found in 20% of Calcutta iceA1 genes was not seen in any of approximately 200 strains studied from other geographic regions and thus seemed to be unique to this H. pylori population. Two mobile DNAs that were rare in east Asian strains were also common in Calcutta. About 90% of Calcutta strains were metronidazole resistant. These findings support the idea that H. pylori gene pools differ regionally and emphasize the potential importance of studies of Indian and other non-Western H. pylori populations in developing a global understanding of this gastric pathogen and associated disease.


Cell Host & Microbe | 2009

Helicobacter pylori CagA Phosphorylation-Independent Function in Epithelial Proliferation and Inflammation

Masato Suzuki; Hitomi Mimuro; Kotaro Kiga; Makoto Fukumatsu; Nozomi Ishijima; Hanako Morikawa; Shigenori Nagai; Shigeo Koyasu; Robert H. Gilman; Dangeruta Kersulyte; Douglas E. Berg; Chihiro Sasakawa

CagA, a major virulence factor of Helicobacter pylori (Hp), is delivered into gastric epithelial cells and exists in phosphorylated and nonphosphorylated forms. The biological activity of the phosphorylated form is well established; however, function(s) of the nonphosphorylated form remain elusive. Here, we report that a conserved motif in the C-terminal region of CagA, which is distinct from the EPIYA motifs used for phosphorylation and which we designate CRPIA (conserved repeat responsible for phosphorylation-independent activity), plays pivotal roles in Hp pathogenesis. The CRPIA motif in nonphosphorylated CagA was involved in interacting with activated Met, the hepatocyte growth factor receptor, leading to the sustained activation of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/Akt signaling in response to Hp infection. This in turn led to the activation of beta-catenin and NF-kappaB signaling, which promote proliferation and inflammation, respectively. Thus, nonphosphorylated CagA activity contributes to the epithelial proliferative and proinflammatory responses associated with development of chronic gastritis and gastric cancer.

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Asish K. Mukhopadhyay

Washington University in St. Louis

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Dangeruta Kersulyte

Washington University in St. Louis

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Claire M. Berg

University of Connecticut

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Daiva Dailidiene

Washington University in St. Louis

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Billie Velapatiño

Cayetano Heredia University

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Lilia Cabrera

Johns Hopkins University

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Awdhesh Kalia

University of Louisville

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Giedrius Dailide

Washington University in St. Louis

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