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Dive into the research topics where Elizabeth A. Stohl is active.

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Featured researches published by Elizabeth A. Stohl.


Molecular Microbiology | 2001

The recX gene potentiates homologous recombination in Neisseria gonorrhoeae.

Elizabeth A. Stohl; H. Steven Seifert

In the pathogen Neisseria gonorrhoeae (Gc), the RecA protein is necessary for DNA repair, DNA transformation and pilus antigenic variation. Many bacteria contain a gene, recX, which has been suggested to downregulate recA through an unknown mechanism. To investigate the possible role of recX in Gc, we cloned and insertionally inactivated the recX gene. The recX loss‐of‐function mutant showed decreases in pilus phase variation, DNA transformation and DNA repair ability compared with wild type. We were able to complement all these deficiencies by supplying a functional copy of recX elsewhere in the chromosome. The recX mutant still showed increases in pilus phase variation under conditions of iron starvation, and the recX mutant showed levels of RecA protein equivalent to wild type. Although the precise role of recX in recombination remains unclear, RecX aids all RecA‐related processes in Gc, and this is the first demonstration of a role for recX in homologous recombination in any organism.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

The DinI and RecX Proteins Are Competing Modulators of RecA Function

Shelley L. Lusetti; Julia C. Drees; Elizabeth A. Stohl; H. Steven Seifert; Michael M. Cox

The DinI and RecX proteins of Escherichia coli both modulate the function of RecA protein, but have very different effects. DinI protein stabilizes RecA filaments, preventing disassembly but permitting assembly. RecX protein blocks RecA filament extension, which can lead to net filament disassembly. We demonstrate that both proteins can interact with the RecA filament, and propose that each can replace the other. The DinI/RecX displacement reactions are slow, requiring multiple minutes even when a large excess of the challenging protein is present. The effects of RecX protein on RecA filaments are manifest at lower modulator concentrations than the effects of DinI protein. Together, the DinI and RecX proteins constitute a new regulatory network. The two proteins compete directly as mainly positive (DinI) and negative (RecX) modulators of RecA function.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2006

Neisseria gonorrhoeae DNA Recombination and Repair Enzymes Protect against Oxidative Damage Caused by Hydrogen Peroxide

Elizabeth A. Stohl; H. Steven Seifert

The strict human pathogen Neisseria gonorrhoeae is exposed to oxidative damage during infection. N. gonorrhoeae has many defenses that have been demonstrated to counteract oxidative damage. However, recN is the only DNA repair and recombination gene upregulated in response to hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) by microarray analysis and subsequently shown to be important for oxidative damage protection. We therefore tested the importance of RecA and DNA recombination and repair enzymes in conferring resistance to H(2)O(2) damage. recA mutants, as well as RecBCD (recB, recC, and recD) and RecF-like pathway mutants (recJ, recO, and recQ), all showed decreased resistance to H(2)O(2). Holliday junction processing mutants (ruvA, ruvC, and recG) showed decreased resistance to H(2)O(2) resistance as well. Finally, we show that RecA protein levels did not increase as a result of H(2)O(2) treatment. We propose that RecA, recombinational DNA repair, and branch migration are all important for H(2)O(2) resistance in N. gonorrhoeae but that constitutive levels of these enzymes are sufficient for providing protection against oxidative damage by H(2)O(2).


Gene | 1999

Zwittermicin A biosynthetic cluster

Elizabeth A. Stohl; Jocelyn L. Milner; Jo Handelsman

The goal of this study was to identify the biosynthetic cluster for zwittermicin A, a novel, broad spectrum, aminopolyol antibiotic produced by Bacillus cereus. The nucleotide sequence of 2.7kb of DNA flanking the zwittermicin A self-resistance gene, zmaR, from B. cereus UW85 revealed three open reading frames (ORFs). Of these ORFs, two had sequence similarity to acyl-CoA dehydrogenases and polyketide synthases, respectively. Insertional inactivation demonstrated that orf2 is necessary for zwittermicin A production and that zmaR is necessary for high-level resistance to zwittermicin A but is not required for zwittermicin A production. Expression of ZmaR was temporally associated with zwittermicin A production. The results suggest that zmaR is part of a cluster of genes that is involved in zwittermicin A biosynthesis, representing the first biosynthetic pathway for an aminopolyol antibiotic.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Less Is More: Neisseria gonorrhoeae RecX Protein Stimulates Recombination by Inhibiting RecA

Marielle C. Gruenig; Elizabeth A. Stohl; Sindhu Chitteni-Pattu; H. Steven Seifert; Michael M. Cox

Escherichia coli RecX (RecXEc) is a negative regulator of RecA activities both in the bacterial cell and in vitro. In contrast, the Neisseria gonorrhoeae RecX protein (RecXNg) enhances all RecA-related processes in N. gonorrhoeae. Surprisingly, the RecXNg protein is not a RecA protein activator in vitro. Instead, RecXNg is a much more potent inhibitor of all RecANg and RecAEc activities than is the E. coli RecX ortholog. A series of RecXNg mutant proteins representing a gradient of functional deficiencies provide a direct correlation between RecANg inhibition in vitro and the enhancement of RecANg function in N. gonorrhoeae. Unlike RecXEc, RecXNg does not simply cap the growing ends of RecA filaments, but it directly facilitates a more rapid RecA filament disassembly. Thus, in N. gonorrhoeae, recombinational processes are facilitated by RecXNg protein-mediated limitations on RecANg filament presence and/or length to achieve maximal function.


Molecular Microbiology | 2011

The DNA-binding activity of the Neisseria gonorrhoeae LexA orthologue NG1427 is modulated by oxidation

Paul O. P. Schook; Elizabeth A. Stohl; Alison K. Criss; H. Steven Seifert

Neisseria gonorrhoeae is a human‐specific organism that is not usually exposed to UV light or chemicals but is likely to encounter reactive oxygen species during infection. Exposure of N. gonorrhoeae to sublethal hydrogen peroxide revealed that the ng1427 gene was upregulated sixfold. N. gonorrhoeae was thought to lack an SOS system, although NG1427 shows amino acid sequence similarity to the SOS response regulator LexA from Escherichia coli. Similar to LexA and other S24 peptidases, NG1427 undergoes autoproteolysis in vitro, which is facilitated by either the gonococcal or E. coli RecA proteins or high pH, and autoproteolysis requires the active and cleavage site residues conserved between LexA and NG1427. NG1427 controls a three gene regulon: itself; ng1428, a Neisseria‐specific, putative integral membrane protein; and recN, a DNA repair gene known to be required for oxidative damage survival. Full NG1427 regulon de‐repression requires RecA following methyl methanesulphonate or mitomycin C treatment, but is largely RecA‐independent following hydrogen peroxide treatment. NG1427 binds specifically to the operator regions of the genes it controls, and DNA binding is abolished by oxidation of the single cysteine residue encoded in NG1427. We propose that NG1427 is inactivated independently of RecA by oxidation.


Microbiology | 2002

Differential cross-complementation patterns of Escherichia coli and Neisseria gonorrhoeae RecA proteins.

Elizabeth A. Stohl; Leslie Blount; H. Steven Seifert

The Escherichia coli RecA protein is one of the best-studied enzymes, but less is understood about how RecA homologues of other species are similar to or different from the E. coli RecA. In the Gram-negative pathogen Neisseria gonorrhoeae (the gonococcus; Gc), the causative agent of gonorrhoea, RecA is involved in DNA transformation, pilin antigenic variation, and DNA repair. By expressing the recA genes from Gc and E. coli under control of lac regulatory sequences in E. coli, the authors have shown that the Gc RecA fully complements an E. coli recA mutant for homologous recombination, but only partially complements for survival to DNA damage. By expressing similar constructs in Gc, it was shown that the E. coli RecA complements for pilin antigenic variation, partially complements for DNA transformation, but does not complement for survival to DNA damage, suggesting that species-specific interactions are important for DNA repair, but not for homologous recombination. Co-expression of the E. coli recA and recX genes in Gc suggests that in this heterologous system RecX modulates RecA-mediated processes.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Neisseria gonorrhoeae Virulence Factor NG1686 Is a Bifunctional M23B Family Metallopeptidase That Influences Resistance to Hydrogen Peroxide and Colony Morphology

Elizabeth A. Stohl; Yolande A. Chan; Kathleen T. Hackett; Petra L. Kohler; Joseph P. Dillard; H. Steven Seifert

Background: Deletion of N. gonorrhoeae virulence factor ng1686 results in increased sensitivity to H2O2 and PMN-mediated killing. Results: NG1686 has endopeptidase and carboxypeptidase activities. Conclusion: NG1686 is a M23B family zinc metallopeptidase with bifunctional activity. Significance: This is the first demonstration of a metallopeptidase affecting both resistance to H2O2 and PMN-mediated killing in any bacterium. Symptomatic gonococcal infection, caused exclusively by the human-specific pathogen Neisseria gonorrhoeae (the gonococcus), is characterized by the influx of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) to the site of infection. Although PMNs possess a potent antimicrobial arsenal comprising both oxidative and non-oxidative killing mechanisms, gonococci survive this interaction, suggesting that the gonococcus has evolved many defenses against PMN killing. We previously identified the NG1686 protein as a gonococcal virulence factor that protects against both non-oxidative PMN-mediated killing and oxidative killing by hydrogen peroxide. In this work, we show that deletion of ng1686 affects gonococcal colony morphology but not cell morphology and that overexpression of ng1686 does not confer enhanced survival to hydrogen peroxide on gonococci. NG1686 contains M23B endopeptidase active sites found in proteins that cleave bacterial cell wall peptidoglycan. Strains of N. gonorrhoeae expressing mutant NG1686 proteins with substitutions in many, but not all, conserved metallopeptidase active sites recapitulated the hydrogen peroxide sensitivity and altered colony morphology of the Δng1686 mutant strain. We showed that purified NG1686 protein degrades peptidoglycan in vitro and that mutations in many conserved active site residues abolished its degradative activity. Finally, we demonstrated that NG1686 possesses both dd-carboxypeptidase and endopeptidase activities. We conclude that the NG1686 protein is a M23B peptidase with dual activities that targets the cell wall to affect colony morphology and resistance to hydrogen peroxide and PMN-mediated killing.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Purification and characterization of the RecA protein from Neisseria gonorrhoeae

Elizabeth A. Stohl; Marielle C. Gruenig; Michael M. Cox; H. Steven Seifert

The strict human pathogen Neisseria gonorrhoeae is the only causative agent of the sexually transmitted infection gonorrhea. The recA gene from N. gonorrhoeae is essential for DNA repair, natural DNA transformation, and pilin antigenic variation, all processes that are important for the pathogenesis and persistence of N. gonorrhoeae in the human population. To understand the biochemical features of N. gonorrhoeae RecA (RecANg), we overexpressed and purified the RecANg and SSBNg proteins and compared their activities to those of the well-characterized E. coli RecA and SSB proteins in vitro. We observed that RecANg promoted more strand exchange at early time points than RecAEc through DNA homologous substrates, and exhibited the highest ATPase activity of any RecA protein characterized to date. Further analysis of this robust ATPase activity revealed that RecANg is more efficient at displacing SSB from ssDNA and that RecANg shows higher ATPase activity during strand exchange than RecAEc. Using substrates created to mimic the cellular processes of DNA transformation and pilin antigenic variation we observed that RecAEc catalyzed more strand exchange through a 100 bp heterologous insert, but that RecANg catalyzed more strand exchange through regions of microheterology. Together, these data suggest that the processes of ATP hydrolysis and DNA strand exchange may be coupled differently in RecANg than in RecAEc. This difference may explain the unusually high ATPase activity observed for RecANg with the strand exchange activity between RecANg and RecAEc being more similar.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2016

Amidase Activity of AmiC Controls Cell Separation and Stem Peptide Release and Is Enhanced by NlpD in Neisseria gonorrhoeae

Jonathan D. Lenz; Elizabeth A. Stohl; Rosanna M. Robertson; Kathleen T. Hackett; Kathryn Fisher; Kalia Xiong; Mijoon Lee; Dusan Hesek; Shahriar Mobashery; H. Steven Seifert; Christopher Davies; Joseph P. Dillard

The human-restricted pathogen Neisseria gonorrhoeae encodes a single N-acetylmuramyl-l-alanine amidase involved in cell separation (AmiC), as compared with three largely redundant cell separation amidases found in Escherichia coli (AmiA, AmiB, and AmiC). Deletion of amiC from N. gonorrhoeae results in severely impaired cell separation and altered peptidoglycan (PG) fragment release, but little else is known about how AmiC functions in gonococci. Here, we demonstrated that gonococcal AmiC can act on macromolecular PG to liberate cross-linked and non-cross-linked peptides indicative of amidase activity, and we provided the first evidence that a cell separation amidase can utilize a small synthetic PG fragment as substrate (GlcNAc-MurNAc(pentapeptide)-GlcNAc-MurNAc(pentapeptide)). An investigation of two residues in the active site of AmiC revealed that Glu-229 is critical for both normal cell separation and the release of PG fragments by gonococci during growth. In contrast, Gln-316 has an autoinhibitory role, and its mutation to lysine resulted in an AmiC with increased enzymatic activity on macromolecular PG and on the synthetic PG derivative. Curiously, the same Q316K mutation that increased AmiC activity also resulted in cell separation and PG fragment release defects, indicating that activation state is not the only factor determining normal AmiC activity. In addition to displaying high basal activity on PG, gonococcal AmiC can utilize metal ions other than the zinc cofactor typically used by cell separation amidases, potentially protecting its ability to function in zinc-limiting environments. Thus gonococcal AmiC has distinct differences from related enzymes, and these studies revealed parameters for how AmiC functions in cell separation and PG fragment release.

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Michael M. Cox

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Jocelyn L. Milner

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Joseph P. Dillard

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Jonathan D. Lenz

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Kathleen T. Hackett

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Marielle C. Gruenig

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Shelley L. Lusetti

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Sindhu Chitteni-Pattu

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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