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Dive into the research topics where Gwendolyn E. Wood is active.

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Featured researches published by Gwendolyn E. Wood.


Molecular Microbiology | 1994

Partial suppression of an Escherichia coli TonB transmembrane domain mutation (ΔV17) by a missense mutation in ExbB

Ray A. Larsen; Michael G. Thomas; Gwendolyn E. Wood; Kathleen Postle

Active transport of vitamin B12 and Fe(III)‐siderophore complexes across the outer membrane of Escherichia coli appears to be dependent upon the ability of the TonB protein to couple cytoplasmic membrane‐generated protonmotive force to outer membrane receptors. TonB is supported in this role by an auxiliary protein, ExbB, which, in addition to stabilizing TonB against the activities of endogenous envelope proteases, directly contributes to the energy transduction process. The topological partitioning of TonB and ExbB to either side of the cytoplasmic membrane restricts the sites of interaction between these proteins primarily to their transmembrane domains. In this study, deletion of valine 17 within the amino‐terminal transmembrane anchor of TonB resulted in complete loss of TonB activity, as well as loss of detectable in vivo crosslinking into a 59 kDa complex believed to contain ExbB. The ΔV17 mutation had no effect on TonB export. The loss of crosslinking appeared to reflect conformational changes in the TonB/ExbB pair rather than loss of interaction since ExbB was still required for some stabilization of TonBΔV17. Molecular modeling suggested that the ΔV17 mutation caused a significant change in the predicted conserved face of the TonB amino‐terminal membrane anchor. TonBΔV17 was unable to achieve the 23 kDa proteinase K‐resistant form in lysed sphaeroplasts that is characteristic of active TonB. Wild‐type TonB also failed to achieve the proteinase K‐resistant configuration when ExbB was absent. Taken together these results suggested that the ΔV17 mutation interrupted productive TonB–ExbB interactions. The apparent ability to crosslink to ExbB as well as a limited ability to transduce energy were restored by a second mutation (A39E) in or near the first predicted transmembrane domain of the ExbB protein. Consistent with the weak suppression, a 23 kDa proteinase K‐resistant form of TonBΔV17 was not observed in the presence of ExbBA39E. Neither the ExbBA39E allele nor the absence of ExbB affected TonB or TonBΔV17 export. Unlike the tonBΔV17 mutation, the exbBA39E mutation did not greatly alter a modelled ExbB transmembrane domain structure. Furthermore, the suppressor ExbBA39E functioned normally with wild‐type TonB, suggesting that the suppressor was not allele specific. Contrary to expectations, the TonBδV17, ExbBA39E pair resulted in a TonB with a greatly reduced half‐life (≅ 10 min). These results together with protease susceptibility studies suggest that ExbB functions by modulating the conformation of TonB.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2003

Function and Regulation of the Formate Dehydrogenase Genes of the Methanogenic Archaeon Methanococcus maripaludis

Gwendolyn E. Wood; Andrew K. Haydock; John A. Leigh

Methanococcus maripaludis is a mesophilic species of Archaea capable of producing methane from two substrates: hydrogen plus carbon dioxide and formate. To study the latter, we identified the formate dehydrogenase genes of M. maripaludis and found that the genome contains two gene clusters important for formate utilization. Phylogenetic analysis suggested that the two formate dehydrogenase gene sets arose from duplication events within the methanococcal lineage. The first gene cluster encodes homologs of formate dehydrogenase alpha (FdhA) and beta (FdhB) subunits and a putative formate transporter (FdhC) as well as a carbonic anhydrase analog. The second gene cluster encodes only FdhA and FdhB homologs. Mutants lacking either fdhA gene exhibited a partial growth defect on formate, whereas a double mutant was completely unable to grow on formate as a sole methanogenic substrate. Investigation of fdh gene expression revealed that transcription of both gene clusters is controlled by the presence of H(2) and not by the presence of formate.


Infection and Immunity | 2001

Haemophilus ducreyi Inhibits Phagocytosis by U-937 Cells, a Human Macrophage-Like Cell Line

Gwendolyn E. Wood; Susan M. Dutro; Patricia A. Totten

ABSTRACT Haemophilus ducreyi is a gram-negative obligate human pathogen that causes the genital ulcer disease chancroid. Chancroid lesions are deep necrotic ulcers with an immune cell infiltrate that includes macrophages. Despite the presence of these phagocytic cells, chancroid ulcers can persist for months and live H. ducreyi can be isolated from these lesions. To analyze the interaction of H. ducreyi with macrophages, we investigated the ability of H. ducreyi strain 35000 to adhere to, invade, and survive within U-937 cells, a human macrophage-like cell line. We found that although H. ducreyi strain 35000 adhered efficiently to U-937 cells, few bacteria were internalized, suggesting that H. ducreyiavoids phagocytosis by human macrophages. The few bacteria that were phagocytosed in these experiments were rapidly killed. We also found that H. ducreyi inhibits the phagocytosis of a secondary target (opsonized sheep red blood cells). Antiphagocytic activity was found in logarithmic, stationary-phase, and plate-grown cultures and was associated with whole, live bacteria but not with heat-killed cultures, sonicates, or culture supernatants. Phagocytosis was significantly inhibited after a 15-min exposure to H. ducreyi, and a multiplicity of infection of approximately 1 CFU per macrophage was sufficient to cause a significant reduction in phagocytosis by U-937 cells. Finally, all of nine H. ducreyi strains tested were antiphagocytic, suggesting that this is a common virulence mechanism for this organism. This finding suggests a mechanism by which H. ducreyi avoids killing and clearance by macrophages in chancroid lesions and inguinal lymph nodes.


Molecular Microbiology | 2012

RecA mediates MgpB and MgpC phase and antigenic variation in Mycoplasma genitalium, but plays a minor role in DNA repair

Raul Burgos; Gwendolyn E. Wood; Lei Young; John I. Glass; Patricia A. Totten

Mycoplasma genitalium, a sexually transmitted human pathogen, encodes MgpB and MgpC adhesins that undergo phase and antigenic variation through recombination with archived ‘MgPar’ donor sequences. The mechanism and molecular factors required for this genetic variation are poorly understood. In this study, we estimate that sequence variation at the mgpB/C locus occurs in vitro at a frequency of > 1.25 × 10−4 events per genome per generation using a quantitative anchored PCR assay. This rate was dramatically reduced in a recA deletion mutant and increased in a complemented strain overexpressing RecA. Similarly, the frequency of haemadsorption‐deficient phase variants was reduced in the recA mutant, but restored by complementation. Unlike Escherichia coli, inactivation of recA in M. genitalium had a minimal effect on survival after exposure to mitomycin C or UV irradiation. In contrast, a deletion mutant for the predicted nucleotide excision repair uvrC gene showed growth defects and was exquisitely sensitive to DNA damage. We conclude that M. genitalium RecA has a primary role in mgpB/C–MgPar recombination leading to antigenic and phase variation, yet plays a minor role in DNA repair. Our results also suggest that M. genitalium possesses an active nucleotide excision repair system, possibly representing the main DNA repair pathway in this minimal bacterium.


Infection and Immunity | 2013

Persistence, Immune Response, and Antigenic Variation of Mycoplasma genitalium in an Experimentally Infected Pig-Tailed Macaque (Macaca nemestrina)

Gwendolyn E. Wood; Stefanie L. Iverson-Cabral; Dorothy L. Patton; Peter Cummings; Yvonne T. Cosgrove Sweeney; Patricia A. Totten

ABSTRACT Mycoplasma genitalium is a sexually transmitted pathogen associated with several acute and chronic reproductive tract disease syndromes in men and women. To evaluate the suitability of a pig-tailed macaque model of M. genitalium infection, we inoculated a pilot animal with M. genitalium strain G37 in the uterine cervix and in salpingeal pockets generated by transplanting autologous Fallopian tube tissue subcutaneously. Viable organisms were recovered throughout the 8-week experiment in cervicovaginal specimens and up to 2 weeks postinfection in salpingeal pockets. Humoral and cervicovaginal antibodies reacting to MgpB were induced postinoculation and persisted throughout the infection. The immunodominance of the MgpB adhesin and the accumulation of mgpB sequence diversity previously observed in persistent human infections prompted us to evaluate sequence variation in this animal model. We found that after 8 weeks of infection, sequences within mgpB variable region B were replaced by novel sequences generated by reciprocal recombination with an archived variant sequence located elsewhere on the chromosome. In contrast, mgpB region B of the same inoculum propagated for 8 weeks in vitro remained unchanged. Notably, serum IgG reacted strongly with a recombinant protein spanning MgpB region B of the inoculum, while reactivity to a recombinant protein representing the week 8 variant was reduced, suggesting that antibodies were involved in the clearance of bacteria expressing the original infecting sequence. Together these results suggest that the pig-tailed macaque is a suitable model to study M. genitalium pathogenesis, antibody-mediated selection of antigenic variants in vivo, and immune escape.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Analysis of the mycoplasma genitalium MgpB adhesin to predict membrane topology, investigate antibody accessibility, characterize amino acid diversity, and identify functional and immunogenic epitopes

Stefanie L. Iverson-Cabral; Gwendolyn E. Wood; Patricia A. Totten

Mycoplasma genitalium is a sexually transmitted pathogen and is associated with reproductive tract disease that can be chronic in nature despite the induction of a strong antibody response. Persistent infection exacerbates the likelihood of transmission, increases the risk of ascension to the upper tract, and suggests that M. genitalium may possess immune evasion mechanism(s). Antibodies from infected patients predominantly target the MgpB adhesin, which is encoded by a gene that recombines with homologous donor sequences, thereby generating sequence variation within and among strains. We have previously characterized mgpB heterogeneity over the course of persistent infection and have correlated the induction of variant-specific antibodies with the loss of that particular variant from the infected host. In the current study, we examined the membrane topology, antibody accessibility, distribution of amino acid diversity, and the location of functional and antigenic epitopes within the MgpB adhesin. Our results indicate that MgpB contains a single transmembrane domain, that the majority of the protein is surface exposed and antibody accessible, and that the attachment domain is located within the extracellular C-terminus. Not unexpectedly, amino acid diversity was concentrated within and around the three previously defined variable regions (B, EF, and G) of MgpB; while nonsynonymous mutations were twice as frequent as synonymous mutations in regions B and G, region EF had equal numbers of nonsynonymous and synonymous mutations. Interestingly, antibodies produced during persistent infection reacted predominantly with the conserved C-terminus and variable region B. In contrast, infection-induced antibodies reacted poorly with the N-terminus, variable regions EF and G, and intervening conserved regions despite the presence of predicted B cell epitopes. Overall, this study provides an important foundation to define how different segments of the MgpB adhesin contribute to functionality, variability, and immunogenicity during persistent M. genitalium infection.


Infection and Immunity | 2018

Mycoplasma genitalium Nonadherent Phase Variants Arise by Multiple Mechanisms and Escape Antibody-Dependent Growth Inhibition

Raul Burgos; Gwendolyn E. Wood; Stefanie L. Iverson-Cabral; Patricia A. Totten

ABSTRACT Antigenic variation of the immunodominant MgpB and MgpC proteins has been suggested to be a mechanism of immune evasion of the human pathogen Mycoplasma genitalium, a cause of several reproductive tract disease syndromes. Phase variation resulting in the loss of adherence has also been documented, but the molecular mechanisms underlying this process and its role in pathogenesis are still poorly understood. In this study, we isolated and characterized 40 spontaneous, nonadherent phase variants from in vitro-passaged M. genitalium cultures. In all cases, nonadherence was associated with the loss of MgpBC protein expression, attributable to sequence changes in the mgpBC expression site. Phase variants were grouped into seven classes on the basis of the nature of the mutation. Consistent with the established role of RecA in phase variation, 31 (79.5%) variants arose via recombination with MgPa repeat regions that contain mgpBC variable sequences. The remaining mutants arose via nonsense or frameshift mutations. As expected, revertants were obtained for phase variants that were predicted to be reversible but not for those that arose via an irreversible mechanism. Furthermore, phase variants were enriched in M. genitalium cultures exposed to antibodies reacting to the extracellular, conserved C terminus of MgpB but not in cultures exposed to antibodies reacting to an intracellular domain of MgpB or the cytoplasmic HU protein. Genetic characterization of the antibody-selected phase variants confirmed that they arose via reversible and irreversible recombination and point mutations within mgpBC. These phase variants resisted antibody-mediated growth inhibition, suggesting that phase variation promotes immune evasion.


Sexually Transmitted Infections | 2011

O4-S2.06 A primate model of Mycoplasma genitalium cervical infection

Patricia A. Totten; Gwendolyn E. Wood; Stefanie L. Iverson-Cabral; Peter Cummings; Y Cosgrove Sweeney; Dorothy L. Patton

Background Mycoplasma genitalium (MG) is a newly recognised pathogen associated with acute and persistent reproductive tract infection in men and women. Understanding of the disease mechanisms, persistence and immune avoidance of this organism is hampered by the lack of a suitable animal model. Methods Female pigtail macaques (Macaca nemestrina) were inoculated cervically with ∼109 genome equivalents (∼108 ccus) of MG strain G37, then assessed at intervals over 8 weeks for the persistence of MG in lower tract specimens. Fallopian tube biopsies were collected via laparotomy at Weeks 4 and 8. Specimens were assessed for the presence of MG DNA by qPCR and for viable MG by growth in H broth and Vero cell co-cultures. Serum collected at intervals was evaluated by immunoblot and ELISA for reactivity to MG antigens. Finally the variable regions of the immunodominant surface antigens, MgpB and MgpC, were analysed by PCR cloning and sequencing to evaluate sequence variation during infection. Results Of the five primates inoculated cervically with MG, three were infected throughout the 8 weeks of the study, one maintained infection for 4 weeks and one resisted infection. Recovery of viable MG from lower reproductive tract sites was improved by co-culture in Vero cells followed by qPCR to measure an increase in MG genomes during culture. Growth in H broth, as determined by colour change proved an unreliable indicator of the presence of viable MG in the specimen possibly due to the presence of primate microorganisms that inhibit the growth of MG. No viable MG or MG DNA was detected in upper tract tissues in any of the primates perhaps suggesting that longer infection times or repeated inoculations are needed to achieve ascension in this model. Analysis of mgpB variable regions B and G indicated that after 8 weeks of infection the predominant expressed sequence changed from that of the G37C inoculum to 1 to 5 novel sequences consistent with recombination between the expression site and the MgPars. In contrast, no sequence variation was observed in the inoculum grown in vitro for a similar duration. Antibodies reactive with MG antigens, including the variable regions of MgpB and MgpC, were detected by immunoblot and ELISA in serum and cervical exudates. Conclusions The cervical inoculation model of pigtail macaques results in long-term infection and can be used to study the persistence of MG, development of antibodies and antigenic variation.


Science | 2001

The Genome of the Natural Genetic Engineer Agrobacterium tumefaciens C58

Derek W. Wood; João C. Setubal; Rajinder Kaul; Dave E. Monks; João Paulo Kitajima; Vagner K. Okura; Yang Zhou; Lishan Chen; Gwendolyn E. Wood; Nalvo F. Almeida; Lisa Woo; Yuching Chen; Ian T. Paulsen; Jonathan A. Eisen; Peter D. Karp; Donald Bovee; Peter Chapman; James B. Clendenning; Glenda Deatherage; Will Gillet; Charles E. Grant; Tatyana Kutyavin; Ruth Levy; Meng-Jin Li; Erin K. McClelland; Anthony Palmieri; Christopher K. Raymond; Gregory Rouse; Channakhone Saenphimmachak; Zaining Wu


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

Regulation of nif Expression in Methanococcus maripaludis ROLES OF THE EURYARCHAEAL REPRESSOR NrpR, 2-OXOGLUTARATE, AND TWO OPERATORS

Thomas J. Lie; Gwendolyn E. Wood; John A. Leigh

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Susan M. Dutro

University of Washington

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John A. Leigh

University of Washington

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Peter Cummings

University of Washington

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Raul Burgos

University of Washington

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