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Dive into the research topics where H. Robert Masure is active.

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Featured researches published by H. Robert Masure.


Molecular Microbiology | 1997

Contribution of novel choline-binding proteins to adherence, colonization and immunogenicity of Streptococcus pneumoniae

Carsten Rosenow; Patricia A. Ryan; Jeffrey N. Weiser; Syd Johnson; Patricia Fontan; Ake Ortqvist; H. Robert Masure

The surface of Streptococcus pneumoniae is decorated with a family of choline‐binding proteins (CBPs) that are non‐covalently bound to the phosphorylcholine of the teichoic acid. Two examples (PspA, a protective antigen, and LytA, the major autolysin) have been well characterized. We identified additional CPBs and characterized a new CBP, CbpA, as an adhesin and a determinant of virulence. Using choline immobilized on a solid matrix, a mixture of proteins from a pspA‐deficient strain of pneumococcus was eluted in a choline‐dependent fashion. Antisera to these proteins passively protected mice challenged in the peritoneum with a lethal dose of pneumococci. The predominant component of this mixture, CbpA, is a 75‐kDa surface‐exposed protein that reacts with human convalescent antisera. The deduced sequence from the corresponding gene showed a chimeric architecture with a unique N‐terminal region and a C‐terminal domain consisting of 10 repeated choline‐binding domains nearly identical to PspA. A cbpA‐deficient mutant showed a >50% reduction in adherence to cytokine‐activated human cells and failed to bind to immobilized sialic acid or lacto‐N‐neotetraose, known pneumococcal ligands on eukaryotic cells. Carriage of this mutant in an animal model of nasopharyngeal colonization was reduced 100‐fold. There was no difference between the parent strain and this mutant in an intraperitoneal model of sepsis. These data for CbpA extend the important functions of the CBP family to bacterial adherence and identify a pneumococcal vaccine candidate.


Infection and Immunity | 2001

Use of a Whole Genome Approach To Identify Vaccine Molecules Affording Protection against Streptococcus pneumoniae Infection

Theresa M. Wizemann; Jon H. Heinrichs; John E. Adamou; Alice L. Erwin; Charles A. Kunsch; Gil H. Choi; Steven C. Barash; Craig A. Rosen; H. Robert Masure; Elaine Tuomanen; Anthony Gayle; Yambasu A. Brewah; William Walsh; Philip Barren; Raju Lathigra; Mark S. Hanson; Solomon Langermann; Syd Johnson; Scott Koenig

ABSTRACT Microbial targets for protective humoral immunity are typically surface-localized proteins and contain common sequence motifs related to their secretion or surface binding. Exploiting the whole genome sequence of the human bacterial pathogen Streptococcus pneumoniae, we identified 130 open reading frames encoding proteins with secretion motifs or similarity to predicted virulence factors. Mice were immunized with 108 of these proteins, and 6 conferred protection against disseminated S. pneumoniaeinfection. Flow cytometry confirmed the surface localization of several of these targets. Each of the six protective antigens showed broad strain distribution and immunogenicity during human infection. Our results validate the use of a genomic approach for the identification of novel microbial targets that elicit a protective immune response. These new antigens may play a role in the development of improved vaccines against S. pneumoniae.


Infection and Immunity | 2000

Role of novel choline binding proteins in virulence of Streptococcus pneumoniae.

Khoosheh Gosink; Elizabeth R. Mann; Chris Guglielmo; Elaine Tuomanen; H. Robert Masure

ABSTRACT The choline binding proteins (CBPs) are a family of surface proteins noncovalently bound to the phosphorylcholine moiety of the cell wall of Streptococcus pneumoniae by a conserved choline binding domain. Six new members of this family were identified, and these six plus two recently described cell wall hydrolases, LytB and LytC, were characterized for their roles in virulence. CBP-deficient mutants were constructed and tested for adherence to eukaryotic cells, colonization of the rat nasopharynx, and ability to cause sepsis. Five CBP mutants, CbpD, CbpE, CbpG, LytB, and LytC, showed significantly reduced colonization of the nasopharynx. For CbpE and -G this was attributable to a decreased ability to adhere to human cells. CbpG, a putative serine protease, also played a role in sepsis, the first observation of a pneumococcal virulence determinant strongly operative both on the mucosal surface and in the bloodstream.


Molecular Microbiology | 1996

Pyruvate oxidase, as a determinant of virulence in Streptococcus pneumoniae

Barbara Spellerberg; Diana R. Cundell; Jens Sandros; B. J. Pearce; Ilona Idanpaan-Heikkila; Carsten Rosenow; H. Robert Masure

Pneumococcus has been shown to bind to epithelial cells of the nasopharynx and lung, and to endothelial cells of the peripheral vasculature. To characterize bacterial elements required for attachment to these cell types, a library of genetically altered pneumococci with defects in exported proteins was screened for the loss of attachment to glycoconjugates representative of the nasopharyngeal cell receptor, type II lung cells (LC) and human endothelial cells (EC). A mutant was identified which showed a greater than 70% loss in the ability to attach to all cell types. This mutant also showed decreased adherence to the glycoconjugates containing the terminal sugar residues GalNAcβ1‐3Gal, GalNAcβ1‐4Gal and the carbohydrate GlcNAc, which are proposed components of the pneumococcal receptors specific to the surfaces of LC and EC. Analysis of the locus altered in this mutant revealed a gene, spxB, that encodes a member of the family of bacterial pyruvate oxidases which decarboxylates pyruvate to acetyl phosphate plus H2O2 and CO2. This mutant produced decreased concentrations of H2O2 and failed to grow aerobically in a chemically defined medium, unless supplemented with acetate which presumably restores acetyl phosphate levels by the action of acetate kinase, further suggesting that spxB encodes a pyruvate oxidase. The addition of acetate to the growth medium restored the adherence properties of the mutant indicating a link between the enzyme and the expression of bacterial adhesins. A defect in spxB corresponded to impaired virulence of the mutant in vivo. Compared to the parent strain, an spxB mutant showed reduced virulence in animal models for nasopharyngeal colonization, pneumonia, and sepsis. We propose that a mutation in spxB leads to down‐regulation of the multiple adhesive properties of pneumococcus which, in turn, may correlate to diminished virulence in vivo


Archive | 1997

Choline binding proteins for anti-pneumococcal vaccines

H. Robert Masure; Carsten Rosenow; Elaine Tuomanen; Theresa M. Wizemann


Archive | 1992

Analog of endothelial leukocyte adhesion molecule (elam)

Elaine Tuomanen; H. Robert Masure


Archive | 1994

Bacterial exported proteins and acellular vaccines based thereon

H. Robert Masure; B. J. Pearce; Elaine Tuomanen


Microbial Pathogenesis | 1993

The adenylate cyclase toxin contributes to the survival of Bordetella pertussis within human macrophages

H. Robert Masure


Archive | 1995

Antibody recognizing endothelial cell ligand for leukocyte cr3

Elaine Tuomanen; H. Robert Masure


Archive | 1998

Bacterial peptide methionine sulfoxide reductase an adhesion-associated protein, and antibiotic therapies based thereon

Elaine Tuomanen; H. Robert Masure; Theresa M. Wizemann

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Scott Koenig

National Institutes of Health

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Elizabeth R. Mann

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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