Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Heather E. Allison is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Heather E. Allison.


Future Microbiology | 2007

Stx-phages: drivers and mediators of the evolution of STEC and STEC-like pathogens

Heather E. Allison

Bacteriophages, also known as phages, are viruses that infect bacteria. Until recently they have been ignored by most of the scientific community, but their impact upon our world is enormous. They are the most abundant lifeform on the globe and drive the diversity and abundance of bacteria around us, including, in many instances, the pathogenic profiles of many of mankinds most feared bacterial pathogens. This article focuses on how a group of bacteriophages, Stx-phages, which carry the genes encoding Shiga toxin, have driven and are driving the emergence of Shiga toxin-producing pathogens such as the infamous Escherichia coli O157:H7. Since the emergence of this foodborne pathogen as a cause of significant human disease in 1982, more than 500 different serogroups of E. coli have been reported to produce Shiga toxin, as well as a few other organisms. These events and many more are all controlled by the biology of Stx-phages.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2001

Lytic and lysogenic infection of diverse Escherichia coli and Shigella strains with a verocytotoxigenic bacteriophage.

Chloe E. James; Karen N. Stanley; Heather E. Allison; Harry J. Flint; Colin S. Stewart; Richard J. Sharp; Jon R. Saunders; Alan J. McCarthy

ABSTRACT A verocytotoxigenic bacteriophage isolated from a strain of enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli O157, into which a kanamycin resistance gene (aph3) had been inserted to inactivate the verocytotoxin gene (vt2), was used to infect Enterobacteriaceae strains. A number ofShigella and E. coli strains were susceptible to lysogenic infection, and a smooth E. coli isolate (O107) was also susceptible to lytic infection. The lysogenized strains included different smooth E. coli serotypes of both human and animal origin, indicating that this bacteriophage has a substantial capacity to disseminate verocytotoxin genes. A novel indirect plaque assay utilizing an E. coli recA441 mutant in which phage-infected cells can enter only the lytic cycle, enabling detection of all infective phage, was developed.


Infection and Immunity | 2003

Immunity profiles of wild-type and recombinant shiga-like toxin-encoding bacteriophages and characterization of novel double lysogens.

Heather E. Allison; Martin J. Sergeant; Chloe E. James; Jon R. Saunders; Darren Smith; Richard J. Sharp; Trevor S. Marks; Alan J. McCarthy

ABSTRACT The pathogenicity of Shiga-like toxin (stx)-producing Escherichia coli (STEC), notably serotype O157, the causative agent of hemorrhagic colitis, hemolytic-uremic syndrome, and thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura, is based partly on the presence of genes (stx1 and/or stx2) that are known to be carried on temperate lambdoid bacteriophages. Stx phages were isolated from different STEC strains and found to have genome sizes in the range of 48 to 62 kb and to carry either stx1 or stx2 genes. Restriction fragment length polymorphism patterns and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis protein profiles were relatively uninformative, but the phages could be differentiated according to their immunity profiles. Furthermore, these were sufficiently sensitive to enable the identification and differentiation of two different phages, both carrying the genes for Stx2 and originating from the same STEC host strain. The immunity profiles of the different Stx phages did not conform to the model established for bacteriophage lambda, in that the pattern of individual Stx phage infection of various lysogens was neither expected nor predicted. Unexpected differences were also observed among Stx phages in their relative lytic productivity within a single host. Two antibiotic resistance markers were used to tag a recombinant phage in which the stx genes were inactivated, enabling the first reported observation of the simultaneous infection of a single host with two genetically identical Stx phages. The data demonstrate that, although Stx phages are members of the lambdoid family, their replication and infection control strategies are not necessarily identical to the archetypical bacteriophage λ, and this could be responsible for the widespread occurrence of stx genes across a diverse range of E. coli serotypes.


BMC Genomics | 2012

Comparative genomics of Shiga toxin encoding bacteriophages

Darren Smith; David J. Rooks; Paul C. M. Fogg; Alistair C. Darby; Nicholas R. Thomson; Alan J. McCarthy; Heather E. Allison

BackgroundStx bacteriophages are responsible for driving the dissemination of Stx toxin genes (stx) across their bacterial host range. Lysogens carrying Stx phages can cause severe, life-threatening disease and Stx toxin is an integral virulence factor. The Stx-bacteriophage vB_EcoP-24B, commonly referred to as Ф24B, is capable of multiply infecting a single bacterial host cell at a high frequency, with secondary infection increasing the rate at which subsequent bacteriophage infections can occur. This is biologically unusual, therefore determining the genomic content and context of Ф24B compared to other lambdoid Stx phages is important to understanding the factors controlling this phenomenon and determining whether they occur in other Stx phages.ResultsThe genome of the Stx2 encoding phage, Ф24B was sequenced and annotated. The genomic organisation and general features are similar to other sequenced Stx bacteriophages induced from Enterohaemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC), however Ф24B possesses significant regions of heterogeneity, with implications for phage biology and behaviour. The Ф24B genome was compared to other sequenced Stx phages and the archetypal lambdoid phage, lambda, using the Circos genome comparison tool and a PCR-based multi-loci comparison system.ConclusionsThe data support the hypothesis that Stx phages are mosaic, and recombination events between the host, phages and their remnants within the same infected bacterial cell will continue to drive the evolution of Stx phage variants and the subsequent dissemination of shigatoxigenic potential.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2007

Short-Tailed Stx Phages Exploit the Conserved YaeT Protein To Disseminate Shiga Toxin Genes among Enterobacteria

Darren Smith; Chloe E. James; Martin J. Sergeant; Yan Yaxian; Jon R. Saunders; Alan J. McCarthy; Heather E. Allison

Infection of Escherichia coli by Shiga toxin-encoding bacteriophages (Stx phages) was the pivotal event in the evolution of the deadly Shiga toxin-encoding E. coli (STEC), of which serotype O157:H7 is the most notorious. The number of different bacterial species and strains reported to produce Shiga toxin is now more than 500, since the first reported STEC infection outbreak in 1982. Clearly, Stx phages are spreading rapidly, but the underlying mechanism for this dissemination has not been explained. Here we show that an essential and highly conserved gene product, YaeT, which has an essential role in the insertion of proteins in the gram-negative bacterial outer membrane, is the surface molecule recognized by the majority (ca. 70%) of Stx phages via conserved tail spike proteins associated with a short-tailed morphology. The yaeT gene was initially identified through complementation, and its role was confirmed in phage binding assays with and without anti-YaeT antiserum. Heterologous cloning of E. coli yaeT to enable Stx phage adsorption to Erwinia carotovora and the phage adsorption patterns of bacterial species possessing natural yaeT variants further supported this conclusion. The use of an essential and highly conserved protein by the majority of Stx phages is a strategy that has enabled and promoted the rapid spread of shigatoxigenic potential throughout multiple E. coli serogroups and related bacterial species. Infection of commensal bacteria in the mammalian gut has been shown to amplify Shiga toxin production in vivo, and the data from this study provide a platform for the development of a therapeutic strategy to limit this YaeT-mediated infection of the commensal flora.


Journal of Applied Microbiology | 2007

EFFECTS OF A NANOPARTICULATE SILICA SUBSTRATE ON CELL ATTACHMENT OF CANDIDA ALBICANS

Brian G. Cousins; Heather E. Allison; P. J. Doherty; C. Edwards; Michael Joseph Garvey; D. S. Martin; Rachel Williams

Aims:  To investigate the influence of silica nanoparticles on the attachment and growth of Candida albicans cells.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2005

Occurrence of hlyA and sheA Genes in Extraintestinal Escherichia coli Strains

Monika Kerényi; Heather E. Allison; István Bátai; Agnes Sonnevend; Levente Emödy; Nóra Plaveczky; Tibor Pál

ABSTRACT The association of a hemolytic phenotype with the carriage of the α-hemolysin gene (hlyA) and/or the silent hemolysin gene (sheA or clyA) among 540 extraintestinal clinical isolates of Escherichia coli and 110 fecal isolates from healthy individuals was investigated. Though HlyA is an important virulence factor in extraintestinal E. coli infection, the role of SheA is not completely clarified. Two hemolytic sheA+E. coli strains that lacked hlyA and possessed no other hemolysin genes were identified. No hlyA+sheA+ strains were identified, suggesting that there is possible incompatibility between hlyA and sheA in the chromosome of E. coli.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2008

Cellulose Degradation by Micromonosporas Recovered from Freshwater Lakes and Classification of These Actinomycetes by DNA Gyrase B Gene Sequencing

Alexandre B. de Menezes; Robert J. Lockhart; Michael J. Cox; Heather E. Allison; Alan J. McCarthy

ABSTRACT A number of Micromonospora strains isolated from the water column, sediment, and cellulose baits placed in freshwater lakes were shown to be able to degrade cellulose in lake water without any addition of nutrients. A selective isolation method was also developed to demonstrate that CFU arose from both spores and hyphae that inhabit the lake environment. Gyrase B gene sequencing performed on the isolates identified a number of new centers of variation within Micromonospora, but the most actively cellulolytic strains were recovered in a single cluster that equated with the type species of the genus, M. chalcea.


Environmental Microbiology | 2008

Detection of novel Fibrobacter populations in landfill sites and determination of their relative abundance via quantitative PCR.

James E. McDonald; Robert J. Lockhart; Michael J. Cox; Heather E. Allison; Alan J. McCarthy

Members of the bacterial genus Fibrobacter have long been considered important components of the anaerobic cellulolytic community in the herbivore gut, but their presence and activity in other environments is largely unknown. In this study, a specific polymerase chain reaction (PCR) primer set, targeting the 16S rRNA gene of Fibrobacter spp., was applied to community DNA from five landfill sites followed by temporal thermal gel electrophoresis (TTGE) analysis of cloned amplification products. Phylogenetic analysis of clone sequences indicated the presence of novel clusters closely related to the genus Fibrobacter. There are two named species, Fibrobacter succinogenes and F. intestinalis, and only two of the 58 sequenced clones were identified with them, and both were F. succinogenes. The clone sequences from landfill were recovered in five distinct clusters within the Fibrobacter lineage, and four of these were novel. Quantitative PCR (qPCR) assays of reverse-transcribed community RNA from landfill leachates and rumen fluid samples indicated that the abundance of Fibrobacter spp. relative to total bacteria varied from 0.2% to 40% in landfill, and 21% to 32% in the rumen, and these data demonstrate that fibrobacters can be a significant component of the microbial community in landfill ecosystems. This is the first evidence for Fibrobacter spp. outside the gut ecosystem, and as the only cultivated representatives of this group are actively cellulolytic, their diversity and abundance points to a possible role in cellulose hydrolysis in landfill, and perhaps other anaerobic environments also.


Environmental Microbiology | 2010

Development and validation of a qPCR‐based method for quantifying Shiga toxin‐encoding and other lambdoid bacteriophages

David J. Rooks; Yaxian Yan; James E. McDonald; Martin J. Woodward; Alan J. McCarthy; Heather E. Allison

To address whether seasonal variability exists among Shiga toxin-encoding bacteriophage (Stx phage) numbers on a cattle farm, conventional plaque assay was performed on water samples collected over a 17 month period. Distinct seasonal variation in bacteriophage numbers was evident, peaking between June and August. Removal of cattle from the pasture precipitated a reduction in bacteriophage numbers, and during the winter months, no bacteriophage infecting Escherichia coli were detected, a surprising occurrence considering that 10(31) tailed-bacteriophages are estimated to populate the globe. To address this discrepancy a culture-independent method based on quantitative PCR was developed. Primers targeting the Q gene and stx genes were designed that accurately and discriminately quantified artificial mixed lambdoid bacteriophage populations. Application of these primer sets to water samples possessing no detectable phages by plaque assay, demonstrated that the number of lambdoid bacteriophage ranged from 4.7 x 10(4) to 6.5 x 10(6) ml(-1), with one in 10(3) free lambdoid bacteriophages carrying a Shiga toxin operon (stx). Specific molecular biological tools and discriminatory gene targets have enabled virus populations in the natural environment to be enumerated and similar strategies could replace existing propagation-dependent techniques, which grossly underestimate the abundance of viral entities.

Collaboration


Dive into the Heather E. Allison's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Giles Holt

Northumbria University

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge