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Dive into the research topics where Janine T. Bossé is active.

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Featured researches published by Janine T. Bossé.


Microbes and Infection | 2002

Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae : pathobiology and pathogenesis of infection

Janine T. Bossé; Håkan Janson; Brian J. Sheehan; Amanda J. Beddek; Andrew N. Rycroft; J. Simon Kroll; Paul R. Langford

Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae causes porcine pleuropneumonia, a highly contagious disease for which there is no effective vaccine. This review considers how adhesins, iron-acquisition factors, capsule and lipopolysaccharide, RTX cytotoxins and other potential future vaccine components contribute to colonisation, to avoidance of host clearance mechanisms and to damage of host tissues.


Infection and Immunity | 2003

Identification of Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae Genes Important for Survival during Infection in Its Natural Host

Brian J. Sheehan; Janine T. Bossé; Amanda J. Beddek; Andrew N. Rycroft; J. Simon Kroll; Paul R. Langford

ABSTRACT Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae is a strict respiratory tract pathogen of swine and is the causative agent of porcine pleuropneumonia. We have used signature-tagged mutagenesis (STM) to identify genes required for survival of the organism within the pig. A total of 2,064 signature-tagged Tn10 transposon mutants were assembled into pools of 48 each, and used to inoculate pigs by the endotracheal route. Out of 105 mutants that were consistently attenuated in vivo, only 11 mutants showed a >2-fold reduction in growth in vitro compared to the wild type, whereas 8 of 14 mutants tested showed significant levels of attenuation in pig as evidenced from competitive index experiments. Inverse PCR was used to generate DNA sequence of the chromosomal domains flanking each transposon insertion. Only one sibling pair of mutants was identified, but three apparent transposon insertion hot spots were found—an anticipated consequence of the use of a Tn10-based system. Transposon insertions were found within 55 different loci, and similarity (BLAST) searching identified possible analogues or homologues for all but four of these. Matches included proteins putatively involved in metabolism and transport of various nutrients or unknown substances, in stress responses, in gene regulation, and in the production of cell surface components. Ten of the sequences have homology with genes involved in lipopolysaccharide and capsule production. The results highlight the importance of genes involved in energy metabolism, nutrient uptake and stress responses for the survival of A. pleuropneumoniae in its natural host: the pig.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2008

The Complete Genome Sequence of Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae L20 (Serotype 5b)

Simon J. Foote; Janine T. Bossé; Anne Bouevitch; Paul R. Langford; N. Martin Young; John H. E. Nash

There are 16 capsule-based serotypes of Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae, all of which are capable of causing disease in pigs. Here we report the finished and annotated genome sequence of the reference serotype 5b strain L20. This strain has a rough appearance and readily forms biofilms, as is typical for most field isolates.


Infection and Immunity | 2004

Two TonB Systems in Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae: Their Roles in Iron Acquisition and Virulence

Amanda J. Beddek; Brian J. Sheehan; Janine T. Bossé; Andrew N. Rycroft; John Simon Kroll; Paul R. Langford

ABSTRACT Iron acquisition in vivo by Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae depends upon a functional TonB system. Tonpitak et al. (W. Tonpitak, S. Thiede, W. Oswald, N. Baltes, and G.-F. Gerlach, Infect. Immun. 68:1164-1170, 2000) have described one such system, associated with tbpBA encoding the transferrin receptor, and here we report a second, termed tonB2. This gene cluster (exbB2-exbD2-tonB2) is highly homologous to those in other Pasteurellaceae, unlike the earlier system described (now termed tonB1), suggesting that it is the indigenous system for this organism. Both tonB2 and tonB1 are upregulated upon iron restriction. TonB2, but not TonB1, was found to be essential for growth in vitro when the sole source of iron was hemin, porcine hemoglobin, or ferrichrome. In the case of iron provided as iron-loaded porcine transferrin, neither tonB mutant was viable. The tonB1 phenotype could be explained by a polar effect of the mutation on transcription of downstream tbp genes. We propose that TonB2 is crucial for the acquisition of iron provided in this form, interacting with accessory proteins of the TonB1 system that have been demonstrated to be necessary by Tonpitak et al. TonB2 appears to play a much more important role in A. pleuropneumoniae virulence than TonB1. In an acute porcine infection model, the tonB2 mutant was found to be highly attenuated, while the tonB1 mutant was not. We hypothesize that acquisition of the tonB1-tbp gene cluster confers a biological advantage through its capacity to utilize transferrin-iron but that TonB1 itself plays little or no part in this process.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2010

Regulation of pga Operon Expression and Biofilm Formation in Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae by σE and H-NS

Janine T. Bossé; Sunita Sinha; M S Li; C A O'Dwyer; John H. E. Nash; Andrew N. Rycroft; J S Kroll; Paul R. Langford

Clinical isolates of the porcine pathogen Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae often form adherent colonies on agar plates due to expression of an operon, pgaABCD, encoding a poly-beta-1,6-N-acetyl-D-glucosamine (PGA) extracellular matrix. The adherent colony phenotype, which correlates with the ability to form biofilms on the surfaces of polystyrene plates, is lost following serial passage in broth culture, and repeated passage of the nonadherent variants on solid media does not result in reversion to the adherent colony phenotype. In order to investigate the regulation of PGA expression and biofilm formation in A. pleuropneumoniae, we screened a bank of transposon mutants of the nonadherent serovar 1 strain S4074(T) and identified mutations in two genes, rseA and hns, which resulted in the formation of the adherent colony phenotype. In other bacteria, including the Enterobacteriaceae, H-NS acts as a global gene regulator, and RseA is a negative regulator of the extracytoplasmic stress response sigma factor sigma(E). Transcription profiling of A. pleuropneumoniae rseA and hns mutants revealed that both sigma(E) and H-NS independently regulate expression of the pga operon. Transcription of the pga operon is initiated from a sigma(E) promoter site in the absence of H-NS, and upregulation of sigma(E) is sufficient to displace H-NS, allowing transcription to proceed. In A. pleuropneumoniae, H-NS does not act as a global gene regulator but rather specifically regulates biofilm formation via repression of the pga operon. Positive regulation of the pga operon by sigma(E) indicates that biofilm formation is part of the extracytoplasmic stress response in A. pleuropneumoniae.


Infection and Immunity | 2008

Analysis of the Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae ArcA Regulon Identifies Fumarate Reductase as a Determinant of Virulence

Falk F. R. Buettner; Ibrahim M. Bendallah; Janine T. Bossé; Karla Dreckmann; John H. E. Nash; Paul R. Langford; Gerald-F. Gerlach

ABSTRACT The ability of the bacterial pathogen Actinobacilluspleuropneumoniae to grow anaerobically allows the bacterium to persist in the lung. The ArcAB two-component system is crucial for metabolic adaptation in response to anaerobic conditions, and we recently showed that an A. pleuropneumoniae arcA mutant had reduced virulence compared to the wild type (F. F. Buettner, A. Maas, and G.-F. Gerlach, Vet. Microbiol. 127:106-115, 2008). In order to understand the attenuated phenotype, we investigated the ArcA regulon of A. pleuropneumoniae by using a combination of transcriptome (microarray) and proteome (two-dimensional difference gel electrophoresis and subsequent mass spectrometry) analyses. We show that ArcA negatively regulates the expression of many genes, including those encoding enzymes which consume intermediates during fumarate synthesis. Simultaneously, the expression of glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, a component of the respiratory chain serving as a direct reduction equivalent for fumarate reductase, was upregulated. This result, together with the in silico analysis finding that A. pleuropneumoniae has no oxidative branch of the citric acid cycle, led to the hypothesis that fumarate reductase might be crucial for virulence by providing (i) energy via fumarate respiration and (ii) succinate and other essential metabolic intermediates via the reductive branch of the citric acid cycle. To test this hypothesis, an isogenic A. pleuropneumoniae fumarate reductase deletion mutant was constructed and studied by using a pig aerosol infection model. The mutant was shown to be significantly attenuated, thereby strongly supporting a crucial role for fumarate reductase in the pathogenesis of A. pleuropneumoniae infection.


Infection and Immunity | 2005

Deletion of the Ferric Uptake Regulator Fur Impairs the In Vitro Growth and Virulence of Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae

Ilse D. Jacobsen; Jörg Gerstenberger; Achim D. Gruber; Janine T. Bossé; Paul R. Langford; Isabel Hennig-Pauka; Jochen Meens; Gerald-F. Gerlach

ABSTRACT In order to investigate the role of the ferric uptake regulator Fur in the porcine lung pathogen Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae, we constructed an isogenic in-frame deletion mutant, A. pleuropneumoniae Δfur. This mutant showed constitutive expression of transferrin-binding proteins, growth deficiencies in vitro, and reduced virulence in an aerosol infection model.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2001

Novel Genes Affecting Urease Activity in Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae

Janine T. Bossé; Hali D. Gilmour; Janet I. MacInnes

Characterization of a series of urease-negative transposon mutations of Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae revealed that many of the mutants had insertions 2 to 4 kbp upstream of the urease gene cluster. A 5-kbp upstream region of DNA was sequenced and found to contain six open reading frames (ORFs) transcribed in the same orientation as the urease genes. As well, a partial ORF, apuR, 202 bp upstream of these six ORFs, is transcribed in the opposite orientation. The predicted product of this partial ORF shows homology with many members of the LysR family of transcriptional regulators. Five of the ORFs (cbiKLMQO) appear to form an operon encoding a putative nickel and cobalt periplasmic permease system. The cbiM and cbiQ genes encode proteins that have sequence similarity with known cobalt transport membrane proteins, and the cbiO gene encodes a cobalt transport ATP-binding protein homologue. The product of the cbiK gene is predicted to be the periplasmic-binding-protein component of the system, though it does not show any sequence similarity with CbiN, the cobalt-binding periplasmic protein. Escherichia coli clones containing this putative transport operon together with the urease genes of A. pleuropneumoniae were urease positive when grown in unsupplemented Luria-Bertani broth, whereas a clone containing only the minimal urease gene cluster required the addition of high concentrations of NiCl(2) for full urease activity. This result supports the hypothesis that nickel is a substrate for this permease system. The sixth ORF, utp, appears to encode an integral membrane protein which has significant sequence identity with mammalian urea transport proteins, though its function in A. pleuropneumoniae remains to be determined.


Proteomics | 2009

Analysis of the Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae HlyX (FNR) regulon and identification of iron-regulated protein B as an essential virulence factor

Falk F. R. Buettner; Ibrahim M. Bendalla; Janine T. Bossé; Jochen Meens; John H. E. Nash; Elisabeth Härtig; Paul R. Langford; Gerald-F. Gerlach

The Gram‐negative rod Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae is a facultative anaerobic pathogen of the porcine respiratory tract, and HlyX, the A. pleuropneumoniae homologue of fumarate and nitrate reduction regulator (FNR), has been shown to be important for persistence. An A. pleuropneumoniae hlyX deletion mutant has a decreased generation time but highly prolonged survival in comparison to its wild type parent strain when grown anaerobically in glucose‐supplemented medium. Applying a combination of proteomic and transcriptomic approaches as well as in silico analyses, we identified 23 different proteins and 418 genes to be modulated by HlyX (≥ twofold up‐ or down‐regulated). A putative HlyX‐box was identified upstream of 54 of these genes implying direct control by HlyX. Consistent with its role as a strong positive regulator, HlyX induced the expression of genes for anaerobic metabolism encoding alternative terminal reductases and hydrogenases. In addition, expression of virulence‐associated genes encoding iron uptake systems, a putative DNA adenine modification system, and an autotransporter serine protease were induced by HlyX under anaerobic growth conditions. With respect to virulence‐associated genes, we focused on the iron‐regulated protein B (FrpB) as it is the outer membrane protein most strongly up‐regulated by HlyX. An frpB deletion mutant of A. pleuropneumoniae had the same growth characteristics as wild type grown aerobically and anaerobically. In contrast, A. pleuropneumoniae ΔfrpB did not cause any disease and could not be re‐isolated from experimentally infected pigs, thereby identifying FrpB as a previously unknown virulence factor.


Fems Microbiology Letters | 2009

Natural competence in strains of Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae

Janine T. Bossé; Sunita Sinha; Timo Schippers; J. Simon Kroll; Rosemary J. Redfield; Paul R. Langford

We have identified a highly transformable strain of Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae whose competence is regulated by the competence-activator Sxy as in other Pasteurellaceae. Other strains were poorly transformable or nontransformable. The genomes of two poorly transformable strains contain intact sets of competence genes. Moreover, we show that the low competence of one of these strains is not due to an inability to induce sxy expression or to a defect in Sxy function, suggesting that some other component of the competence system is defective. Although the A. pleuropneumoniae sxy gene has only 24% identity to its Haemophilus influenzae homologue, both genes fully complemented an H. influenzae sxy knockout, demonstrating that Sxy function is conserved throughout the Pasteurellaceae.

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Yanwen Li

Imperial College London

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Susanna Williamson

Animal and Plant Health Agency

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John H. E. Nash

National Research Council

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