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Dive into the research topics where Jay C. D. Hinton is active.

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Featured researches published by Jay C. D. Hinton.


Molecular Microbiology | 2002

Unravelling the biology of macrophage infection by gene expression profiling of intracellular Salmonella enterica.

Sofia Eriksson; Sacha Lucchini; Arthur R. Thompson; Mikael Rhen; Jay C. D. Hinton

For intracellular pathogens such as Salmonellae, Mycobacteriae and Brucellae, infection requires adaptation to the intracellular environment of the phagocytic cell. The transition from extracellular to intravacuolar environment has been expected to involve a global modulation of bacterial gene expression, but the precise events have been difficult to determine. We now report the complete transcriptional profile of intracellular Salmonella enterica sv. Typhimurium following macrophage infection. During replication in murine macrophage‐like J774‐A.1 cells, 919 of 4451 S. Typhimurium genes showed significant changes in transcription. The expression profile identified alterations in numerous virulence and SOS response genes and revealed unexpected findings concerning the biology of the Salmonella–macrophage interaction. We observed that intracellular Salmonella are not starved for amino acids or iron (Fe2+), and that the intravacuolar environment is low in phosphate and magnesium but high in potassium. S. Typhimurium appears to be using the Entner–Douderoff pathway to use gluconate and related sugars as a carbon source within macrophages. Almost half the in vivo‐regulated genes were of unknown function, suggesting that intracellular growth involves novel macrophage‐associated functions. This is the first report that identifies the whole set of in vivo‐regulated genes for any bacterial pathogen during infection of mammalian cells.


PLOS Genetics | 2008

Deep Sequencing Analysis of Small Noncoding RNA and mRNA Targets of the Global Post-Transcriptional Regulator, Hfq

Alexandra Sittka; Sacha Lucchini; Kai Papenfort; Cynthia M. Sharma; Katarzyna Rolle; Tim T. Binnewies; Jay C. D. Hinton; Jörg Vogel

Recent advances in high-throughput pyrosequencing (HTPS) technology now allow a thorough analysis of RNA bound to cellular proteins, and, therefore, of post-transcriptional regulons. We used HTPS to discover the Salmonella RNAs that are targeted by the common bacterial Sm-like protein, Hfq. Initial transcriptomic analysis revealed that Hfq controls the expression of almost a fifth of all Salmonella genes, including several horizontally acquired pathogenicity islands (SPI-1, -2, -4, -5), two sigma factor regulons, and the flagellar gene cascade. Subsequent HTPS analysis of 350,000 cDNAs, derived from RNA co-immunoprecipitation (coIP) with epitope-tagged Hfq or control coIP, identified 727 mRNAs that are Hfq-bound in vivo. The cDNA analysis discovered new, small noncoding RNAs (sRNAs) and more than doubled the number of sRNAs known to be expressed in Salmonella to 64; about half of these are associated with Hfq. Our analysis explained aspects of the pleiotropic effects of Hfq loss-of-function. Specifically, we found that the mRNAs of hilD (master regulator of the SPI-1 invasion genes) and flhDC (flagellar master regulator) were bound by Hfq. We predicted that defective SPI-1 secretion and flagellar phenotypes of the hfq mutant would be rescued by overexpression of HilD and FlhDC, and we proved this to be correct. The combination of epitope-tagging and HTPS of immunoprecipitated RNA detected the expression of many intergenic chromosomal regions of Salmonella. Our approach overcomes the limited availability of high-density microarrays that have impeded expression-based sRNA discovery in microorganisms. We present a generic strategy that is ideal for the systems-level analysis of the post-transcriptional regulons of RNA-binding proteins and for sRNA discovery in a wide range of bacteria.


PLOS Pathogens | 2006

H-NS mediates the silencing of laterally acquired genes in bacteria

Sacha Lucchini; Gary Rowley; Martin D. Goldberg; Douglas Hurd; Marcus Harrison; Jay C. D. Hinton

Histone-like nucleoid structuring protein (H-NS) is a modular protein that is associated with the bacterial nucleoid. We used chromatin immunoprecipitation to determine the binding sites of H-NS and RNA polymerase on the Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium chromosome. We found that H-NS does not bind to actively transcribed genes and does not co-localize with RNA polymerase. This shows that H-NS principally silences gene expression by restricting the access of RNA polymerase to the DNA. H-NS had previously been shown to preferentially bind to curved DNA in vitro. In fact, at the genomic level we discovered that the level of H-NS binding correlates better with the AT-content of DNA. This is likely to have evolutionary consequences because we show that H-NS binds to many Salmonella genes acquired by lateral gene transfer, and functions as a gene silencer. The removal of H-NS from the cell causes un-controlled expression of several Salmonella pathogenicity islands, and we demonstrate that this has deleterious consequences for bacterial fitness. Our discovery of this novel role for H-NS may have implications for the acquisition of foreign genes by enteric bacteria.


Molecular Microbiology | 2006

σE-dependent small RNAs of Salmonella respond to membrane stress by accelerating global omp mRNA decay

Kai Papenfort; Verena Pfeiffer; Franziska Mika; Sacha Lucchini; Jay C. D. Hinton; Jörg Vogel

The bacterial envelope stress response (ESR) is triggered by the accumulation of misfolded outer membrane proteins (OMPs) upon envelope damage or excessive OMP synthesis, and is mediated by the alternative sigma factor, σE. Activation of the σE pathway causes a rapid downregulation of major omp mRNAs, which prevents further build‐up of unassembled OMPs and liberates the translocation and folding apparatus under conditions that require envelope remodelling. The factors that facilitate the rapid removal of the unusually stable omp mRNAs in the ESR were previously unknown. We report that in Salmonella the ESR relies upon two highly conserved, σE‐controlled small non‐coding RNAs, RybB and MicA. By using a transcriptomic approach and kinetic analyses of target mRNA decay in vivo, RybB was identified as the factor that selectively accelerates the decay of multiple major omp mRNAs upon induction of the ESR, while MicA is proposed to facilitate rapid decay of the single ompA mRNA. In unstressed bacterial cells, the two σE‐dependent small RNAs function within a surveillance loop to maintain envelope homeostasis and to achieve autoregulation of σE.


Cell | 1992

The chromatin-associated protein H-NS interacts with curved DNA to influence DNA topology and gene expression

Tom Owen-Hughes; Graham D. Pavitt; Diogenes S. Santos; Julie M. Sidebotham; C. S. J. Hulton; Jay C. D. Hinton; Christopher F. Higgins

H-NS is an abundant structural component of bacterial chromatin and influences many cellular processes, including recombination, transposition, and transcription. We have studied the mechanism of action of H-NS at the osmotically regulated proU promoter. The interaction of H-NS with a curved DNA element located downstream of the proU promoter is required for normal regulation of expression. Heterologous curved sequences can replace the regulatory role of the proU curve. Hence, the luxAB and lacZ reporter genes, which differ in the presence or absence of a curve, can indicate very different patterns of transcription. H-NS interacts preferentially with these curved DNA elements in vitro. Furthermore, in vivo the interaction of H-NS with curved DNA participates in the control of plasmid linking number. The data suggest that H-NS-dependent changes in DNA topology play a role in the osmoregulation of proU expression.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

The transcriptional landscape and small RNAs of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium

Carsten Kröger; Shane C. Dillon; Andrew D. S. Cameron; Kai Papenfort; Sathesh K. Sivasankaran; Karsten Hokamp; Yanjie Chao; Alexandra Sittka; Magali Hébrard; Kristian Händler; Aoife Colgan; Pimlapas Leekitcharoenphon; Gemma C. Langridge; Amanda J. Lohan; Brendan J. Loftus; Sacha Lucchini; David W. Ussery; Charles J. Dorman; Nicholas R. Thomson; Jörg Vogel; Jay C. D. Hinton

More than 50 y of research have provided great insight into the physiology, metabolism, and molecular biology of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium), but important gaps in our knowledge remain. It is clear that a precise choreography of gene expression is required for Salmonella infection, but basic genetic information such as the global locations of transcription start sites (TSSs) has been lacking. We combined three RNA-sequencing techniques and two sequencing platforms to generate a robust picture of transcription in S. Typhimurium. Differential RNA sequencing identified 1,873 TSSs on the chromosome of S. Typhimurium SL1344 and 13% of these TSSs initiated antisense transcripts. Unique findings include the TSSs of the virulence regulators phoP, slyA, and invF. Chromatin immunoprecipitation revealed that RNA polymerase was bound to 70% of the TSSs, and two-thirds of these TSSs were associated with σ70 (including phoP, slyA, and invF) from which we identified the −10 and −35 motifs of σ70-dependent S. Typhimurium gene promoters. Overall, we corrected the location of important genes and discovered 18 times more promoters than identified previously. S. Typhimurium expresses 140 small regulatory RNAs (sRNAs) at early stationary phase, including 60 newly identified sRNAs. Almost half of the experimentally verified sRNAs were found to be unique to the Salmonella genus, and <20% were found throughout the Enterobacteriaceae. This description of the transcriptional map of SL1344 advances our understanding of S. Typhimurium, arguably the most important bacterial infection model.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2009

Coding sequence targeting by MicC RNA reveals bacterial mRNA silencing downstream of translational initiation

Verena Pfeiffer; Kai Papenfort; Sacha Lucchini; Jay C. D. Hinton; Jörg Vogel

Bacterial small noncoding RNAs (sRNAs) generally recognize target mRNAs in the 5′ region to prevent 30S ribosomes from initiating translation. It was thought that the mRNA coding sequence (CDS) was refractory to sRNA-mediated repression, because elongating 70S ribosomes have an efficient RNA helicase activity that prevents stable target pairing. We report that the Hfq-associated MicC sRNA silences Salmonella typhimurium ompD mRNA via a ≤12-bp RNA duplex within the CDS (codons 23–26) that is essential and sufficient for repression. MicC does not inhibit translational initiation at this downstream position but instead acts by accelerating RNase E–dependent ompD mRNA decay. We propose an alternative gene-silencing pathway within bacterial CDS wherein sRNAs repress targets by endonucleolytic mRNA destabilization rather than by the prototypical inhibition of translational initiation. The discovery of CDS targeting markedly expands the sequence space for sRNA target predictions in bacteria.


The EMBO Journal | 1994

The chromatin-associated protein H-NS alters DNA topology in vitro.

A.E. Tupper; Tom Owen-Hughes; David W. Ussery; Diogenes S. Santos; D. J. P. Ferguson; Julie M. Sidebotham; Jay C. D. Hinton; Christopher F. Higgins

H‐NS is one of the two most abundant proteins in the bacterial nucleoid and influences the expression of a number of genes. We have studied the interaction of H‐NS with DNA; purified H‐NS was demonstrated to constrain negative DNA supercoils in vitro. This provides support for the hypothesis that H‐NS influences transcription via changes in DNA topology, and is evidence of a structural role for H‐NS in bacterial chromatin. The effects of H‐NS on topology were only observed at sub‐saturating concentrations of the protein. In addition, a preferred binding site on DNA was identified by DNase I footprinting at sub‐saturating H‐NS concentrations. This site corresponded to a curved sequence element which we previously showed, by in vivo studies, to be a site at which H‐NS influences transcription of the proU operon. When present in saturating concentrations, H‐NS did not constrain supercoils and bound to DNA in a sequence‐independent fashion, covering all DNA molecules from end to end, suggesting that H‐NS may form distinct complexes with DNA at different H‐NS:DNA ratios. The data presented here provide direct support for the hypothesis that H‐NS acts at specific sites to influence DNA topology and, hence, transcription.


Cellular Microbiology | 2008

During infection of epithelial cells Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium undergoes a time-dependent transcriptional adaptation that results in simultaneous expression of three type 3 secretion systems

Isabelle Hautefort; Arthur R. Thompson; S. Eriksson-Ygberg; M. L. Parker; Sacha Lucchini; Vittoria Danino; Roy J. Bongaerts; N. Ahmad; Mikael Rhen; Jay C. D. Hinton

The biogenesis of the Salmonella‐containing vacuole within mammalian cells has been intensively studied over recent years. However, the ability of Salmonella to sense and adapt to the intracellular environment of different types of host cells has received much less attention. To address this issue, we report the transcriptome of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium SL1344 within epithelial cells and show comparisons with Salmonella gene expression inside macrophages. We report that S. Typhimurium expresses a characteristic intracellular transcriptomic signature in response to the environments it encounters within different cell types. The signature involves the upregulation of the mgtBC, pstACS and iro genes for magnesium, phosphate and iron uptake, and Salmonella pathogenicity island 2 (SPI2). Surprisingly, in addition to SPI2, the invasion‐associated SPI1 pathogenicity island and the genes involved in flagellar biosynthesis were expressed inside epithelial cells at later stages of the infection, while they were constantly downregulated in macrophage‐like cells. To our knowledge, this is the first report of the simultaneous transcription of all three Type Three Secretion Systems (T3SS) within an intracellular Salmonella population. We discovered that S. Typhimurium strain SL1344 was strongly cytotoxic to epithelial cells after 6 h of infection and hypothesize that the time‐dependent changes in Salmonella gene expression within epithelial cells reflects the bacterial response to host cells that have been injured by the infection process.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

SseL, a Salmonella deubiquitinase required for macrophage killing and virulence

Anne Rytkönen; John Poh; Junkal Garmendia; Cliona Boyle; Arthur R. Thompson; Mei Liu; Paul S. Freemont; Jay C. D. Hinton; David W. Holden

Expression of the Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium pathogenicity island 2 (SPI-2) type III secretion system is controlled by the two-component regulatory system SsrA-SsrB. We used a transcriptomic approach to help define the SsrA-SsrB regulon. We identified a gene encoding an uncharacterized effector (SseL) whose translocation into host cells depends on the SPI-2 secretion system. SseL has similarities to cysteine proteases with deubiquitinating activity. A GST-SseL fusion protein specifically hydrolyzed mono- and polyubiquitin substrates in vitro with a preference for K63-linked ubiquitin chains. Ubiquitin-modified proteins accumulated in macrophages infected with Salmonella sseL mutant strains but to a lesser extent when infected with bacteria expressing active protein, demonstrating that SseL functions as a deubiquitinase in vivo. Salmonella sseL mutant strains did not show a replication defect or induce altered levels of cytokine production upon infection of macrophages but were defective for a delayed cytotoxic effect and were attenuated for virulence in mice.

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Jörg Vogel

University of Würzburg

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Gary Rowley

University of East Anglia

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