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Dive into the research topics where Jolanda Neef is active.

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Featured researches published by Jolanda Neef.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2006

Novel Surface Display System for Proteins on Non-Genetically Modified Gram-Positive Bacteria

Tjibbe Bosma; Rolf Kanninga; Jolanda Neef; Sandrine Audouy; Maarten L. van Roosmalen; Anton Steen; Girbe Buist; Jan Kok; Oscar P. Kuipers; George T. Robillard; Kees Leenhouts

ABSTRACT A novel display system is described that allows highly efficient immobilization of heterologous proteins on bacterial surfaces in applications for which the use of genetically modified bacteria is less desirable. This system is based on nonliving and non-genetically modified gram-positive bacterial cells, designated gram-positive enhancer matrix (GEM) particles, which are used as substrates to bind externally added heterologous proteins by means of a high-affinity binding domain. This binding domain, the protein anchor (PA), was derived from the Lactococcus lactis peptidoglycan hydrolase AcmA. GEM particles were typically prepared from the innocuous bacterium L. lactis, and various parameters for the optimal preparation of GEM particles and binding of PA fusion proteins were determined. The versatility and flexibility of the display and delivery technology were demonstrated by investigating enzyme immobilization and nasal vaccine applications.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Pyruvate Oxidase Influences the Sugar Utilization Pattern and Capsule Production in Streptococcus pneumoniae

Sandra M. Carvalho; Vahid Farshchi Andisi; Jolanda Neef; Oscar P. Kuipers; Ana Rute Neves; Jetta J. E. Bijlsma

Pyruvate oxidase is a key function in the metabolism and lifestyle of many lactic acid bacteria and its activity depends on the presence of environmental oxygen. In Streptococcus pneumoniae the protein has been suggested to play a major role in metabolism and has been implicated in virulence, oxidative stress survival and death in stationary phase. Under semi-aerobic conditions, transcriptomic and metabolite profiling analysis of a spxB mutant grown on glucose showed minor changes compared to the wild type, apart from the significant induction of two operons involved in carbohydrate uptake and processing. This induction leads to a change in the sugar utilization capabilities of the bacterium, as indicated by the analysis of the growth profiles of the D39 parent and spxB mutant on alternative carbohydrates. Metabolic analysis and growth experiments showed that inactivation of SpxB has no effect on the glucose fermentation pattern, except under aerobic conditions. More importantly, we show that mutation of spxB results in the production of increased amounts of capsule, the major virulence factor of S. pneumoniae. Part of this increase can be attributed to induction of capsule operon (cps) transcription. Therefore, we propose that S. pneumoniae utilizes pyruvate oxidase as an indirect sensor of the oxygenation of the environment, resulting in the adaption of its nutritional capability and the amount of capsule to survive in the host.


Infection and Immunity | 2011

Deletion of a Cation Transporter Promotes Lysis in Streptococcus pneumoniae

Jolanda Neef; Vahid Farshchi Andisi; Kwang S. Kim; Oscar P. Kuipers; Jetta J. E. Bijlsma

ABSTRACT Streptococcus pneumoniae is a significant human pathogen which causes respiratory and serious invasive diseases. Mg2+ is essential for life, and its concentration varies throughout the human body. Magnesium uptake plays an important role in the virulence of many bacterial pathogens. To study the Mg2+ uptake of S. pneumoniae strain D39, a mutant was generated in SPD1383, a P-type ATPase with homology to the Salmonella Mg2+ transporter MgtA, which has also been shown to be a Ca2+ exporter in strain TIGR4. Under low-Ca2+ conditions, mutation led to a growth defect in complex medium and the gene was nearly essential for growth under low-Mg2+ conditions. Addition of Mg2+ restored the normal growth of the mutant in all cases, but the addition of other divalent cations had no effect. Addition of Ca2+, Mn2+, and Zn2+ in the presence of high Mg2+ concentrations inhibited restoration of growth. The mutant was unable to proliferate in blood, which was also alleviated by the addition of Mg2+. The protein was located in the membrane and produced in various S. pneumoniae strains and pathogenic streptococcal species. Surprisingly, mutation of the gene led to an elevated toxicity for endothelial cells. This was caused by an increased amount of pneumolysin in the medium, mediated by elevated lysis of the mutant. Thus, in this study, we uncovered a role for SPD1383 in Mg2+ uptake and hypothesize that the protein is a Mg2+/Ca2+ antiporter. Furthermore, a disturbance in Mg2+ homeostasis seems to promote lysis of S. pneumoniae.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Active Immunization with an Octa-Valent Staphylococcus aureus Antigen Mixture in Models of S. aureus Bacteremia and Skin Infection in Mice

Sanne van den Berg; Dennis G. A. M. Koedijk; Jaap Willem Back; Jolanda Neef; Annette Dreisbach; Jan Maarten van Dijl; Irma A. J. M. Bakker-Woudenberg; Girbe Buist

Proteomic studies with different Staphylococcus aureus isolates have shown that the cell surface-exposed and secreted proteins IsaA, LytM, Nuc, the propeptide of Atl (pro-Atl) and four phenol-soluble modulins α (PSMα) are invariantly produced by this pathogen. Therefore the present study was aimed at investigating whether these proteins can be used for active immunization against S. aureus infection in mouse models of bacteremia and skin infection. To this end, recombinant His-tagged fusions of IsaA, LytM, Nuc and pro-Atl were isolated from Lactococcus lactis or Escherichia coli, while the PSMα1-4 peptides were chemically synthesized. Importantly, patients colonized by S. aureus showed significant immunoglobulin G (IgG) responses against all eight antigens. BALB/cBYJ mice were immunized subcutaneously with a mixture of the antigens at day one (5 μg each), and boosted twice (25 μg of each antigen) with 28 days interval. This resulted in high IgG responses against all antigens although the response against pro-Atl was around one log lower compared to the other antigens. Compared to placebo-immunized mice, immunization with the octa-valent antigen mixture did not reduce the S. aureus isolate P load in blood, lungs, spleen, liver, and kidneys in a bacteremia model in which the animals were challenged for 14 days with a primary load of 3 × 105 CFU. Discomfort scores and animal survival rates over 14 days did not differ between immunized mice and placebo-immunized mice upon bacteremia with S. aureus USA300 (6 × 105 CFU). In addition, this immunization did not reduce the S. aureus isolate P load in mice with skin infection. These results show that the target antigens are immunogenic in both humans and mice, but in the used animal models do not result in protection against S. aureus infection.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2014

Degradation of extracytoplasmic catalysts for protein folding in Bacillus subtilis.

Laxmi Krishnappa; Carmine G. Monteferrante; Jolanda Neef; Annette Dreisbach; Jan Maarten van Dijl

ABSTRACT The general protein secretion pathway of Bacillus subtilis has a high capacity for protein export from the cytoplasm, which is exploited in the biotechnological production of a wide range of enzymes. These exported proteins pass the membrane in an unfolded state, and accordingly, they have to fold into their active and protease-resistant conformations once membrane passage is completed. The lipoprotein PrsA and the membrane proteins HtrA and HtrB facilitate the extracytoplasmic folding and quality control of exported proteins. Among the native exported proteins of B. subtilis are at least 10 proteases that have previously been implicated in the degradation of heterologous secreted proteins. Recently, we have shown that these proteases also degrade many native membrane proteins, lipoproteins, and secreted proteins. The present studies were therefore aimed at assessing to what extent these proteases also degrade extracytoplasmic catalysts for protein folding. To this end, we employed a collection of markerless protease mutant strains that lack up to 10 different extracytoplasmic proteases. The results show that PrsA, HtrA, and HtrB are indeed substrates of multiple extracytoplasmic proteases. Thus, improved protein secretion by multiple-protease-mutant strains may be related to both reduced proteolysis and improved posttranslocational protein folding and quality control.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2014

Efficient production of secreted staphylococcal antigens in a non-lysing and proteolytically reduced Lactococcus lactis strain.

Jolanda Neef; Danny G. A. M. Koedijk; Tjibbe Bosma; Jan Maarten van Dijl; Girbe Buist

Cell surface-exposed and secreted proteins are attractive targets for vaccination against pathogenic gram-positive bacteria. To obtain sufficient amounts of such antigens, efficient protein production platforms are needed. In this study, a pipeline for the production and purification of surface-exposed and secreted antigens of the gram-positive bacterial pathogen Staphylococcus aureus is presented. Cytoplasmic or extracellular production of S. aureus antigens was achieved using the Lactococcus lactis strain PA1001, which lacks the major extracellular protease HtrA and the autolysin AcmA to minimize proteolysis and cell lysis, respectively. For most tested S. aureus antigens, secretory production directed by the signal peptide of the major secreted protein Usp45 of L. lactis resulted in higher yields than intracellular production without a signal peptide. Additionally, secretory production of His-tagged antigens allowed their facile one-step purification from the growth medium by metal affinity chromatography. For three of the purified antigens, biological activity was confirmed through enzyme activity assays. We, furthermore, show that the present pipeline can be used to produce staphylococcal antigens with an N-terminal AVI-tag for site-specific labeling with biotin or a C-terminal cell wall-binding domain for cell surface display. We conclude that our L. lactis-based pipeline allows the efficient production of S. aureus antigens and their subsequent purification in one step.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2015

Versatile vector suite for the extracytoplasmic production and purification of heterologous His-tagged proteins in Lactococcus lactis.

Jolanda Neef; Fin J. Milder; Danny G. A. M. Koedijk; Marindy Klaassens; Erik Heezius; Jos A. G. van Strijp; Andreas Otto; Doerte Becher; Jan Maarten van Dijl; Girbe Buist

Recent studies have shown that the Gram-positive bacterium Lactococcus lactis can be exploited for the expression of heterologous proteins; however, a versatile set of vectors suitable for inducible extracellular protein production and subsequent purification of the expressed proteins by immobilized metal affinity chromatography was so far lacking. Here we describe three novel vectors that, respectively, facilitate the nisin-inducible production of N- or C-terminally hexa-histidine (His6)-tagged proteins in L. lactis. One of these vectors also encodes a tobacco etch virus (TEV) protease cleavage site allowing removal of the N-terminal His6-tag from expressed proteins. Successful application of the developed vectors for protein expression, purification and/or functional studies is exemplified with six different cell wall-bound or secreted proteins from Staphylococcus aureus. The results show that secretory production of S. aureus proteins is affected by the position, N- or C-terminal, of the His6-tag. This seems to be due to an influence of the His6-tag on protein stability. Intriguingly, the S. aureus IsdB protein, which is phosphorylated in S. aureus, was also found to be phosphorylated when heterologously produced in L. lactis, albeit not on the same Tyr residue. This implies that this particular post-translational protein modification is to some extent conserved in S. aureus and L. lactis. Altogether, we are confident that the present vector set combined with the L. lactis expression host has the potential to become a very useful tool in optimization of the expression, purification and functional analysis of extracytoplasmic bacterial proteins.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2017

A Lactococcus lactis expression vector set with multiple affinity tags to facilitate isolation and direct labeling of heterologous secreted proteins

Francisco Romero Pastrana; Jolanda Neef; Jan Maarten van Dijl; Girbe Buist

The gram-positive bacterium Lactococcus lactis is a useful host for extracellular protein production. A main advantage of L. lactis over other bacterial expression systems is that lactococcal cells display low levels of autolysis and proteolysis. Previously, we developed a set of vectors for nisin-inducible extracellular production of N- or C-terminally hexa-histidine (His6)-tagged proteins. The present study was aimed at expanding our portfolio of L. lactis expression vectors for protein purification and site-specific labeling. Specifically, we present two new groups of vectors allowing N- or C-terminal provision of proteins with a Strep-tag II or AVI-tag. Vectors for AVI-tagging encode an additional His6-tag for protein purification. Another set of vectors allows removal of N-terminal Strep- or His6-tags from expressed proteins with the tobacco etch virus protease. Two possible applications of the developed vectors are presented. First, we show that Strep-tagged LytM of Staphylococcus aureus in the growth medium of L. lactis can be directly bound to microtiter plates coated with an affinity reagent and used for enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays. Second, we show that the AVI-tagged Sle1 protein from S. aureus produced in L. lactis can be directly biotinylated and fluorescently labeled. The fluorescently labeled Sle1 was successfully applied for S. aureus re-binding studies, allowing subcellular localization by fluorescence microscopy. In conclusion, we have developed a set of expression vectors that enhances the versatility of L. lactis as a system for production of proteins with tags that can be used for affinity purification and site-specific protein labeling.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Human antibody responses against non-covalently cell wall-bound Staphylococcus aureus proteins

Francisco Romero Pastrana; Jolanda Neef; Dennis G. A. M. Koedijk; Douwe De Graaf; José C. Duipmans; Marcel F. Jonkman; Susanne Engelmann; Jan Maarten van Dijl; Girbe Buist

Human antibody responses to pathogens, like Staphylococcus aureus, are important indicators for in vivo expression and immunogenicity of particular bacterial components. Accordingly, comparing the antibody responses to S. aureus components may serve to predict their potential applicability as antigens for vaccination. The present study was aimed at assessing immunoglobulin G (IgG) responses elicited by non-covalently cell surface-bound proteins of S. aureus, which thus far received relatively little attention. To this end, we applied plasma samples from patients with the genetic blistering disease epidermolysis bullosa (EB) and healthy S. aureus carriers. Of note, wounds of EB patients are highly colonized with S. aureus and accordingly these patients are more seriously exposed to staphylococcal antigens than healthy individuals. Ten non-covalently cell surface-bound proteins of S. aureus, namely Atl, Eap, Efb, EMP, IsaA, LukG, LukH, SA0710, Sle1 and SsaA2, were selected by bioinformatics and biochemical approaches. These antigens were recombinantly expressed, purified and tested for specific IgG responses using human plasma. We show that high exposure of EB patients to S. aureus is mirrored by elevated IgG levels against all tested non-covalently cell wall-bound staphylococcal antigens. This implies that these S. aureus cell surface proteins are prime targets for the human immune system.


Microbial Cell Factories | 2017

Intramembrane protease RasP boosts protein production in Bacillus

Jolanda Neef; Cristina Bongiorni; Vivianne J. Goosens; Brian Schmidt; Jan Maarten van Dijl

BackgroundThe microbial cell factory Bacillus subtilis is a popular industrial platform for high-level production of secreted technical enzymes. Nonetheless, the effective secretion of particular heterologous enzymes remains challenging. Over the past decades various studies have tackled this problem, and major improvements were achieved by optimizing signal peptides or removing proteases involved in product degradation. On the other hand, serious bottlenecks in the protein export process per se remained enigmatic, especially for protein secretion at commercially significant levels by cells grown to high density. The aim of our present study was to assess the relevance of the intramembrane protease RasP for high-level protein production in B. subtilis.ResultsDeletion of the rasP gene resulted in reduced precursor processing and extracellular levels of the overproduced α-amylases AmyE from B. subtilis and AmyL from Bacillus licheniformis. Further, secretion of the overproduced serine protease BPN’ from Bacillus amyloliquefaciens was severely impaired in the absence of RasP. Importantly, overexpression of rasP resulted in threefold increased production of a serine protease from Bacillus clausii, and 2.5- to 10-fold increased production of an AmyAc α-amylase from Paenibacillus curdlanolyticus, depending on the culture conditions. Of note, growth defects due to overproduction of the two latter enzymes were suppressed by rasP-overexpression.ConclusionHere we show that an intramembrane protease, RasP, sets a limit to high-level production of two secreted heterologous enzymes that are difficult to produce in the B. subtilis cell factory. This finding was unexpected and suggests that proteolytic membrane sanitation is key to effective enzyme production in Bacillus.

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Jan Maarten van Dijl

University Medical Center Groningen

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Girbe Buist

University Medical Center Groningen

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Annette Dreisbach

University Medical Center Groningen

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Tjibbe Bosma

University of Groningen

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