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Dive into the research topics where JoLynn Troudt is active.

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Featured researches published by JoLynn Troudt.


Journal of Immunology | 2007

The Hypervirulent Mycobacterium tuberculosis Strain HN878 Induces a Potent TH1 Response followed by Rapid Down-Regulation

Diane J. Ordway; Marcela Henao-Tamayo; Marisa Harton; Gopinath S. Palanisamy; JoLynn Troudt; Crystal A. Shanley; Randall J. Basaraba; Ian M. Orme

The HN878 strain of Mycobacterium tuberculosis is regarded as “hypervirulent” due to its rapid growth and reduced survival of infected mice when compared with other clinical isolates. This property has been ascribed due to an early increase in type I IFNs and a failure to generate TH1-mediated immunity, induced by a response to an unusual cell wall phenolic glycolipid expressed by the HN878 isolate. We show, however, that although type I IFN does play an inhibitory role, this response was most apparent during the chronic disease stage and was common to all M. tuberculosis strains tested. In addition, we further demonstrate that the HN878 infection was associated with a potent TH1 response, characterized by the emergence of both CD4 and CD8 T cell subsets secreting IFN-γ. However, where HN878 differed to the other strains tested was a subsequent reduction in TH1 immunity, which was temporally associated with the rapid emergence of a CD4+CD25+FoxP3+CD223+IL-10+ regulatory T cell population. This association may explain the paradoxical initial emergence of a TH1 response in these mice but their relatively short time of survival.


Infection and Immunity | 2006

Role for Matrix Metalloproteinase 9 in Granuloma Formation during Pulmonary Mycobacterium tuberculosis Infection

Jennifer L. Taylor; Jessica M. Hattle; Steven A. Dreitz; JoLynn Troudt; Linda S. Izzo; Randall J. Basaraba; Ian M. Orme; Lynn M. Matrisian; Angelo A. Izzo

ABSTRACT Recent studies have shown that matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) are induced by Mycobacterium tuberculosis during pulmonary infection. Here, expression of MMP-9 during pulmonary M. tuberculosis infection was characterized to determine whether its production correlated with disease resistance in vivo and to determine what role, if any, MMP-9 might have in granuloma formation. Following aerosol infection with M. tuberculosis, dissemination of bacilli occurred earlier in the C57BL/6 resistant mouse strain than in the susceptible CBA/J strain, as was evident from an increased number of bacteria in the blood, spleen, and liver at day 14 after infection. In addition, early dissemination of the bacilli was associated with early induction of protective immunity as assessed from gamma interferon levels. Nonspecific blocking of MMPs in C57BL/6 mice early during infection reduced hematogenous spread of the bacilli, suggesting that MMPs indeed play a role in facilitating dissemination, likely via extracellular matrix degradation. The concentration of active MMP-9, specifically, was greater in the lungs of C57BL/6 mice than in those of the CBA/J mice at day 28, thereby suggesting that MMP-9 is not one of the MMPs directly involved in promoting early dissemination of M. tuberculosis. Instead, however, histological lung sections and flow cytometric analysis of lung cells from MMP-9-knockout mice showed that MMP-9 is involved in macrophage recruitment and granuloma development. These combined data support the idea that early MMP activity is an essential component of resistance to pulmonary mycobacterial infection and that MMP-9, specifically, is required for recruitment of macrophages and tissue remodeling to allow for the formation of tight, well-organized granulomas.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Portrait of a pathogen: the Mycobacterium tuberculosis proteome in vivo.

Nicole A. Kruh; JoLynn Troudt; Angelo Izzo; Jessica E. Prenni; Karen M. Dobos

Background Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), the causative agent of tuberculosis (TB), is a facultative intracellular pathogen that can persist within the host. The bacteria are thought to be in a state of reduced replication and metabolism as part of the chronic lung infection. Many in vitro studies have dissected the hypothesized environment within the infected lung, defining the bacterial response to pH, starvation and hypoxia. While these experiments have afforded great insight, the picture remains incomplete. The only way to study the combined effects of these environmental factors and the mycobacterial response is to study the bacterial response in vivo. Methodology/Principal Findings We used the guinea pig model of tuberculosis to examine the bacterial proteome during the early and chronic stages of disease. Lungs were harvested thirty and ninety days after aerosol challenge with Mtb, and analyzed by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. To date, in vivo proteomics of the tubercle bacillus has not been described and this work has generated the first large-scale shotgun proteomic data set, comprising over 500 unique protein identifications. Cell wall and cell wall processes, and intermediary metabolism and respiration were the two major functional classes of proteins represented in the infected lung. These classes of proteins displayed the greatest heterogeneity indicating important biological processes for establishment of a productive bacterial infection and its persistence. Proteins necessary for adaptation throughout infection, such as nitrate/nitrite reduction were found at both time points. The PE-PPE protein class, while not well characterized, represented the third most abundant category and showed the most consistent expression during the infection. Conclusions/Significance Cumulatively, the results of this work may provide the basis for rational drug design – identifying numerous Mtb proteins, from essential kinases to products involved in metal regulation and cell wall remodeling, all present throughout the course of infection.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Protection and Polyfunctional T Cells Induced by Ag85B-TB10.4/IC31® against Mycobacterium tuberculosis Is Highly Dependent on the Antigen Dose

Claus Aagaard; Truc Thi Kim Thanh Hoang; Angelo Izzo; Rolf Billeskov; JoLynn Troudt; Kim Arnett; Andrew Keyser; Tara Elvang; Peter Andersen; Jes Dietrich

Background Previously we have shown that Ag85B-TB10.4 is a highly efficient vaccine against tuberculosis when delivered in a Th1 inducing adjuvant based on cationic liposomes. Another Th1 inducing adjuvant, which has shown a very promising profile in both preclinical and clinical trials, is IC31®. In this study, we examined the potential of Ag85B-TB10.4 delivered in the adjuvant IC31® for the ability to induce protection against infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis. In addition, we examined if the antigen dose could influence the phenotype of the induced T cells. Methods and Findings We found that vaccination with the combination of Ag85B-TB10.4 and IC31® resulted in high numbers of polyfunctional CD4 T cells co-expressing IL-2, IFN-γ and TNF-α. This correlated with protection against subsequent challenge with M.tb in the mouse TB model. Importantly, our results also showed that both the vaccine induced T cell response, and the protective efficacy, was highly dependent on the antigen dose. Thus, whereas antigen doses of 5 and 15 µg did not induce significant protection against M.tb, reducing the dose to 0.5 µg selectively increased the number of polyfunctional T cells and induced a strong protection against infection with M.tb. The influence of antigen dose was also observed in the guinea pig model of aerosol infection with M.tb. In this model a 2.5 fold increase in the antigen dose reduced the protection against infection with M.tb to the level observed in non-vaccinated animals. Conclusions/Significance Small changes in the antigen dose can greatly influence the induction of specific T cell subpopulations and the dose is therefore a crucial factor when testing new vaccines. However, the adjuvant IC31® can, with the optimal dose of Ag85B-TB10.4, induce strong protection against Mycobacterium tuberculosis. This vaccine has now entered clinical trials.


Journal of Leukocyte Biology | 2008

Animal model of Mycobacterium abscessus lung infection

Diane J. Ordway; Marcela Henao-Tamayo; Erin E. Smith; Crystal A. Shanley; Marisa Harton; JoLynn Troudt; Xiyuan Bai; Randall J. Basaraba; Ian M. Orme; Edward D. Chan

Chronic lung disease as a result of Mycobacterium abscessus is an emerging infection in the United States. We characterized the lung immune responses in mice and guinea pigs infected with M. abscessus. C57BL/6 and leptin‐deficient ob/ob mice challenged with a low‐dose aerosol (LDA) of M. abscessus did not develop an infection. However, when challenged with a high‐dose aerosol (HDA), C57BL/6 and ob/ob mice developed an established infection and a pulmonary immune response consisting of an early influx of IFN‐γ+ CD4+ T cells; this immune response preceded the successful clearance of M. abscessus in both strains of mice, although mycobacterial elimination was delayed in the ob/ob mice. Infected guinea pigs showed an increased influx of lymphocytes into the lungs with bacterial clearance by Day 60. In contrast to the C57BL/6 and ob/ob mice and guinea pigs, IFN‐γ knockout (GKO) mice challenged with a LDA or HDA of M. abscessus showed a progressive lung infection despite a robust influx of T cells, macrophages, and dendritic cells, culminating in extensive lung consolidation. Furthermore, with HDA challenge of the GKO mice, emergence of IL‐4‐ and IL‐10‐producing CD4+ and CD8+ T cells was seen in the lungs. In conclusion, IFN‐γ is critically important in the host defense against M. abscessus. As the number of effective drugs against M. abscessus is limited, the GKO mice provide a model for in vivo testing of novel drugs.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2011

Metabolic Profiling of Lung Granuloma in Mycobacterium tuberculosis Infected Guinea Pigs: Ex vivo 1H Magic Angle Spinning NMR Studies

B. S. Somashekar; Anita G. Amin; Christopher D. Rithner; JoLynn Troudt; Randall J. Basaraba; Angelo A. Izzo; Dean C. Crick; Delphi Chatterjee

A crucial and distinctive feature of tuberculosis infection is that Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) resides in granulomatous lesion at various stages of disease development and necrosis, an aspect that is little understood. We used a novel approach, applying high resolution magic angle spinning nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (HRMAS NMR) directly to infected tissues, allowing us to study the development of tuberculosis granulomas in guinea pigs in an untargeted manner. Significant up-regulation of lactate, alanine, acetate, glutamate, oxidized and the reduced form of glutathione, aspartate, creatine, phosphocholine, glycerophosphocholine, betaine, trimethylamine N-oxide, myo-inositol, scyllo-inositol, and dihydroxyacetone was clearly visualized and was identified as the infection progressed. Concomitantly, phosphatidylcholine was down-regulated. Principal component analysis of NMR data revealed clear group separation between infected and uninfected tissues. These metabolites are suggestive of utilization of alternate energy sources by the infiltrating cells that generate much of the metabolites in the increasingly necrotic and hypoxic developing granuloma through the glycolytic, pentose phosphate, and tricarboxylic acid pathways. The most relevant changes seen are, surprisingly, very similar to metabolic changes seen in cancer during tumor development.


Infection and Immunity | 2005

Factors associated with severe granulomatous pneumonia in Mycobacterium tuberculosis-infected mice vaccinated therapeutically with hsp65 DNA.

Jennifer L. Taylor; Diane J. Ordway; JoLynn Troudt; Mercedes Gonzalez-Juarrero; Randall J. Basaraba; Ian M. Orme

ABSTRACT Resistant C57BL/6 mice infected in the lungs with Mycobacterium tuberculosis and then therapeutically vaccinated with Mycobacterium leprae-derived hsp65 DNA develop severe granulomatous pneumonia and tissue damage. Analysis of cells accumulating in the lungs of these animals revealed substantial increases in T cells secreting tumor necrosis factor alpha and CD8 cells staining positive for granzyme B. Stimulation of lung cells ex vivo revealed very high levels of interleukin-10, some of which was produced by B-1 B cells. This was probably an anti-inflammatory response, since lung pathology was dramatically worsened in B-cell gene-disrupted mice.


Infection and Immunity | 2011

Three Protein Cocktails Mediate Delayed-Type Hypersensitivity Responses Indistinguishable from That Elicited by Purified Protein Derivative in the Guinea Pig Model of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Infection

Hongliang Yang; JoLynn Troudt; Ajay Grover; Kimberly Arnett; Megan Lucas; Yun Sang Cho; Helle Bielefeldt-Ohmann; Jennifer L. Taylor; Angelo Izzo; Karen M. Dobos

ABSTRACT Purified protein derivative (PPD) is a widely used reagent for the diagnosis of Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection. Recently, the molecular composition of PPD was defined, with hundreds of mycobacterial protein representatives making up PPD. Which, if any, of these specific products drive the potency of PPD remains in question. In this study, two proteins (DnaK and GroEL2) previously identified as dominant proteins in PPD were tested for the capacity to induce delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) responses in H37Rv-infected or BCG-vaccinated guinea pigs. These two proteins were used in pull-down assays to identify interacting PPD products. Six proteins were identified as interacting partners with DnaK and GroEL2, i.e., Rv0009, Rv0475, Rv0569, Rv0685, Rv2626c, and Rv2632c. These six proteins were tested alone and in combination with DnaK and GroEL2 for the capacity to induce a DTH response in the guinea pig model. From these studies, two cocktails, DnaK/GroEL2/Rv0009 and DnaK/GroEL2/Rv0685, were found to induce DTH responses in H37Rv-infected or BCG-vaccinated guinea pigs that were indistinguishable from DTH responses driven by a PPD injection. The mechanism by which DTH responses were induced was elucidated by histologic examination, analysis of activated CD4+/CD8+ T cells, and cytokine mRNA expression at the site of the DTH response. PPD and the protein cocktails tested induced strong DTH responses in H37Rv-infected guinea pigs. Ex vivo phenotyping of T cells at the DTH site indicated that this response is mediated by activated CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, with increases in gamma interferon and tumor necrosis factor alpha, but not interleukin-10, at the site of the DTH response. Our results demonstrate for the first time that the PPD response can be mimicked at the molecular level with defined protein cocktails. The use of this defined product will allow a more thorough understanding of the DTH response and may provide a platform for more rapid and sensitive second-generation skin test reagents for the diagnosis of M. tuberculosis infection.


Cellular Microbiology | 2008

Mycobacterial infection induces the secretion of high-mobility group box 1 protein.

Ajay Grover; Jennifer L. Taylor; JoLynn Troudt; Andrew Keyser; Kirsa Sommersted; Alan R. Schenkel; Angelo Izzo

High‐mobility group box protein 1 (HMGB1) is a non‐histone nuclear protein that acts as a pro‐inflammatory cytokine and is released by monocytes and macrophages. Necrotic cells also release HMGB1 at the site of tissue damage which induces a variety of cellular responses, including the expression of pro‐inflammatory mediators. This study investigated the secretion of HMGB1 in mycobacterial infection by macrophages in vitro and in the lungs of infected guinea pigs. We observed that infection by mycobacterium effectively induced HMGB1 release in both macrophage and monocytic cell cultures. Culture filtrate proteins from Mycobacterium tuberculosis induced maximum release of HMGB1 compared with different subcellular fractions of mycobacterium. We demonstrated that HMGB1 is released in lungs during infection of M. tuberculosis in guinea pigs and increased HMGB1 secretion in lungs of guinea pigs was delayed by prior vaccination with Mycobacterium bovis BCG. The secretion of cytokines like tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF‐α) and Interleukin‐1β was significantly increased when M. bovis BCG‐infected cultures of J774A.1 cells were incubated with HMGB1. Among different mycobacterial toll‐like receptor ligands, heat‐shock protein 65 (HSP65) was found to be more potent in inducing HMGB1 secretion in RAW 264.7 cells. Pharmacological suppression of p38 or extracellular signal‐regulated kinase 1/2 mitogen‐activated protein kinases with specific inhibitors failed to inhibit HSP65‐induced HMGB1 release, but inhibition of c‐Jun NH2‐terminal kinase activation attenuated HMGB1 release. Inhibition of the inducible NO synthase and neutralizing antibodies against TNF‐α also reduced HMGB1 release stimulated by HSP65. We conclude that HMGB1 is secreted by macrophages during tuberculosis and it may act as a signal of tissue or cellular injury and enhances immune response.


Infection and Immunity | 2009

Kinetics of the Immune Response Profile in Guinea Pigs after Vaccination with Mycobacterium bovis BCG and Infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Ajay Grover; Jennifer L. Taylor; JoLynn Troudt; Andrew Keyser; Kimberly Arnett; Linda S. Izzo; Drew Rholl; Angelo A. Izzo

ABSTRACT The guinea pig model of tuberculosis is used extensively in assessing novel vaccines, since Mycobacterium bovis BCG vaccination effectively prolongs survival after low-dose aerosol infection with virulent M. tuberculosis. To better understand how BCG extends time to death after pulmonary infection with M. tuberculosis, we examined cytokine responses postvaccination and recruitment of activated T cells and cytokine response postinfection. At 10 weeks postvaccination, splenic gamma interferon (IFN-γ) mRNA was significantly elevated compared to the levels at 5 weeks in ex vivo stimulation assays. At 15, 40, 60, and 120 days postinfection, T-cell activation (CD4+ CD62Llow and CD8+ CD62Llow) and mRNA expression of IFN-γ, tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α), interleukin-1 (IL-1), IL-10, IL-12, and eomesodermin were assessed. Our data show that at day 40, BCG-vaccinated guinea pigs had significantly increased levels of IFN-γ mRNA expression but decreased TNF-α mRNA expression in their lungs compared to the levels in nonvaccinated animals. At day 120, a time when nonvaccinated guinea pigs succumbed to infection, low levels of IFN-γ mRNA were observed even though there were increasing levels of IL-1, IL-12, and IL-10, and the numbers of activated T cells did not differ from those in BCG-vaccinated animals. BCG vaccination conferred the advantage of recruiting greater numbers of CD4+ CD62Llow T cells at day 40, although the numbers of CD8+ CD62Llow T cells were not elevated compared to the numbers in nonvaccinated animals. Our data suggest that day 40 postinfection may be a pivotal time point in determining vaccine efficacy and prolonged survival and that BCG promotes the capacity of T cells in the lungs to respond to infection.

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Angelo Izzo

Colorado State University

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Ajay Grover

Colorado State University

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Andrew Keyser

Colorado State University

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Linda Izzo

Colorado State University

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Ian M. Orme

Colorado State University

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Karen M. Dobos

Colorado State University

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