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Dive into the research topics where Jorge A. Benitez is active.

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Featured researches published by Jorge A. Benitez.


Infection and Immunity | 2006

Contribution of Hemagglutinin/Protease and Motility to the Pathogenesis of El Tor Biotype Cholera

Anisia J. Silva; Gordon J. Leitch; Andrew Camilli; Jorge A. Benitez

ABSTRACT Vibrio cholerae is a highly motile organism that secretes a Zn-dependent metalloprotease, hemagglutinin/protease (HapA). HapA has been shown to have mucinase activity and contribute to the reactogenicity of live vaccine candidates, but its role in cholera pathogenesis is not yet clear. The contribution of motility to pathogenesis is not fully understood, since conflicting results have been obtained with different strains, mutants, and animal models. The objective of this work was to determine the contribution of HapA and motility to the pathogenesis of El Tor biotype cholera. To this end we constructed isogenic motility (motY) and mucinase (hapA) single and double mutants of an El Tor biotype V. cholerae strain. Mutants were characterized for the expression of major virulence factors in vitro and in vivo. The motility mutant showed a remarkable increase in cholera toxin (CT), toxin coregulated pilus major subunit (TcpA), and HapA production in vitro. Increased TcpA and CT production could be explained by increased transcription of tcpA, ctxA, and toxT. No effect was detected on the transcription of hapA in the motility mutant. The sodium ionophore monensin diminished production of HapA in the parent but not in the motility mutant. Phenamil, a specific inhibitor of the flagellar motor, diminished CT production in the wild-type and motY strains. The hapA mutant showed increased binding to mucin. In contrast, the motY mutation diminished adherence to biotic and abiotic surfaces including mucin. Lack of HapA did not affect colonization in the suckling mouse model. The motility and mucinase defects did not prevent induction of ctxA and tcpA in the mouse intestine as measured by recombinase-based in vivo expression technology. Analysis of mutants in the rabbit ileal loop model showed that both V. cholerae motility and HapA were necessary for full expression of enterotoxicity.


Infection and Immunity | 2001

Environmental signals controlling production of hemagglutinin/protease in Vibrio cholerae

Jorge A. Benitez; Anisia J. Silva; Richard A. Finkelstein

ABSTRACT Vibrio cholerae hemagglutinin/protease (Hap) was induced upon nutrient limitation and strongly repressed by glucose. Hap was not produced in a mutant defective in the cyclic AMP (cAMP) receptor protein, suggesting that intracellular cAMP levels mediate Hap expression. No difference was found in Hap production between anrpoS deletion mutant and its isogenic wild-type precursor, indicating that the alternate ςs factor is not essential for Hap expression. Based on these and previous results, we discuss the role of Hap in the pathogenesis of cholera.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2004

Transcriptional Regulation of Vibrio cholerae Hemagglutinin/Protease by the Cyclic AMP Receptor Protein and RpoS

Anisia J. Silva; Jorge A. Benitez

Vibrio cholerae secretes a Zn-dependent metalloprotease, hemagglutinin/protease (HA/protease), which is encoded by hapA and displays a broad range of potentially pathogenic activities. Production of HA/protease requires transcriptional activation by the quorum-sensing regulator HapR. In this study we demonstrate that transcription of hapA is growth phase dependent and specifically activated in the deceleration and stationary growth phases. Addition of glucose in these phases repressed hapA transcription by inducing V. cholerae to resume exponential growth, which in turn diminished the expression of a rpoS-lacZ transcriptional fusion. Contrary to a previous observation, we demonstrate that transcription of hapA requires the rpoS-encoded sigma(s) factor. The cyclic AMP (cAMP) receptor protein (CRP) strongly enhanced hapA transcription in the deceleration phase. Analysis of rpoS and hapR mRNA in isogenic CRP+ and CRP- strains suggested that CRP enhances the transcription of rpoS and hapR. Analysis of strains containing hapR-lacZ and hapA-lacZ fusions confirmed that hapA is transcribed in response to concurrent quorum-sensing and nutrient limitation stimuli. Mutations inactivating the stringent response regulator RelA and the HapR-controlled AphA regulator did not affect HA/protease expression. Electrophoretic mobility shift experiments showed that pure cAMP-CRP and HapR alone do not bind the hapA promoter. This result suggests that HapR activation of hapA differs from its interaction with the aphA promoter and could involve additional factors.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2006

Polyphosphate Stores Enhance the Ability of Vibrio cholerae To Overcome Environmental Stresses in a Low-Phosphate Environment

Iqbal K. Jahid; Anisia J. Silva; Jorge A. Benitez

ABSTRACT Vibrio cholerae, the causative agent of Asiatic cholera, has been reported to make large quantities of polyphosphate. Inorganic polyphosphate is a ubiquitous molecule with a variety of functions in prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. We constructed a V. cholerae mutant with a deletion in the polyphosphate kinase (ppk) gene. The mutant was defective in polyphosphate biosynthesis. Deletion of ppk had no significant effect on production of cholera toxin, hemagglutinin/protease, motility, biofilm formation, and colonization of the suckling mouse intestine. The wild type and mutant had similar growth rates in rich and minimal medium and exhibited similar phosphate uptake and alkaline phosphatase induction. In contrast to ppk mutants from other gram-negative bacteria, the V. cholerae mutant survived prolonged starvation in LB medium and artificial seawater basal salts. The ppk mutant was significantly more sensitive to low pH, high salinity, and oxidative stress when it was cultured in low-phosphate minimal medium. The ppk mutant failed to induce catalase when it was downshifted to phosphorus-limiting conditions. Furthermore, the increased sensitivity of the ppk mutant to environmental stressors in phosphate-limited medium correlated with a diminished capacity to synthesize ATP from intracellular reservoirs. We concluded that polyphosphate protects V. cholerae from environmental stresses under phosphate limitation conditions. It has been proposed that toxigenic V. cholerae can survive in estuaries and brackish waters in which phosphorus and/or nitrogen can be a limiting nutrient. Thus, synthesis of large polyphosphate stores could enhance the ability of V. cholerae to survive in the aquatic environment.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2007

The Cyclic AMP Receptor Protein Modulates Colonial Morphology in Vibrio cholerae

Weili Liang; Anisia J. Silva; Jorge A. Benitez

ABSTRACT Inactivation of the quorum-sensing regulator HapR causes Vibrio cholerae El Tor biotype strain C7258 to adopt a rugose colonial morphology that correlates with enhanced biofilm formation. V. cholerae mutants lacking the cyclic AMP (cAMP) receptor protein (CRP) produce very little HapR, which results in elevated expression of Vibrio exopolysaccharide (vps) genes and biofilm compared to the wild type. However, Δcrp mutants still exhibited smooth colonial morphology and expressed reduced levels of vps genes compared to isogenic hapR mutants. In this study we demonstrate that deletion of crp and cya (adenylate cyclase) converts a rugose ΔhapR mutant to a smooth one. The smooth ΔhapR Δcrp and ΔhapR Δcya double mutants could be converted back to rugose by complementation with crp and cya, respectively. CRP was found to enhance the expression of VpsR, a strong activator of vps expression, but to diminish transcription of VpsT. Ectopic expression of VpsR in smooth ΔhapR Δcrp and ΔhapR Δcya double mutants restored rugose colonial morphology. Lowering intracellular cAMP levels in a ΔhapR mutant by the addition of glucose diminished VpsR expression and colonial rugosity. On the basis of our results, we propose a model for the regulatory input of CRP on exopolysaccharide biosynthesis.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2016

Vibrio cholerae Biofilms and Cholera Pathogenesis.

Anisia J. Silva; Jorge A. Benitez

Vibrio cholerae can switch between motile and biofilm lifestyles. The last decades have been marked by a remarkable increase in our knowledge of the structure, regulation, and function of biofilms formed under laboratory conditions. Evidence has grown suggesting that V. cholerae can form biofilm-like aggregates during infection that could play a critical role in pathogenesis and disease transmission. However, the structure and regulation of biofilms formed during infection, as well as their role in intestinal colonization and virulence, remains poorly understood. Here, we review (i) the evidence for biofilm formation during infection, (ii) the coordinate regulation of biofilm and virulence gene expression, and (iii) the host signals that favor V. cholerae transitions between alternative lifestyles during intestinal colonization, and (iv) we discuss a model for the role of V. cholerae biofilms in pathogenicity.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2008

Role of the histone-like nucleoid structuring protein in the regulation of rpoS and RpoS-dependent genes in Vibrio cholerae.

Anisia J. Silva; Syed Z. Sultan; Weili Liang; Jorge A. Benitez

Production of the Zn-metalloprotease hemagglutinin (HA)/protease by Vibrio cholerae has been reported to enhance enterotoxicity in rabbit ileal loops and the reactogenicity of live cholera vaccine candidates. Expression of HA/protease requires the alternate sigma factor sigma(S) (RpoS), encoded by rpoS. The histone-like nucleoid structuring protein (H-NS) has been shown to repress rpoS expression in Escherichia coli. In V. cholerae strains of the classical biotype, H-NS has been reported to silence virulence gene expression. In this study we examined the role of H-NS in the expression of HA/protease and motility in an El Tor biotype strain by constructing a Deltahns mutant. The Deltahns mutant exhibited multiple phenotypes, such as production of cholera toxin in nonpermissive LB medium, reduced resistance to high osmolarity, enhanced resistance to low pH and hydrogen peroxide, and reduced motility. Depletion of H-NS by overexpression of a dominant-negative allele or by deletion of hns resulted in diminished expression of HA/protease. Epistasis analysis of HA/protease expression in Deltahns, DeltarpoS, and Deltahns DeltarpoS mutants, analysis of RpoS reporter fusions, quantitative reverse transcription-PCR measurements, and ectopic expression of RpoS in DeltarpoS and DeltarpoS Deltahns mutants showed that H-NS posttranscriptionally enhances RpoS expression. The Deltahns mutant exhibited a lower degree of motility and lower levels of expression of flaA, flaC, cheR-2, and motX mRNAs than the wild type. Comparison of the mRNA abundances of these genes in wild-type, Deltahns, DeltarpoS, and Deltahns DeltarpoS strains revealed that deletion of rpoS had a more severe negative effect on their expression. Interestingly, deletion of hns in the rpoS background resulted in higher expression levels of flaA, flaC, and motX, suggesting that H-NS represses the expression of these genes in the absence of sigma(S). Finally, we show that the cyclic AMP receptor protein and H-NS act along the same pathway to positively affect RpoS expression.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2006

A Vibrio cholerae Relaxed (relA) Mutant Expresses Major Virulence Factors, Exhibits Biofilm Formation and Motility, and Colonizes the Suckling Mouse Intestine

Anisia J. Silva; Jorge A. Benitez

We have constructed a relaxed mutant of El Tor biotype Vibrio cholerae strain C7258 by disruption of the RelA catalytic domain. The ability of the V. cholerae relaxed mutant to biosynthesize guanosine tetraphosphate and pentaphosphate was severely affected; the mutant showed a reduced growth rate in minimal medium that could be reversed by the addition of Casamino Acids, and it was thermosensitive. Contrary to published findings, the new relA mutant still produced significant cholera toxin and toxin-coregulated pilus. The V. cholerae relA mutant was motile, produced normal biofilms, and colonized the suckling mouse intestine. Our data suggest that levels of basal guanosine nucleotides pppGpp and ppGpp, rather than the availability of a stringent response, could influence expression of virulence factors, depending on strain and culture conditions. Production of hemagglutinin (HA)/protease, which requires HapR, RpoS, and the cyclic AMP receptor protein, was not strongly affected. Nevertheless, overexpression of RelA protein from an isopropyl-beta-d-thiogalactopyranoside-inducible promoter posttranscriptionally diminished production of HA/protease.


Fems Microbiology Letters | 2010

The PhoB regulatory system modulates biofilm formation and stress response in El Tor biotype Vibrio cholerae

Syed Zafar Sultan; Anisia J. Silva; Jorge A. Benitez

The PhoBR regulatory system is required for the induction of multiple genes under conditions of phosphate limitation. Here, we examine the role of PhoB in biofilm formation and environmental stress response in Vibrio cholerae of the El Tor biotype. Deletion of phoB or hapR enhanced biofilm formation in a phosphate-limited medium. Planktonic and redispersed biofilm cells of the DeltaphoB mutant did not differ from wild type for the expression of HapR, suggesting that PhoB negatively affects biofilm formation through an HapR-independent pathway. The DeltaphoB mutant exhibited elevated expression of exopolysaccharide genes vpsA and vpsL compared with the wild type. Deletion of hapR enhanced the expression of the positive regulator vpsT, but had no effect on the expression of vpsR. In contrast, deletion of phoB enhanced the expression of the positive regulator vpsR, but had no effect on the expression of hapR and vpsT. The DeltaphoB mutant was more sensitive to hydrogen peroxide compared with the wild type and with an isogenic DeltarpoS mutant. Conversely, the DeltaphoB mutant was more resistant to acidic conditions and high osmolarity compared with the wild type and with an isogenic DeltarpoS mutant. Taken together, our data suggest that phosphate limitation induces V. cholerae to adopt a free-swimming life style in which PhoB modulates environmental stress response in a manner that differs from the general stress response regulator RpoS.


Infection and Immunity | 2004

Induction of Interleukin-8 in T84 Cells by Vibrio cholerae

Xin Zhou; Da Q. Gao; Jane Michalski; Jorge A. Benitez; James B. Kaper

ABSTRACT The induction of interleukin-8 (IL-8) in vitro has been suggested to correlate with the reactogenicity of Vibrio cholerae vaccine candidates. V. cholerae vaccine candidate 638, a hemagglutinin protease/hap-defective strain, was recently reported to be well tolerated in human volunteers, suggesting a role for Hap in reactogenicity. We examined the role of hap in the induction of IL-8 in intestinal epithelial T84 cells. Wild-type V. cholerae strains 3038 and C7258 and a vaccine candidate strain, JBK70, induced levels of IL-8 similar to those of their isogenic hap mutants. Supernatant containing Hap did not stimulate IL-8 production at a variety of concentrations tested, suggesting that Hap itself does not induce IL-8 production. Furthermore, supernatant from CVD115, which had deletions of hap and rtxA (encoding repeats in toxin) and was derived from a reactogenic strain, CVD110, induced IL-8 production in T84 cells in a dose-dependent manner. The IL-8-stimulating activity of CVD115 culture supernatants was growth phase dependent and was strongest in stationary phase cultures. This IL-8 stimulator(s) was resistant to heat treatment but sensitive to proteinase. Protease activity in vitro did not correlate with the reactogenicity of V. cholerae vaccine candidates. Our data suggest that Hap is not an IL-8 inducer in T84 cells and that the IL-8 stimulator in the supernatant of V. cholerae culture may play a role in reactogenicity.

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Anisia J. Silva

Morehouse School of Medicine

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Hongxia Wang

Morehouse School of Medicine

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Julio C. Ayala

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Weili Liang

Morehouse School of Medicine

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Jian-He Wu

Morehouse School of Medicine

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