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Dive into the research topics where Judith H. Merritt is active.

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Featured researches published by Judith H. Merritt.


Current protocols in microbiology | 2011

Growing and analyzing static biofilms.

Judith H. Merritt; Daniel E. Kadouri; George A. O'Toole

Many bacteria can exist as surface-attached aggregations known as biofilms. Presented in this unit are several approaches for the study of these communities. The focus here is on static biofilm systems, which are particularly useful for examination of the early stages of biofilm formation, including initial adherence to the surface and microcolony formation. Furthermore, most of the techniques presented are easily adapted to the study of biofilms under a variety of conditions and are suitable for either small- or relatively large-scale studies. Unlike assays involving continuous-flow systems, the static biofilm assays described here require very little specialized equipment and are relatively simple to execute. In addition, these static biofilm systems allow analysis of biofilm formation with a variety of readouts, including microscopy of live cells, macroscopic visualization of stained bacteria, and viability counts. Used individually or in combination, these assays provide useful means for the study of biofilms.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2012

An engineered eukaryotic protein glycosylation pathway in Escherichia coli

Juan D Valderrama-Rincon; Adam C. Fisher; Judith H. Merritt; Yao-Yun Fan; Craig A. Reading; Krishan Chhiba; Christian Heiss; Parastoo Azadi; Markus Aebi; Matthew P. DeLisa

We performed bottom-up engineering of a synthetic pathway in Escherichia coli for the production of eukaryotic trimannosyl chitobiose glycans and the transfer of these glycans to specific asparagine residues in target proteins. The glycan biosynthesis was enabled by four eukaryotic glycosyltransferases, including the yeast uridine diphosphate-N-acetylglucosamine transferases Alg13 and Alg14 and the mannosyltransferases Alg1 and Alg2. By including the bacterial oligosaccharyltransferase PglB from Campylobacter jejuni, we successfully transferred glycans to eukaryotic proteins.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2010

Cyclic-di-GMP-mediated repression of swarming motility by Pseudomonas aeruginosa: the pilY1 gene and its impact on surface-associated behaviors.

Sherry L. Kuchma; Alicia E. Ballok; Judith H. Merritt; John H. Hammond; Wenyun Lu; Joshua D. Rabinowitz; George A. O'Toole

The intracellular signaling molecule cyclic-di-GMP (c-di-GMP) has been shown to influence surface-associated behaviors of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, including biofilm formation and swarming motility. Previously, we reported a role for the bifA gene in the inverse regulation of biofilm formation and swarming motility. The bifA gene encodes a c-di-GMP-degrading phosphodiesterase (PDE), and the Delta bifA mutant exhibits increased cellular pools of c-di-GMP, forms hyperbiofilms, and is unable to swarm. In this study, we isolated suppressors of the Delta bifA swarming defect. Strains with mutations in the pilY1 gene, but not in the pilin subunit pilA gene, show robust suppression of the swarming defect of the Delta bifA mutant, as well as its hyperbiofilm phenotype. Despite the ability of the pilY1 mutation to suppress all the c-di-GMP-related phenotypes, the global pools of c-di-GMP are not detectably altered in the Delta bifA Delta pilY1 mutant relative to the Delta bifA single mutant. We also show that enhanced expression of the pilY1 gene inhibits swarming motility, and we identify residues in the putative VWA domain of PilY1 that are important for this phenotype. Furthermore, swarming repression by PilY1 specifically requires the diguanylate cyclase (DGC) SadC, and epistasis analysis indicates that PilY1 functions upstream of SadC. Our data indicate that PilY1 participates in multiple surface behaviors of P. aeruginosa, and we propose that PilY1 may act via regulation of SadC DGC activity but independently of altering global c-di-GMP levels.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2011

Production of Secretory and Extracellular N-Linked Glycoproteins in Escherichia coli†

Adam C. Fisher; Charles Haitjema; Cassandra Guarino; Eda Çelik; Christine E. Endicott; Craig A. Reading; Judith H. Merritt; A. Celeste Ptak; Sheng Zhang; Matthew P. DeLisa

ABSTRACT The Campylobacter jejuni pgl gene cluster encodes a complete N-linked protein glycosylation pathway that can be functionally transferred into Escherichia coli. In this system, we analyzed the interplay between N-linked glycosylation, membrane translocation and folding of acceptor proteins in bacteria. We developed a recombinant N-glycan acceptor peptide tag that permits N-linked glycosylation of diverse recombinant proteins expressed in the periplasm of glycosylation-competent E. coli cells. With this “glycosylation tag,” a clear difference was observed in the glycosylation patterns found on periplasmic proteins depending on their mode of inner membrane translocation (i.e., Sec, signal recognition particle [SRP], or twin-arginine translocation [Tat] export), indicating that the mode of protein export can influence N-glycosylation efficiency. We also established that engineered substrate proteins targeted to environments beyond the periplasm, such as the outer membrane, the membrane vesicles, and the extracellular medium, could serve as substrates for N-linked glycosylation. Taken together, our results demonstrate that the C. jejuni N-glycosylation machinery is compatible with distinct secretory mechanisms in E. coli, effectively expanding the N-linked glycome of recombinant E. coli. Moreover, this simple glycosylation tag strategy expands the glycoengineering toolbox and opens the door to bacterial synthesis of a wide array of recombinant glycoprotein conjugates.


Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 2013

Glycans‐by‐design: Engineering bacteria for the biosynthesis of complex glycans and glycoconjugates

Judith H. Merritt; Anne A. Ollis; Adam C. Fisher; Matthew P. DeLisa

There is an urgent need for new tools that enable better understanding of the structure, recognition, metabolism, and biosynthesis of glycans as well as the production of biologically important glycans and glycoconjugates. With the discovery of glycoprotein synthesis in bacteria and functional transfer of glycosylation pathways between species, Escherichia coli cells have become a tractable host for both understanding glycosylation and the underlying glycan code of living cells as well as for expressing glycoprotein therapeutics and vaccines. Here, we review recent efforts to harness natural biological pathways and engineer synthetic designer pathways in bacteria for making complex glycans and conjugating these to lipids and proteins. The result of these efforts has been a veritable transformation of bacteria into living factories for scalable, bottom‐up production of complex glycoconjugates by design. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2013; 110: 1550–1564.


Metabolic Engineering | 2018

A flow cytometric approach to engineering Escherichia coli for improved eukaryotic protein glycosylation

Cameron J. Glasscock; Laura E. Yates; Thapakorn Jaroentomeechai; Joshua D. Wilson; Judith H. Merritt; Julius B. Lucks; Matthew P. DeLisa

A synthetic pathway for production of the eukaryotic trimannosyl chitobiose glycan (mannose3-N-acetylglucosamine2, Man3GlcNAc2) and its transfer to specific asparagine residues in target proteins was previously engineered in Escherichia coli, providing this simple microbe with the ability to perform a complex post-translational protein modification. Here, we leveraged a flow cytometric fluorescence-based assay to improve Man3GlcNAc2 glycan biosynthesis in E. coli cells. Specifically, pathway improvements were identified, including reducing pathway enzyme expression levels and overexpressing nucleotide sugar biosynthesis genes, which enhanced production of lipid-linked Man3GlcNAc2 by nearly 50-fold to 13.9 μg/L. In turn, cells producing higher levels of the Man3GlcNAc2 substrate yielded up to 10 times more glycosylated acceptor protein (to ~ 14 mg/L) than their non-optimized counterparts. These results demonstrate the use of flow cytometry screening as a powerful tool for interrogating the surfaces of glyco-engineered bacteria and identifying meaningful improvements in glycan biosynthesis. We anticipate this approach will enable further optimization of bacterial glycan biosynthesis pathways using new strain engineering tools from metabolic engineering and synthetic biology.


Scientific Reports | 2017

A library of chemically defined human N-glycans synthesized from microbial oligosaccharide precursors

Brian S. Hamilton; Joshua D. Wilson; Marina A. Shumakovich; Adam C. Fisher; James C. Brooks; Alyssa Pontes; Radnaa Naran; Christian Heiss; Chao Gao; Robert Kardish; Jamie Heimburg-Molinaro; Parastoo Azadi; Richard D. Cummings; Judith H. Merritt; Matthew P. DeLisa

Synthesis of homogenous glycans in quantitative yields represents a major bottleneck to the production of molecular tools for glycoscience, such as glycan microarrays, affinity resins, and reference standards. Here, we describe a combined biological/enzymatic synthesis that is capable of efficiently converting microbially-derived precursor oligosaccharides into structurally uniform human-type N-glycans. Unlike starting material obtained by chemical synthesis or direct isolation from natural sources, which can be time consuming and costly to generate, our approach involves precursors derived from renewable sources including wild-type Saccharomyces cerevisiae glycoproteins and lipid-linked oligosaccharides from glycoengineered Escherichia coli. Following deglycosylation of these biosynthetic precursors, the resulting microbial oligosaccharides are subjected to a greatly simplified purification scheme followed by structural remodeling using commercially available and recombinantly produced glycosyltransferases including key N-acetylglucosaminyltransferases (e.g., GnTI, GnTII, and GnTIV) involved in early remodeling of glycans in the mammalian glycosylation pathway. Using this approach, preparative quantities of hybrid and complex-type N-glycans including asymmetric multi-antennary structures were generated and subsequently used to develop a glycan microarray for high-throughput, fluorescence-based screening of glycan-binding proteins. Taken together, these results confirm our combined synthesis strategy as a new, user-friendly route for supplying chemically defined human glycans simply by combining biosynthetically-derived precursors with enzymatic remodeling.


bioRxiv | 2017

A library of structurally homogeneous human N-glycans synthesized from microbial oligosaccharide precursors

Brian S. Hamilton; Joshua D. Wilson; Marina A. Shumakovich; Adam C. Fisher; James C. Brooks; Alyssa Pontes; Radnaa Naran; Christian Heiss; Chao Gao; Robert Kurdish; Jamie Heimburg-Molinaro; Parastoo Azadi; Richard D. Cummings; Judith H. Merritt; Matthew P. DeLisa

Synthesis of homogenous glycans in quantitative yields represents a major bottleneck to the production of molecular tools for glycoscience, such as glycan microarrays, affinity resins, and reference standards. Here, we describe a combined biological/enzymatic method termed bioenzymatic synthesis that is capable of efficiently converting microbially-derived precursor oligosaccharides into structurally uniform human-type N-glycans. Unlike starting material obtained by chemical synthesis or direct isolation from natural sources, which can be time consuming and costly to generate, bioenzymatic synthesis involves precursors derived from renewable sources including wild-type Saccharomyces cerevisiae glycoproteins and lipid-linked oligosaccharides from glycoengineered Escherichia coli. Following deglycosylation of these biosynthetic precursors, the resulting microbial oligosaccharides are subjected to a greatly simplified purification scheme followed by structural remodeling using commercially available and recombinantly produced glycosyltransferases including key N- acetylglucosaminyltransferases (e.g., GnTI, GnTII, and GnTIV) involved in early remodeling of glycans in the mammalian glycosylation pathway. Using this approach, preparative quantities of hybrid and complex-type N-glycans including asymmetric multi-antennary structures were generated all without the need of a specialized skillset. Collectively, our results reveal bioenzymatic synthesis to be a user-friendly methodology for rapidly supplying homogeneous oligosaccharide structures that can be used to understand the human glycome and probe the biological roles of glycans in health and disease.


Chemistry & Biology | 2016

Immunization with Outer Membrane Vesicles Displaying Designer Glycotopes Yields Class-Switched, Glycan-Specific Antibodies

Jenny L. Valentine; Linxiao Chen; Emily Perregaux; Kevin B. Weyant; Joseph A. Rosenthal; Christian Heiss; Parastoo Azadi; Adam C. Fisher; David Putnam; Gregory R. Moe; Judith H. Merritt; Matthew P. DeLisa


Archive | 2014

POLYSIALIC ACID, BLOOD GROUP ANTIGENS AND GLYCOPROTEIN EXPRESSION IN PROKARYOTES

Judith H. Merritt; Adam C. Fisher; Brian S. Hamilton; Matthew P. Delisa

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