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Dive into the research topics where K. G. Papavinasasundaram is active.

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Featured researches published by K. G. Papavinasasundaram.


Cell Host & Microbe | 2008

Mycobacterium tuberculosis virulence is mediated by PtpA dephosphorylation of human vacuolar protein sorting 33B.

Horacio Bach; K. G. Papavinasasundaram; Dennis Wong; Zakaria Hmama; Yossef Av-Gay

Entry into host macrophages and evasion of intracellular destruction mechanisms, including phagosome-lysosome fusion, are critical elements of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) pathogenesis. To achieve this, the Mtb genome encodes several proteins that modify host signaling pathways. PtpA, a low-molecular weight tyrosine phosphatase, is a secreted Mtb protein of unknown function. The lack of tyrosine kinases in the Mtb genome suggests that PtpA may modulate host tyrosine phosphorylated protein(s). We report that a genetic deletion of ptpA attenuates Mtb growth in human macrophages, and expression of PtpA-neutralizing antibodies simulated this effect. We identify VPS33B, a regulator of membrane fusion, as a PtpA substrate. VPS33B and PtpA colocalize in Mtb-infected human macrophages. PtpA secretion combined with active-phosphorylated VPS33B inhibited phagosome-lysosome fusion, a process arrested in Mtb infections. These results demonstrate that PtpA is essential for Mtb intracellular persistence and identify a key host regulatory pathway that is inactivated by Mtb.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2005

Deletion of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis pknH Gene Confers a Higher Bacillary Load during the Chronic Phase of Infection in BALB/c Mice

K. G. Papavinasasundaram; Bosco H.Y. Chan; Ji-Hae Chung; M. Joseph Colston; Elaine O. Davis; Yossef Av-Gay

The role of the serine/threonine kinase PknH in the physiology and virulence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis was assessed by the construction of a pknH deletion mutant. Deletion of the pknH gene did not affect sensitivity to the antimycobacterial drug ethambutol, although it was previously thought to be involved in regulating expression of emb genes encoding arabinosyl transferases, the targets of ethambutol. Nevertheless, transcription analyses revealed that genes associated with mycobacterial cell wall component synthesis, such as emb and ini operons, are downstream substrates of the PknH signaling cascade. In vitro survival studies revealed that a mutant with a deletion of the pknH gene displayed increased resistance to acidified nitrite stress, suggesting that nitric oxide is one of the potential environmental triggers for PknH activation. The effect of pknH deletion on mycobacterial virulence was investigated in BALB/c mice. In this model, the DeltapknH mutant was found to survive and replicate to a higher bacillary load in mouse organs than its parental strain and the pknH-complemented strain. In contrast, another closely related kinase mutant, the DeltapknE mutant, obtained from the same parental strain, was not affected in its virulence phenotype. Infection of THP-1 cells or in vitro growth studies in 7H9 medium did not reveal a significant in vitro growth advantage phenotype for the DeltapknH mutant. In conclusion, we propose that the serine/threonine kinase PknH plays a role in regulating bacillary load in mouse organs to facilitate adaptation to the host environment, possibly by enabling a regulated chronic infection by M. tuberculosis.


Science Signaling | 2012

A Phosphorylated Pseudokinase Complex Controls Cell Wall Synthesis in Mycobacteria

Christine L. Gee; K. G. Papavinasasundaram; Sloane R. Blair; Christina E. Baer; Arnold M. Falick; David S. King; Jennifer E. Griffin; Harene Venghatakrishnan; Andrew Zukauskas; Jun-Rong Wei; Rakesh K. Dhiman; Dean C. Crick; Eric J. Rubin; Christopher M. Sassetti; Tom Alber

Structure-function studies in mycobacteria reveal how a Ser-Thr protein kinase and pseudokinase work together to regulate the synthesis of the bacterial cell wall. The Bacterial Cell Wall Construction Foremen The bacterial peptidoglycan cell wall is essential for viability and pathogenesis and represents the target of many antibacterial drugs. In Mycobacterium tuberculosis, which causes tuberculosis, the transmembrane protein MviN is required for peptidoglycan synthesis and contains a kinase-like domain not found in the orthologous proteins of other bacteria. Structural analysis by Gee et al. revealed that, although the kinase homology domain adopted a conserved kinase fold, the protein was an inactive pseudokinase. Biochemical analysis showed that this pseudokinase was a substrate for the Ser-Thr kinase PknB, which is activated by peptidoglycan fragments. Structural and biochemical analysis revealed a high-affinity interaction between the FHA domain–containing protein FhaA and phosphorylated MviN. Conditional depletion or overexpression experiments in vivo suggested that PknB-mediated phosphorylation of the pseudokinase domain of MviN enabled the inhibition of MviN by FhaA. Thus, this protein kinase–pseudokinase–FHA cascade appears to serve as a homeostatic regulator of cell wall metabolism. Prokaryotic cell wall biosynthesis is coordinated with cell growth and division, but the mechanisms regulating this dynamic process remain obscure. Here, we describe a phosphorylation-dependent regulatory complex that controls peptidoglycan (PG) biosynthesis in Mycobacterium tuberculosis. We found that PknB, a PG-responsive Ser-Thr protein kinase (STPK), initiates complex assembly by phosphorylating a kinase-like domain in the essential PG biosynthetic protein, MviN. This domain was structurally diverged from active kinases and did not mediate phosphotransfer. Threonine phosphorylation of the pseudokinase domain recruited the FhaA protein through its forkhead-associated (FHA) domain. The crystal structure of this phosphorylated pseudokinase–FHA domain complex revealed the basis of FHA domain recognition, which included unexpected contacts distal to the phosphorylated threonine. Conditional degradation of these proteins in mycobacteria demonstrated that MviN was essential for growth and PG biosynthesis and that FhaA regulated these processes at the cell poles and septum. Controlling this spatially localized PG regulatory complex is only one of several cellular roles ascribed to PknB, suggesting that the capacity to coordinate signaling across multiple processes is an important feature conserved between eukaryotic and prokaryotic STPK networks.


Infection and Immunity | 2001

Silencing of Oxidative Stress Response in Mycobacterium tuberculosis: Expression Patterns of ahpC in Virulent and Avirulent Strains and Effect of ahpC Inactivation

Burkhard Springer; Sharon Master; Peter Sander; Thomas C. Zahrt; M. McFalone; Jian Song; K. G. Papavinasasundaram; M. J. Colston; E. C. Boettger; Vojo Deretic

ABSTRACT Intracellular pathogens such as Mycobacterium tuberculosis are able to survive in the face of antimicrobial products generated by the host cell in response to infection. The product of the alkyl hydroperoxide reductase gene (ahpC) of M. tuberculosis is thought to be involved in protecting the organism against both oxidative and nitrosative stress encountered within the infected macrophage. Here we report that, contrary to expectations, ahpC expression in virulent strains of M. tuberculosis and Mycobacterium bovis grown in vitro is repressed, often below the level of detection, whereas expression in the avirulent vaccine strainM. bovis BCG is constitutively high. The repression of the ahpC gene of the virulent strains is independent of the naturally occurring lesions of central regulatoroxyR. Using a green fluorescence protein vector (gfp)-ahpC reporter construct we present data showing that repression of ahpC of virulentM. tuberculosis also occurred during growth inside macrophages, whereas derepression in BCG was again seen under identical conditions. Inactivation of ahpC on the chromosome ofM. tuberculosis by homologous recombination had no effect on its growth during acute infection in mice and did not affect in vitro sensitivity to H2O2. However, consistent with AhpC function in detoxifying organic peroxides, sensitivity to cumene hydroperoxide exposure was increased in theahpC::Kmr mutant strain. The preservation of a functional ahpC gene in M. tuberculosis in spite of its repression under normal growth conditions suggests that, while AhpC does not play a significant role in establishing infection, it is likely to be important under certain, as yet undefined conditions. This is supported by the observation that repression of ahpC expression in vitro was lifted under conditions of static growth.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Mycobacterium tuberculosis induces an atypical cell death mode to escape from infected macrophages

Jinhee Lee; Teresa Repasy; K. G. Papavinasasundaram; Christopher M. Sassetti; Hardy Kornfeld

Background Macrophage cell death following infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis plays a central role in tuberculosis disease pathogenesis. Certain attenuated strains induce extrinsic apoptosis of infected macrophages but virulent strains of M. tuberculosis suppress this host response. We previously reported that virulent M. tuberculosis induces cell death when bacillary load exceeds ∼20 per macrophage but the precise nature of this demise has not been defined. Methodology/Principal Findings We analyzed the characteristics of cell death in primary murine macrophages challenged with virulent or attenuated M. tuberculosis complex strains. We report that high intracellular bacillary burden causes rapid and primarily necrotic death via lysosomal permeabilization, releasing hydrolases that promote Bax/Bak-independent mitochondrial damage and necrosis. Cell death was independent of cathepsins B or L and notable for ultrastructural evidence of damage to lipid bilayers throughout host cells with depletion of several host phospholipid species. These events require viable bacteria that can respond to intracellular cues via the PhoPR sensor kinase system but are independent of the ESX1 system. Conclusions/Significance Cell death caused by virulent M. tuberculosis is distinct from classical apoptosis, pyroptosis or pyronecrosis. Mycobacterial genes essential for cytotoxicity are regulated by the PhoPR two-component system. This atypical death mode provides a mechanism for viable bacilli to exit host macrophages for spreading infection and the eventual transition to extracellular persistence that characterizes advanced pulmonary tuberculosis.


Molecular Microbiology | 2002

The functions of OmpATb, a pore-forming protein of Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Catherine Raynaud; K. G. Papavinasasundaram; Richard A. Speight; Burkhard Springer; Peter Sander; Erik C. Böttger; M. Joseph Colston; Philip Draper

The functions of OmpATb, the product of the ompATb gene of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and a putative porin, were investigated by studying a mutant with a targeted deletion of the gene, and by observing expression of the gene in wild‐type M. tuberculosis H37Rv by real‐time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and immunoblotting. The loss of ompATb had no effect on growth under normal conditions, but caused a major reduction in ability to grow at reduced pH. The gene was substantially upregulated in wild‐type bacteria exposed to these conditions. The mutant was impaired in its ability to grow in macrophages and in normal mice, although it was as virulent as the wild type in mice that lack T cells. Deletion of the ompATb gene reduced permeability to several small water‐soluble substances. This was particularly evident at pH 5.5; at this pH, uptake of serine was minimal, suggesting that, at this pH, OmpATb might be the only functioning porin. These data indicate that OmpATb has two functions: as a pore‐forming protein with properties of a porin, and in enabling M. tuberculosis to respond to reduced environmental pH. It is not known whether this second function is related to the porin‐like activity at low pH or involves a completely separate role for OmpATB. The involvement with pH is likely to contribute to the ability of M. tuberculosis to overcome host defence mechanisms and grow in a mammalian host.


Molecular Microbiology | 1998

Construction and complementation of a recA deletion mutant of Mycobacterium smegmatis reveals that the intein in Mycobacterium tuberculosis recA does not affect RecA function

K. G. Papavinasasundaram; M. Joseph Colston; Elaine O. Davis

A recA deletion mutant of Mycobacterium smegmatis has been isolated by homologous recombination using a sacB counterselection strategy. Deletion of the recA gene from the chromosome was demonstrated by Southern hybridizations and by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Western analysis using anti‐RecA antibodies confirmed that the RecA protein was not made by the mutant strain. The recA deletion strain exhibited enhanced sensitivity to UV irradiation and failed to undergo homologous recombination. The results obtained from the recombination assays suggest that in wild‐type M. smegmatis the majority of colonies arise from single cross‐over homologous recombination events with only a very minor contribution from random integrations. The deficiencies in UV survival and recombination were complemented by introduction of the cloned M. smegmatis recA gene. Overexpression of RecA was found to be toxic in the absence of recX, which is found downstream of and co‐transcribed with recA and is thus also affected by the deletion of recA. The M. smegmatis recA deletion strain was also complemented by the M. tuberculosis recA gene with or without its intein; most importantly, the frequency of double cross‐over homologous recombination events was identical regardless of whether the M. tuberculosis recA gene contained or lacked the intein. Thus, the low frequency of homologous recombination observed in M. tuberculosis is not due to the presence of an intein‐coding sequence in its recA gene per se.


Molecular Microbiology | 1997

Mycobacterial recA is cotranscribed with a potential regulatory gene called recX

K. G. Papavinasasundaram; Farahnaz Movahedzadeh; Jacquie T. Keer; Neil G. Stoker; M. Joseph Colston; Elaine O. Davis

The recA gene of Mycobacterium smegmatis has been cloned and sequenced. The amino acid sequence of the RecA protein is highly homologous to other RecA proteins. Three other potential open reading frames were identified. One of these showed extensive homology to a protein, HypB, involved in the incorporation of nickel into hydrogenases. Another, found downstream of and overlapping recA, was similar to a gene, recX, which has been proposed to play a regulatory role related to recA function. The homology between the M. smegmatis sequence and that of Mycobacterium tuberculosis extended upstream of the recA coding region for 140 bp including a motif identical to the Cheo‐box consensus sequence which has been shown to bind LexA. In addition, the transcriptional start sites were found to be identical to those identified previously for M. tuberculosis. Transcriptional fusions to the reporter gene chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) revealed that recA was DNA‐damage inducible and that expression required sequences at some distance from the mapped transcriptional start sites. Although a motif with only one mismatch to the Cheo box was found in the intergenic region between orf1 and orf2 these open reading frames were not DNA‐damage inducible, nor was this motif required for regulation of recA expression. Gel retardation assays revealed that the reason for this was that LexA did not bind to this sequence containing a mismatch. Reverse transcription/polymerase chain reaction analysis of M. smegmatis RNA demonstrated that recA and orf3 (recX ) are within the same trancriptional unit.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Convergence of Ser/Thr and Two-component Signaling to Coordinate Expression of the Dormancy Regulon in Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Joseph D. Chao; K. G. Papavinasasundaram; Xingji Zheng; Ana Chávez-Steenbock; Xuetao Wang; Guinevere Q. Lee; Yossef Av-Gay

Signal transduction in Mycobacterium tuberculosis is mediated primarily by the Ser/Thr protein kinases and the two-component systems. The Ser/Thr kinase PknH has been shown to regulate growth of M. tuberculosis in a mouse model and in response to NO stress in vitro. Comparison of a pknH deletion mutant (ΔpknH) with its parental M. tuberculosis H37Rv strain using iTRAQ enabled us to quantify >700 mycobacterial proteins. Among these, members of the hypoxia- and NO-inducible dormancy (DosR) regulon were disregulated in the ΔpknH mutant. Using kinase assays, protein-protein interactions, and mass spectrometry analysis, we demonstrated that the two-component response regulator DosR is a substrate of PknH. PknH phosphorylation of DosR mapped to Thr198 and Thr205 on the key regulatory helix α10 involved in activation and dimerization of DosR. PknH Thr phosphorylation and DosS Asp phosphorylation of DosR cooperatively enhanced DosR binding to cognate DNA sequences. Transcriptional analysis comparing ΔpknH and parental M. tuberculosis revealed that induction of the DosR regulon was subdued in the ΔpknH mutant in response to NO. Together, these results indicate that PknH phosphorylation of DosR is required for full induction of the DosR regulon and demonstrate convergence of the two major signal transduction systems for the first time in M. tuberculosis.


Molecular Microbiology | 2002

DNA damage induction of recA in Mycobacterium tuberculosis independently of RecA and LexA

Elaine O. Davis; Burkhard Springer; Krishna K. Gopaul; K. G. Papavinasasundaram; Peter Sander; Erik C. Böttger

The ubiquitous and highly conserved RecA protein is generally expressed from a single promoter, which is regulated by LexA in conjunction with RecA. We show here using transcriptional fusions to a reporter gene that the Mycobacterium tuberculosis recA gene is expressed from two promoters. Although one promoter is clearly regulated in the classical way, the other remains DNA damage inducible in the absence of RecA or when LexA binding is prevented. These observations demonstrate convincingly for the first time that there is a novel mechanism of DNA damage induction in M. tuberculosis that is independent of LexA and RecA.

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Christopher M. Sassetti

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Yossef Av-Gay

University of British Columbia

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Christina E. Baer

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Kenan C. Murphy

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Xingji Zheng

University of British Columbia

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B. Gopal

Indian Institute of Science

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