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Dive into the research topics where Laura L. Presley is active.

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Featured researches published by Laura L. Presley.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2006

Abundant and Diverse Fungal Microbiota in the Murine Intestine

Alexandra J. Scupham; Laura L. Presley; Bo Wei; Elizabeth Bent; Natasha Griffith; Michael McPherson; Feilin Zhu; Oluwadayo Oluwadara; Nagesh Rao; Jonathan Braun; James Borneman

ABSTRACT Enteric microbiota play a variety of roles in intestinal health and disease. While bacteria in the intestine have been broadly characterized, little is known about the abundance or diversity of enteric fungi. This study utilized a culture-independent method termed oligonucleotide fingerprinting of rRNA genes (OFRG) to describe the compositions of fungal and bacterial rRNA genes from small and large intestines (tissue and luminal contents) of restricted-flora and specific-pathogen-free mice. OFRG analysis identified rRNA genes from all four major fungal phyla: Ascomycota, Basidiomycota, Chytridiomycota, and Zygomycota. The largest assemblages of fungal rRNA sequences were related to the genera Acremonium, Monilinia, Fusarium, Cryptococcus/Filobasidium, Scleroderma, Catenomyces, Spizellomyces, Neocallimastix, Powellomyces, Entophlyctis, Mortierella, and Smittium and the order Mucorales. The majority of bacterial rRNA gene clones were affiliated with the taxa Bacteroidetes, Firmicutes, Acinetobacter, and Lactobacillus. Sequence-selective PCR analyses also detected several of these bacterial and fungal rRNA genes in the mouse chow. Fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis with a fungal small-subunit rRNA probe revealed morphologically diverse microorganisms resident in the mucus biofilm adjacent to the cecal and proximal colonic epithelium. Hybridizing organisms comprised about 2% of the DAPI (4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole, dihydrochloride)-positive organisms in the mucus biofilm, but their abundance in fecal material may be much lower. These data indicate that diverse fungal taxa are present in the intestinal microbial community. Their abundance suggests that they may play significant roles in enteric microbial functions.


PLOS ONE | 2011

A Metaproteomic Approach to Study Human-Microbial Ecosystems at the Mucosal Luminal Interface

Xiaoxiao Li; James LeBlanc; Allison Truong; Ravi Vuthoori; Sharon S. Chen; Jonathan L. Lustgarten; Bennett E. Roth; Jeff Allard; Andrew Ippoliti; Laura L. Presley; James Borneman; William L. Bigbee; Vanathi Gopalakrishnan; Thomas G. Graeber; David Elashoff; Jonathan Braun; Lee Goodglick

Aberrant interactions between the host and the intestinal bacteria are thought to contribute to the pathogenesis of many digestive diseases. However, studying the complex ecosystem at the human mucosal-luminal interface (MLI) is challenging and requires an integrative systems biology approach. Therefore, we developed a novel method integrating lavage sampling of the human mucosal surface, high-throughput proteomics, and a unique suite of bioinformatic and statistical analyses. Shotgun proteomic analysis of secreted proteins recovered from the MLI confirmed the presence of both human and bacterial components. To profile the MLI metaproteome, we collected 205 mucosal lavage samples from 38 healthy subjects, and subjected them to high-throughput proteomics. The spectral data were subjected to a rigorous data processing pipeline to optimize suitability for quantitation and analysis, and then were evaluated using a set of biostatistical tools. Compared to the mucosal transcriptome, the MLI metaproteome was enriched for extracellular proteins involved in response to stimulus and immune system processes. Analysis of the metaproteome revealed significant individual-related as well as anatomic region-related (biogeographic) features. Quantitative shotgun proteomics established the identity and confirmed the biogeographic association of 49 proteins (including 3 functional protein networks) demarcating the proximal and distal colon. This robust and integrated proteomic approach is thus effective for identifying functional features of the human mucosal ecosystem, and a fresh understanding of the basic biology and disease processes at the MLI.


Journal of Immunology | 2008

Systemic Control of Plasmacytoid Dendritic Cells by CD8+ T Cells and Commensal Microbiota

Daisuke Fujiwara; Bo Wei; Laura L. Presley; Sarah Brewer; Michael McPherson; Michael A. Lewinski; James Borneman; Jonathan Braun

The composition of the intestinal microbial community is a distinctive individual trait that may divergently influence host biology. Because dendritic cells (DC) regulate the quality of the host response to microbiota, we evaluated DC in mice bearing distinct enteric microbial communities divergent for colitis susceptibility. Surprisingly, a selective, systemic reduction of plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDC) was observed in isogenic mice with different microbiota: restricted flora (RF) vs specific pathogen free (SPF). This reduction was not observed in germfree mice, suggesting that the pDC deficiency was not simply due to a lack of intestinal microbial products. The microbial action was linked to cytotoxic CD8+ T cells, since pDC in RF mice were preserved in the CD8−/− and perforin−/− genotypes, partially restored by anti-CD8β Ab, and augmented in SPF mice bearing the TAP−/− genotype. Direct evidence for pDC cytolysis was obtained by rapid and selective pDC depletion in SPF mice transferred with RF CD8+ T cells. These data indicate that commensal microbiota, via CTL activation, functionally shape systemic immune regulation that may modify risk of inflammatory disease.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2010

Bacteria Associated with Immunoregulatory Cells in Mice

Laura L. Presley; Bo Wei; Jonathan Braun; James Borneman

ABSTRACT This study examined bacteria-immune interactions in a mouse model possessing microbiota-dependent immune regulatory features similar to those occurring in human atopy, colitis, and immune regulation. Associations between the abundance of several bacterial phylotypes and immunoregulatory target cell types were identified, suggesting that they may play a role in these phenotypes.


Inflammatory Bowel Diseases | 2012

Host–microbe relationships in inflammatory bowel disease detected by bacterial and metaproteomic analysis of the mucosal–luminal interface

Laura L. Presley; Jingxiao Ye; Xiaoxiao Li; James LeBlanc; Zhanpan Zhang; Paul Ruegger; Jeff Allard; Dermot McGovern; Andrew Ippoliti; Bennett E. Roth; Xinping Cui; Daniel R. Jeske; David Elashoff; Lee Goodglick; Jonathan Braun; James Borneman

Background: Host–microbe interactions at the intestinal mucosal–luminal interface (MLI) are critical factors in the biology of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Methods: To address this issue, we performed a series of investigations integrating analysis of the bacteria and metaproteome at the MLI of Crohns disease, ulcerative colitis, and healthy human subjects. After quantifying these variables in mucosal specimens from a first sample set, we searched for bacteria exhibiting strong correlations with host proteins. This assessment identified a small subset of bacterial phylotypes possessing this host interaction property. Using a second and independent sample set, we tested the association of disease state with levels of these 14 “host interaction” bacterial phylotypes. Results: A high frequency of these bacteria (35%) significantly differentiated human subjects by disease type. Analysis of the MLI metaproteomes also yielded disease classification with exceptional confidence levels. Examination of the relationships between the bacteria and proteins, using regularized canonical correlation analysis (RCCA), sorted most subjects by disease type, supporting the concept that host–microbe interactions are involved in the biology underlying IBD. Moreover, this correlation analysis identified bacteria and proteins that were undetected by standard means‐based methods such as analysis of variance, and identified associations of specific bacterial phylotypes with particular protein features of the innate immune response, some of which have been documented in model systems. Conclusions: These findings suggest that computational mining of mucosa‐associated bacteria for host interaction provides an unsupervised strategy to uncover networks of bacterial taxa and host processes relevant to normal and disease states. (Inflamm Bowel Dis 2012;)


Inflammatory Bowel Diseases | 2008

Bacteria and Bacterial rRNA Genes Associated with the Development of Colitis in IL-10-/-Mice

Jingxiao Ye; Jimmy W. Lee; Laura L. Presley; Elizabeth Bent; Bo Wei; Jonathan Braun; Neal L. Schiller; Daniel S. Straus; James Borneman

Background: Microorganisms appear to play important yet ill‐defined roles in the etiology of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). This study utilized a novel population‐based approach to identify bacteria and bacterial rRNA genes associated with the development of colitis in IL‐10−/− mice. Methods: Mice were housed in 2 environments: a community mouse facility where the mice were fed nonsterile chow (Room 3) and a limited access facility where the mice were fed sterile chow (Room 4). Every month the disease activity levels were assessed and fecal bacterial compositions were analyzed. At the end of the experiments histological and bacterial analyses were performed on intestinal tissue. Results: Although disease activity increased over time in both environments, it progressed at a faster rate in Room 3 than Room 4. Culture and culture‐independent bacterial analyses identified several isolates and phylotypes associated with colitis. Two phylotypes (GpC2 and Gp66) were distinguished by their negative associations with disease activity in fecal and tissue samples. Notably, rRNA genes from these phylotypes had high sequence identity (99%) to an rRNA gene from a previously described flagellated Clostridium (Lachnospiraceae bacterium A4). Conclusions: The negative associations of these 2 phylotypes (GpC2 and Gp66) suggest that these bacteria were being immunologically targeted, consistent with prior findings that the Lachnospiraceae bacterium A4 bears a prevalent flagellar antigen for disease‐associated immunity in murine immune colitis and human Crohns disease. Identification of these associations suggests that the experimental approach used in this study will have considerable utility in elucidating the host–microbe interactions underlying IBD.


Cancer Research | 2013

Intestinal Bacteria Modify Lymphoma Incidence and Latency by Affecting Systemic Inflammatory State, Oxidative Stress, and Leukocyte Genotoxicity

Mitsuko L. Yamamoto; Irene Maier; Angeline Tilly Dang; David Berry; Jared Liu; Paul Ruegger; Jiue-in Yang; Phillip A. Soto; Laura L. Presley; Ramune Reliene; Aya M. Westbrook; Bo Wei; Alexander Loy; Christopher Chang; Jonathan Braun; James Borneman; Robert H. Schiestl

Ataxia-telangiectasia is a genetic disorder associated with high incidence of B-cell lymphoma. Using an ataxia-telangiectasia mouse model, we compared lymphoma incidence in several isogenic mouse colonies harboring different bacterial communities, finding that intestinal microbiota are a major contributor to disease penetrance and latency, lifespan, molecular oxidative stress, and systemic leukocyte genotoxicity. High-throughput sequence analysis of rRNA genes identified mucosa-associated bacterial phylotypes that were colony-specific. Lactobacillus johnsonii, which was deficient in the more cancer-prone mouse colony, was causally tested for its capacity to confer reduced genotoxicity when restored by short-term oral transfer. This intervention decreased systemic genotoxicity, a response associated with reduced basal leukocytes and the cytokine-mediated inflammatory state, and mechanistically linked to the host cell biology of systemic genotoxicity. Our results suggest that intestinal microbiota are a potentially modifiable trait for translational intervention in individuals at risk for B-cell lymphoma, or for other diseases that are driven by genotoxicity or the molecular response to oxidative stress.


Gastroenterology | 2008

303 Systemic Control of Plasmacytoid Dendritic Cells By CD8+ T Cells and Commensal Microbiota

Daisuke Fujiwara; Bo Wei; Laura L. Presley; Sarah Brewer; Michael McPherson; James Borneman; Jonathan Braun

The composition of the intestinal microbial community is a distinctive individual trait that may divergently influence host biology. Because dendritic cells (DC) regulate the quality of the host response to microbiota, we evaluated DC in mice bearing distinct enteric microbial communities divergent for colitis susceptibility. Surprisingly, a selective, systemic reduction of plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDC) was observed in isogenic mice with different microbiota: restricted flora (RF) vs specific pathogen free (SPF). This reduction was not observed in germfree mice, suggesting that the pDC deficiency was not simply due to a lack of intestinal microbial products. The microbial action was linked to cytotoxic CD8(+) T cells, since pDC in RF mice were preserved in the CD8(-/-) and perforin(-/-) genotypes, partially restored by anti-CD8beta Ab, and augmented in SPF mice bearing the TAP(-/-) genotype. Direct evidence for pDC cytolysis was obtained by rapid and selective pDC depletion in SPF mice transferred with RF CD8(+) T cells. These data indicate that commensal microbiota, via CTL activation, functionally shape systemic immune regulation that may modify risk of inflammatory disease.


Archive | 2007

Identifying Microorganisms Involved in Specific In Situ Functions: Experimental Design Considerations for rRNA Gene-Based Population Studies and Sequence-Selective PCR Assays

James Borneman; J. O. Becker; Elizabeth Bent; B. Lanoil; B. M. Gardener; Rabiu Olatinwo; Laura L. Presley; Alexandra J. Scupham; Lea Valinsky; Bei Yin; C. J. Hurst; R. L. Crawford; J. L. Garland; D. A. Lipson; A. L. Mills; L. D. Stetzenbach


Archive | 2013

Microbiotaby CD8+ T Cells and Commensal Systemic Control of Plasmacytoid Dendritic

Jonathan Braun; Michael McPherson; Michael A. Lewinski; Bo Wei; Laura L. Presley; Sarah Brewer

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James Borneman

University of California

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Jonathan Braun

University of California

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Bo Wei

University of California

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David Elashoff

University of California

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James LeBlanc

University of California

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Lee Goodglick

University of California

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Xiaoxiao Li

University of California

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Elizabeth Bent

University of California

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Sarah Brewer

University of California

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