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Dive into the research topics where Leigh A. Knodler is active.

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Featured researches published by Leigh A. Knodler.


Traffic | 2003

Taking Possession: Biogenesis of the Salmonella‐Containing Vacuole

Leigh A. Knodler; Olivia Steele-Mortimer

The Gram‐negative pathogen Salmonella enterica can survive and replicate within a variety of mammalian cells. Regardless of the cell type, internalized bacteria survive and replicate within the Salmonella‐containing vacuole, the biogenesis of which is dependent on bacterially encoded virulence factors. In particular, Type III secretion systems translocate bacterial effector proteins into the eukaryotic cell where they can specifically interact with a variety of targets. Salmonella has two distinct Type III secretion systems that are believed to have completely different functions. The SPI2 system is induced intracellularly and is required for intracellular survival in macrophages; it plays no role in invasion but is categorized as being required for Salmonella‐containing vacuole biogenesis. In contrast, the SPI1 Type III secretion system is induced extracellularly and is essential for invasion of nonphagocytic cells. Its role in post‐invasion processes has not been well studied. Recent studies indicate that Salmonella‐containing vacuole biogenesis may be more dependent on SPI1 than previously believed. Other non‐SPI2 virulence factors and the host cell itself may play critical roles in determining the intracellular environment of this facultative intracellular pathogen. In this review we discuss the recent advances in determining the mechanisms by which Salmonella regulate Salmonella‐containing vacuole biogenesis and the implications of these findings.


Traffic | 2007

Salmonella trafficking is defined by continuous dynamic interactions with the endolysosomal system.

Dan Drecktrah; Leigh A. Knodler; Dale Howe; Olivia Steele-Mortimer

Following invasion of non‐phagocytic host cells, Salmonella enterica survives and replicates within a phagosome‐like compartment known as the Salmonella‐containing vacuole (SCV). It is now well established that SCV biogenesis, like phagosome biogenesis, involves sequential interactions with the endocytic pathway. However, Salmonella is believed to limit these interactions and, in particular, to avoid fusion of terminal lysosomes with the SCV. In this study, we reassessed this process using a high‐resolution live‐cell imaging approach and found an unanticipated level of interaction between the SCV and the endocytic pathway. Direct interactions, in which late endosomal/lysosomal content was transferred to SCVs, were detected within 30 min of invasion and continued for several hours. Mechanistically, these interactions were very similar to phagosome–lysosome fusion because they were accompanied by rapid acidification of the SCV, could be blocked by chemical perturbation of microtubules or vacuolar acidification and involved the small GTPase Rab7. In comparison with vacuoles containing internalized Escherichia coli or heat‐killed Salmonella, SCVs did show some delay of fusion and acidification, although, this appeared to be independent of either type III secretion system. These results provide compelling evidence that inhibition of SCV–lysosome fusion is not the major determinant in establishment of the Salmonella replicative niche in epithelial cells.


Infection and Immunity | 2002

Mice lacking T and B lymphocytes develop transient colitis and crypt hyperplasia yet suffer impaired bacterial clearance during Citrobacter rodentium infection.

Bruce A. Vallance; Wanyin Deng; Leigh A. Knodler; B. Brett Finlay

ABSTRACT The bacterial pathogen Citrobacter rodentium belongs to a family of gastrointestinal pathogens that includes enteropathogenic and enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli and is the causative agent of transmissible colonic hyperplasia in mice. The molecular mechanisms used by these pathogens to colonize host epithelial surfaces and form attaching and effacing (A/E) lesions have undergone intense study. In contrast, little is known about the hosts immune response to these infections and its importance in tissue pathology and bacterial clearance. To address these issues, wild-type mice and mice lacking T and B lymphocytes (RAG1 knockout [KO]) were infected with C. rodentium. By day 10 postinfection (p.i.), both wild-type and RAG1 KO mice developed colitis and crypt hyperplasia, and these responses became more exaggerated in wild-type mice over the next 2 weeks, as they cleared the infection. By day 24 p.i., bacterial clearance was complete, and the colitis had subsided; however, crypt heights remained increased. In contrast, inflammatory and crypt hyperplastic responses in the RAG1 KO mice were transient, subsiding after 2 weeks. By day 24 p.i., RAG1 KO mice showed no signs of bacterial clearance and infection was often fatal. Surprisingly, despite remaining heavily infected, tissues from RAG1 KO mice surviving the acute colitis showed few signs of disease. These results thus emphasize the important contribution of the host immune response during infection by A/E bacterial pathogens. While T and/or B lymphocytes are essential for host defense against C. rodentium, they also mediate much of the tissue pathology and disease symptoms that occur during infection.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

HilD-mediated transcriptional cross-talk between SPI-1 and SPI-2

Víctor H. Bustamante; Luary C. Martínez; Francisco J. Santana; Leigh A. Knodler; Olivia Steele-Mortimer; José L. Puente

The acquisition of new genetic traits by horizontal gene transfer and their incorporation into preexisting regulatory networks have been essential events in the evolution of bacterial pathogens. An example of successful assimilation of virulence traits is Salmonella enterica, which acquired, at distinct evolutionary times, Salmonella pathogenicity island 1 (SPI-1), required for efficient invasion of the intestinal epithelium and intestinal disease, and SPI-2, essential for Salmonella replication and survival within macrophages and the progression of a systemic infection. A positive regulatory cascade mainly composed of HilD, HilA, and InvF, encoded in SPI-1, controls the expression of SPI-1 genes, whereas the two-component regulatory system SsrA/B, encoded in SPI-2, controls expression of SPI-2 genes. In this study, we report a previously undescribed transcriptional cross-talk between SPI-1 and SPI-2, where the SPI-1–encoded regulator HilD is essential for the activation of both the SPI-1 and SPI-2 regulons but at different times during the stationary phase of growth in Luria-Bertani medium. Our data indicate that HilD counteracts the H-NS–mediated repression exerted on the OmpR-dependent activation of the ssrAB operon by specifically interacting with its regulatory region. In contrast, HilD is not required for SPI-2 regulon expression under the in vitro growth conditions that are thought to resemble the intracellular environment. Our results suggest that two independent SPI-2 activation pathways evolved to take advantage of the SPI-2–encoded information at different niches and, in consequence, in response to different growth conditions.


Traffic | 2006

The Mechanism of Salmonella Entry Determines the Vacuolar Environment and Intracellular Gene Expression

Dan Drecktrah; Leigh A. Knodler; Robin Ireland; Olivia Steele-Mortimer

Macrophages are an important intracellular niche for Salmonella particularly for systemic infection. The interaction of Salmonella with these cells is mediated by two type III secretion systems (TTSS), encoded on Salmonella pathogenicity islands 1 and 2 (SPI1, SPI2), which mediate distinct phases of the pathogen–host cell interaction. The SPI1 TTSS mediates invasion whereas the SPI2 TTSS is required for intramacrophage survival. Importantly, however, Salmonella can enter macrophages by either SPI1‐dependent invasion or host cell‐mediated phagocytosis. Here, we investigated how the mechanism of internalization affects the intracellular environment and TTSS gene expression. Intracellular bacterial survival depended on the method of entry, because complement‐opsonized and SPI1‐induced Salmonella initiated replication within 8u2003h whereas immunoglobulin G (IgG)‐opsonized and non‐opsonized Salmonella were initially killed. Analysis of vacuolar pH showed that acidification of the Salmonella‐containing vacuole occurred more rapidly for non‐opsonized or SPI1‐induced Salmonella compared with IgG‐opsonized or complement‐opsonized Salmonella. Finally, quantitative polymerase chain reaction was used to compare the transcriptional profiles of selected SPI1 and SPI2 regulon genes. We found that the magnitude of SPI2 gene induction depended on the mechanism of internalization. Unexpectedly, SPI1 genes, which are rapidly downregulated following SPI1‐mediated invasion, were induced intracellularly following phagocytic uptake. These results reveal another level of complexity in pathogen–macrophage interactions.


Cellular Microbiology | 2004

The Salmonella SPI1 effector SopB stimulates nitric oxide production long after invasion.

Dan Drecktrah; Leigh A. Knodler; Kendal Galbraith; Olivia Steele-Mortimer

The ability of Salmonella enterica to invade and replicate within host cells depends on two type III secretion systems (TTSSs) encoded on pathogenicity islands 1 and 2 (SPI1 and SPI2). The current paradigm holds that these systems translocate two classes of effectors that operate sequentially and independently. In essence, the SPI1 TTSS mediates early events (i.e. invasion) whereas the SPI2 TTSS mediates post‐invasion processes (i.e. replication, vacuole maturation). Contrary to this model, we have found in infected macrophages that a SPI1 effector, SopB/SigD, increased inducible nitric oxide synthase levels and nitric oxide production, host cell process previously known only to be a target of the SPI2 TTSS. Furthermore, SopB protein and message persist many hours after invasion. Our findings reveal an unanticipated potential for dialogue between the SPI1 and SPI2 TTSS and the host cell response.


Cellular Microbiology | 2009

Ubiquitination of the bacterial inositol phosphatase, SopB, regulates its biological activity at the plasma membrane.

Leigh A. Knodler; Seth Winfree; Dan Drecktrah; Robin Ireland; Olivia Steele-Mortimer

The Salmonella type III effector, SopB, is an inositol polyphosphate phosphatase that modulates host cell phospholipids at the plasma membrane and the nascent Salmonella‐containing vacuole (SCV). Translocated SopB persists for many hours after infection and is ubiquitinated but the significance of this covalent modification has not been investigated. Here we identify by mass spectrometry six lysine residues of SopB that are mono‐ubiquitinated. Substitution of these six lysine residues with arginine, SopB‐K6R, almost completely eliminated SopB ubiquitination. We found that ubiquitination does not affect SopB stability or membrane association, or SopB‐dependent events in SCV biogenesis. However, two spatially and temporally distinct events are dependent on ubiquitination, downregulation of SopB activity at the plasma membrane and prolonged retention of SopB on the SCV. Activation of the mammalian pro‐survival kinase Akt/PKB, a downstream target of SopB, was intensified and prolonged after infection with the SopB‐K6R mutant. At later times, fewer SCV were decorated with SopB‐K6R compared with SopB. Instead SopB‐K6R was present as discrete vesicles spread diffusely throughout the cell. Altogether, our data show that ubiquitination of SopB is not related to its intracellular stability but rather regulates its enzymatic activity at the plasma membrane and intracellular localization.


Infection and Immunity | 2005

Cloning Vectors and Fluorescent Proteins Can Significantly Inhibit Salmonella enterica Virulence in Both Epithelial Cells and Macrophages: Implications for Bacterial Pathogenesis Studies

Leigh A. Knodler; Aaron Bestor; Caixia Ma; Imke Hansen-Wester; Michael Hensel; Bruce A. Vallance; Olivia Steele-Mortimer

ABSTRACT Plasmid vectors and fluorescent protein reporter systems are commonly used in the study of bacterial pathogenesis. Here we show that they can impair the ability of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium to productively infect either cultured mammalian cells or mice. This has significant implications for studies that rely on these systems.


Mbio | 2013

Sensing of Bacterial Type IV Secretion via the Unfolded Protein Response

Maarten F. de Jong; Tregei Starr; Maria G. Winter; Andreas B. den Hartigh; Robert Child; Leigh A. Knodler; Jan Maarten van Dijl; Jean Celli; Renée M. Tsolis

ABSTRACT Host cytokine responses to Brucella abortus infection are elicited predominantly by the deployment of a type IV secretion system (T4SS). However, the mechanism by which the T4SS elicits inflammation remains unknown. Here we show that translocation of the T4SS substrate VceC into host cells induces proinflammatory responses. Ectopically expressed VceC interacted with the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) chaperone BiP/Grp78 and localized to the ER of HeLa cells. ER localization of VceC required a transmembrane domain in its N terminus. Notably, the expression of VceC resulted in reorganization of ER structures. In macrophages, VceC was required for B. abortus-induced inflammation by induction of the unfolded protein response by a process requiring inositol-requiring transmembrane kinase/endonuclease 1. Altogether, these findings suggest that translocation of the T4SS effector VceC induces ER stress, which results in the induction of proinflammatory host cell responses during B. abortus infection. IMPORTANCE Brucella species are pathogens that require a type IV secretion system (T4SS) to survive in host cells and to maintain chronic infection. By as-yet-unknown pathways, the T4SS also elicits inflammatory responses in infected cells. Here we show that inflammation caused by the T4SS results in part from the sensing of a T4SS substrate, VceC, that localizes to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), an intracellular site of Brucella replication. Possibly via binding of the ER chaperone BiP, VceC causes ER stress with concomitant expression of proinflammatory cytokines. Thus, induction of the unfolded protein response may represent a novel pathway by which host cells can detect pathogens deploying a T4SS. Brucella species are pathogens that require a type IV secretion system (T4SS) to survive in host cells and to maintain chronic infection. By as-yet-unknown pathways, the T4SS also elicits inflammatory responses in infected cells. Here we show that inflammation caused by the T4SS results in part from the sensing of a T4SS substrate, VceC, that localizes to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), an intracellular site of Brucella replication. Possibly via binding of the ER chaperone BiP, VceC causes ER stress with concomitant expression of proinflammatory cytokines. Thus, induction of the unfolded protein response may represent a novel pathway by which host cells can detect pathogens deploying a T4SS.


Molecular Microbiology | 2006

Structure‐based mutagenesis of SigE verifies the importance of hydrophobic and electrostatic residues in type III chaperone function

Leigh A. Knodler; Michela G. Bertero; Calvin K. Yip; Natalie C. J. Strynadka; Olivia Steele-Mortimer

Despite sharing little sequence identity, most type III chaperones display a similar homodimeric structure characterized by negative charges distributed broadly over their entire surface, interspersed with hydrophobic patches. Here we have used SigE from Salmonella as a model for class IA type III chaperones to investigate the role of these surface‐exposed residues in chaperone function. SigE is essential for the stability, secretion and translocation of its cognate effector, SopB (SigD). We analysed the effect of mutating nine conserved hydrophobic and electronegative surface‐exposed amino acids of SigE on SopB binding, stability, secretion and translocation. Six of these mutations affected some aspect of SigE function (Leu14, Asp20, Leu22, Leu23, Ile25 and Asp51) and three were without effect (Leu54, Glu92 and Glu99). Our results highlight that both hydrophobic and electronegative surfaces are required for the function of SigE and provide an important basis for the prediction of side‐chain requirements for other chaperone–effector pairs.

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Robin Ireland

Rocky Mountain Laboratories

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B. Brett Finlay

University of British Columbia

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Bruce A. Vallance

University of British Columbia

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Calvin K. Yip

University of British Columbia

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Aaron Bestor

National Institutes of Health

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Dale Howe

Rocky Mountain Laboratories

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Jean Celli

Rocky Mountain Laboratories

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