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Dive into the research topics where Leslie Marie Palmer is active.

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Featured researches published by Leslie Marie Palmer.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2004

Novel Chromosomally Encoded Multidrug Efflux Transporter MdeA in Staphylococcus aureus

Jianzhong Huang; Paul W. O'Toole; Wei Shen; Heather Amrine-Madsen; Xinhe Jiang; Neethan Lobo; Leslie Marie Palmer; LeRoy Voelker; Frank Fan; Michael N. Gwynn; Damien McDevitt

ABSTRACT Antibiotic efflux is an important mechanism of resistance in pathogenic bacteria. Here we describe the identification and characterization of a novel chromosomally encoded multidrug resistance efflux protein in Staphylococcus aureus, MdeA (multidrug efflux A). MdeA was identified from screening an S. aureus open reading frame expression library for resistance to antibiotic compounds. When overexpressed, MdeA confers resistance on S. aureus to a range of quaternary ammonium compounds and antibiotics, but not fluoroquinolones. MdeA is a 52-kDa protein with 14 predicted transmembrane segments. It belongs to the major facilitator superfamily and is most closely related, among known efflux proteins, to LmrB of Bacillus subtilis and EmrB of Escherichia coli. Overexpression of mdeA in S. aureus reduced ethidium bromide uptake and enhanced its efflux, which could be inhibited by reserpine and abolished by an uncoupler. The mdeA promoter was identified by primer extension. Spontaneous mutants selected for increased resistance to an MdeA substrate had undergone mutations in the promoter for mdeA, and their mdeA transcription levels were increased by as much as 15-fold. The mdeA gene was present in the genomes of all six strains of S. aureus examined. Uncharacterized homologs of MdeA were present elsewhere in the S. aureus genome, but their overexpression did not mediate resistance to the antibacterials tested. However, MdeA homologs were identified in other bacteria, including Bacillus anthracis, some of which were shown to be functional orthologs of MdeA.


Gene | 2000

Regulated gene expression in Staphylococcus aureus for identifying conditional lethal phenotypes and antibiotic mode of action.

Ling Zhang; Frank Fan; Leslie Marie Palmer; Michael Arthur Lonetto; Chantal M. Petit; LeRoy L. Voelker; Annemarie St. John; Brent Bankosky; Martin Rosenberg; Damien McDevitt

Selectively regulating gene expression in bacteria has provided an important tool for studying gene function. However, well-regulated gene control systems have been restricted primarily for use in laboratory non-pathogenic strains of bacteria (e.g. Escherichia coli, Bacillus subtilis). The development of analogous systems for use in bacterial pathogens such as Staphylococcus aureus would significantly enhance our ability to examine the contribution of any given gene product to pathogen growth and viability. In this report, we adapt, examine and compare three regulated gene expression systems in S. aureus, which had previously been used in B. subtilis. We demonstrate that all three systems function and exhibit titratable induction, together covering a dynamic range of gene expression of approximately 3000-fold. This dynamic range correlates well with the physiological expression levels of cellular proteins. Importantly, we show that one of these systems, the Spac system, is particularly useful for examining gene essentiality and creating specific conditional lethal phenotypes. Moreover, we find that titration of selective target gene products using this system allows direct demonstration of antibiotic mode of action.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2003

Characterization of a Novel Fucose-Regulated Promoter (PfcsK) Suitable for Gene Essentiality and Antibacterial Mode-of-Action Studies in Streptococcus pneumoniae

Pan F. Chan; Karen O'Dwyer; Leslie Marie Palmer; Jennifer D. Ambrad; Karen A. Ingraham; Chi So; Michael Arthur Lonetto; Sanjoy Biswas; Martin Rosenberg; David J. Holmes; Magdalena Zalacain

The promoter of the Streptococcus pneumoniae putative fuculose kinase gene (fcsK), the first gene of a novel fucose utilization operon, is induced by fucose and repressed by glucose or sucrose. When the streptococcal polypeptide deformylase (PDF) gene (def1, encoding PDF) was placed under the control of P(fcsK), fucose-dependent growth of the S. pneumoniae (P(fcsK)::def1) strain was observed, confirming the essential nature of PDF in this organism. The mode of antibacterial action of actinonin, a known PDF inhibitor, was also confirmed with this strain. The endogenous fuculose kinase promoter is a tightly regulated, titratable promoter which will be useful for target validation and for confirmation of the mode of action of novel antibacterial drugs in S. pneumoniae.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2011

Comparative Genomics of Klebsiella pneumoniae Strains with Different Antibiotic Resistance Profiles

Vinod Kumar; Peng Sun; Jessica Vamathevan; Yong Li; Karen A. Ingraham; Leslie Marie Palmer; Jianzhong Huang; James R. Brown

ABSTRACT There is a global emergence of multidrug-resistant (MDR) strains of Klebsiella pneumoniae, a Gram-negative enteric bacterium that causes nosocomial and urinary tract infections. While the epidemiology of K. pneumoniae strains and occurrences of specific antibiotic resistance genes, such as plasmid-borne extended-spectrum β-lactamases (ESBLs), have been extensively studied, only four complete genomes of K. pneumoniae are available. To better understand the multidrug resistance factors in K. pneumoniae, we determined by pyrosequencing the nearly complete genome DNA sequences of two strains with disparate antibiotic resistance profiles, broadly drug-susceptible strain JH1 and strain 1162281, which is resistant to multiple clinically used antibiotics, including extended-spectrum β-lactams, fluoroquinolones, aminoglycosides, trimethoprim, and sulfamethoxazoles. Comparative genomic analysis of JH1, 1162281, and other published K. pneumoniae genomes revealed a core set of 3,631 conserved orthologous proteins, which were used for reconstruction of whole-genome phylogenetic trees. The close evolutionary relationship between JH1 and 1162281 relative to other K. pneumoniae strains suggests that a large component of the genetic and phenotypic diversity of clinical isolates is due to horizontal gene transfer. Using curated lists of over 400 antibiotic resistance genes, we identified all of the elements that differentiated the antibiotic profile of MDR strain 1162281 from that of susceptible strain JH1, such as the presence of additional efflux pumps, ESBLs, and multiple mechanisms of fluoroquinolone resistance. Our study adds new and significant DNA sequence data on K. pneumoniae strains and demonstrates the value of whole-genome sequencing in characterizing multidrug resistance in clinical isolates.


Archive | 1998

Method for determining gene essentiality in a pathogen

Leslie Marie Palmer; Julie M. SmithKline Beecham Pharma. Pratt; Martin Rosenberg


Archive | 2001

GTP cyclohydrolase II (RIBA)

Min Wang; Judith M. Ward; Richard Lloyd Warren; Richard Oakley Nicholas; Leslie Marie Palmer; Julie M. Pratt; David Justin Charles Knowles; Michael Arthur Lonetto; Jeffrey Mooney; Michael Terence Black; Martin Karl Russell Burnham; Christine Debouck; Jason Craig Fedon; John Edward Hodgson; Deborah Dee Jaworski; Raymond Winfield Reichard; Martin Rosenberg; Christopher Michael Traini; Yi Yi Zhong


Archive | 1999

Polynucleotides encoding GTP cyclohydrolase II (ribA)

Min Wang; Judith M. Ward; Richard Lloyd Warren; Richard Oakley Nicholas; Leslie Marie Palmer; Julie M. Pratt; David Justin Charles Knowles; Michael Arthur Lonetto; Jeffrey Mooney; Michael Terence Black; Martin Karl Russell Burnham; Christine Debouck; Jason Craig Fedon; John Edward Hodgson; Deborah Dee Jaworski; Raymond Winfield Reichard; Martin Rosenberg; Christopher Michael Traini; Yi Yi Zhong


Archive | 1999

FabF from Staphylococcus aureus

Howard Kallender; John T. Lonsdale; Leslie Marie Palmer; Joshua West; Stephanie Van Horn


Archive | 2000

A histidine kinase, 636 hk, of staphylococcus aureus

Martin Karl Russel Burnham; Leslie Marie Palmer; John P. Throup; Stephanie Van Horn; Richard Lloyd Warren


Archive | 1998

Staphylococcus aureus 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase

Leslie Marie Palmer; Michael Arthur Lonetto; Richard O. Nicholas; Robert L. Deresiewicz; Julie M. Pratt; John Edward Hodgson; David T. Beattie; Adrian M. Lowe

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John Edward Hodgson

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Julie M. Pratt

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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