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Dive into the research topics where Mark E. Wickham is active.

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Featured researches published by Mark E. Wickham.


Cell | 1997

Targeted Gene Disruption Shows That Knobs Enable Malaria-Infected Red Cells to Cytoadhere under Physiological Shear Stress

Brendan S. Crabb; Brian M. Cooke; John C. Reeder; Ross F. Waller; Sonia R. Caruana; Kathleen M. Davern; Mark E. Wickham; Graham V. Brown; Ross L. Coppel; Alan F. Cowman

Knobs at the surface of erythrocytes infected with Plasmodium falciparum have been proposed to be important in adherence of these cells to the vascular endothelium. This structure contains the knob-associated histidine-rich protein (KAHRP) and the adhesion receptor P. falciparum erythrocyte membrane protein 1. We have disrupted the gene encoding KAHRP and show that it is essential for knob formation. Knob-transfectants adhere to CD36 in static assays; when tested under flow conditions that mimic those of postcapillary venules, however, the binding to CD36 was dramatically reduced. These data suggest that knobs on P. falciparum-infected erythrocytes exert an important influence on adherence of parasitized-erythrocytes to microvascular endothelium, an important process in the pathogenesis of P. falciparum infections.


The EMBO Journal | 2001

Trafficking and assembly of the cytoadherence complex in Plasmodium falciparum-infected human erythrocytes

Mark E. Wickham; Melanie Rug; Stuart A. Ralph; Nectarios Klonis; Geoffrey I. McFadden; Leann Tilley; Alan F. Cowman

After invading human erythrocytes, the malarial parasite Plasmodium falciparum, initiates a remarkable process of secreting proteins into the surrounding erythrocyte cytoplasm and plasma membrane. One of these exported proteins, the knob‐associated histidine‐rich protein (KAHRP), is essential for microvascular sequestration, a strategy whereby infected red cells adhere via knob structures to capillary walls and thus avoid being eliminated by the spleen. This cytoadherence is an important factor in many of the deaths caused by malaria. Green fluorescent protein fusions and fluorescence recovery after photobleaching were used to follow the pathway of KAHRP deployment from the parasite endomembrane system into an intermediate depot between parasite and host, then onwards to the erythrocyte cytoplasm and eventually into knobs. Sequence elements essential to individual steps in the pathway are defined and we show that parasite‐derived structures, known as Maurers clefts, are an elaboration of the canonical secretory pathway that is transposed outside the parasite into the host cell, the first example of its kind in eukaryotic biology.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2008

Molecular Analysis as an Aid To Assess the Public Health Risk of Non-O157 Shiga Toxin-Producing Escherichia coli Strains

Brian K. Coombes; Mark E. Wickham; Mariola Mascarenhas; Samantha Gruenheid; B. Brett Finlay; Mohamed A. Karmali

ABSTRACT Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) strains are commensal bacteria in cattle with high potential for environmental and zoonotic transmission to humans. Although O157:H7 is the most common STEC serotype, there is growing concern over the emergence of more than 200 highly virulent non-O157 STEC serotypes that are globally distributed, several of which are associated with outbreaks and/or severe human illness such as hemolytic-uremic syndrome (HUS) and hemorrhagic colitis. At present, the underlying genetic basis of virulence potential in non-O157 STEC is unknown, although horizontal gene transfer and the acquisition of new pathogenicity islands are an expected origin. We used seropathotype classification as a framework to identify genetic elements that distinguish non-O157 STEC strains posing a serious risk to humans from STEC strains that are not associated with severe and epidemic disease. We report the identification of three genomic islands encoding non-LEE effector (nle) genes and 14 individual nle genes in non-O157 STEC strains that correlate independently with outbreak and HUS potential in humans. The implications for transmissible zoonotic spread and public health are discussed. These results and methods offer a molecular risk assessment strategy to rapidly recognize and respond to non-O157 STEC strains from environmental and animal sources that might pose serious public health risks to humans.


Cellular Microbiology | 2006

Attaching and effacing pathogen‐induced tight junction disruption in vivo

Julian A. Guttman; Yuling Li; Mark E. Wickham; Wanyin Deng; A. Wayne Vogl; B. Brett Finlay

Diarrhoea is a hallmark of infections by the human attaching and effacing (A/E) pathogens, enterohaemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) and enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC). Although the mechanisms underlying diarrhoea induced by these pathogens remain unknown, cell culture results have suggested that these pathogens may target tight junctions. Tight junctions in the colon function as physical intercellular barriers that separate and prevent mixing of the luminal contents with adlumenal regions of the epithelium. Consequently, it is thought that the disruption of intestinal epithelial tight junctions by A/E pathogens could result in a loss of barrier function in the alimentary tract; however, this remains unexamined. Here we demonstrate for the first time that A/E pathogen infection results in the morphological alteration of tight junctions during natural disease. Tight junction alteration, characterized by relocalization of the transmembrane tight junction proteins claudin 1, 3 and 5, is a functional disruption; molecular tracers, which do not normally penetrate uninfected epithelia, pass across pathogen‐infected epithelia. Functional junction disruption occurs with a concomitant increase in colon luminal water content. The effects on tissue are dependent upon the bacterial type III effector EspF (E. coli secreted protein F), because bacteria lacking EspF, while able to colonize, are defective for junction disruption and result in decreased proportions of water in the colon compared with wild‐type infection. These results suggest that the diarrhoea induced by A/E pathogens occurs as part of functional tight junction disruption.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Selective Inhibition of a Two-step Egress of Malaria Parasites from the Host Erythrocyte

Mark E. Wickham; Janetta G. Culvenor; Alan F. Cowman

Escape from the host erythrocyte by the invasive stage of the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum is a fundamental step in the pathogenesis of malaria of which little is known. Upon merozoite invasion of the host cell, the parasite becomes enclosed within a parasitophorous vacuole, the compartment in which the parasite undergoes growth followed by asexual division to produce 16–32 daughter merozoites. These daughter cells are released upon parasitophorous vacuole and erythrocyte membrane rupture. To examine the process of merozoite release, we used P. falciparum lines expressing green fluorescent protein-chimeric proteins targeted to the compartments from which merozoites must exit: the parasitophorous vacuole and the host erythrocyte cytosol. This allowed visualization of merozoite release in live parasites. Herein we provide the first evidence in live, untreated cells that merozoite release involves a primary rupture of the parasitophorous vacuole membrane followed by a secondary rupture of the erythrocyte plasma membrane. We have confirmed, with the use of immunoelectron microscopy, that parasitophorous vacuole membrane rupture occurs before erythrocyte plasma membrane rupture in untransfected wild-type parasites. We have also demonstrated selective inhibition of each step in this two-step process of exit using different protease inhibitors, implicating the involvement of distinct proteases in each of these steps. This will facilitate the identification of the parasite and host molecules involved in merozoite release.


The EMBO Journal | 2000

Targeted mutagenesis of Plasmodium falciparum erythrocyte membrane protein 3 (PfEMP3) disrupts cytoadherence of malaria‐infected red blood cells

Jacqueline G. Waterkeyn; Mark E. Wickham; Kathleen M. Davern; Brian M. Cooke; Ross L. Coppel; John C. Reeder; Janetta G. Culvenor; Ross F. Waller; Alan F. Cowman

Adhesion of parasite‐infected red blood cells to the vascular endothelium is a critical event in the pathogenesis of malaria caused by Plasmodium falciparum. Adherence is mediated by the variant erythrocyte membrane protein 1 (PfEMP1). Another protein, erythrocyte membrane protein‐3 (PfEMP3), is deposited under the membrane of the parasite‐infected erythrocyte but its function is unknown. Here we show that mutation of PfEMP3 disrupts transfer of PfEMP1 to the outside of the P.falciparum‐infected cell. Truncation of the C‐terminal end of PfEMP3 by transfection prevents distribution of this large (>300 kDa) protein around the membrane but does not disrupt trafficking of the protein from the parasite to the cytoplasmic face of the erythrocyte membrane. The truncated PfEMP3 accumulates in structures that appear to be associated with the erythrocyte membrane. We show that accumulation of mutated PfEMP3 blocks the transfer of PfEMP1 onto the outside of the parasitized cell surface and suggest that these proteins traffic through an erythrocyte membrane‐associated compartment that is involved in the transfer of PfEMP1 to the surface of the parasite‐infected red blood cell.


European Biophysics Journal | 2002

Fluorescence photobleaching analysis for the study of cellular dynamics

Nectarios Klonis; Melanie Rug; Ian Steward Harper; Mark E. Wickham; Alan F. Cowman; Leann Tilley

Abstract The wide availability of the confocal microscope and the emergence of green fluorescent protein (GFP) transfection technology has led to the increasing use of photobleaching studies to examine aspects of cellular dynamics in living cells. In this review, we examine the theory and practice of performing photobleaching studies using a confocal microscope. We illustrate the application of photobleaching protocols using our own measurements of fluorescently labelled red blood cells and of malaria parasite-infected erythrocytes expressing GFP fusions and examine other examples from the literature.


Cellular Microbiology | 2006

Citrobacter rodentium infection causes both mitochondrial dysfunction and intestinal epithelial barrier disruption in vivo: role of mitochondrial associated protein (Map).

Caixia Ma; Mark E. Wickham; Julian A. Guttman; Wanyin Deng; John Walker; Karen Madsen; Kevan Jacobson; Wayne Vogl; B. Brett Finlay; Bruce A. Vallance

Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) and enterohaemorrhagic E.u2003coli are non‐invasive attaching/effacing (A/E) bacterial pathogens that infect their host’s intestinal epithelium, causing severe diarrhoeal disease. These bacteria utilize a type III secretion apparatus to deliver effector molecules into host cells, subverting cellular function. Mitochondrial associated protein (Map) is a multifunctional effector protein that targets host cell mitochondria and contributes to infection‐induced epithelial barrier dysfunction in vitro. Unfortunately, the relevance of these actions to the pathogenesis of EPEC‐induced disease is uncertain. Using Citrobacter rodentium, a mouse‐adapted A/E bacterium, we found that Map colocalized with host cell mitochondria, and that in vivo infection led to a disruption of mitochondrial morphology in infected colonocytes as assessed by electron microscopy. Histochemical staining for the mitochondrial enzyme succinate dehydrogenase also revealed a significant loss of mitochondrial respiratory function in the infected intestinal epithelium; however, both pathologies were attenuated in mice infected with a Δmap strain. C.u2003rodentium Map was also implicated in the disruption of epithelial barrier function both in vitro and in vivo. These studies thus advance our understanding of how A/E pathogens subvert host cell functions and cause disease, demonstrating that Map contributes to the functional disruption of the intestinal epithelium during enteric infection by C.u2003rodentium.


PLOS Pathogens | 2006

Crossing the Line: Selection and Evolution of Virulence Traits

Nat F. Brown; Mark E. Wickham; Brian K. Coombes; B. Brett Finlay

The evolution of pathogens presents a paradox. Pathogenic species are often absolutely dependent on their host species for their propagation through evolutionary time, yet the pathogenic lifestyle requires that the host be damaged during this dependence. It is clear that pathogenic strategies are successful in evolutionary terms because a diverse array of pathogens exists in nature. Pathogens also evolve using a broad range of molecular mechanisms to acquire and modulate existing virulence traits in order to achieve this success. Detailing the benefit of enhanced selection derived through virulence and understanding the mechanisms through which virulence evolves are important to understanding the natural world and both have implications for human health.


FEBS Letters | 2000

Functional analysis of proteins involved in Plasmodium falciparum merozoite invasion of red blood cells

Alan F. Cowman; Deborah L. Baldi; Julie Healer; Kerry E. Mills; Rebecca A. O'Donnell; Michael B. Reed; Tony Triglia; Mark E. Wickham; Brendan S. Crabb

Plasmodium falciparum causes the most lethal form of malaria in humans and is responsible for over two million deaths per year. The development of a vaccine against this parasite is an urgent priority and potential protein targets include those on the surface of the asexual merozoite stage, the form that invades the host erythrocyte. The development of methods to transfect P. falciparum has enabled the construction of gain‐of‐function and loss‐of‐function mutants and provided new strategies to analyse the role of parasite proteins. In this review, we describe the use of this technology to examine the role of merozoite antigens in erythrocyte invasion and to address their potential as vaccine candidates.

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B. Brett Finlay

University of British Columbia

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Wanyin Deng

University of British Columbia

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Nathaniel Francis Brown

University of British Columbia

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Leann Tilley

University of Melbourne

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Michael J. Lowden

University of British Columbia

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