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Dive into the research topics where Matthew W. Gilmour is active.

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Featured researches published by Matthew W. Gilmour.


Science | 2013

Distinguishable epidemics of multidrug-resistant Salmonella Typhimurium DT104 in different hosts.

Alison E. Mather; S. Reid; Duncan J. Maskell; Julian Parkhill; Maria Fookes; Simon R. Harris; Derek J. Brown; J E Coia; Michael R. Mulvey; Matthew W. Gilmour; Liljana Petrovska; E. de Pinna; M. Kuroda; M. Akiba; H. Izumiya; Thomas Richard Connor; Marc A. Suchard; Philippe Lemey; D. J. Mellor; Daniel T. Haydon; Nicholas R. Thomson

Sourcing Antibiotic Resistance It is widely assumed that antibiotic resistance in farm animals contributes in a major way to antibiotic resistance in humans. Mather et al. (p. 1514, published online 12 September; see the Perspective by Woolhouse and Ward) analyzed hundreds of genome sequences from Salmonella isolates collected from both livestock and patients in Scotland between 1990 and 2004. The relative contributions of animal-derived and human-derived sources of infection were quantified and the phylogenetic diversity of resistance profiles was matched with bacterial phylogenies. The results suggest that most human infections are caught from other humans rather than from livestock and that humans harbor a greater diversity of antibiotic resistance. Antibiotic resistance travels in independent epidemics in humans and their livestock. [Also see Perspective by Woolhouse and Ward] The global epidemic of multidrug-resistant Salmonella Typhimurium DT104 provides an important example, both in terms of the agent and its resistance, of a widely disseminated zoonotic pathogen. Here, with an unprecedented national collection of isolates collected contemporaneously from humans and animals and including a sample of internationally derived isolates, we have used whole-genome sequencing to dissect the phylogenetic associations of the bacterium and its antimicrobial resistance genes through the course of an epidemic. Contrary to current tenets supporting a single homogeneous epidemic, we demonstrate that the bacterium and its resistance genes were largely maintained within animal and human populations separately and that there was limited transmission, in either direction. We also show considerable variation in the resistance profiles, in contrast to the largely stable bacterial core genome, which emphasizes the critical importance of integrated genotypic data sets in understanding the ecology of bacterial zoonoses and antimicrobial resistance.


Molecular Microbiology | 2003

Interaction between the IncHI1 plasmid R27 coupling protein and type IV secretion system: TraG associates with the coiled-coil mating pair formation protein TrhB

Matthew W. Gilmour; James E. Gunton; Trevor D. Lawley; Diane E. Taylor

Assemblies of plasmid‐encoded proteins direct the conjugative transfer of plasmid DNA molecules between bacteria. These include the membrane‐associated mating pair formation (Mpf) complex necessary for pilus production and the cytoplasmic relaxosome required for DNA processing. The proposed link between these distinct protein complexes is the coupling protein (the TraG family of proteins). Interactions between the coupling protein and relaxosome components have been previously characterized and we document here, for the first time, a direct interaction between the coupling protein and an Mpf protein. Using the adenylate cyclase bacterial two‐hybrid (BTH) system, we present in vivo evidence that the IncHI1 plasmid R27‐encoded proteins TraG and TrhB interact. This interaction was verified through a co‐immunoprecipitation reaction. We have also been able to delineate the interaction domain of TrhB to TraG by showing a positive interaction using the first 220 amino acids of TrhB (452 aa). TrhB has a proline‐rich domain from amino acids 135–173 which may serve to facilitate protein interactions and/or periplasmic extension. TrhB self association was detected using far‐Western, co‐immunoprecipitation, and also BTH analysis, which was used to define the homotypic interaction domain, comprising a predicted coiled‐coil region at residues 77–124 of TrhB. These data support a model in which the coupling protein interacts with an Mpf component to target the transferring DNA strand held by the relaxosome to the transmembrane Mpf complex.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2012

Integrating genome-based informatics to modernize global disease monitoring, information sharing, and response.

Frank Møller Aarestrup; Eric W. Brown; Chris Detter; Peter Gerner-Smidt; Matthew W. Gilmour; Dag Harmsen; Rene S. Hendriksen; Roger Hewson; David L. Heymann; Karin Johansson; Kashef Ijaz; Paul Keim; Marion Koopmans; Annelies Kroneman; Danilo Lo Fo Wong; Ole Lund; Daniel Palm; Pathom Sawanpanyalert; Jeremy Sobel; Jørgen Schlundt

The rapid advancement of genome technologies holds great promise for improving the quality and speed of clinical and public health laboratory investigations and for decreasing their cost. The latest generation of genome DNA sequencers can provide highly detailed and robust information on disease-causing microbes, and in the near future these technologies will be suitable for routine use in national, regional, and global public health laboratories. With additional improvements in instrumentation, these next- or third-generation sequencers are likely to replace conventional culture-based and molecular typing methods to provide point-of-care clinical diagnosis and other essential information for quicker and better treatment of patients. Provided there is free-sharing of information by all clinical and public health laboratories, these genomic tools could spawn a global system of linked databases of pathogen genomes that would ensure more efficient detection, prevention, and control of endemic, emerging, and other infectious disease outbreaks worldwide.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2002

Functional and Mutational Analysis of Conjugative Transfer Region 2 (Tra2) from the IncHI1 Plasmid R27

Trevor D. Lawley; Matthew W. Gilmour; James E. Gunton; Leah J. Standeven; Diane E. Taylor

The transfer 2 region (Tra2) of the conjugative plasmid drR27 (derepressed R27) was analyzed by PSI-BLAST, insertional mutagenesis, genetic complementation, and an H-pilus assay. Tra2 contains 11 mating-pair formation (Mpf) genes that are essential for conjugative transfer, 9 of which are essential for H-pilus production (trhA, -L, -E, -K, -B, -V, -C, -P, and -W). TrhK has similarity to secretin proteins, suggesting a mechanism by which DNA could traverse the outer membrane of donors. The remaining two Mpf genes, trhU and trhN, play an auxiliary role in H-pilus synthesis and are proposed to be involved in DNA transfer and mating-pair stabilization, respectively. Conjugative transfer abilities were restored for each mutant when complemented with the corresponding transfer gene. In addition to the essential Mpf genes, three genes, trhO, trhZ, and htdA, modulate R27 transfer frequency. Disruption of trhO and trhZ severely reduced the transfer frequencies of drR27, whereas disruption of htdA greatly increased the transfer frequency of wild-type R27 to drR27 levels. A comparison of the essential transfer genes encoded by the Tra2 and Tra1 (T. D. Lawley, M. W. Gilmour, J. E. Gunton, L. J. Standeven, and D. E. Taylor, J. Bacteriol. 184:2173-2183, 2002) of R27 to other transfer systems illustrates that the R27 conjugative transfer system is a chimera composed of IncF-like and IncP-like transfer systems. Furthermore, the Mpf/type IV secretion systems encoded by IncH and IncF transfer systems are distinct from that of the IncP transfer system. The phenotypic and ecological significance of these observations is discussed.


Journal of Microbiological Methods | 2013

Evaluation of MALDI-TOF mass spectroscopy methods for determination of Escherichia coli pathotypes

Clifford G. Clark; Peter Kruczkiewicz; Cai Guan; Stuart McCorrister; Patrick Chong; John L. Wylie; Paul Van Caeseele; Helen Tabor; Phillip Snarr; Matthew W. Gilmour; Eduardo N. Taboada; Garrett Westmacott

It is rapidly becoming apparent that many E. coli pathotypes cause a considerable burden of human disease. Surveillance of these organisms is difficult because there are few or no simple, rapid methods for detecting and differentiating the different pathotypes. MALDI-TOF mass spectroscopy has recently been rapidly and enthusiastically adopted by many clinical laboratories as a diagnostic method because of its high throughput, relatively low cost, and adaptability to the laboratory workflow. To determine whether the method could be adapted for E. coli pathotype differentiation the Bruker Biotyper methodology and a second methodology adapted from the scientific literature were tested on isolates representing eight distinct pathotypes and two other groups of E. coli. A total of 136 isolates was used for this study. Results confirmed that the Bruker Biotyper methodology that included extraction of proteins from bacterial cells was capable of identifying E. coli isolates from all pathotypes to the species level and, furthermore, that the Bruker extraction and MALDI-TOF MS with the evaluation criteria developed in this work was effective for differentiating most pathotypes.


Epidemiology and Infection | 2012

Integrated surveillance and potential sources of Salmonella Enteritidis in human cases in Canada from 2003 to 2009

Andrea Nesbitt; André Ravel; Regan Murray; Rachel H. McCormick; Carmen Savelli; Rita Finley; Jane Parmley; Agnes Agunos; Shannon E. Majowicz; Matthew W. Gilmour

SUMMARY Salmonella Enteritidis has emerged as the most prevalent cause of human salmonellosis in Canada. Recent trends of S. Enteritidis subtypes and their potential sources were described by integrating Salmonella data from several Canadian surveillance and monitoring programmes. A threefold increase in S. Enteritidis cases from 2003 to 2009 was identified to be primarily associated with phage types 13, 8 and 13a. Other common phage types (4, 1, 6a) showed winter seasonality and were more likely to be associated with cases linked to international travel. Conversely, phage types 13, 8 and 13a had summer seasonal peaks and were associated with cases of domestically acquired infections. During agri-food surveillance, S. Enteritidis was detected in various commodities, most frequently in chicken (with PT13, PT8 and PT13a predominating). Antimicrobial resistance was low in human and non-human isolates. Continued integrated surveillance and collaborative prevention and control efforts are required to mitigate future illness.


PLOS ONE | 2012

A comparison of Shiga-toxin 2 bacteriophage from classical enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli serotypes and the German E. coli O104:H4 outbreak strain.

Chad R. Laing; Yongxiang Zhang; Matthew W. Gilmour; Vanessa Allen; Roger P. Johnson; James E. Thomas; Victor P. J. Gannon

Escherichia coli O104:H4 was associated with a severe foodborne disease outbreak originating in Germany in May 2011. More than 4000 illnesses and 50 deaths were reported. The outbreak strain was a typical enteroaggregative E. coli (EAEC) that acquired an antibiotic resistance plasmid and a Shiga-toxin 2 (Stx2)-encoding bacteriophage. Based on whole-genome phylogenies, the O104:H4 strain was most closely related to other EAEC strains; however, Stx2-bacteriophage are mobile, and do not necessarily share an evolutionary history with their bacterial host. In this study, we analyzed Stx2-bacteriophage from the E. coli O104:H4 outbreak isolates and compared them to all available Stx2-bacteriophage sequences. We also compared Stx2 production by an E. coli O104:H4 outbreak-associated isolate (ON-2011) to that of E. coli O157:H7 strains EDL933 and Sakai. Among the E. coli Stx2-phage sequences studied, that from O111:H- strain JB1-95 was most closely related phylogenetically to the Stx2-phage from the O104:H4 outbreak isolates. The phylogeny of most other Stx2-phage was largely concordant with their bacterial host genomes. Finally, O104:H4 strain ON-2011 produced less Stx2 than E. coli O157:H7 strains EDL933 and Sakai in culture; however, when mitomycin C was added, ON-2011 produced significantly more toxin than the E. coli O157:H7 strains. The Stx2-phage from the E. coli O104:H4 outbreak strain and the Stx2-phage from O111:H- strain JB1-95 likely share a common ancestor. Incongruence between the phylogenies of the Stx2-phage and their host genomes suggest the recent Stx2-phage acquisition by E. coli O104:H4. The increase in Stx2-production by ON-2011 following mitomycin C treatment may or may not be related to the high rates of hemolytic uremic syndrome associated with the German outbreak strain. Further studies are required to determine whether the elevated Stx2-production levels are due to bacteriophage or E. coli O104:H4 host related factors.


Molecular Microbiology | 2008

Cellular location and temperature-dependent assembly of IncHI1 plasmid R27-encoded TrhC-associated conjugative transfer protein complexes

Matthew W. Gilmour; Trevor D. Lawley; Michelle M. Rooker; Peter J. Newnham; Diane E. Taylor

Conjugal transfer of IncHI plasmid DNA between Gram‐negative bacteria is temperature sensitive, as mating is optimal between 22°C and 30°C but is inhibited at 37°C. R27, isolated from Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi, is an IncHI1 plasmid of 180 kbp that has been sequenced completely. The gene encoding green fluorescent protein (GFP) was inserted into R27 in frame with trhC. TrhC is a mating pair formation (Mpf) protein that is essential for plasmid transfer and H‐pilus production. Fluorescence microscopy allowed visualization of the TrhC–GFP fusion protein, and Escherichia coli cells were examined for the subcellular localization and temperature‐dependent production of TrhC–GFP. At 27°C, TrhC–GFP was found at the periphery of cells as discrete foci, indicating an association of TrhC within protein complexes in the bacterial cell membrane, whereas at 37°C, little fluorescence was detected. These foci probably represent the intracellular position of protein complexes involved in conjugative transfer, as the formation of foci was dependent upon the presence of other Mpf proteins. During temperature shift experiments from 37°C to 27°C, a long lag period was required for generation of GFP foci. Conversely, during short shifts from 27°C to 37°C, the GFP foci remained stable. These results suggest that the expression of transfer genes in the Tra2 region of R27 is temperature dependent. Subcellular localization of TrhC was verified by cellular fractionation. Expression patterns of TrhC–GFP were confirmed with immunoblot analysis and reverse transcriptase–polymerase chain reaction (RT–PCR). These results allow us to propose mechanisms to explain the temperature‐sensitive transfer of R27.


The Journal of Molecular Diagnostics | 2010

Comparison of Shiga Toxin-Producing Escherichia coli Detection Methods Using Clinical Stool Samples

Linda Chui; Marc R. Couturier; Theodore Chiu; Gehua Wang; Adam B. Olson; Ryan R. McDonald; Nick A. Antonishyn; Greg Horsman; Matthew W. Gilmour

Molecular diagnostic tools capable of identifying Shiga toxin-specific genetic determinants in stool specimens permit an unbiased approach to detect Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) in clinical samples and can indicate when culture-based isolation methods are required. It is increasingly recognized that clinically relevant STEC are not limited to the singular O157 serotypes, and therefore diagnostic assays targeting toxin-encoding determinants must be able to account for any genetic variation that exists between serotypes. In this study conventional PCR and four real-time PCR assays (HybProbe, TaqMan, SYBR Green, and LUX) targeting the stx1 and stx2 Shiga toxin coding sequences were used to identify STEC in enriched stool samples (n = 36) and a panel of O157 and non-O157 strains (n = 64). PCR assays targeting stx1 and stx2 had variable specificity and sensitivity values with enriched stool samples. Molecular assays using DNA from pure cultures revealed that some primers were not sensitive to all stx2 variants. This evaluation concluded that the TaqMan-based probes were most appropriate in high throughput clinical diagnostic laboratories in consideration of cost, turn around time, and assay performance.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2015

Defining the Phylogenomics of Shigella Species: a Pathway to Diagnostics

Jason W. Sahl; Carolyn R. Morris; Jennifer Emberger; Claire M. Fraser; John B. Ochieng; Jane Juma; Barry Fields; Robert F. Breiman; Matthew W. Gilmour; James P. Nataro; David A. Rasko

ABSTRACT Shigellae cause significant diarrheal disease and mortality in humans, as there are approximately 163 million episodes of shigellosis and 1.1 million deaths annually. While significant strides have been made in the understanding of the pathogenesis, few studies on the genomic content of the Shigella species have been completed. The goal of this study was to characterize the genomic diversity of Shigella species through sequencing of 55 isolates representing members of each of the four Shigella species: S. flexneri, S. sonnei, S. boydii, and S. dysenteriae. Phylogeny inferred from 336 available Shigella and Escherichia coli genomes defined exclusive clades of Shigella; conserved genomic markers that can identify each clade were then identified. PCR assays were developed for each clade-specific marker, which was combined with an amplicon for the conserved Shigella invasion antigen, IpaH3, into a multiplex PCR assay. This assay demonstrated high specificity, correctly identifying 218 of 221 presumptive Shigella isolates, and sensitivity, by not identifying any of 151 diverse E. coli isolates incorrectly as Shigella. This new phylogenomics-based PCR assay represents a valuable tool for rapid typing of uncharacterized Shigella isolates and provides a framework that can be utilized for the identification of novel genomic markers from genomic data.

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David Safronetz

Public Health Agency of Canada

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Joseph Darbellay

Vaccine and Infectious Disease Organization

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Uladzimir Karniychuk

Vaccine and Infectious Disease Organization

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Trevor D. Lawley

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Colette Wheler

Vaccine and Infectious Disease Organization

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Garrett Westmacott

Public Health Agency of Canada

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Helen Tabor

Public Health Agency of Canada

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