Michael E. Watson
Washington University in St. Louis
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Featured researches published by Michael E. Watson.
Infection and Immunity | 2014
Zachary T. Cusumano; Michael E. Watson; Michael G. Caparon
ABSTRACT A bacteriums ability to acquire nutrients from its host during infection is an essential component of pathogenesis. For the Gram-positive pathogen Streptococcus pyogenes, catabolism of the amino acid arginine via the arginine deiminase (ADI) pathway supplements energy production and provides protection against acid stress in vitro. Its expression is enhanced in murine models of infection, suggesting an important role in vivo. To gain insight into the function of the ADI pathway in pathogenesis, the virulence of mutants defective in each of its enzymes was examined. Mutants unable to use arginine (ΔArcA) or citrulline (ΔArcB) were attenuated for carriage in a murine model of asymptomatic mucosal colonization. However, in a murine model of inflammatory infection of cutaneous tissue, the ΔArcA mutant was attenuated but the ΔArcB mutant was hyperattenuated, revealing an unexpected tissue-specific role for citrulline metabolism in pathogenesis. When mice defective for the arginine-dependent production of nitric oxide (iNOS−/−) were infected with the ΔArcA mutant, cutaneous virulence was rescued, demonstrating that the ability of S. pyogenes to utilize arginine was dispensable in the absence of nitric oxide-mediated innate immunity. This work demonstrates the importance of arginine and citrulline catabolism and suggests a novel mechanism of virulence by which S. pyogenes uses its metabolism to modulate innate immunity through depletion of an essential host nutrient.
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2011
Michael E. Watson; Michele M. Estabrook; Carey-Ann D. Burnham
ABSTRACT A 23-month-old child with leukemia who was receiving chemotherapy developed fevers. Serial blood cultures from a central venous catheter and a peripheral venous site grew an organism identified by 16S rRNA gene sequencing and phenotypic analysis as Nocardia higoensis, an opportunistic organism isolated once previously from a pulmonary infection in Japan.
Journal of Medical Microbiology | 2013
Michael E. Watson; Kevin L. Nelson; Victoria Nguyen; Carey-Ann D. Burnham; Jill E. Clarridge; Xuan Qin; Arnold L. Smith
The incidence of invasive infections due to Haemophilus influenzae has decreased significantly in developed countries with high rates of vaccination against H. influenzae serotype b (Hib). This vaccine provides no protection against H. influenzae serotype f (Hif), typically associated with invasive infections in adults with chronic disease and/or immunodeficiency, and rarely in otherwise healthy adults and children. The specific properties of Hif associated with virulence remain largely uncharacterized. A panel of 26 Hif strains consisting of both invasive disease-associated and mucosal surface non-invasive disease-associated isolates was surveyed by DNA fingerprinting, biotyping and PCR detection of hmw1, hmw2, hsf, the hif fimbrial locus and the lipo-oligosaccharide (LOS) biosynthetic island, and assessment of β-lactamase expression and determination of resistance to the bactericidal activity of normal adult human serum. Repetitive sequence-based PCR fingerprinting differentiated the 26 strains into three clusters, with the majority of isolates (22/26, 84.6 %) clustered into a single indistinguishable group. Most isolates (24/26, 92.3 %) were of biotype I and two isolates produced β-lactamase with detection of a conjugative plasmid, and the isolates displayed a range of resistances to the bactericidal activity of human serum. All 26 isolates carried the adhesin hsf, 21 carried a partial hif fimbrial operon and 4 had the adhesin genes hmw1/2. A LOS biosynthetic island was detected in 20 isolates consisting of the genes lic2BC. It was concluded that Hif has many recognized virulence properties and comprises a relatively homogeneous group independent of the anatomical source from which it was isolated.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Alison J. Carey; Jason B. Weinberg; Suzanne Dawid; Carola Venturini; Alfred King-Yin Lam; Victor Nizet; Michael G. Caparon; Mark J. Walker; Michael E. Watson; Glen C. Ulett
Postpartum women are at increased risk of developing puerperal sepsis caused by group A Streptococcus (GAS). Specific GAS serotypes, including M1 and M28, are more commonly associated with puerperal sepsis. However, the mechanisms of GAS genital tract infection are not well understood. We utilized a murine genital tract carriage model to demonstrate that M1 and M28 GAS colonization triggers TNF-α, IL-1β, and IL-17A production in the female genital tract. GAS-induced IL-17A significantly influences streptococcal carriage and alters local inflammatory responses in two genetically distinct inbred strains of mice. An absence of IL-17A or the IL-1 receptor was associated with reduced neutrophil recruitment to the site of infection; and clearance of GAS was significantly attenuated in IL-17A−/− mice and Rag1−/− mice (that lack mature lymphocytes) but not in mice deficient for the IL-1 receptor. Together, these findings support a role for IL-17A in contributing to the control of streptococcal mucosal colonization and provide new insight into the inflammatory mediators regulating host-pathogen interactions in the female genital tract.
Archive | 2011
Michael E. Watson; Gregory A. Storch; W. Michael Dunne; Carey-Ann D. Burnham
A previously healthy 2-year-old Caucasian female from southeast Missouri presented to the emergency department of St. Louis Childrens Hospital in June 2010 with a week-long fever. Her history included the removal of a small tick engorged with blood several days prior to fever onset. She exhibited
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2011
Michael E. Watson; Gregory A. Storch; W. Michael Dunne; Carey-Ann D. Burnham
A previously healthy 2-year-old Caucasian female from southeast Missouri presented to the emergency department of St. Louis Childrens Hospital in June 2010 with a week-long fever. Her history included the removal of a small tick engorged with blood several days prior to fever onset. She exhibited
Infection and Immunity | 2013
Michael E. Watson; Hailyn V. Nielsen; Scott J. Hultgren; Michael G. Caparon
Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 2008
Michael E. Watson; Gregory A. Storch
Archive | 2016
Michael E. Watson; Melody N. Neely; Michael G. Caparon
Infectious Diseases in Clinical Practice | 2011
Michael E. Watson; Samuel Z. Davila; Carey-Ann D. Burnham; Victoria Nguyen; Kevin L. Nelson; Arnold L. Smith; Gregory A. Storch