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Dive into the research topics where Nadia Boisen is active.

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Featured researches published by Nadia Boisen.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2011

Origins of the E. coli strain causing an outbreak of hemolytic-uremic syndrome in Germany.

David A. Rasko; Dale Webster; Jason W. Sahl; Ali Bashir; Nadia Boisen; Flemming Scheutz; Ellen E. Paxinos; Robert Sebra; Chen Shan Chin; Dimitris Iliopoulos; Aaron Klammer; Paul Peluso; Lawrence Lee; Andrey Kislyuk; James Bullard; Andrew Kasarskis; Susanna Wang; John Eid; David Rank; Julia C. Redman; Susan R. Steyert; Jakob Frimodt-Møller; Carsten Struve; Andreas Petersen; Karen A. Krogfelt; James P. Nataro; Eric E. Schadt; Matthew K. Waldor

BACKGROUND A large outbreak of diarrhea and the hemolytic-uremic syndrome caused by an unusual serotype of Shiga-toxin-producing Escherichia coli (O104:H4) began in Germany in May 2011. As of July 22, a large number of cases of diarrhea caused by Shiga-toxin-producing E. coli have been reported--3167 without the hemolytic-uremic syndrome (16 deaths) and 908 with the hemolytic-uremic syndrome (34 deaths)--indicating that this strain is notably more virulent than most of the Shiga-toxin-producing E. coli strains. Preliminary genetic characterization of the outbreak strain suggested that, unlike most of these strains, it should be classified within the enteroaggregative pathotype of E. coli. METHODS We used third-generation, single-molecule, real-time DNA sequencing to determine the complete genome sequence of the German outbreak strain, as well as the genome sequences of seven diarrhea-associated enteroaggregative E. coli serotype O104:H4 strains from Africa and four enteroaggregative E. coli reference strains belonging to other serotypes. Genomewide comparisons were performed with the use of these enteroaggregative E. coli genomes, as well as those of 40 previously sequenced E. coli isolates. RESULTS The enteroaggregative E. coli O104:H4 strains are closely related and form a distinct clade among E. coli and enteroaggregative E. coli strains. However, the genome of the German outbreak strain can be distinguished from those of other O104:H4 strains because it contains a prophage encoding Shiga toxin 2 and a distinct set of additional virulence and antibiotic-resistance factors. CONCLUSIONS Our findings suggest that horizontal genetic exchange allowed for the emergence of the highly virulent Shiga-toxin-producing enteroaggregative E. coli O104:H4 strain that caused the German outbreak. More broadly, these findings highlight the way in which the plasticity of bacterial genomes facilitates the emergence of new pathogens.


Infection and Immunity | 2008

New Adhesin of Enteroaggregative Escherichia coli Related to the Afa/Dr/AAF Family

Nadia Boisen; Carsten Struve; Flemming Scheutz; Karen A. Krogfelt; James P. Nataro

ABSTRACT Enteroaggregative Escherichia coli (EAEC) is an important cause of diarrhea worldwide. We analyzed 17 Danish EAEC strains, isolated in the course of a case control study, for phenotypic and genotypic properties. The strains belonged to at least 14 different serotypes. Using PCR to investigate the prevalence of various putative virulence genes, we found that all but two strains were typical EAEC, as they harbored all or part of the previously described AggR regulon. The majority of the strains harbored genes encoding aggregative adherence fimbriae (AAF). The most common was AAF/I, found in nine strains; eight strains carried no known AAF-related genes. We utilized TnphoA mutagenesis to localize the aggregative adherence (AA) adhesin from one typical EAEC strain, C1010-00, which lacked a known AAF. We identified a TnphoA insertion in a hypothetical Dr-related pilin deposited in GenBank as HdaA. Four additional Danish strains harbored HdaA, and all but one displayed AA to HEp-2 cells. By using PCR primers derived from the pilins and ushers from the three AAF and Hda, we found that 16 of 17 strains exhibited evidence of one of these factors; importantly, the one negative strain also lacked the aggR gene. Cloning of the complete Hda gene cluster and expression in E. coli DH5α resulted in AA and complementation of the C1010-00 nonadherent mutant. Four related adhesins have now been found to confer AA in typical EAEC strains; our data suggest that, together, these variants may account for AA in the large majority of strains.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2012

Genomic Characterization of Enteroaggregative Escherichia coli From Children in Mali

Nadia Boisen; Flemming Scheutz; David A. Rasko; Julia C. Redman; Søren Persson; Jakub K. Simon; Karen L. Kotloff; Myron M. Levine; Samba O. Sow; Boubou Tamboura; Aliou Toure; Dramane Malle; Sandra Panchalingam; Karen A. Krogfelt; James P. Nataro

Background. Enteroaggregative Escherichia coli (EAEC) is a cause of epidemic and sporadic diarrhea, yet its role as an enteric pathogen is not fully understood. Methods. We characterized 121 EAEC strains isolated in 2008 as part of a case-control study of moderate to severe acute diarrhea among children 0–59 months of age in Bamako, Mali. We applied multiplex polymerase chain reaction and comparative genome hybridization to identify potential virulence factors among the EAEC strains, coupled with classification and regression tree modeling to reveal combinations of factors most strongly associated with illness. Results. The gene encoding the autotransporter protease SepA, originally described in Shigella species, was most strongly associated with diarrhea among the EAEC strains tested (odds ratio, 5.6 [95% confidence interval, 1.92–16.17]; P = .0006). In addition, we identified 3 gene combinations correlated with diarrhea: (1) a clonal group positive for sepA and a putative hemolysin; (2) a group harboring the EAST-1 enterotoxin and the flagellar type H33 but no other previously identified EAEC virulence factor; and (3) a group carrying several of the typical EAEC virulence genes. Conclusion. Our data suggest that only a subset of EAEC strains are pathogenic in Mali and suggest that sepA may serve as a valuable marker for the most virulent isolates.


Infection and Immunity | 2013

Role of enteroaggregative Escherichia coli virulence factors in uropathogenesis.

Erik J. Boll; Carsten Struve; Nadia Boisen; Bente Olesen; Steen G. Stahlhut; Karen A. Krogfelt

ABSTRACT A multiresistant clonal Escherichia coli O78:H10 strain qualifying molecularly as enteroaggregative Escherichia coli (EAEC) was recently shown to be the cause of a community-acquired outbreak of urinary tract infection (UTI) in greater Copenhagen, Denmark, in 1991. This marks the first time EAEC has been associated with an extraintestinal disease outbreak. Importantly, the outbreak isolates were recovered from the urine of patients with symptomatic UTI, strongly implying urovirulence. Here, we sought to determine the uropathogenic properties of the Copenhagen outbreak strain and whether these properties are conferred by the EAEC-specific virulence factors. We demonstrated that through expression of aggregative adherence fimbriae, the principal adhesins of EAEC, the outbreak strain exhibited pronouncedly increased adherence to human bladder epithelial cells compared to prototype uropathogenic strains. Moreover, the strain was able to produce distinct biofilms on abiotic surfaces, including urethral catheters. These findings suggest that EAEC-specific virulence factors increase uropathogenicity and may have played a significant role in the ability of the strain to cause a community-acquired outbreak of UTI. Thus, inclusion of EAEC-specific virulence factors is warranted in future detection and characterization of uropathogenic E. coli.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2012

Enteroaggregative Escherichia coli O78:H10, the Cause of an Outbreak of Urinary Tract Infection

Bente Olesen; Flemming Scheutz; Rebecca L. Andersen; Megan Menard; Nadia Boisen; Brian Johnston; Dennis S. Hansen; Karen A. Krogfelt; James P. Nataro; James R. Johnson

ABSTRACT In 1991, multiresistant Escherichia coli O78:H10 strains caused an outbreak of urinary tract infections in Copenhagen, Denmark. The phylogenetic origin, clonal background, and virulence characteristics of the outbreak isolates, and their relationship to nonoutbreak O78:H10 strains according to these traits and resistance profiles, are unknown. Accordingly, we extensively characterized 51 archived E. coli O78:H10 isolates (48 human isolates from seven countries, including 19 Copenhagen outbreak isolates, and 1 each of calf, avian, and unknown-source isolates), collected from 1956 through 2000. E. coli O78:H10 was clonally heterogeneous, comprising one dominant clonal group (61% of isolates, including all 19 outbreak isolates) from ST10 (phylogenetic group A) plus several minor clonal groups (phylogenetic groups A and D). All ST10 isolates, versus 25% of non-ST10 isolates, were identified by molecular methods as enteroaggregative E. coli (EAEC) (P < 0.001). Genes present in >90% of outbreak isolates included fimH (type 1 fimbriae; ubiquitous in E. coli); fyuA, traT, and iutA (associated with extraintestinal pathogenic E. coli [ExPEC]); and sat, pic, aatA, aggR, aggA, ORF61, aaiC, aap, and ORF3 (associated with EAEC). An outbreak isolate was lethal in a murine subcutaneous sepsis model and exhibited characteristic EAEC “stacked brick” adherence to cultured epithelial cells. Thus, the 1991 Copenhagen outbreak was caused by a tight, non-animal-associated subset within a broadly disseminated O78:H10 clonal group (ST10; phylogenetic group A), members of which exhibit both ExPEC and EAEC characteristics, whereas O78:H10 isolates overall are phylogenetically diverse. Whether ST10 O78:H10 EAEC strains are both uropathogenic and diarrheagenic warrants further investigation.


Infection and Immunity | 2015

Novel Aggregative Adherence Fimbria Variant of Enteroaggregative Escherichia coli

Rie Jønsson; Carsten Struve; Nadia Boisen; Ramona Valentina Mateiu; Araceli E. Santiago; Håvard Jenssen; James P. Nataro; Karen A. Krogfelt

ABSTRACT Enteroaggregative Escherichia coli (EAEC) organisms belong to a diarrheagenic pathotype known to cause diarrhea and can be characterized by distinct aggregative adherence (AA) in a stacked-brick pattern to cultured epithelial cells. In this study, we investigated 118 EAEC strains isolated from the stools of Danish adults with travelers diarrhea. We evaluated the presence of the aggregative adherence fimbriae (AAFs) by a multiplex PCR, targeting the four known major subunit variants as well as their usher-encoding genes. Almost one-half (49/118) of the clinical isolates did not possess any known AAF major fimbrial subunit, despite the presence of other AggR-related loci. Further investigation revealed the presence of an AAF-related gene encoding a yet-uncharacterized adhesin, termed agg5A. The sequence of the agg5DCBA gene cluster shared fimbrial accessory genes (usher, chaperone, and minor pilin subunit genes) with AAF/III, as well as the signal peptide present in the beginning of the agg3A gene. The complete agg5DCBA gene cluster from a clinical isolate, EAEC strain C338-14, with the typical stacked-brick binding pattern was cloned, and deletion of the cluster was performed. Transformation to a nonadherent E. coli HB101 and complementation of the nonadherent C338-14 mutant with the complete gene cluster restored the AA adhesion. Overall, we found the agg5A gene in 12% of the 118 strains isolated from Denmark, suggesting that this novel adhesin represents an important variant.


Infection and Immunity | 2013

Virulence of the Shiga Toxin Type 2-Expressing Escherichia coli O104:H4 German Outbreak Isolate in Two Animal Models

Tonia Zangari; Angela R. Melton-Celsa; Aruna Panda; Nadia Boisen; Mark A. Smith; Ivan Tatarov; Louis J. De Tolla; James P. Nataro; Alison D. O'Brien

ABSTRACT In May 2011, a large food-borne outbreak was traced to an unusual O104:H4 enteroaggregative Escherichia coli (EAEC) strain that produced Shiga toxin (Stx) type 2 (Stx2). We developed a mouse model to study the pathogenesis and treatment for this strain and examined the virulence of the isolate for Dutch belted rabbits. O104:H4 strain C227-11 was gavaged into C57BL/6 mice at 109 to 1011 CFU/animal. The infected animals were then given water with ampicillin (Amp; 5 g/liter) ad libitum. The C227-11-infected, Amp-treated C57BL/6 mice exhibited both morbidity and mortality. Kidneys from mice infected with C227-11 showed acute tubular necrosis, a finding seen in mice infected with typical Stx-producing E. coli. We provided anti-Stx2 antibody after infection and found that all of the antibody-treated mice gained more weight than untreated mice and, in another study, that all of the antibody-treated animals lived, whereas 3/8 phosphate-buffered saline-treated mice died. We further compared the pathogenesis of C227-11 with that of an Stx-negative (Stx−) O104:H4 isolate, C734-09, and an Stx2− phage-cured derivative of C227-11. Whereas C227-11-infected animals lost weight or gained less weight over the course of infection and died, mice infected with either of the Stx− isolates did not lose weight and only one mouse died. When the Stx-positive (Stx+) and Stx2− O104:H4 strains were compared in rabbits, greater morbidity and mortality were observed in rabbits infected with the Stx2+ isolates than the Stx2− isolates. In conclusion, we describe two animal models for EAEC pathogenesis, and these studies show that Stx2 is responsible for most of the virulence observed in C227-11-infected mice and rabbits.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Optimization of Quantitative PCR Methods for Enteropathogen Detection.

Jie Liu; Jean Gratz; Caroline Amour; Rosemary Nshama; Thomas Walongo; Athanasia Maro; Esto Mduma; James A. Platts-Mills; Nadia Boisen; James P. Nataro; Doris M. Haverstick; Furqan Kabir; Paphavee Lertsethtakarn; Sasikorn Silapong; Pimmada Jeamwattanalert; Ladaporn Bodhidatta; Carl J. Mason; Sharmin Begum; Rashidul Haque; Ira Praharaj; Gagandeep Kang; Eric R. Houpt

Detection and quantification of enteropathogens in stool specimens is useful for diagnosing the cause of diarrhea but is technically challenging. Here we evaluate several important determinants of quantification: specimen collection, nucleic acid extraction, and extraction and amplification efficiency. First, we evaluate the molecular detection and quantification of pathogens in rectal swabs versus stool, using paired flocked rectal swabs and whole stool collected from 129 children hospitalized with diarrhea in Tanzania. Swabs generally yielded a higher quantification cycle (Cq) (average 29.7, standard deviation 3.5 vs. 25.3 ± 2.9 from stool, P<0.001) but were still able to detect 80% of pathogens with a Cq < 30 in stool. Second, a simplified total nucleic acid (TNA) extraction procedure was compared to separate DNA and RNA extractions and showed 92% (318/344) sensitivity and 98% (951/968) specificity, with no difference in Cq value for the positive results (ΔCq(DNA+RNA-TNA) = -0.01 ± 1.17, P = 0.972, N = 318). Third, we devised a quantification scheme that adjusts pathogen quantity to the specimen’s extraction and amplification efficiency, and show that this better estimates the quantity of spiked specimens than the raw target Cq. In sum, these methods for enteropathogen quantification, stool sample collection, and nucleic acid extraction will be useful for laboratories studying enteric disease.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2014

The Presence of the pAA Plasmid in the German O104:H4 Shiga Toxin Type 2a (Stx2a)–Producing Enteroaggregative Escherichia coli Strain Promotes the Translocation of Stx2a Across an Epithelial Cell Monolayer

Nadia Boisen; Anne-Marie Hansen; Angela R. Melton-Celsa; Tonia Zangari; Ninell P. Mortensen; James B. Kaper; Alison D. O'Brien; James P. Nataro

BACKGROUND A Shiga toxin type 2a (Stx2a)-producing enteroaggregative Escherichia coli (EAEC) strain of serotype O104:H4 caused a large outbreak in 2011 in northern Europe. Pathogenic mechanisms for this strain are unclear. We hypothesized that EAEC genes encoded on the pAA virulence plasmid promoted the translocation of Stx2a across the intestinal mucosa. METHODS We investigated the potential contribution of pAA by using mutants of Stx-EAEC strain C227-11, either cured of the pAA plasmid or deleted for individual known pAA-encoded virulence genes (ie, aggR, aggA, and sepA). The resulting mutants were tested for their ability to induce interleukin 8 (IL-8) secretion and translocation of Stx2a across a polarized colonic epithelial (T84 cell) monolayer. RESULTS We found that deletion of aggR or aggA significantly reduced bacterial adherence and (independently) translocation of Stx2a across the T84-cell monolayer. Moreover, deletion of aggR, aggA, sepA, or the Stx2a-encoding phage from C227-11 resulted in reduced secretion of IL-8 from the infected monolayer. CONCLUSIONS Our data suggest that the AggR-regulated aggregative adherence fimbriae I enhance inflammation and enable the outbreak strain to both adhere to epithelial cells and translocate Stx2a across the intestinal epithelium.


Apmis | 2011

The role of Campylobacter jejuni cytolethal distending toxin in gastroenteritis: toxin detection, antibody production, and clinical outcome

Ninell P. Mortensen; Peter Schiellerup; Nadia Boisen; Bjarke M. Klein; Henning Locht; Manal AbuOun; Diane G. Newell; Karen A. Krogfelt

Mortensen NP, Schiellerup P, Boisen N, Klein BM, Locht H, AbuOun M, Newell D, Krogfelt KA. The role of Campylobacter jejuni cytolethal distending toxin in gastroenteritis: toxin detection, antibody production and clinical outcome. APMIS 2011.

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Andreas Munk Petersen

Copenhagen University Hospital

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Bente Olesen

University of Copenhagen

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