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Dive into the research topics where Nathaniel Francis Brown is active.

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Featured researches published by Nathaniel Francis Brown.


Molecular Microbiology | 2004

Identification and characterization of NleA, a non‐LEE‐encoded type III translocated virulence factor of enterohaemorrhagic Escherichia coli O157:H7

Samantha Gruenheid; Inna Sekirov; Nikhil A. Thomas; Wanyin Deng; Paul O'Donnell; David L. Goode; Yuling Li; Elizabeth A. Frey; Nathaniel Francis Brown; Pavel Metalnikov; Tony Pawson; Keith Ashman; B. Brett Finlay

Enterohaemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) O157:H7 uses a specialized protein translocation apparatus, the type III secretion system (TTSS), to deliver bacterial effector proteins into host cells. These effectors interfere with host cytoskeletal pathways and signalling cascades to facilitate bacterial survival and replication and promote disease. The genes encoding the TTSS and all known type III secreted effectors in EHEC are localized in a single pathogenicity island on the bacterial chromosome known as the locus for enterocyte effacement (LEE). In this study, we performed a proteomic analysis of proteins secreted by the LEE‐encoded TTSS of EHEC. In addition to known LEE‐encoded type III secreted proteins, such as EspA, EspB and Tir, a novel protein, NleA (non‐LEE‐encoded effector A), was identified. NleA is encoded in a prophage‐associated pathogenicity island within the EHEC genome, distinct from the LEE. The LEE‐encoded TTSS directs translocation of NleA into host cells, where it localizes to the Golgi apparatus. In a panel of strains examined by Southern blot and database analyses, nleA was found to be present in all other LEE‐containing pathogens examined, including enteropathogenic E. coli and Citrobacter rodentium, and was absent from non‐pathogenic strains of E. coli and non‐LEE‐containing pathogens. NleA was determined to play a key role in virulence of C. rodentium in a mouse infection model.


Cellular Microbiology | 2006

Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium effectors SopB, SopE, SopE2 and SipA disrupt tight junction structure and function

Erin C. Boyle; Nathaniel Francis Brown; B. Brett Finlay

Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium is a major cause of human gastroenteritis. Infection of epithelial monolayers by S. Typhimurium disrupts tight junctions that normally maintain the intestinal barrier and regulate cell polarity. Tight junction disruption is dependent upon the Salmonella pathogenicity island‐1 (SPI‐1) type 3 secretion system but the specific effectors involved have not been identified. In this study we demonstrate that SopB, SopE, SopE2 and SipA are the SPI‐1‐secreted effectors responsible for disruption of tight junction structure and function. Tight junction disruption by S. Typhimurium was prevented by inhibiting host protein geranylgeranylation but was not dependent on host protein synthesis or secretion of host‐derived products. Unlike wild‐type S. Typhimurium, ΔsopB, ΔsopE/E2, ΔsipA, or ΔsipA/sopB mutants, ΔsopB/E/E2 and ΔsipA/sopE/E2 mutants were unable to increase the permeability of polarized epithelial monolayers, did not disrupt the distribution or levels of ZO‐1 and occludin, and did not alter cell polarity. These data suggest that SPI‐1‐secreted effectors utilize their ability to stimulate Rho family GTPases to disrupt tight junction structure and function.


Traffic | 2003

SopD2 is a novel type III secreted effector of Salmonella typhimurium that targets late endocytic compartments upon delivery into host cells.

John H. Brumell; Sonya Kujat-Choy; Nathaniel Francis Brown; Bruce A. Vallance; Leigh A. Knodler; B. Brett Finlay

Salmonella typhimuriumis a facultative intracellular pathogen that utilizes two type III secretion systems to deliver virulence proteins into host cells. These proteins, termed effectors, alter host cell function to allow invasion into and intracellular survival/replication within a vacuolar compartment. Here we describe SopD2, a novel member of the Salmonella translocated effector (STE) family, which share a conserved N‐terminal type III secretion signal. Disruption of the sopD2 gene prolonged the survival of mice infected with a lethal dose of Salmonella typhimurium, demonstrating a significant role for this effector in pathogenesis. Expression of sopD2 was induced inside host cells and was dependent on functional ssrA/B and phoP/Q, two component regulatory systems. HA‐tagged SopD2 was delivered into HeLa cells in a SPI‐2‐dependent manner and associated with both the Salmonella‐containing vacuole and with swollen endosomes elsewhere in the cell. Subcellular fractionation confirmed that SopD2 was membrane associated in host cells, while the closely related effector SopD was localized to the cytosol. A SopD2 fusion to GFP associated with small tubular structures and large vesicles containing late endocytic markers, including Rab7. Surprisingly, expression of N‐terminal amino acids 1–150 of SopD2 fused to GFP was sufficient to mediate both binding to late endosomes/lysosomes and swelling of these compartments. These findings demonstrate that the N‐terminus of SopD2 is a bifunctional domain required for both type III secretion out of Salmonella as well as late endosome/lysosome targeting following translocation into host cells.


Infection and Immunity | 2005

A Type IV Pilin, PilA, Contributes to Adherence of Burkholderia pseudomallei and Virulence In Vivo

Angela E. Essex-Lopresti; Justin Andrew Boddey; Richard J. Thomas; Martin P. Smith; M. Gill Hartley; Timothy P. Atkins; Nathaniel Francis Brown; Chuk Hai Tsang; Ian R. Peak; Jim Hill; Ifor R. Beacham; Richard W. Titball

ABSTRACT The Burkholderia pseudomallei K96243 genome contains multiple type IV pilin-associated loci, including one encoding a putative pilus structural protein (pilA). A pilA deletion mutant has reduced adherence to human epithelial cells and is less virulent in the nematode model of virulence and the murine model of melioidosis, suggesting a role for type IV pili in B. pseudomallei virulence.


Infection and Immunity | 2007

SseL Is a Salmonella-Specific Translocated Effector Integrated into the SsrB-Controlled Salmonella Pathogenicity Island 2 Type III Secretion System

Brian K. Coombes; Michael J. Lowden; Jenna L. Bishop; Mark E. Wickham; Nathaniel Francis Brown; Nancy Duong; Suzanne E. Osborne; Ohad Gal-Mor; B. Brett Finlay

ABSTRACT Bacterial pathogens use horizontal gene transfer to acquire virulence factors that influence host colonization, alter virulence traits, and ultimately shape the outcome of disease following infection. One hallmark of the host-pathogen interaction is the prokaryotic type III secretion system that translocates virulence factors into host cells during infection. Salmonella enterica possesses two type III secretion systems that are utilized during host colonization and intracellular replication. Salmonella pathogenicity island 2 (SPI2) is a genomic island containing approximately 30 contiguous genes required to assemble a functional secretion system including the two-component regulatory system called SsrA-SsrB that positively regulates transcription of the secretion apparatus. We used transcriptional profiling with DNA microarrays to search for genes that coregulate with the SPI2 type III secretion machinery in an SsrB-dependent manner. Here we report the identification of a Salmonella-specific translocated effector called SseL that is required for full virulence during murine typhoid-like disease. Analysis of infected macrophages using fluorescence-activated cell sorting revealed that sseL is induced inside cells and requires SsrB for expression. SseL is retained predominantly in the cytoplasm of infected cells following translocation by the type III system encoded in SPI2. Animal infection experiments with sseL mutant bacteria indicate that integration of SseL into the SsrB response regulatory system contributes to systemic virulence of this pathogen.


Molecular Microbiology | 2004

The related effector proteins SopD and SopD2 from Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium contribute to virulence during systemic infection of mice

Xiuju Jiang; Olivia W. Rossanese; Nathaniel Francis Brown; Sonya Kujat-Choy; Jorge E. Galán; B. Brett Finlay; John H. Brumell

Salmonella resides within host cells in a vacuole that it modifies through the action of virulence proteins called effectors. Here we examined the role of two related effectors, SopD and SopD2, in Salmonella pathogenesis. Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium) mutants lacking either sopD or sopD2 were attenuated for replication in the spleens of infected mice when competed against wild‐type bacteria in mixed infection experiments. A double mutant lacking both effector genes did not display an additive attenuation of virulence in these experiments. The double mutant also competed equally with both of the single mutants. Deletion of either effector impaired bacterial replication in mouse macrophages but not human epithelial cells. Deletion of sopD2 impaired Salmonella’s ability to form tubular membrane filaments [Salmonella‐induced filaments (Sifs)] in infected cells; the number of Sifs decreased, whereas the number of pseudo‐Sifs (thought to be a precursor of Sifs) was increased. Transfection of HeLa cells with the effector SifA induced the formation of Sif‐like tubules and these were observed in greater size and number after co‐transfection of SifA with SopD2. In infected cells, SifA and SopD2 were localized both to Sifs and to pseudo‐Sifs. In contrast, deletion of sopD had no effect on Sif formation. Our results indicate that both SopD and SopD2 contribute to virulence in mice and suggest a functional relationship between these two proteins during systemic infection of the host.


The EMBO Journal | 2010

Inhibition of the PtdIns(5) kinase PIKfyve disrupts intracellular replication of Salmonella

Markus C. Kerr; Jack T. H. Wang; Natalie A Castro; Nicholas A. Hamilton; Liam Town; Darren L. Brown; Frederic A. Meunier; Nathaniel Francis Brown; Jennifer L. Stow; Rohan D. Teasdale

3‐phosphorylated phosphoinositides (3‐PtdIns) orchestrate endocytic trafficking pathways exploited by intracellular pathogens such as Salmonella to gain entry into the cell. To infect the host, Salmonellae subvert its normal macropinocytic activity, manipulating the process to generate an intracellular replicative niche. Disruption of the PtdIns(5) kinase, PIKfyve, be it by interfering mutant, siRNA‐mediated knockdown or pharmacological means, inhibits the intracellular replication of Salmonella enterica serovar typhimurium in epithelial cells. Monitoring the dynamics of macropinocytosis by time‐lapse 3D (4D) videomicroscopy revealed a new and essential role for PI(3,5)P2 in macropinosome‐late endosome/lysosome fusion, which is distinct from that of the small GTPase Rab7. This PI(3,5)P2‐dependent step is required for the proper maturation of the Salmonella‐containing vacuole (SCV) through the formation of Salmonella‐induced filaments (SIFs) and for the engagement of the Salmonella pathogenicity island 2‐encoded type 3 secretion system (SPI2‐T3SS). Finally, although inhibition of PIKfyve in macrophages did inhibit Salmonella replication, it also appears to disrupt the macrophages bactericidal response.


Cellular Microbiology | 2007

SopD acts cooperatively with SopB during Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium invasion

Malina A. Bakowski; Judith T. Cirulis; Nathaniel Francis Brown; B. Brett Finlay; John H. Brumell

The intracellular bacterial pathogen, Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (S. typhimurium), causes disease in a variety of hosts. To invade and replicate in host cells, these bacteria subvert host molecular machinery using bacterial proteins, called effectors, which they translocate into host cells using specialized protein delivery systems. One of these effectors, SopD, contributes to gastroenteritis, systemic virulence and persistence of S. typhimurium in animal models of infection. Recently, SopD has been implicated in invasion of polarized epithelial cells and here we investigate the features of SopD‐mediated invasion. We show that SopD plays a role in membrane fission and macropinosome formation during S. typhimurium invasion, events previously shown to be mediated by the SopB effector. We further demonstrate that SopD acts cooperatively with SopB to promote these events during invasion. Using live cell imaging we show that a SopD–GFP fusion does not localize to HeLa cell cytosol as previously described, but instead is membrane associated. Upon S. typhimurium infection of these cells, SopD‐GFP is recruited to the invasion site, and this recruitment required the phosphatase activity of SopB. Our findings demonstrate a role for SopD in manipulation of host‐cell membrane during S. typhimurium invasion and reveal the nature of its cooperative action with SopB.


Microbes and Infection | 2003

SseA is required for translocation of Salmonella pathogenicity island-2 effectors into host cells

Brian K. Coombes; Nathaniel Francis Brown; Sonya Kujat-Choy; Bruce A. Vallance; B. Brett Finlay

The Salmonella pathogenicity island-2 (SPI2) is a virulence locus on the bacterial chromosome required for intracellular proliferation and systemic infection in mice. Cell culture models and a murine model of systemic infection were used to address the role of an uncharacterized SPI2 open reading frame, designated as sseA, in Salmonella virulence. A Salmonella strain with an unmarked internal deletion of sseA displayed a phenotype that was similar to an SPI2-encoded type III secretion system apparatus mutant. Moreover, SseA was required for survival and replication within epithelial cells and macrophages. Murine infection studies confirmed that the DeltasseA strain was severely attenuated for virulence. Using immunofluorescence microscopy, the virulence defect in the DeltasseA strain was attributed to an inability to translocate SPI2 effector proteins into host cells. These data demonstrate that SseA is essential for SPI2-mediated translocation of effector proteins.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Salmonella Phage ST64B Encodes a Member of the SseK/NleB Effector Family

Nathaniel Francis Brown; Brian K. Coombes; Jenna L. Bishop; Mark E. Wickham; Michael J. Lowden; Ohad Gal-Mor; David L. Goode; Erin C. Boyle; Kristy L. Sanderson; B. Brett Finlay

Salmonella enterica is a species of bacteria that is a major cause of enteritis across the globe, while certain serovars cause typhoid, a more serious disease associated with a significant mortality rate. Type III secreted effectors are major contributors to the pathogenesis of Salmonella infections. Genes encoding effectors are acquired via horizontal gene transfer, and a subset are encoded within active phage lysogens. Because the acquisition of effectors is in flux, the complement of effectors possessed by various Salmonella strains frequently differs. By comparing the genome sequences of S. enterica serovar Typhimurium strain SL1344 with LT2, we identified a gene with significant similarity to SseK/NleB type III secreted effector proteins within a phage ST64B lysogen that is absent from LT2. We have named this gene sseK3. SseK3 was co-regulated with the SPI-2 type III secretion system in vitro and inside host cells, and was also injected into infected host cells. While no role for SseK3 in virulence could be identified, a role for the other family members in murine typhoid was found. SseK3 and other phage-encoded effectors were found to have a significant but sparse distribution in the available Salmonella genome sequences, indicating the potential for more uncharacterised effectors to be present in less studied serovars. These phage-encoded effectors may be principle subjects of contemporary selective processes shaping Salmonella-host interactions.

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B. Brett Finlay

University of British Columbia

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Mark E. Wickham

University of British Columbia

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Erin C. Boyle

University of British Columbia

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Sonya Kujat-Choy

University of British Columbia

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Bruce A. Vallance

University of British Columbia

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Jenna L. Bishop

University of British Columbia

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