Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Peter Mullany is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Peter Mullany.


Nature Genetics | 2006

The multidrug-resistant human pathogen Clostridium difficile has a highly mobile, mosaic genome.

Mohammed Sebaihia; Brendan W. Wren; Peter Mullany; Neil Fairweather; Nigel P. Minton; Richard A. Stabler; Nicholas R. Thomson; Adam P. Roberts; Ana Cerdeño-Tárraga; Hongmei Wang; Matthew T. G. Holden; Anne Wright; Carol Churcher; Michael A. Quail; Stephen Baker; Nathalie Bason; Karen Brooks; Tracey Chillingworth; Ann Cronin; Paul Davis; Linda Dowd; Audrey Fraser; Theresa Feltwell; Zahra Hance; S. Holroyd; Kay Jagels; Sharon Moule; Karen Mungall; Claire Price; Ester Rabbinowitsch

We determined the complete genome sequence of Clostridium difficile strain 630, a virulent and multidrug-resistant strain. Our analysis indicates that a large proportion (11%) of the genome consists of mobile genetic elements, mainly in the form of conjugative transposons. These mobile elements are putatively responsible for the acquisition by C. difficile of an extensive array of genes involved in antimicrobial resistance, virulence, host interaction and the production of surface structures. The metabolic capabilities encoded in the genome show multiple adaptations for survival and growth within the gut environment. The extreme genome variability was confirmed by whole-genome microarray analysis; it may reflect the organisms niche in the gut and should provide information on the evolution of virulence in this organism.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2011

Acquired Antibiotic Resistance Genes: An Overview

Angela H.A.M. van Hoek; Dik Mevius; Beatriz Guerra; Peter Mullany; Adam P. Roberts; H.J.M. Aarts

In this review an overview is given on antibiotic resistance (AR) mechanisms with special attentions to the AR genes described so far preceded by a short introduction on the discovery and mode of action of the different classes of antibiotics. As this review is only dealing with acquired resistance, attention is also paid to mobile genetic elements such as plasmids, transposons, and integrons, which are associated with AR genes, and involved in the dispersal of antimicrobial determinants between different bacteria.


Infection and Immunity | 2001

Characterization of a cell surface protein of Clostridium difficile with adhesive properties.

Anne-Judith Waligora; Claire Hennequin; Peter Mullany; Pierre Bourlioux; Anne Collignon; Tuomo Karjalainen

ABSTRACT Our laboratory has previously shown that Clostridium difficile adherence to cultured cells is enhanced after heat shock at 60°C and that it is mediated by a proteinaceous surface component. The present study was undertaken to identify the surface molecules of this bacterium that could play a role in its adherence to the intestine. The cwp66 gene, encoding a cell surface-associated protein of C. difficile 79-685, was isolated by immunoscreening of a C. difficile gene library with polyclonal antibodies against C. difficile heated at 60°C. The Cwp66 protein (66 kDa) contains two domains, each carrying three imperfect repeats and one presenting homologies to the autolysin CwlB of Bacillus subtilis. A survey of 36 strains ofC. difficile representing 11 serogroups showed that the 3′ portion of the cwp66 gene is variable; this was confirmed by sequencing of cwp66 from another strain, C-253. Two recombinant protein fragments corresponding to the two domains of Cwp66 were expressed in fusion with glutathione S-transferase inEscherichia coli and purified by affinity chromatography using gluthatione-Sepharose 4B. Antibodies raised against the two domains recognized Cwp66 in bacterial surface extracts. By immunoelectron microscopy, the C-terminal domain was found to be cell surface exposed. When used as inhibitors in cell binding studies, the antibodies and protein fragments partially inhibited adherence ofC. difficile to cultured cells, confirming that Cwp66 is an adhesin, the first to be identified in clostridia.


Plasmid | 2008

Revised Nomenclature for Transposable Genetic Elements

Adam P. Roberts; Michael Chandler; Patrice Courvalin; Gérard Guédon; Peter Mullany; Tony J. Pembroke; Julian I. Rood; Jeffrey C. Smith; Anne O. Summers; Masataka Tsuda; Douglas E. Berg

Transposable DNA elements occur naturally in the genomes of nearly all species of prokaryotes. A proposal for a uniform transposable element nomenclature was published prominently in the 1970s but is not, at present, available online even in abstract form, and many of the newly discovered elements have been named without reference to it. We propose here an updated version of the original nomenclature system for all of the various types of prokaryotic, autonomous, transposable elements excluding insertion sequences, for which a nomenclature system already exists. The use of this inclusive and sequential Tn numbering system for transposable elements, as described here, recognizes the ease of interspecies spread of individual elements, and allows for the naming of mosaic elements containing segments from two or more previously described types of transposons or plasmids. It will guard against any future need to rename elements following changes in bacterial nomenclature which occurs constantly with our increased understanding of bacterial phylogenies and taxonomic groupings. It also takes into account the increasing importance of metagenomic sequencing projects and the continued identification of new mobile elements from unknown hosts.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2003

Prevalence of Tetracycline Resistance Genes in Oral Bacteria

A. Villedieu; M. L. Diaz-Torres; N. Hunt; R. McNab; D. A. Spratt; Michael T. Wilson; Peter Mullany

ABSTRACT Tetracycline is a broad-spectrum antibiotic used in humans, animals, and aquaculture; therefore, many bacteria from different ecosystems are exposed to this antibiotic. In order to determine the genetic basis for resistance to tetracycline in bacteria from the oral cavity, saliva and dental plaque samples were obtained from 20 healthy adults who had not taken antibiotics during the previous 3 months. The samples were screened for the presence of bacteria resistant to tetracycline, and the tetracycline resistance genes in these isolates were identified by multiplex PCR and DNA sequencing. Tetracycline-resistant bacteria constituted an average of 11% of the total cultivable oral microflora. A representative 105 tetracycline-resistant isolates from the 20 samples were investigated; most of the isolates carried tetracycline resistance genes encoding a ribosomal protection protein. The most common tet gene identified was tet(M), which was found in 79% of all the isolates. The second most common gene identified was tet(W), which was found in 21% of all the isolates, followed by tet(O) and tet(Q) (10.5 and 9.5% of the isolates, respectively) and then tet(S) (2.8% of the isolates). Tetracycline resistance genes encoding an efflux protein were detected in 4.8% of all the tetracycline-resistant isolates; 2.8% of the isolates had tet(L) and 1% carried tet(A) and tet(K) each. The results have shown that a variety of tetracycline resistance genes are present in the oral microflora of healthy adults. This is the first report of tet(W) in oral bacteria and the first report to show that tet(O), tet(Q), tet(A), and tet(S) can be found in some oral species.


Fems Microbiology Reviews | 2011

Tn916-like genetic elements: a diverse group of modular mobile elements conferring antibiotic resistance

Adam P. Roberts; Peter Mullany

Antibiotic-resistant Gram-positive bacteria are responsible for morbidity and mortality in healthcare environments. Enterococcus faecium, Enterococcus faecalis, Staphylococcus aureus and Streptococcus pneumoniae can all exhibit clinically relevant multidrug resistance phenotypes due to acquired resistance genes on mobile genetic elements. It is possible that clinically relevant multidrug-resistant Clostridium difficile strains will appear in the future, as the organism is adept at acquiring mobile genetic elements (plasmids and transposons). Conjugative transposons of the Tn916/Tn1545 family, which carry major antibiotic resistance determinants, are transmissible between these different bacteria by a conjugative mechanism during which the elements are excised by a staggered cut from donor cells, converted to a circular form, transferred by cell-cell contact and inserted into recipient cells by a site-specific recombinase. The ability of these conjugative transposons to acquire additional, clinically relevant antibiotic resistance genes importantly contributes to the emergence of multidrug resistance.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2003

Novel Tetracycline Resistance Determinant from the Oral Metagenome

M. L. Diaz-Torres; R. McNab; D. A. Spratt; A. Villedieu; N. Hunt; Michael T. Wilson; Peter Mullany

ABSTRACT A major drawback of most studies on how bacteria become resistant to antibiotics is that they concentrate mainly on bacteria that can be cultivated in the laboratory. In the present study, we cloned part of the oral metagenome and isolated a novel tetracycline resistance gene, tet(37), which inactivates tetracycline.


Nature Communications | 2013

Horizontal gene transfer converts non-toxigenic Clostridium difficile strains into toxin producers

Michael S.M. Brouwer; Adam P. Roberts; Haitham Hussain; Rachel J. Williams; Elaine Allan; Peter Mullany

Clostridium difficile is a major nosocomial pathogen and the main causative agent of antibiotic-associated diarrhoea. The organism produces two potent toxins, A and B, which are its major virulence factors. These are chromosomally encoded on a region termed the pathogenicity locus (PaLoc), which also contains regulatory genes, and is absent in non-toxigenic strains. Here we show that the PaLoc can be transferred from the toxin-producing strain, 630Δerm, to three non-toxigenic strains of different ribotypes. One of the transconjugants is shown by cytotoxicity assay to produce toxin B at a similar level to the donor strain, demonstrating that a toxigenic C. difficile strain is capable of converting a non-toxigenic strain to a toxin producer by horizontal gene transfer. This has implications for the treatment of C. difficile infections, as non-toxigenic strains are being tested as treatments in clinical trials.


Microbiology | 2001

Comparison of Tn5397 from Clostridium difficile, Tn916 from Enterococcus faecalis and the CW459tet(M) element from Clostridium perfringens shows that they have similar conjugation regions but different insertion and excision modules.

Adam P. Roberts; Priscilla A. Johanesen; Dena Lyras; Peter Mullany; Julian I. Rood

Comparative analysis of the conjugative transposons Tn5397 from Clostridium difficile and Tn916 from Enterococcus faecalis, and the CW459tet(M) element from Clostridium perfringens, has revealed that these tetracycline-resistance elements are closely related. All three elements contain the tet(M) resistance gene and have sequence similarity throughout their central region. However, they have very different integration/excision modules. Instead of the int and xis genes that are found in Tn916, Tn5397 has a large resolvase gene, tndX. The C. perfringens element encodes the putative Int459 protein, which is a member of the integrase family of site-specific recombinases but is not closely related to Int from Tn916. Based on these studies it is concluded that the clostridial elements have a modular genetic organization and were derived independently from distinct mobile genetic elements.


Microbiology | 1990

Genetic analysis of a tetracycline resistance element from clostridium difficile and its conjugal transfer to and from bacillus subtilis

Peter Mullany; Mark Wilks; Ian Lamb; C. L. Clayton; Brendan W. Wren; Soad Tabaqchali

A tetracycline resistance (Tcr) determinant from Clostridium difficile strain 630 was cloned into the Escherichia coli plasmid vector pUC13. The resulting plasmid pPPM20, containing an insert of 3.4 kbp, was mapped and a 1.1 kbp SacI-HindIII fragment wholly within the Tcr gene was identified. Dot-blot hybridization studies with the 1.1 kbp fragment showed that the Tcr gene belonged to hybridization class M. Tcr could be transferred between C. difficile strains and to Bacillus subtilis at a frequency of 10(-7) per donor cell. The element could be returned from B. subtilis to C. difficile at a frequency of 10(-8) per donor cell. This is the first demonstration of C. difficile acting as a recipient in intergeneric crosses. DNA from C. difficile transconjugants digested with EcoRV always has two hybridizing fragments of 9.5 and 11.0 kbp when probed with pPPM20. DNA from B. subtilis transconjugants digested with EcoRV produced one hybridizing band of variable size when probed with pPPM20. The behaviour of the element was reminiscent of the conjugative transposons. Therefore we compared the element to the conjugative transposon Tn916. The HincII restriction maps of the two elements differed and no hybridization was detected to oligonucleotides directed to the ends of Tn916. However, the elements do have some sequence homology, detected by hybridization analysis.

Collaboration


Dive into the Peter Mullany's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Adam P. Roberts

Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Elaine Allan

UCL Eastman Dental Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michael Wilson

UCL Eastman Dental Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Derren Ready

Public health laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Soad Tabaqchali

St Bartholomew's Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Philip J. Warburton

UCL Eastman Dental Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

C. L. Clayton

St Bartholomew's Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mark Wilks

Queen Mary University of London

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge