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Dive into the research topics where Philip J. Hill is active.

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Featured researches published by Philip J. Hill.


Molecular Microbiology | 2002

Quorum‐sensing cross talk: isolation and chemical characterization of cyclic dipeptides from Pseudomonas aeruginosa and other Gram‐negative bacteria

Matthew T. G. Holden; Siri Ram Chhabra; Rocky de Nys; Paul Stead; Nigel J. Bainton; Philip J. Hill; Mike Manefield; Naresh Kumar; Maurice Labatte; Dacre England; Scott A. Rice; Michael Givskov; George P. C. Salmond; Gordon S. A. B. Stewart; Barrie W. Bycroft; Staffan Kjelleberg; Paul Williams

In cell‐free Pseudomonas aeruginosa culture supernatants, we identified two compounds capable of activating an N‐acylhomoserine lactone (AHL) biosensor. Mass spectrometry and NMR spectroscopy revealed that these compounds were not AHLs but the diketopiperazines (DKPs), cyclo(ΔAla‐l‐Val) and cyclo(l‐Pro‐l‐Tyr) respectively. These compounds were also found in cell‐free supernatants from Proteus mirabilis, Citrobacter freundii and Enterobacter agglomerans [cyclo(ΔAla‐l‐Val) only]. Although both DKPs were absent from Pseudomonas fluorescens and Pseudomonas alcaligenes, we isolated, from both pseudomonads, a third DKP, which was chemically characterized as cyclo(l‐Phe‐l‐Pro). Dose–response curves using a LuxR‐based AHL biosensor indicated that cyclo(ΔAla‐l‐Val), cyclo(l‐Pro‐l‐Tyr) and cyclo(l‐Phe‐l‐Pro) activate the biosensor in a concentration‐dependent manner, albeit at much higher concentrations than the natural activator N‐(3‐oxohexanoyl)‐l‐homoserine lactone (3‐oxo‐C6‐HSL). Competition studies showed that cyclo(ΔAla‐l‐Val), cyclo(l‐Pro‐l‐Tyr) and cyclo(l‐Phe‐l‐Pro) antagonize the 3‐oxo‐C6‐HSL‐mediated induction of bioluminescence, suggesting that these DKPs may compete for the same LuxR‐binding site. Similarly, DKPs were found to be capable of activating or antagonizing other LuxR‐based quorum‐sensing systems, such as the N‐butanoylhomoserine lactone‐dependent swarming motility of Serratia liquefaciens. Although the physiological role of these DKPs has yet to be established, their activity suggests the existence of cross talk among bacterial signalling systems.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2003

Bacterial Community Structure and Location in Stilton Cheese

Danilo Ercolini; Philip J. Hill; Christine E. R. Dodd

ABSTRACT The microbial diversity occurring in Stilton cheese was evaluated by 16S ribosomal DNA analysis with PCR-denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis. DNA templates for PCR experiments were directly extracted from the cheese as well as bulk cells harvested from a variety of viable-count media. The variable V3 and V4-V5 regions of the 16S genes were analyzed. Closest relatives of Lactococcus lactis, Enterococcus faecalis, Lactobacillus plantarum, Lactobacillus curvatus, Leuconostoc mesenteroides, Staphylococcus equorum, and Staphylococcus sp. were identified by sequencing of the DGGE fragments. Fluorescently labeled oligonucleotide probes were developed to detect Lactococcus lactis, Lactobacillus plantarum, and Leuconostoc mesenteroides in fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) experiments, and their specificity for the species occurring in the community of Stilton cheese was checked in FISH experiments carried out with reference cultures. The combined use of these probes and the bacterial probe Eub338 in FISH experiments on Stilton cheese sections allowed the assessment of the spatial distribution of the different microbial species in the dairy matrix. Microbial colonies of bacteria showed a differential location in the different parts of the cheese examined: the core, the veins, and the crust. Lactococci were found in the internal part of the veins as mixed colonies and as single colonies within the core. Lactobacillus plantarum was detected only underneath the surface, while Leuconostoc microcolonies were homogeneously distributed in all parts observed. The combined molecular approach is shown to be useful to simultaneously describe the structure and location of the bacterial flora in cheese. The differential distribution of species found suggests specific ecological reasons for the establishment of sites of actual microbial growth in the cheese, with implications of significance in understanding the ecology of food systems and with the aim of achieving optimization of the fermentation technologies as well as preservation of traditional products.


Gene | 1992

A general role for the lux autoinducer in bacterial cell signalling: control of antibiotic biosynthesis in Erwinia

Nigel J. Bainton; Barrie W. Bycroft; Siri Ram Chhabra; Paul Stead; Linden Gledhill; Philip J. Hill; Catherine E. D. Rees; Michael K. Winson; George P. C. Salmond; Gordon S. A. B. Stewart; Paul Williams

Micro-organisms have evolved complex and diverse mechanisms to sense environmental changes. Activation of a sensory mechanism typically leads to alterations in gene expression facilitating an adaptive response. This may take several forms, but many are mediated by response-regulator proteins. The luxR-encoded protein (LuxR) has previously been characterised as a member of the response-regulator superfamily and is known to respond to the small diffusible autoinducer signal molecule N-(beta-ketocaproyl) homoserine lactone (KHL). Observed previously in only a few marine bacteria, we now report that KHL is in fact produced by a diverse group of terrestrial bacteria. In one of these (Erwinia carotovora), we show that it acts as a molecular control signal for the expression of genes controlling carbapenem antibiotic biosynthesis. This represents the first substantive evidence to support the previous postulate that the lux autoinducer, KHL, is widely involved in bacterial signalling.


Molecular Microbiology | 2004

Clp ATPases are required for stress tolerance, intracellular replication and biofilm formation in Staphylococcus aureus

Dorte Frees; Arnaud Chastanet; Saara Qazi; Karen Sørensen; Philip J. Hill; Tarek Msadek; Hanne Ingmer

The Hsp100/Clp ATPases constitute a family of closely related proteins of which some members function solely as chaperones whereas others additionally can associate with the unrelated ClpP peptidase forming a Clp proteolytic complex. We have investigated the role of four Clp ATPases in the versatile pathogen, Staphylococcus aureus. Previously, we showed that ClpX is required for expression of major virulence factors and for virulence of S. aureus, but not for survival during heat shock. In the present study, we have inactivated clpC, clpB and clpL and, while none of these mutations affected toxin production, both ClpC and ClpB and to a minor extent ClpL were required for intracellular multiplication within bovine mammary epithelial cells. These defects were paralleled by an inability of the clpC mutant to grow at high temperature and of the clpB mutant to induce thermotolerance indicating that the protective functions of these proteins are required both at high temperature and during infection. By primer extension analysis and footprint studies, we show that expression of clpC and clpB is controlled by the negative heat‐shock regulator, CtsR, and that ClpC is required for its repressor activity. Thus, ClpC is a likely sensor of stress encountered during both environmental stress and infection. In addition to virulence factor production the ability to form biofilms is of importance to S. aureus as a nosocomial pathogen. Interestingly, biofilm formation was reduced in the absence of ClpX or ClpC whereas it was enhanced in the absence of ClpP. Thus, our data show that Clp proteolytic complexes and the Clp ATPases control several key processes of importance to the success of S. aureus as a pathogen.


Molecular Microbiology | 1993

A novel strategy for the isolation of luxl homologues: evidence for the widespread distribution of a LuxR:Luxl superfamily in enteric bacteria

Simon Swift; Michael K. Winson; P. F. Chan; Nigel J. Bainton; M. Birdsall; Philip J. Reeves; Catherine E. D. Rees; Siri Ram Chhabra; Philip J. Hill; John P. Throup; Barrie W. Bycroft; George P. C. Salmond; Paul Williams; Gordon S. A. B. Stewart

The pheromone N‐(3‐oxohexanoyl)‐L‐homoserine lactone (OHHL) regulates expression of bioluminescence in the marine bacterium Vibrio fischeri, the production of carbapenem antibiotic in Erwinia carotovora and exoenzymes in both E. carotovora and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. A characteristic feature of this regulatory mechanism in V. fischeri is that it is cell density‐dependent, reflecting the need to accumulate sufficient pheromone to trigger the induction of gene expression. Using a lux plasmid‐based bioluminescent sensor for OHHL, pheromone production by E. carotovora, Enterobacter agglomerans, Hafnia alvei, Rahnella aquatilis and Serratia marcescens has been demonstrated and shown also to be cell density‐dependent. Production of OHHL implies the presence in these bacteria of a gene equivalent to luxl. Chromosomal banks from all five enteric bacteria have yielded clones capable of eliciting OHHL production when expressed in Escherichia coli. The luxl homologue from both E. carotovora (carl) and E. agglomerans (eagl) were characterized at the DNA sequence level and the deduced protein sequences have only 25% identity with the V. fischeri Luxl. Despite this, carl, eagl and luxl are shown to be biologically equivalent. An insertion mutant of eagl demonstrates that this gene is essential for OHHL production in E. agglomerans.


Molecular Microbiology | 2003

Alternative roles of ClpX and ClpP in Staphylococcus aureus stress tolerance and virulence

Dorte Frees; Saara Qazi; Philip J. Hill; Hanne Ingmer

Clp proteolytic complexes are essential for virulence and for survival under stress conditions in several pathogenic bacteria. Recently, a study using signature‐tagged mutagenesis identified the ClpX ATPase as also being required for virulence in Staphylococcus aureus. Presently, we have constructed deletion mutants removing either ClpX or the proteolytic subunit, ClpP, in S. aureus 8325‐4 in order to examine a putative link between stress tolerance and virulence. When exposed to stress, we found that, although clpP mutant cells were sensitive to conditions generating misfolded proteins, the absence of ClpX improved survival. In the presence of oxidative stress or at low temperature, both ClpP and ClpX were important for growth. Virulence was examined in a murine skin abscess model and was found to be severely attenuated for both mutants. S. aureus pathogenicity is largely dependent on a set of extracellular and cell wall‐associated proteins. In the mutant cells, the amount of α‐haemolysin (hla) and several other extracellular proteins was greatly decreased, and analysis of hla expression revealed that the reduction occurred at the transcriptional level. Essential for transcriptional regulation of hla is the quorum‐sensing agr locus. Interestingly, the absence of ClpX or ClpP reduced both transcription of the agr effector molecule, RNA III, and the activity of the autoinducing peptide (AIP). In addition, ClpX was required independently of ClpP for transcription of spa encoding Protein A. Thus, our results indicate that ClpX and ClpP contribute to virulence by controlling the activity of major virulence factors rather than by promoting stress tolerance.


Infection and Immunity | 2001

agr Expression Precedes Escape of Internalized Staphylococcus aureus from the Host Endosome

Saara Qazi; Emilie Counil; Julie A. Morrissey; Catherine E. D. Rees; Alan Cockayne; Klaus Winzer; Weng C. Chan; Paul Williams; Philip J. Hill

ABSTRACT Staphylococcus aureus is a versatile pathogen capable of causing life-threatening infections. Many of its cell wall and exoproduct virulence determinants are controlled via the accessory gene regulator (agr). Although considered primarily as an extracellular pathogen, it is now recognized that S. aureus can be internalized by epithelial and endothelial cells. Traditional experimental approaches to investigate bacterial internalization are extremely time-consuming and notoriously irreproducible. We present here a new reporter gene method to assess intracellular growth of S. aureus in MAC-T cells that utilizes a gfp-luxABCDE reporter operon under the control of the Bacillus megateriumxylA promoter, which in S. aureus is expressed in a growth-dependent manner. This facilitates assessment of the growth of internalized bacteria in a nondestructive assay. The dual gfp-lux reporter cassette was also evaluated as a reporter of agr expression and used to monitor the temporal induction of agr during the MAC-T internalization process. The data obtained suggest thatagr induction occurs prior to endosomal lysis and thatagr-regulated exoproteins appear to be required prior to the release and replication of S. aureus within the infected MAC-T cells.


Molecular Microbiology | 2001

Structure, activity and evolution of the group I thiolactone peptide quorum‐sensing system of Staphylococcus aureus

Philip MDowell; Zina Mariam Affas; Caroline Reynolds; Matthew T. G. Holden; Stewart J. Wood; Sandra Saint; Alan Cockayne; Philip J. Hill; Christine E. R. Dodd; Barrie W. Bycroft; Weng C. Chan; Paul Williams

In Staphylococcus aureus, the agr locus is responsible for controlling virulence gene expression via quorum sensing. As the blockade of quorum sensing offers a novel strategy for attenuating infection, we sought to gain novel insights into the structure, activity and turnover of the secreted staphylococcal autoinducing peptide (AIP) signal molecules. A series of analogues (including the l‐alanine and d‐amino acid scanned peptides) was synthesized to determine the functionally critical residues within the S. aureus group I AIP. As a consequence, we established that (i) the group I AIP is inactivated in culture supernatants by the formation of the corresponding methionyl sulphoxide; and (ii) the group I AIP lactam analogue retains the capacity to activate agr, suggesting that covalent modification of the AgrC receptor is not a necessary prerequisite for agr activation. Although each of the d‐amino acid scanned AIP analogues retained activity, replacement of the endocyclic amino acid residue (aspartate) located C‐terminally to the central cysteine with alanine converted the group I AIP from an activator to a potent inhibitor. The screening of clinical S. aureus isolates for novel AIP groups revealed a variant that differed from the group I AIP by a single amino acid residue (aspartate to tyrosine) in the same position defined as critical by alanine scanning. Although this AIP inhibits group I S. aureus strains, the producer strains possess a functional agr locus dependent on the endogenous peptide and, as such, constitute a fourth S. aureus AIP pheromone group (group IV). The addition of exogenous synthetic AIPs to S. aureus inhibited the production of toxic shock syndrome toxin (TSST‐1) and enterotoxin C3, confirming the potential of quorum‐sensing blockade as a therapeutic strategy.


Systematic and Applied Microbiology | 2001

Synthesis of multiple N-acylhomoserine lactones is wide-spread among the members of the Burkholderia cepacia complex.

Astrid Gotschlich; Birgit Huber; Otto Geisenberger; Andreas Tögl; Anette Steidle; Kathrin Riedel; Philip J. Hill; Burkhard Tümmler; Peter Vandamme; Barry Middleton; Miguel Cámara; Paul Williams; Andrea Hardman; Leo Eberl

Seventy strains of the Burkholderia cepacia complex, which currently comprises six genomic species, were tested for their ability to produce N-acylhomoserine lactone (AHL) signal molecules. Using thin layer chromatography in conjunction with a range of AHL biosensors, we show that most strains primarily produce two AHLs, namely N-octanoylhomoserine lactone (C8-HSL) and N-hexanoylhomoserine lactone (C6-HSL). Furthermore, some strains belonging to B. vietnamiensis (genomovar V) produce additional long chain AHL molecules with acyl chains ranging from C10 to C14. For B. vietnamiensis R-921 the structure of the most abundant long chain AHL was confirmed as N-decanoylhomoserine lactone (C10-HSL) by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) in combination with total chemical synthesis. Interestingly, a number of strains, most notably all representatives of B. multivorans (genomovar II), did not produce AHLs at least under the growth conditions used in this study. All strains were also screened for the production of extracellular lipase, chitinase, protease, and siderophores. However, no correlation between the AHL production and the synthesis of these exoproducts was apparent. Southern blot analysis showed that all the B. cepacia complex strains investigated, including the AHL-negative strains, possess genes homologous to the C8-HSL synthase cepI and to cepR, which encodes the cognate receptor protein. The nucleotide sequence of the cepI and cepR genes from one representative strain from each of the six genomovars was determined. Furthermore, the cepI genes from the different genomovars were expressed in Escherichia coli and it is demonstrated that all genes encode functional proteins that direct the synthesis of C8-HSL and C6-HSL. Given that cepI from the B. multivorans strain encodes a functional AHL synthase, yet detectable levels of AHLs were not produced by the wild-type, this suggests that additional regulatory functions may be present in members of this genomovar that negatively affect expression of cepI.


Infection and Immunity | 2006

N-Acylhomoserine Lactones Antagonize Virulence Gene Expression and Quorum Sensing in Staphylococcus aureus

Saara Qazi; Barry Middleton; Siti Hanna Muharram; Alan Cockayne; Philip J. Hill; Paul O'Shea; Siri Ram Chhabra; Miguel Cámara; Paul Williams

ABSTRACT Many gram-negative bacteria employ N-acylhomoserine lactone (AHL)-mediated quorum sensing to control virulence. To determine whether gram-positive bacteria such as Staphylococcus aureus respond to AHLs, we used a growth-dependent lux reporter fusion. Exposure of S. aureus to different AHLs revealed that 3-oxo-substituted AHLs with C10 to C14 acyl chains inhibited light output and growth in a concentration-dependent manner, while short-chain AHLs had no effect. N-(3-Oxododecanoyl)-l-homoserine lactone (3-oxo-C12-HSL) inhibited the production of exotoxins and cell wall fibronectin-binding proteins but enhanced protein A expression. Since these processes are reciprocally regulated via the S. aureus agr quorum-sensing system, which in turn, is regulated via sar, we examined the effect of AHLs on sarA and agr. At sub-growth-inhibitory concentrations of 3-oxo-C12-HSL, both sarA expression and agr expression were inhibited, indicating that the action of 3-oxo-C12-HSL is mediated at least in part through antagonism of quorum sensing in S. aureus. Spent culture supernatants from Pseudomonas aeruginosa, which produces both 3-oxo-C12-HSL and N-butanoyl-homoserine lactone (C4-HSL), also inhibited agr expression, although C4-HSL itself was inactive in this assay. Since quorum sensing in S. aureus depends on the activities of membrane-associated proteins, such as AgrB, AgrC, and AgrD, we investigated whether AHLs perturbed S. aureus membrane functionality by determining their influence on the membrane dipole potential. From the binding curves obtained, a dissociation constant of 7 μM was obtained for 3-oxo-C12-HSL, indicating the presence of a specific saturable receptor, whereas no binding was observed for C4-HSL. These data demonstrate that long-chain 3-oxo-substituted AHLs, such as 3-oxo-C12-HSL, are capable of interacting with the S. aureus cytoplasmic membrane in a saturable, specific manner and at sub-growth-inhibitory concentrations, down-regulating exotoxin production and both sarA and agr expression.

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Paul Williams

University of Nottingham

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Saara Qazi

University of Nottingham

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Alan Cockayne

University of Nottingham

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