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Dive into the research topics where Raymond Gilmour is active.

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Featured researches published by Raymond Gilmour.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2001

Genome of the Bacterium Streptococcus pneumoniae Strain R6

JoAnn Hoskins; William E. Alborn; Jeffrey S. Arnold; Larry C. Blaszczak; Stanley G. Burgett; Bradley S. Dehoff; Shawn T. Estrem; Lori Fritz; Dong-Jing Fu; Wendy Fuller; Chad Geringer; Raymond Gilmour; Jennifer S. Glass; Hamid Khoja; Angelika Regina Kraft; Robert E. Lagace; Donald J. LeBlanc; Linda N. Lee; Elliot J. Lefkowitz; Jin Lu; Patti Matsushima; Scott M. McAhren; Margaret Ann Mchenney; Kevin McLeaster; Christopher W. Mundy; Thalia I. Nicas; Franklin H. Norris; MaryJeanne O'Gara; Robert B. Peery; Gregory T. Robertson

Streptococcus pneumoniae is among the most significant causes of bacterial disease in humans. Here we report the 2,038,615-bp genomic sequence of the gram-positive bacterium S. pneumoniae R6. Because the R6 strain is avirulent and, more importantly, because it is readily transformed with DNA from homologous species and many heterologous species, it is the principal platform for investigation of the biology of this important pathogen. It is also used as a primary vehicle for genomics-based development of antibiotics for gram-positive bacteria. In our analysis of the genome, we identified a large number of new uncharacterized genes predicted to encode proteins that either reside on the surface of the cell or are secreted. Among those proteins there may be new targets for vaccine and antibiotic development.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2002

Global Transcriptional Analysis of clpP Mutations of Type 2 Streptococcus pneumoniae and Their Effects on Physiology and Virulence

Gregory T. Robertson; Wai-Leung Ng; Joseph W. Foley; Raymond Gilmour; Malcolm E. Winkler

Streptococcus pneumoniae is an important human pathogen that contains single copies of genes encoding the ClpP and FtsH ATP-dependent proteases but lacks the Lon and HslV proteases. We constructed and characterized the phenotypes of clpP, clpC, and clpX deletion replacement mutants, which lack the ClpP protease subunit or the putative ClpC or ClpX ATPase specificity factor. A DeltaclpP mutant, but not a DeltaclpC or DeltaclpX mutant, of the virulent D39 type 2 strain of S. pneumoniae grew poorly at 30 degrees C and failed to grow at 40 degrees C. Despite this temperature sensitivity, transcription of the heat shock regulon determined by microarray analysis was induced in a DeltaclpP mutant, which was also more sensitive to oxidative stress by H2O2 and to puromycin than its clpP+ parent strain. A DeltaclpP mutant, but not a DeltaclpC mutant, was strongly attenuated for virulence in the murine lung and sepsis infection models. All of these phenotypes were complemented in a DeltaclpP/clpP+ merodiploid strain. Consistent with these complementation patterns, clpP was found to be in a monocistronic operon, whose transcription was induced about fivefold by heat shock in S. pneumoniae as determined by Northern and real-time reverse transcription-PCR analyses. Besides clpP, transcription of clpC, clpE, and clpL, but not clpX or ftsH, was induced by heat shock or entry into late exponential growth phase. Microarray analysis of DeltaclpP mutants showed a limited change in transcription pattern (approximately 80 genes) consistent with these phenotypes, including repression of genes involved in oxidative stress, metal ion transport, and virulence. In addition, transcription of the early and late competence regulon was induced in the DeltaclpP mutant, and competence gene expression and DNA uptake seemed to be constitutively induced throughout growth. Together, these results indicate that ClpP-mediated proteolysis plays a complex and central role in numerous pneumococcal stress responses, development of competence, and virulence.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2003

Transcriptional Regulation and Signature Patterns Revealed by Microarray Analyses of Streptococcus pneumoniae R6 Challenged with Sublethal Concentrations of Translation Inhibitors

Wai-Leung Ng; Krystyna M. Kazmierczak; Gregory T. Robertson; Raymond Gilmour; Malcolm E. Winkler

The effects of sublethal concentrations of four different classes of translation inhibitors (puromycin, tetracycline, chloramphenicol, and erythromycin) on global transcription patterns of Streptococcus pneumoniae R6 were determined by microarray analyses. Consistent with the general mode of action of these inhibitors, relative transcript levels of genes that encode ribosomal proteins and translation factors or that mediate tRNA charging and amino acid biosynthesis increased or decreased, respectively. Transcription of the heat shock regulon was induced only by puromycin or streptomycin treatment, which lead to truncation or mistranslation, respectively, but not by other antibiotics that block translation, transcription, or amino acid charging of tRNA. In contrast, relative transcript amounts of certain genes involved in transport, cellular processes, energy metabolism, and purine nucleotide (pur) biosynthesis were changed by different translation inhibitors. In particular, transcript amounts from a pur gene cluster and from purine uptake and salvage genes were significantly elevated by several translation inhibitors, but not by antibiotics that target other cellular processes. Northern blotting confirmed increased transcript amounts from part of the pur gene cluster in cells challenged by translation inhibitors and revealed the presence of a 10-kb transcript. Purine metabolism genes were negatively regulated by a homologue of the PurR regulatory protein, and full derepression in a DeltapurR mutant depended on optimal translation. Unexpectedly, hierarchical clustering of the microarray data distinguished among the global transcription patterns caused by antibiotics that inhibit different steps in the translation cycle. Together, these results show that there is extensive control of transcript amounts by translation in S. pneumoniae, especially for de novo purine nucleotide biosynthesis. In addition, these global transcription patterns form a signature that can be used to classify the mode of action and potential mechanism of new translation inhibitors.


Advances in Microbial Physiology | 1998

Energetics of Alkaliphilic Bacillus Species: Physiology and Molecules

Terry A. Krulwich; Ito M; Raymond Gilmour; David Hicks; Arthur A. Guffanti

The challenge of maintaining a cytoplasmic pH that is much lower than the external pH is central to the adaptation of extremely alkaliphilic Bacillus species to growth at pH values above 10. The success with which this challenge is met may set the upper limit of pH for growth in these bacteria, all of which also exhibit a low content of basic amino acids in proteins or protein segments that are exposed to the outside bulk phase liquid. The requirement for an active Na(+)-dependent cycle and possible roles of acidic cell wall components in alkaliphile pH homeostasis are reviewed. The gene loci that encode Na+/H+ antiporters that function in the active cycle are described and compared with the less Na(+)-specific homologues thus far found in non-alkaliphilic Gram-positive prokaryotes. Alkaliphilic Bacillus species carry out oxidative phosphorylation using an exclusively H(+)-coupled ATPase (synthase). Nonetheless, ATP synthesis is more rapid and reaches a higher phosphorylation potential at highly alkaline pH than at near-neutral pH even though the bulk electrochemical proton gradient across the coupling membrane is lower at highly alkaline pH. It is possible that some of the protons extruded by the respiratory chain are conveyed to the ATP synthase without first equilibrating with the external bulk phase. Mechanisms that might apply to oxidative phosphorylation in this type of extensively studied alkaliphile are reviewed, and note is made of the possibility of different kinds of solutions to the problem that may be found in new alkaliphilic bacteria that are yet to be isolated or characterized.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1996

Energetic problems of extremely alkaliphilic aerobes

Terry A. Krulwich; Masahiro Ito; Raymond Gilmour; Michael G. Sturr; Arthur A. Guffanti; David Hicks

Over a decade of work on extremely alkaliphilic Bacillus species has clarified the extraordinary capacity that these bacteria have for regulating their cytoplasmic pH during growth at pH values well over 10. However, a variety of interesting energetic problems related to their Na(+)-dependent pH homeostatic mechanism are yet to be solved. They include: (1) the clarification of how cell surface layers play a role in a category of alkaliphiles for which this is the case; (2) identification of the putative, electrogenic Na+/H+ antiporter(s) that, in at least some alkaliphiles, may completely account for a cytoplasmic pH that is over 2 pH units lower than the external pH; (3) the determination of whether specific modules or accessory proteins are essential for the efficacy of such antiporters; (4) the mechanistic basis for the increase in the transmembrane electrical potential at the high external pH values at which the potential-consuming antiporter(s) must be most active; and (5) an explanation for the Na(+)-specificity of pH homeostasis in the extremely alkaliphilic bacilli as opposed to the almost equivalent efficacy of K+ for pH homeostasis in at least some non-alkaliphilic aerobes. The current status of such studies and future strategies will be outlined for this central area of alkaliphile energetics. Also considered, will be strategies to elucidate the basis for robust H(+)-coupled oxidative phosphorylation by alkaliphiles at pH values over 10. The maintenance of a cytoplasmic pH over 2 units below the high external pH results in a low bulk electrochemical proton gradient (delta p). To bypass this low delta p, Na(+)-coupling is used for solute uptake even by alkaliphiles that are mesophiles from environments that are not especially Na(+)-rich. This indicates that these bacteria indeed experience a low delta p, to which such coupling is an adaptation. Possible reasons and mechanisms for using a H(+)-coupled rather than a Na(+)-coupled ATP synthase under such circumstances will be discussed.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2000

Two-Dimensional Gel Electrophoresis Analyses of pH-Dependent Protein Expression in Facultatively Alkaliphilic Bacillus pseudofirmus OF4 Lead to Characterization of an S-Layer Protein with a Role in Alkaliphily

Raymond Gilmour; Paul Messner; Arthur A. Guffanti; Rebecca Kent; Andrea Scheberl; Nancy Kendrick; Terry A. Krulwich

The large majority of proteins of alkaliphilic Bacillus pseudofirmus OF4 grown at pH 7.5 and 10.5, as studied by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis analyses, did not exhibit significant pH-dependent variation. A new surface layer protein (SlpA) was identified in these studies. Although the prominence of some apparent breakdown products of SlpA in gels from pH 10.5-grown cells led to discovery of the alkaliphile S-layer, the largest and major SlpA forms were present in large amounts in gels from pH 7.5-grown cells as well. slpA RNA abundance was, moreover, unchanged by growth pH. SlpA was similar in size to homologues from nonalkaliphiles but contained fewer Arg and Lys residues. An slpA mutant strain (RG21) lacked an exterior S-layer that was identified in the wild type by electron microscopy. Electrophoretic analysis of whole-cell extracts further indicated the absence of a 90-kDa band in the mutant. This band was prominent in wild-type extracts from both pH 7.5- and 10.5-grown cells. The wild type grew with a shorter lag phase than RG21 at either pH 10.5 or 11 and under either Na(+)-replete or suboptimal Na(+) concentrations. The extent of the adaptation deficit increased with pH elevation and suboptimal Na(+). By contrast, the mutant grew with a shorter lag and faster growth rate than the wild type at pH 7. 5 under Na(+)-replete and suboptimal Na(+) conditions, respectively. Logarithmically growing cells of the two strains exhibited no significant differences in growth rate, cytoplasmic pH regulation, starch utilization, motility, Na(+)-dependent transport of alpha-aminoisobutyric acid, or H(+)-dependent synthesis of ATP. However, the capacity for Na(+)-dependent pH homeostasis was diminished in RG21 upon a sudden upward shift of external pH from 8. 5 to 10.5. The energy cost of retaining the SlpA layer at near-neutral pH is apparently adverse, but the constitutive presence of SlpA enhances the capacity of the extremophile to adjust to high pH.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2003

Essentiality of clpX, but Not clpP, clpL, clpC, or clpE, in Streptococcus pneumoniae R6

Gregory T. Robertson; Wai-Leung Ng; Raymond Gilmour; Malcolm E. Winkler

We show by using a regulated promoter that clpX of Streptococcus pneumoniae R6 is essential, whereas clpP, clpL, clpC, and clpE can be disrupted. The essentiality of clpX was initially missed because of duplication and rearrangement in the region of the chromosome containing clpX. Depletion of ClpX resulted in a rapid loss of viability without overt changes in cell morphology. Essentiality of clpX, but not clpP, has not been reported previously.


Extremophiles | 1998

pH homeostasis and ATP synthesis: studies of two processes that necessitate inward proton translocation in extremely alkaliphilic Bacillus species

Terry A. Krulwich; Masahiro Ito; David Hicks; Raymond Gilmour; Arthur A. Guffanti

Abstract Alkaliphilic Bacillus species that are isolated from nonmarine, moderate salt, and moderate temperature environments offer the opportunity to explore strategies that have developed for solving the energetic challenges of aerobic growth at pH values between 10 and 11. Such bacteria share many structural, metabolic, genomic, and regulatory features with nonextremophilic species such as Bacillus subtilis. Comparative studies can therefore illuminate the specific features of gene organization and special features of gene products that are homologs of those found in non-extremophiles, and potentially identify novel gene products of importance in alkaliphily. We have focused our studies on the facultative alkaliphile Bacillus firmus OF4, which is routinely grown on malate-containing medium at either pH 7.5 or 10.5. Current work is directed toward clarification of the characteristics and energetics of membrane-associated proteins that must catalyze inward proton movements. One group of such proteins are the Na+/H+ antiporters that enable cells to adapt to a sudden upward shift in pH and to maintain a cytoplasmic pH that is 2–2.3 units below the external pH in the most alkaline range of pH for growth. Another is the proton-translocating ATP synthase that catalyzes robust production of ATP under conditions in which the external proton concentration and the bulk chemiosmotic driving force are low. Three gene loci that are candidates for Na+/H+ antiporter encoding genes with roles in Na+- dependent pH homeostasis have been identified. All of them have homologs in B. subtilis, in which pH homeostasis can be carried out with either K+ or Na+. The physiological importance of one of the B. firmus OF4 loci, nhaC, has been studied by targeted gene disruption, and the same approach is being extended to the others. The atp genes that encode the alkaliphiles F1FO-ATP synthase are found to have interesting motifs in areas of putative importance for proton translocation. As an initial step in studies that will probe the importance and possible roles of these motifs, the entire atp operon from B. firmus OF4 has been cloned and functionally expressed in an Escherichia coli mutant that has a full deletion of its atp genes. The transformant does not exhibit growth on succinate, but shows reproducible, modest increases in the aerobic growth yields on glucose as well as membrane ATPase activity that exhibits characteristics of the alkaliphile enzyme.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2005

New Class of Competitive Inhibitor of Bacterial Histidine Kinases

Raymond Gilmour; J. Estelle Foster; Qin Sheng; Jonathan R. McClain; Anna Riley; Pei-Ming Sun; Wai-Leung Ng; Dalai Yan; Thalia I. Nicas; Kenneth Henry; Malcolm E. Winkler

Bacterial histidine kinases have been proposed as targets for the discovery of new antibiotics, yet few specific inhibitors of bacterial histidine kinases have been reported. We report here a novel thienopyridine (TEP) compound that inhibits bacterial histidine kinases competitively with respect to ATP but does not comparably inhibit mammalian serine/threonine kinases. Although it partitions into membranes and does not inhibit the growth of bacterial or mammalian cells, TEP could serve as a starting compound for a new class of histidine kinase inhibitors with antibacterial activity.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1996

Purification and characterization of the succinate dehydrogenase complex and CO-reactive b-type cytochromes from the facultative alkaliphile Bacillus firmus OF4

Raymond Gilmour; Terry A. Krulwich

The presence of a cytochrome bo-type terminal oxidase in Bacillus firmus OF4 had been suggested from the effects of CO on the spectra of reduced membrane cytochromes (Hicks, D.B., Plass, R.J. and Quirk, P.G. (1991) J. Bacteriol. 173, 5010-5016). In that study the CO-binding b-type cytochrome was partially purified by anion exchange chromatography. No further purification was attempted but later HPLC analysis indicated the absence of significant heme O in the B. firmus OF4 membranes. The current work shows that the partially purified cytochrome b is actually composed of three different b-type cytochromes which can be separated and purified by a combination of ion-exchange, hydroxyapatite and gel filtration chromatographies. Two of the cytochromes were CO-reactive but lacked the characteristic multisubunit composition of known terminal oxidases. Neither purified cytochrome catalyzed quinol or ferrocytochrome c oxidation. The more abundant CO-reactive b-type cytochrome (cytochrome b560) had an apparent molecular mass of 10 kDa, whereas the other, more minor component (cytochrome b558), was partially purified and showed two bands of 23 and 17 kDa on SDS-PAGE. The functions of the cytochromes b560 and b558 remain unknown but together they account for the spectrum originally attributed to cytochrome bo. The third, non-CO reactive, cytochrome b was associated with substantial succinate dehydrogenase activity and was purified as a three subunit succinate dehydrogenase complex with high specific activity (17.7 mumol/min/mg). Limited N-terminal sequence of each subunit demonstrated marked similarity to the complex from Bacillus subtilis. The cytochrome b of the alkaliphile enzyme was reduced about 50% by succinate compared to the level of reduction achieved by dithionite. The enzyme reacted with both napthoquinones and benzoquinones. The results presented indicate that Bacillus firmus OF4 contains a succinate dehydrogenase complex with very similar properties to the enzyme from Bacillus subtilis, but does not contain a cytochrome o-type terminal oxidase under the growth conditions studied.

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Terry A. Krulwich

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Arthur A. Guffanti

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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David Hicks

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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