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Featured researches published by Rinat Bar-Shalom.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2016

In Search of Alternative Antibiotic Drugs: Quorum-Quenching Activity in Sponges and their Bacterial Isolates

Kumar Saurav; Rinat Bar-Shalom; Markus Haber; Ilia Burgsdorf; Giorgia Oliviero; Valeria Costantino; David Morgenstern; Laura Steindler

Owing to the extensive development of drug resistance in pathogens against the available antibiotic arsenal, antimicrobial resistance is now an emerging major threat to public healthcare. Anti-virulence drugs are a new type of therapeutic agent aiming at virulence factors rather than killing the pathogen, thus providing less selective pressure for evolution of resistance. One promising example of this therapeutic concept targets bacterial quorum sensing (QS), because QS controls many virulence factors responsible for bacterial infections. Marine sponges and their associated bacteria are considered a still untapped source for unique chemical leads with a wide range of biological activities. In the present study, we screened extracts of 14 sponge species collected from the Red and Mediterranean Sea for their quorum-quenching (QQ) potential. Half of the species showed QQ activity in at least 2 out of 3 replicates. Six out of the 14 species were selected for bacteria isolation, to test for QQ activity also in isolates, which, once cultured, represent an unlimited source of compounds. We show that ≈20% of the isolates showed QQ activity based on a Chromobacterium violaceum CV026 screen, and that the presence or absence of QQ activity in a sponge extract did not correlate with the abundance of isolates with the same activity from the same sponge species. This can be explained by the unknown source of QQ compounds in sponge-holobionts (host or symbionts), and further by the possible non-symbiotic nature of bacteria isolated from sponges. The potential symbiotic nature of the isolates showing QQ activity was tested according to the distribution and abundance of taxonomically close bacterial Operational Taxonomic Units (OTUs) in a dataset including 97 sponge species and 178 environmental samples (i.e., seawater, freshwater, and marine sediments). Most isolates were found not to be enriched in sponges and may simply have been trapped in the filtration channels of the sponge at the time of collection. Our results highlight potential for QQ-bioactive lead molecules for anti-virulence therapy both from sponges and the bacteria isolated thereof, independently on the symbiotic nature of the latter.


Marine Drugs | 2017

Plakofuranolactone as a Quorum Quenching Agent from the Indonesian Sponge Plakortis cf. lita

Valeria Costantino; Gerardo Della Sala; Kumar Saurav; Roberta Teta; Rinat Bar-Shalom; Alfonso Mangoni; Laura Steindler

There is an urgent need for novel strategies to fight drug resistance and multi-drug resistance. As an alternative to the classic antibiotic therapy, attenuation of the bacteria virulence affecting their Quorum sensing (QS) system is a promising approach. Quorum sensing (QS) is a genetic regulation system that allows bacteria to communicate with each other and coordinate group behaviors. A new γ-lactone that is capable of inhibiting the LasI/R QS system, plakofuranolactone (1), was discovered in the extract of the marine sponge Plakortis cf. lita, and its structure, including absolute configuration, was determined by NMR spectroscopy, MS spectrometry, and quantum-mechanical prediction of optical rotation. The quorum quenching activity of plakofuranolactone was evaluated using reporter gene assays for long- and short-chain signals (E. coli pSB1075, E. coli pSB401, and C. violeaceum CV026) and was confirmed by measuring the total protease activity (a virulence factor which is under control of the LasI/R system) of the wild-type P. aeruginosa PAO1. Further research will be pursued to assess the potential of plakofuranolactone as a new antivirulence lead compound and a chemical tool to increase the knowledge in this field.


Endocrinology | 2012

Conversion of TSH Heterodimer to a Single Polypeptide Chain Increases Bioactivity and Longevity

Naiel Azzam; Rinat Bar-Shalom; Fuad Fares

TSH is a dimeric glycoprotein hormone composed of a common α-subunit noncovalently linked to a hormone-specific β-subunit. Previously, the TSH heterodimer was successfully converted to an active single-chain hormone by genetically fusing α and β genes with [TSHβ- carboxyl-terminal peptide (CTP)-α] or without (TSHβ-α) the CTP of human chorionic gonadotropin β-subunit as a linker. In the present study, TSH variants were expressed in Chinese hamster ovarian cells. The results indicated that TSHβ-α single chain has the highest binding affinity to TSH receptor and the highest in vitro bioactivity. With regard to the in vivo bioactivity, all TSH variants increased the levels of T(4) in circulation after 2 and 4 h of treatment. However, the level of T(4) after treatment with TSH-wild type was significantly decreased after 6 and 8 h, compared with the levels after treatment with the other TSH variants. TSHβ-α and TSHβ-CTP-α single chains exhibited almost the same bioactivity after 8 h of treatment. Evaluating the half-life of TSH variants, TSHβ-CTP-α single chain revealed the longest half-life in circulation, whereas TSH-wild type exhibited the shortest serum half-life. These findings indicate that TSH single-chain variants with or without CTP as a linker may display conformational structures that increase binding affinity and serum half-life, thereby, suggesting novel attitudes for engineering and constructing superagonists of TSH, which may be used for treating different conditions of defected thyroid gland activity. Other prominent potential clinical use of these variants is in a diagnostic test for metastasis and recurrence of thyroid cancer.


FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2018

Identification and chemical characterization of N-acyl-homoserine lactone quorum sensing signals across sponge species and time

Maya Britstein; Kumar Saurav; Roberta Teta; Gerardo Della Sala; Rinat Bar-Shalom; Nausicaa Stoppelli; Luca Zoccarato; Valeria Costantino; Laura Steindler

ABSTRACT Marine sponges form symbiotic relationships with complex microbial communities, yet little is known about the mechanisms by which these microbes regulate their behavior through gene expression. Many bacterial communities regulate gene expression using chemical signaling termed quorum sensing. While a few previous studies have shown presence of N‐acyl‐homoserine lactone (AHL)‐based quorum sensing in marine sponges, the chemical identity of AHL signals has been published for only two sponge species. In this study, we screened for AHLs in extracts from 15 sponge species (109 specimens in total) from the Mediterranean and Red Sea, using a wide‐range AHL biosensor. This is the first time that AHL presence was examined over time in sponges. We detected the presence of AHL in 46% of the sponge species and found that AHL signals differ for certain sponge species in time and across sponge individuals. Furthermore, for the Mediterranean sponge species Sarcotragus fasciculatus, we identified 14 different AHLs. The constant presence of specific AHL molecules in all specimens, together with varying signaling molecules between the different specimens, makes Sa. fasciculatus a good model to further investigate the function of quorum sensing in sponge‐associated bacteria. This study extends the knowledge of AHL‐based quorum sensing in marine sponges.


European Journal of Cancer | 2017

Germline polymorphisms on RET proto-oncogene involved in medullary thyroid carcinoma in a Druze family

Naiel Azzam; Rinat Bar-Shalom; Anwar Saab; Fuad Fares

In this following letter, we describe a case in which the subject diagnosed to have medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC). We suppose that germline line mutations are associated with the disease. The patient is a 45-year-old Druze male born in Israel and living in a village in the Northern part of the state. He is married to a Druze woman with second-grade consanguinity to him, and he is a father of 4 sons and 2 daughters. Following complains about general weakness, fatigue, lack of appetite and depressed mood, he was hospitalised. Comprehensive inquiry, including imaging and laboratory tests, revealed no extraordinary findings. Physical test witnessed swollenness in left breast, after which the biopsy was diagnosed to be lipoma. He was released from hospital without any treatment. Eight months later in a second test, enlargements of the thyroid and of cervical lymph glands were detected. Histological analysis of the biopsy taken


Israel Journal of Chemistry | 2016

Isolation of MarineParacoccussp. Ss63 from the SpongeSarcotragussp. and Characterization of its Quorum-Sensing Chemical-Signaling Molecules by LC-MS/MS Analysis

Kumar Saurav; Ilia Burgsdorf; Roberta Teta; Germana Esposito; Rinat Bar-Shalom; Valeria Costantino; Laura Steindler


Archive | 2014

TREATMENT OF CANCER

Fuad Fares; Rinat Bar-Shalom; Shlomo Grossman; Margalit Bergman


international conference on bioinformatics | 2012

Enhancing the Potency and Longevity of Highly Valuable Peptides Using Gene Fusion

Fuad Fares; Naiel Azzam; Rinat Bar-Shalom; Avri Havron; Eyal Fima


11th European Congress of Endocrinology | 2009

The role of N-linked oligosaccharides on the function of thyrotropin: development of new agonists and antagonists

Fuad Fares; Naiel Azzam; Rinat Bar-Shalom; Zaki Kraiem


10th European Congress of Endocrinology | 2008

Structure-function studies of thyrotropin using site-directed mutagenesis and gene transfer: development of new agonists and antagonists

Fuad Fares; Naiel Azzam; Rinat Bar-Shalom; Zaki Kraiem

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Fuad Fares

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Naiel Azzam

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Valeria Costantino

University of Naples Federico II

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Roberta Teta

University of Naples Federico II

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Gerardo Della Sala

University of Naples Federico II

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