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Dive into the research topics where Sahadevan Raman is active.

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Featured researches published by Sahadevan Raman.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2001

The Alternative Sigma Factor SigH Regulates Major Components of Oxidative and Heat Stress Responses in Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Sahadevan Raman; Taeksun Song; Xiaoling Puyang; Stoyan Bardarov; William R. Jacobs; Robert N. Husson

Mycobacterium tuberculosis is a specialized intracellular pathogen that must regulate gene expression to overcome stresses produced by host defenses during infection. SigH is an alternative sigma factor that we have previously shown plays a role in the response to stress of the saprophyte Mycobacterium smegmatis. In this work we investigated the role of sigH in the M. tuberculosis response to heat and oxidative stress. We determined that a M. tuberculosis sigH mutant is more susceptible to oxidative stresses and that the inducible expression of the thioredoxin reductase/thioredoxin genes trxB2/trxC and a gene of unknown function, Rv2466c, is regulated by sigH via expression from promoters directly recognized by SigH. We also determined that the sigH mutant is more susceptible to heat stress and that inducible expression of the heat shock genes dnaK and clpB is positively regulated by sigH. The induction of these heat shock gene promoters but not of other SigH-dependent promoters was markedly greater in response to heat versus oxidative stress, consistent with their additional regulation by a heat-labile repressor. To further understand the role of sigH in the M. tuberculosis stress response, we investigated the regulation of the stress-responsive sigma factor genes sigE and sigB. We determined that inducible expression of sigE is regulated by sigH and that basal and inducible expression of sigB is dependent on sigE and sigH. These data indicate that sigH plays a central role in a network that regulates heat and oxidative-stress responses that are likely to be important in M. tuberculosis pathogenesis.


Nature | 2013

The Mycobacterium tuberculosis regulatory network and hypoxia

James E. Galagan; Kyle J. Minch; Matthew W. Peterson; Anna Lyubetskaya; Elham Azizi; Linsday Sweet; Antonio L. C. Gomes; Tige R. Rustad; Gregory Dolganov; Irina Glotova; Thomas Abeel; Chris Mahwinney; Adam D. Kennedy; Rene Allard; William Brabant; Andrew Krueger; Suma Jaini; Brent Honda; Wen-Han Yu; Mark J. Hickey; Jeremy Zucker; Christopher Garay; Brian Weiner; Peter Sisk; Christian Stolte; Jessica Winkler; Yves Van de Peer; Paul Iazzetti; Diogo Camacho; Jonathan M. Dreyfuss

We have taken the first steps towards a complete reconstruction of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis regulatory network based on ChIP-Seq and combined this reconstruction with system-wide profiling of messenger RNAs, proteins, metabolites and lipids during hypoxia and re-aeration. Adaptations to hypoxia are thought to have a prominent role in M. tuberculosis pathogenesis. Using ChIP-Seq combined with expression data from the induction of the same factors, we have reconstructed a draft regulatory network based on 50 transcription factors. This network model revealed a direct interconnection between the hypoxic response, lipid catabolism, lipid anabolism and the production of cell wall lipids. As a validation of this model, in response to oxygen availability we observe substantial alterations in lipid content and changes in gene expression and metabolites in corresponding metabolic pathways. The regulatory network reveals transcription factors underlying these changes, allows us to computationally predict expression changes, and indicates that Rv0081 is a regulatory hub.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2004

Transcription Regulation by the Mycobacterium tuberculosis Alternative Sigma Factor SigD and Its Role in Virulence

Sahadevan Raman; Rohan Hazra; Christopher C. Dascher; Robert N. Husson

Mycobacterium tuberculosis, an obligate mammalian pathogen, adapts to its host during the course of infection via the regulation of gene expression. Of the regulators of transcription that play a role in this response, several alternative sigma factors of M. tuberculosis have been shown to control gene expression in response to stresses, and some of these are required for virulence or persistence in vivo. For this study, we examined the role of the alternative sigma factor SigD in M. tuberculosis gene expression and virulence. Using microarray analysis, we identified several genes whose expression was altered in a strain with a sigD deletion. A small number of these genes, including sigD itself, the gene encoding the autocrine growth factor RpfC, and a gene of unknown function, Rv1815, appear to be directly regulated by this sigma factor. By identifying the in vivo promoters of these genes, we have determined a consensus promoter sequence that is putatively recognized by SigD. The expression of several genes encoding PE-PGRS proteins, part of a large family of related genes of unknown function, was significantly increased in the sigD mutant. We found that the expression of sigD is stable throughout log phase and stationary phase but that it declines rapidly with oxygen depletion. In a mouse infection model, the sigD mutant strain was attenuated, with differences in survival and the inflammatory response in the lung between mice infected with the mutant and those infected with the wild type.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2005

The Mycobacterium tuberculosis Extracytoplasmic-Function Sigma Factor SigL Regulates Polyketide Synthases and Secreted or Membrane Proteins and Is Required for Virulence

Mi-Young Hahn; Sahadevan Raman; Mauricio Anaya; Robert N. Husson

Mycobacterium tuberculosis sigL encodes an extracytoplasmic function (ECF) sigma factor and is adjacent to a gene for a membrane protein (Rv0736) that contains a conserved HXXXCXXC sequence. This motif is found in anti-sigma factors that regulate several ECF sigma factors, including those that control oxidative stress responses. In this work, SigL and Rv0736 were found to be cotranscribed, and the intracellular domain of Rv0736 was shown to interact specifically with SigL, suggesting that Rv0736 may encode an anti-sigma factor of SigL. An M. tuberculosis sigL mutant was not more susceptible than the parental strain to several oxidative and nitrosative stresses, and sigL expression was not increased in response to these stresses. In vivo, sigL is expressed from a weak SigL-independent promoter and also from a second SigL-dependent promoter. To identify SigL-regulated genes, sigL was overexpressed and microarray analysis of global transcription was performed. Four small operons, sigL (Rv0735)-Rv0736, mpt53 (Rv2878c)-Rv2877c, pks10 (Rv1660)-pks7 (Rv1661), and Rv1139c-Rv1138c, were among the most highly upregulated genes in the sigL-overexpressing strain. SigL-dependent transcription start sites of these operons were mapped, and the consensus promoter sequences TGAACC in the -35 region and CGTgtc in the -10 region were identified. In vitro, purified SigL specifically initiated transcription from the promoters of sigL, mpt53, and pks10. Additional genes, including four PE_PGRS genes, appear to be regulated indirectly by SigL. In an in vivo murine infection model, the sigL mutant strain showed marked attenuation, indicating that the sigL regulon is important in M. tuberculosis pathogenesis.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2006

Mycobacterium tuberculosis SigM Positively Regulates Esx Secreted Protein and Nonribosomal Peptide Synthetase Genes and Down Regulates Virulence-Associated Surface Lipid Synthesis

Sahadevan Raman; Xiaoling Puyang; Tan-Yun Cheng; David C. Young; D. Branch Moody; Robert N. Husson

The Mycobacterium tuberculosis genome encodes 12 alternative sigma factors, several of which regulate stress responses and are required for virulence in animal models of acute infection. In this work we investigated M. tuberculosis SigM, a member of the extracytoplasmic function subfamily of alternative sigma factors. This sigma factor is expressed at low levels in vitro and does not appear to function in stress response regulation. Instead, SigM positively regulates genes required for the synthesis of surface or secreted molecules. Among these are genes encoding two pairs of Esx secreted proteins, a multisubunit nonribosomal peptide synthetase operon, and genes encoding two members of the proline-proline-glutamate (PPE) family of proteins. Genes up regulated in a sigM mutant strain include a different PPE gene, as well as several genes involved in surface lipid synthesis. Among these are genes involved in synthesis of phthiocerol dimycocerosate (PDIM), a surface lipid critical for virulence during acute infection, and the kasA-kasB operon, which is required for mycolic acid synthesis. Analysis of surface lipids showed that PDIM synthesis is increased in a sigM-disrupted strain and is undetectable in a sigM overexpression strain. These findings demonstrate that SigM positively and negatively regulates cell surface and secreted molecules that are likely to function in host-pathogen interactions.


Tuberculosis | 2009

Nitrile-inducible gene expression in mycobacteria.

Amit K. Pandey; Sahadevan Raman; Rose Proff; Swati Joshi; Choong-Min Kang; Eric J. Rubin; Robert N. Husson; Christopher M. Sassetti

The ability to ectopically control gene expression is a fundamental tool for the study of bacterial physiology and pathogenesis. While many efficient inducible expression systems are available for Gram-negative bacteria, few are useful in phylogenetically distant organisms, such as mycobacteria. We have adapted a highly-inducible regulon of Rhodococcus rhodochrous to artificially regulate gene expression in both rapidly-growing environmental mycobacteria and slow-growing pathogens, such as Mycobacterium tuberculosis. We demonstrate that this artificial regulatory circuit behaves as a bistable switch, which can be manipulated regardless of growth phase in vitro, and during intracellular growth in macrophages. High-level overexpression is also possible, facilitating biochemical and structural studies of mycobacterial proteins produced in their native host.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Growth and Translation Inhibition through Sequence-specific RNA Binding by Mycobacterium tuberculosis VapC Toxin

Jared D. Sharp; Jonathan W. Cruz; Sahadevan Raman; Masayori Inouye; Robert N. Husson; Nancy A. Woychik

Background: Mycobacterium tuberculosis harbors a highly expanded number of toxin-antitoxin (TA) systems. Results: The M. tuberculosis VapC-mt4 toxin blocks translation and arrests growth through RNA binding at a short recognition sequence. Conclusion: M. tuberculosis VapC toxins have a function distinct from other characterized TA toxins. Significance: TA systems may contribute to the slow growth and dormancy characteristic of M. tuberculosis during latent tuberculosis. The Mycobacterium tuberculosis genome harbors an unusually large number of toxin-antitoxin (TA) modules. Curiously, over half of these are VapBC (virulence-associated protein) family members. Nonetheless, the cellular target, precise mode of action, and physiological role of the VapC toxins in this important pathogen remain unclear. To better understand the function of this toxin family, we studied the features and biochemical properties of a prototype M. tuberculosis VapBC TA system, vapBC-mt4 (Rv0596c-Rv0595c). VapC-mt4 expression resulted in growth arrest, a hallmark of all TA toxins, in Escherichia coli, Mycobacterium smegmatis, and M. tuberculosis. Its expression led to translation inhibition accompanied by a gradual decrease in the steady-state levels of several mRNAs. VapC-mt4 exhibited sequence-specific endoribonuclease activity on mRNA templates at ACGC and AC(A/U)GC sequences. However, the cleavage activity of VapC-mt4 was comparatively weak relative to the TA toxin MazF-mt1 (Rv2801c). Unlike other TA toxins, translation inhibition and growth arrest preceded mRNA cleavage, suggesting that the RNA binding property of VapC-mt4, not RNA cleavage, initiates toxicity. In support of this hypothesis, expression of VapC-mt4 led to an increase in the recovery of total RNA with time in contrast to TA toxins that inhibit translation via direct mRNA cleavage. Additionally, VapC-mt4 exhibited stable, sequence-specific RNA binding in an electrophoretic mobility shift assay. Finally, VapC-mt4 inhibited protein synthesis in a cell-free system without cleaving the corresponding mRNA. Therefore, the activity of VapC-mt4 is mechanistically distinct from other TA toxins because it appears to primarily inhibit translation through selective, stable binding to RNA.


BMC Genomics | 2012

Comparative analysis of mycobacterium and related actinomycetes yields insight into the evolution of mycobacterium tuberculosis pathogenesis

Abigail Manson McGuire; Brian Weiner; Sang Tae Park; Ilan Wapinski; Sahadevan Raman; Gregory Dolganov; Matthew W. Peterson; Robert Riley; Jeremy Zucker; Thomas Abeel; Jared White; Peter Sisk; Christian Stolte; Mike Koehrsen; Robert T Yamamoto; Milena Iacobelli-Martinez; Matthew J Kidd; Andreia M Maer; Gary K. Schoolnik; Aviv Regev; James E. Galagan

BackgroundThe sequence of the pathogen Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) strain H37Rv has been available for over a decade, but the biology of the pathogen remains poorly understood. Genome sequences from other Mtb strains and closely related bacteria present an opportunity to apply the power of comparative genomics to understand the evolution of Mtb pathogenesis. We conducted a comparative analysis using 31 genomes from the Tuberculosis Database (TBDB.org), including 8 strains of Mtb and M. bovis, 11 additional Mycobacteria, 4 Corynebacteria, 2 Streptomyces, Rhodococcus jostii RHA1, Nocardia farcinia, Acidothermus cellulolyticus, Rhodobacter sphaeroides, Propionibacterium acnes, and Bifidobacterium longum.ResultsOur results highlight the functional importance of lipid metabolism and its regulation, and reveal variation between the evolutionary profiles of genes implicated in saturated and unsaturated fatty acid metabolism. It also suggests that DNA repair and molybdopterin cofactors are important in pathogenic Mycobacteria. By analyzing sequence conservation and gene expression data, we identify nearly 400 conserved noncoding regions. These include 37 predicted promoter regulatory motifs, of which 14 correspond to previously validated motifs, as well as 50 potential noncoding RNAs, of which we experimentally confirm the expression of four.ConclusionsOur analysis of protein evolution highlights gene families that are associated with the adaptation of environmental Mycobacteria to obligate pathogenesis. These families include fatty acid metabolism, DNA repair, and molybdopterin biosynthesis. Our analysis reinforces recent findings suggesting that small noncoding RNAs are more common in Mycobacteria than previously expected. Our data provide a foundation for understanding the genome and biology of Mtb in a comparative context, and are available online and through TBDB.org.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Comprehensive Definition of the SigH Regulon of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Reveals Transcriptional Control of Diverse Stress Responses

Jared D. Sharp; Atul K. Singh; Sang Tae Park; Anna Lyubetskaya; Matthew W. Peterson; Antonio L. C. Gomes; Lakshmi-Prasad Potluri; Sahadevan Raman; James E. Galagan; Robert N. Husson

Expression of SigH, one of 12 Mycobacterium tuberculosis alternative sigma factors, is induced by heat, oxidative and nitric oxide stresses. SigH activation has been shown to increase expression of several genes, including genes involved in maintaining redox equilibrium and in protein degradation. However, few of these are known to be directly regulated by SigH. The goal of this project is to comprehensively define the Mycobacterium tuberculosis genes and operons that are directly controlled by SigH in order to gain insight into the role of SigH in regulating M. tuberculosis physiology. We used ChIP-Seq to identify in vivo SigH binding sites throughout the M. tuberculosis genome, followed by quantification of SigH-dependent expression of genes linked to these sites and identification of SigH-regulated promoters. We identified 69 SigH binding sites, which are located both in intergenic regions and within annotated coding sequences in the annotated M. tuberculosis genome. 41 binding sites were linked to genes that showed greater expression following heat stress in a SigH-dependent manner. We identified several genes not previously known to be regulated by SigH, including genes involved in DNA repair, cysteine biosynthesis, translation, and genes of unknown function. Experimental and computational analysis of SigH-regulated promoter sequences within these binding sites identified strong consensus -35 and -10 promoter sequences, but with tolerance for non-consensus bases at specific positions. This comprehensive identification and validation of SigH-regulated genes demonstrates an extended SigH regulon that controls an unexpectedly broad range of stress response functions.


Microbiology spectrum | 2014

Transcription Factor Binding Site Mapping Using ChIP-Seq

Suma Jaini; Anna Lyubetskaya; Antonio L. C. Gomes; Matthew W. Peterson; Sang Tae Park; Sahadevan Raman; Gary K. Schoolnik; James E. Galagan

Transcription factors (TFs) play a central role in regulating gene expression in all bacteria. Yet until recently, studies of TF binding were limited to a small number of factors at a few genomic locations. Chromatin immunoprecipitation followed by sequencing (ChIP-Seq) provides the ability to map binding sites globally for TFs, and the scalability of the technology enables the ability to map binding sites for every DNA binding protein in a prokaryotic organism. We have developed a protocol for ChIP-Seq tailored for use with mycobacteria and an analysis pipeline for processing the resulting data. The protocol and pipeline have been used to map over 100 TFs from Mycobacterium tuberculosis, as well as numerous TFs from related mycobacteria and other bacteria. The resulting data provide evidence that the long-accepted spatial relationship between TF binding site, promoter motif, and the corresponding regulated gene may be too simple a paradigm, failing to adequately capture the variety of TF binding sites found in prokaryotes. In this article we describe the protocol and analysis pipeline, the validation of these methods, and the results of applying these methods to M. tuberculosis.

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Robert N. Husson

Boston Children's Hospital

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