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Dive into the research topics where Sara Gibbs is active.

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Featured researches published by Sara Gibbs.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2013

Cooccurrence of Free-Living Amoebae and Nontuberculous Mycobacteria in Hospital Water Networks, and Preferential Growth of Mycobacterium avium in Acanthamoeba lenticulata

Alida R. Ovrutsky; Edward D. Chan; Marinka Kartalija; Xiyuan Bai; Mary Jackson; Sara Gibbs; Joseph O. Falkinham; Michael D. Iseman; Paul R. Reynolds; Gerald McDonnell; Vincent Thomas

ABSTRACT The incidence of lung and other diseases due to nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) is increasing. NTM sources include potable water, especially in households where NTM populate pipes, taps, and showerheads. NTM share habitats with free-living amoebae (FLA) and can grow in FLA as parasites or as endosymbionts. FLA containing NTM may form cysts that protect mycobacteria from disinfectants and antibiotics. We first assessed the presence of FLA and NTM in water and biofilm samples collected from a hospital, confirming the high prevalence of NTM and FLA in potable water systems, particularly in biofilms. Acanthamoeba spp. (genotype T4) were mainly recovered (8/17), followed by Hartmannella vermiformis (7/17) as well as one isolate closely related to the genus Flamella and one isolate only distantly related to previously described species. Concerning mycobacteria, Mycobacterium gordonae was the most frequently found isolate (9/17), followed by Mycobacterium peregrinum (4/17), Mycobacterium chelonae (2/17), Mycobacterium mucogenicum (1/17), and Mycobacterium avium (1/17). The propensity of Mycobacterium avium hospital isolate H87 and M. avium collection strain 104 to survive and replicate within various FLA was also evaluated, demonstrating survival of both strains in all amoebal species tested but high replication rates only in Acanthamoeba lenticulata. As A. lenticulata was frequently recovered from environmental samples, including drinking water samples, these results could have important consequences for the ecology of M. avium in drinking water networks and the epidemiology of disease due to this species.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

New Insights into the Early Steps of Phosphatidylinositol Mannoside Biosynthesis in Mycobacteria: PimB′ IS AN ESSENTIAL ENZYME OF MYCOBACTERIUM SMEGMATIS*

Marcelo E. Guerin; Devinder Kaur; B. S. Somashekar; Sara Gibbs; Petra Gest; Delphi Chatterjee; Patrick J. Brennan; Mary Jackson

Phosphatidyl-myo-inositol mannosides (PIMs) are key glycolipids of the mycobacterial cell envelope. They are considered not only essential structural components of the cell but also important molecules implicated in host-pathogen interactions. Although their chemical structures are well established, knowledge of the enzymes and sequential events leading to their biosynthesis is still incomplete. Here we show for the first time that although both mannosyltransferases PimA and PimB′ (MSMEG_4253) recognize phosphatidyl-myo-inositol (PI) as a lipid acceptor, PimA specifically catalyzes the transfer of a Manp residue to the 2-position of the myo-inositol ring of PI, whereas PimB′ exclusively transfers to the 6-position. Moreover, whereas PimB′ can catalyze the transfer of a Manp residue onto the PI-monomannoside (PIM1) product of PimA, PimA is unable in vitro to transfer Manp onto the PIM1 product of PimB′. Further assays using membranes from Mycobacterium smegmatis and purified PimA and PimB′ indicated that the acylation of the Manp residue transferred by PimA preferentially occurs after the second Manp residue has been added by PimB′. Importantly, genetic evidence is provided that pimB′ is an essential gene of M. smegmatis. Altogether, our results support a model wherein Ac1PIM2, a major form of PIMs produced by mycobacteria, arises from the consecutive action of PimA, followed by PimB′, and finally the acyltransferase MSMEG_2934. The essentiality of these three enzymes emphasizes the interest of novel anti-tuberculosis drugs targeting the initial steps of PIM biosynthesis.


PLOS Pathogens | 2014

LprG-mediated surface expression of lipoarabinomannan is essential for virulence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

Rajiv L. Gaur; Kangning Ren; Antje Blumenthal; Suresh Bhamidi; Sara Gibbs; Mary Jackson; Richard N. Zare; Sabine Ehrt; Joel D. Ernst; Niaz Banaei

Mycobacterium tuberculosis employs various virulence strategies to subvert host immune responses in order to persist and cause disease. Interaction of M. tuberculosis with mannose receptor on macrophages via surface-exposed lipoarabinomannan (LAM) is believed to be critical for cell entry, inhibition of phagosome-lysosome fusion, and intracellular survival, but in vivo evidence is lacking. LprG, a cell envelope lipoprotein that is essential for virulence of M. tuberculosis, has been shown to bind to the acyl groups of lipoglycans but the role of LprG in LAM biosynthesis and localization remains unknown. Using an M. tuberculosis lprG mutant, we show that LprG is essential for normal surface expression of LAM and virulence of M. tuberculosis attributed to LAM. The lprG mutant had a normal quantity of LAM in the cell envelope, but its surface was altered and showed reduced expression of surface-exposed LAM. Functionally, the lprG mutant was defective for macrophage entry and inhibition of phagosome-lysosome fusion, was attenuated in macrophages, and was killed in the mouse lung with the onset of adaptive immunity. This study identifies the role of LprG in surface-exposed LAM expression and provides in vivo evidence for the essential role surface LAM plays in M. tuberculosis virulence. Findings have translational implications for therapy and vaccine development.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Increased virulence of an epidemic strain of Mycobacterium massiliense in mice.

Shaobin Shang; Sara Gibbs; Marcela Henao-Tamayo; Crystal A. Shanley; Gerald McDonnell; Rafael Silva Duarte; Diane J. Ordway; Mary Jackson

Background Chronic pulmonary disease and skin/soft tissue infections due to non-tuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) of the Mycobacterium chelonae-abscessus-massiliense group is an emerging health problem worldwide. Moreover, the cure rate for the infections this group causes is low despite aggressive treatment. Post-surgical outbreaks that reached epidemic proportions in Brazil recently were caused by M. massiliense isolates resistant to high-level disinfection with glutaraldehyde (GTA). Understanding the differences in the virulence and host immune responses induced by NTM differing in their sensitivity to disinfectants, and therefore their relative threat of causing outbreaks in hospitals, is an important issue. Methodology/Principal Finding We compared the replication and survival inside macrophages of a GTA-susceptible reference Mycobacterium massiliense clinical isolate CIP 108297 and an epidemic strain from Brazil, CRM-0019, and characterized the immune responses of IFNγ knockout mice exposed to a high dose aerosol with these two isolates. CRM-0019 replicated more efficiently than CIP 108297 inside mouse bone marrow macrophages. Moreover, the animals infected with CRM-0019 showed a progressive lung infection characterized by a delayed influx of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, culminating in extensive lung consolidation and demonstrated increased numbers of pulmonary CD4+ Foxp3+ regulatory T cells compared to those infected with the reference strain. Immunosuppressive activity of regulatory T cells may contribute to the progression and worsening of NTM disease by preventing the induction of specific protective immune responses. Conclusions/Significance These results provide the first direct evidence of the increased virulence in macrophages and mice and pathogenicity in vivo of the Brazilian epidemic isolate and the first observation that NTM infections can be associated with variable levels of regulatory T cells which may impact on their virulence and ability to persist in the host.


American Journal of Infection Control | 2014

Analysis of a panel of rapidly growing mycobacteria for resistance to aldehyde-based disinfectants

Mary A. De Groote; Sara Gibbs; Vinicius Calado Nogueira de Moura; Winona Burgess; Kris Richardson; Shannon Kasperbauer; Nancy E. Madinger; Mary Jackson

After several accounts across the globe of mycobacteria outbreaks associated with medical procedures and aldehyde disinfectants resistance, we undertook an analysis of mycobacteria isolated from patients seen in a hospital in the United States between 1994 and 2008 to determine prevalence of resistance to aldehyde-based disinfectants. Out of the 117 clinical isolates screened, 6 isolates belonging to the emerging Mycobacterium abscessus group were found to display significant levels of resistance to glutaraldehyde and ortho-phthalaldehyde.


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 2017

Disinfectant Susceptibility Profiling of Glutaraldehyde-Resistant Nontuberculous Mycobacteria

Winona Burgess; Alyssa Margolis; Sara Gibbs; Rafael Silva Duarte; Mary Anne Jackson

OBJECTIVE Activated alkaline glutaraldehyde (GTA) remains one of the most widely used high-level disinfectants worldwide. However, several reports have highlighted the potential for nontuberculous mycobacteria to develop high-level resistance to this product. Because aldehyde resistance may lead to cross-resistance to other biocides, we investigated the susceptibility profile of GTA-resistant Mycobacterium chelonae and M. abscessus isolates to various disinfectant chemistries. METHODS High-level disinfectants commonly used in the reprocessing of endoscopes and other heat-sensitive, semicritical medical equipment, including different formulations of aldehyde-based products and oxidizing agents, were tested against 10 slow- and fast-growing, GTA-susceptible and GTA-resistant, Mycobacterium isolates in suspension tests and carrier tests at different temperatures. RESULTS While peracetic acid- and hydrogen peroxide-based disinfectants (S40, Resert XL, Reliance DG) efficiently killed all of the Mycobacterium isolates, GTA- and ortho-phthalaldehyde-based products (ie, Cidex, Aldahol, Cidex OPA) showed variable efficacy against GTA-resistant strains despite the ability of some formulations (Aldahol) to overcome the resistance of some of these isolates, especially when the temperature was increased from 20°C to 25°C. CONCLUSIONS Application permitting, oxidizing chemistries may provide a safe alternative to aldehyde-based products, particularly in GTA-resistant mycobacterial outbreaks. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 2017;38:784-791.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Gene Replacement in Mycobacterium chelonae: Application to the Construction of Porin Knock-Out Mutants

Vinicius Calado Nogueira de Moura; Sara Gibbs; Mary Jackson

Mycobacterium chelonae is a rapidly growing mycobacterial opportunistic pathogen closely related to Mycobacterium abscessus that causes cornea, skin and soft tissue infections in humans. Although M. chelonae and the emerging mycobacterial pathogen M. abscessus have long been considered to belong to the same species, these two microorganisms considerably differ in terms of optimum growth temperature, drug susceptibility, pathogenicity and the types of infection they cause. The whole genome sequencing of clinical isolates of M. chelonae and M. abscessus is opening the way to comparative studies aimed at understanding the biology of these pathogens and elucidating the molecular bases of their pathogenicity and biocide resistance. Key to the validation of the numerous hypotheses that this approach will raise, however, is the availability of genetic tools allowing for the expression and targeted mutagenesis of genes in these species. While homologous recombination systems have recently been described for M. abscessus, genetic tools are lacking for M. chelonae. We here show that two different allelic replacement methods, one based on mycobacteriophage-encoded recombinases and the other on a temperature-sensitive plasmid harboring the counterselectable marker sacB, can be used to efficiently disrupt genes in this species. Knock-out mutants for each of the three porin genes of M. chelonae ATCC 35752 were constructed using both methodologies, one of which displays a significantly reduced glucose uptake rate consistent with decreased porin expression.


PLOS Pathogens | 2014

LprG-Mediated Surface Expression of Lipoarabinomannan Is Essential for Virulence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (vol 10, e1004376, 2014)

Rajiv L. Gaur; Kangning Ren; Antje Blumenthal; Suresh Bhamidi; Sara Gibbs


Archive | 2013

lenticulataavium in Acanthamoeba Water Networks, and Preferential Growth of Nontuberculous Mycobacteria in Hospital Cooccurrence of Free-Living Amoebae and

Vincent Thomas; Michael D. Iseman; Paul R. Reynolds; Mary Jackson; Sara Gibbs; R. Ovrutsky; Edward D. Chan; Marinka Kartalija


american thoracic society international conference | 2011

Disinfectant-Resistance In Rapidly-Growing Mycobacteria: Occurrence And Molecular Mechanisms

Mary A. De Groote; Sara Gibbs; Vinicius Calado Nogueira de Moura; Nancy E. Madinger; Winona Burgess; Zuzana Svetlíková; Vincent Thomas; Gerald McDonnell; Mary Jackson

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Mary Jackson

Colorado State University

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Edward D. Chan

University of Colorado Denver

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Marinka Kartalija

University of Colorado Denver

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Winona Burgess

Colorado State University

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Alida R. Ovrutsky

University of Colorado Denver

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