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Dive into the research topics where Sarah R. Beattie is active.

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Featured researches published by Sarah R. Beattie.


The EMBO Journal | 2014

The Janus transcription factor HapX controls fungal adaptation to both iron starvation and iron excess

Fabio Gsaller; Peter Hortschansky; Sarah R. Beattie; Veronika Klammer; Katja Tuppatsch; Beatrix E. Lechner; Nicole Rietzschel; Ernst R. Werner; Aaron A. Vogan; Dawoon Chung; Ulrich Mühlenhoff; Masashi Kato; Robert A. Cramer; Axel A. Brakhage; Hubertus Haas

Balance of physiological levels of iron is essential for every organism. In Aspergillus fumigatus and other fungal pathogens, the transcription factor HapX mediates adaptation to iron limitation and consequently virulence by repressing iron consumption and activating iron uptake. Here, we demonstrate that HapX is also essential for iron resistance via activating vacuolar iron storage. We identified HapX protein domains that are essential for HapX functions during either iron starvation or high‐iron conditions. The evolutionary conservation of these domains indicates their wide‐spread role in iron sensing. We further demonstrate that a HapX homodimer and the CCAAT‐binding complex (CBC) cooperatively bind an evolutionary conserved DNA motif in a target promoter. The latter reveals the mode of discrimination between general CBC and specific HapX/CBC target genes. Collectively, our study uncovers a novel regulatory mechanism mediating both iron resistance and adaptation to iron starvation by the same transcription factor complex with activating and repressing functions depending on ambient iron availability.


Genetics | 2016

Diverse Regulation of the CreA Carbon Catabolite Repressor in Aspergillus nidulans

Laure Nicolas Annick Ries; Sarah R. Beattie; Eduardo A. Espeso; Robert A. Cramer; Gustavo H. Goldman

Carbon catabolite repression (CCR) is a process that selects the energetically most favorable carbon source in an environment. CCR represses the use of less favorable carbon sources when a better source is available. Glucose is the preferential carbon source for most microorganisms because it is rapidly metabolized, generating quick energy for growth. In the filamentous fungus Aspergillus nidulans, CCR is mediated by the transcription factor CreA, a C2H2 finger domain DNA-binding protein. The aim of this work was to investigate the regulation of CreA and characterize its functionally distinct protein domains. CreA depends in part on de novo protein synthesis and is regulated in part by ubiquitination. CreC, the scaffold protein in the CreB-CreC deubiquitination (DUB) complex, is essential for CreA function and stability. Deletion of select protein domains in CreA resulted in persistent nuclear localization and target gene repression. A region in CreA conserved between Aspergillus spp. and Trichoderma reesei was identified as essential for growth on various carbon, nitrogen, and lipid sources. In addition, a role of CreA in amino acid transport and nitrogen assimilation was observed. Taken together, these results indicate previously unidentified functions of this important transcription factor. These novel functions serve as a basis for additional research in fungal carbon metabolism with the potential aim to improve fungal industrial applications.


Mbio | 2016

Heterogeneity among Isolates Reveals that Fitness in Low Oxygen Correlates with Aspergillus fumigatus Virulence

Caitlin H. Kowalski; Sarah R. Beattie; Kevin K. Fuller; Elizabeth A. McGurk; Yi-Wei Tang; Tobias M. Hohl; Joshua J. Obar; Robert A. Cramer

ABSTRACT Previous work has shown that environmental and clinical isolates of Aspergillus fumigatus represent a diverse population that occupies a variety of niches, has extensive genetic diversity, and exhibits virulence heterogeneity in a number of animal models of invasive pulmonary aspergillosis (IPA). However, mechanisms explaining differences in virulence among A. fumigatus isolates remain enigmatic. Here, we report a significant difference in virulence of two common lab strains, CEA10 and AF293, in the murine triamcinolone immunosuppression model of IPA, in which we previously identified severe low oxygen microenvironments surrounding fungal lesions. Therefore, we hypothesize that the ability to thrive within these lesions of low oxygen promotes virulence of A. fumigatus in this model. To test this hypothesis, we performed in vitro fitness and in vivo virulence analyses in the triamcinolone murine model of IPA with 14 environmental and clinical isolates of A. fumigatus. Among these isolates, we observed a strong correlation between fitness in low oxygen in vitro and virulence. In further support of our hypothesis, experimental evolution of AF293, a strain that exhibits reduced fitness in low oxygen and reduced virulence in the triamcinolone model of IPA, results in a strain (EVOL20) that has increased hypoxia fitness and a corresponding increase in virulence. Thus, the ability to thrive in low oxygen correlates with virulence of A. fumigatus isolates in the context of steroid-mediated murine immunosuppression. IMPORTANCE Aspergillus fumigatus occupies multiple environmental niches, likely contributing to the genotypic and phenotypic heterogeneity among isolates. Despite reports of virulence heterogeneity, pathogenesis studies often utilize a single strain for the identification and characterization of virulence and immunity factors. Here, we describe significant variation between A. fumigatus isolates in hypoxia fitness and virulence, highlighting the advantage of including multiple strains in future studies. We also illustrate that hypoxia fitness correlates strongly with increased virulence exclusively in the nonleukopenic murine triamcinolone immunosuppression model of IPA. Through an experimental evolution experiment, we observe that chronic hypoxia exposure results in increased virulence of A. fumigatus. We describe here the first observation of a model-specific virulence phenotype correlative with in vitro fitness in hypoxia and pave the way for identification of hypoxia-mediated mechanisms of virulence in the fungal pathogen A. fumigatus. Aspergillus fumigatus occupies multiple environmental niches, likely contributing to the genotypic and phenotypic heterogeneity among isolates. Despite reports of virulence heterogeneity, pathogenesis studies often utilize a single strain for the identification and characterization of virulence and immunity factors. Here, we describe significant variation between A. fumigatus isolates in hypoxia fitness and virulence, highlighting the advantage of including multiple strains in future studies. We also illustrate that hypoxia fitness correlates strongly with increased virulence exclusively in the nonleukopenic murine triamcinolone immunosuppression model of IPA. Through an experimental evolution experiment, we observe that chronic hypoxia exposure results in increased virulence of A. fumigatus. We describe here the first observation of a model-specific virulence phenotype correlative with in vitro fitness in hypoxia and pave the way for identification of hypoxia-mediated mechanisms of virulence in the fungal pathogen A. fumigatus.


PLOS Pathogens | 2017

Filamentous fungal carbon catabolite repression supports metabolic plasticity and stress responses essential for disease progression

Sarah R. Beattie; Kenneth M. K. Mark; Arsa Thammahong; Laure Nicolas Annick Ries; Sourabh Dhingra; Alayna K. Caffrey-Carr; Chao Cheng; Candice C. Black; Paul Bowyer; Michael Bromley; Joshua J. Obar; Gustavo H. Goldman; Robert A. Cramer

Aspergillus fumigatus is responsible for a disproportionate number of invasive mycosis cases relative to other common filamentous fungi. While many fungal factors critical for infection establishment are known, genes essential for disease persistence and progression are ill defined. We propose that fungal factors that promote navigation of the rapidly changing nutrient and structural landscape characteristic of disease progression represent untapped clinically relevant therapeutic targets. To this end, we find that A. fumigatus requires a carbon catabolite repression (CCR) mediated genetic network to support in vivo fungal fitness and disease progression. While CCR as mediated by the transcriptional repressor CreA is not required for pulmonary infection establishment, loss of CCR inhibits fungal metabolic plasticity and the ability to thrive in the dynamic infection microenvironment. Our results suggest a model whereby CCR in an environmental filamentous fungus is dispensable for initiation of pulmonary infection but essential for infection maintenance and disease progression. Conceptually, we argue these data provide a foundation for additional studies on fungal factors required to support fungal fitness and disease progression and term such genes and factors, DPFs (disease progression factors).


mSphere | 2016

RbdB, a Rhomboid Protease Critical for SREBP Activation and Virulence in Aspergillus fumigatus

Sourabh Dhingra; Caitlin H. Kowlaski; Arsa Thammahong; Sarah R. Beattie; Katherine M. Bultman; Robert A. Cramer

Aspergillus fumigatus causes life-threatening infections, and treatment options remain limited. Thus, there is an urgent need to find new therapeutic targets to treat this deadly disease. Previously, we have shown that SREBP transcription factors and their regulatory components are critical for the pathobiology of A. fumigatus. Here we identify a role for RbdB, a rhomboid protease, as an essential component of SREBP activity. Our results indicate that mutants lacking rbdB have growth defects under hypoxic conditions, are hypersusceptible to voriconazole, lack extracellular siderophore production, and fail to cause disease in a murine model of invasive pulmonary aspergillosis. This study increases our understanding of the molecular mechanisms involved in SREBP activation in pathogenic fungi and provides a novel therapeutic target for future development. ABSTRACT SREBP transcription factors play a critical role in fungal virulence; however, the mechanisms of sterol regulatory element binding protein (SREBP) activation in pathogenic fungi remains ill-defined. Screening of the Neurospora crassa whole-genome deletion collection for genes involved in hypoxia responses identified a gene for an uncharacterized rhomboid protease homolog, rbdB, required for growth under hypoxic conditions. Loss of rbdB in Aspergillus fumigatus also inhibited growth under hypoxic conditions. In addition, the A. fumigatus ΔrbdB strain also displayed phenotypes consistent with defective SREBP activity, including increased azole drug susceptibility, reduced siderophore production, and full loss of virulence. Expression of the basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) DNA binding domain of the SREBP SrbA in ΔrbdB restored all of the phenotypes linking RdbB activity with SrbA function. Furthermore, the N-terminal domain of SrbA containing the bHLH DNA binding region was absent from ΔrbdB under inducing conditions, suggesting that RbdB regulates the protein levels of this important transcription factor. As SrbA controls clinically relevant aspects of fungal pathobiology in A. fumigatus, understanding the mechanisms of SrbA activation provides opportunities to target this pathway for therapeutic development. IMPORTANCE Aspergillus fumigatus causes life-threatening infections, and treatment options remain limited. Thus, there is an urgent need to find new therapeutic targets to treat this deadly disease. Previously, we have shown that SREBP transcription factors and their regulatory components are critical for the pathobiology of A. fumigatus. Here we identify a role for RbdB, a rhomboid protease, as an essential component of SREBP activity. Our results indicate that mutants lacking rbdB have growth defects under hypoxic conditions, are hypersusceptible to voriconazole, lack extracellular siderophore production, and fail to cause disease in a murine model of invasive pulmonary aspergillosis. This study increases our understanding of the molecular mechanisms involved in SREBP activation in pathogenic fungi and provides a novel therapeutic target for future development.


Infection and Immunity | 2017

Interleukin 1α Is Critical for Resistance against Highly Virulent Aspergillus fumigatus Isolates

Alayna K. Caffrey-Carr; Caitlin H. Kowalski; Sarah R. Beattie; Nathan A. Blaseg; Chanell R. Upshaw; Arsa Thammahong; Hannah E. Lust; Yi-Wei Tang; Tobias M. Hohl; Robert A. Cramer; Joshua J. Obar

ABSTRACT Heterogeneity among Aspergillus fumigatus isolates results in unique virulence potential and inflammatory responses. How these isolates drive specific immune responses and how this affects fungally induced lung damage and disease outcome are unresolved. We demonstrate that the highly virulent CEA10 strain is able to rapidly germinate within the immunocompetent lung environment, inducing greater lung damage, vascular leakage, and interleukin 1α (IL-1α) release than the low-virulence Af293 strain, which germinates with a lower frequency in this environment. Importantly, the clearance of CEA10 was consequently dependent on IL-1α, in contrast to Af293. The release of IL-1α occurred by a caspase 1/11- and P2XR7-independent mechanism but was dependent on calpain activity. Our finding that early fungal conidium germination drives greater lung damage and IL-1α-dependent inflammation is supported by three independent experimental lines. First, pregermination of Af293 prior to in vivo challenge drives greater lung damage and an IL-1α-dependent neutrophil response. Second, the more virulent EVOL20 strain, derived from Af293, is able to germinate in the airways, leading to enhanced lung damage and IL-1α-dependent inflammation and fungal clearance. Third, primary environmental A. fumigatus isolates that rapidly germinate under airway conditions follow the same trend toward IL-1α dependency. Our data support the hypothesis that A. fumigatus phenotypic variation significantly contributes to disease outcomes.


Molecular Microbiology | 2018

Overview of carbon and nitrogen catabolite metabolism in the virulence of human pathogenic fungi: Overview of carbon and nitrogen catabolite metabolism

Laure Nicolas Annick Ries; Sarah R. Beattie; Robert A. Cramer; Gustavo H. Goldman

It is estimated that fungal infections, caused most commonly by Candida albicans, Aspergillus fumigatus and Cryptococcus neoformans, result in more deaths annually than malaria or tuberculosis. It has long been hypothesized the fungal metabolism plays a critical role in virulence though specific nutrient sources utilized by human pathogenic fungi in vivo has remained enigmatic. However, the metabolic utilisation of preferred carbon and nitrogen sources, encountered in a host niche‐dependent manner, is known as carbon catabolite and nitrogen catabolite repression (CCR, NCR), and has been shown to be important for virulence. Several sensory and uptake systems exist, including carbon and nitrogen source‐specific sensors and transporters, that allow scavenging of preferred nutrient sources. Subsequent metabolic utilisation is governed by transcription factors, whose functions and essentiality differ between fungal species. Furthermore, additional factors exist that contribute to the implementation of CCR and NCR. The role of the CCR and NCR‐related factors in virulence varies greatly between fungal species and a substantial gap in knowledge exists regarding specific pathways. Further elucidation of carbon and nitrogen metabolism mechanisms is therefore required in a fungal species‐ and animal model‐specific manner in order to screen for targets that are potential candidates for anti‐fungal drug development.


bioRxiv | 2018

Characterizing the pathogenic, genomic, and chemical traits of Aspergillus fischeri, the closest sequenced relative of the major human fungal pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus

Matthew E. Mead; Sonja L Knowles; Huzefa A. Raja; Sarah R. Beattie; Caitlin H. Kowalski; Jacob L. Steenwyk; Lilian Pereira Silva; Jéssica Chiaratto; Laure Na Ries; Gustavo H. Goldman; Robert A. Cramer; Nicholas H. Oberlies; Antonis Rokas

Aspergillus fischeri is a very close evolutionary relative of the major cause of invasive mold infections, Aspergillus fumigatus. In contrast to A. fumigatus, A. fischeri rarely causes invasive disease, but why such a discrepancy between the species exists is unknown. To begin to address this question, we characterized the pathogenic, genomic, and secondary metabolic similarities and differences between A. fischeri and A. fumigatus. We observed multiple differences between the two species for phenotypes related to pathogenesis, including that A. fischeri is less virulent than A. fumigatus in multiple murine models of invasive disease. In contrast, ~90% of the A. fumigatus proteome is conserved in A. fischeri, including all but one of the previously known A. fumigatus genetic determinants important for virulence. However, the two species differed substantially in their biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) that are likely involved in the production of secondary metabolites, with only 10 / 33 A. fumigatus BGCs also conserved in A. fischeri. Detailed chemical characterization of A. fischeri cultures grown on multiple substrates identified multiple secondary metabolites, including two new compounds and one never before isolated as a natural product. Interestingly, a deletion mutant in A. fischeri of the ortholog of a master regulator of secondary metabolism, laeA, produced fewer secondary metabolites and in lower quantities, suggesting that regulation of secondary metabolism is at least partially conserved between the two species. These results suggest that the less-pathogenic A. fischeri possesses many of the genes important for A. fumigatus pathogenicity but is divergent with respect to its secondary metabolism and its ability to thrive under infection-relevant conditions. Importance Aspergillus fumigatus is the primary cause of aspergillosis, a multi-faceted and devastating disease associated with severe morbidity and mortality worldwide. A. fischeri is a very close relative of A. fumigatus, but it is rarely associated with human disease. To gain insights into the underlying causes of this remarkable difference in pathogenicity, we compared the two organisms for a range of infection-relevant biological and chemical characteristics. We found that disease progression in multiple A. fischeri mouse models was much slower and caused less mortality than A. fumigatus. The two species also exhibited different growth profiles when placed in a range of infection-relevant conditions, such as low oxygen. Interestingly, we also found that A. fischeri contains all but one of the genes previously identified as essential for A. fumigatus virulence. However, the two species differ significantly in their secondary metabolic pathways and profiles. The similarities and differences that we identified shed light into the evolutionary origin of a major fungal pathogen.


Science | 2018

Response to Comment on “Sterilizing immunity in the lung relies on targeting fungal apoptosis-like programmed cell death”

Neta Shlezinger; Henriette Irmer; Sourabh Dhingra; Sarah R. Beattie; Robert A. Cramer; Gerhard H. Braus; Amir Sharon; Tobias M. Hohl

Aouacheria et al. question the interpretation of contemporary assays to monitor programmed cell death with apoptosis-like features (A-PCD) in Aspergillus fumigatus. Although our study focuses on fungal A-PCD for host immune surveillance and infectious outcomes, the experimental approach incorporates multiple independent A-PCD markers and genetic manipulations based on fungal rather than mammalian orthologs to circumvent the limitations associated with any single approach.


Science | 2017

Sterilizing immunity in the lung relies on targeting fungal apoptosis-like programmed cell death

Neta Shlezinger; Henriette Irmer; Sourabh Dhingra; Sarah R. Beattie; Robert A. Cramer; Gerhard H. Braus; Amir Sharon; Tobias M. Hohl

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Tobias M. Hohl

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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