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Featured researches published by Stoyan Bardarov.


Infection and Immunity | 2000

Attenuation of and Protection Induced by a Leucine Auxotroph of Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Mary K. Hondalus; Stoyan Bardarov; Robert G. Russell; John Chan; William R. Jacobs; Barry R. Bloom

ABSTRACT Attenuated mutants of Mycobacterium tuberculosisrepresent potential vaccine candidates for the prevention of tuberculosis. It is known that auxotrophs of a variety of bacteria are attenuated in vivo and yet provide protection against challenge with wild-type organisms. A leucine auxotroph of M. tuberculosiswas created by allelic exchange, replacing wild-type leuD(Rv2987c), encoding isopropyl malate isomerase, with a mutant copy of the gene in which 359 bp had been deleted, creating a strain requiring exogenous leucine supplementation for growth in vitro. The frequency of reversion to prototrophy was <10−11. In contrast to wild-type M. tuberculosis, the ΔleuD mutant was unable to replicate in macrophages in vitro. Its attenuation in vivo and safety as a vaccine were established by the fact that it caused no deaths in immunodeficient SCID mice. Complementation of the mutant with wild-type leuD abolished the requirement for leucine supplementation and restored the ability of the strain to grow both in macrophages and in SCID mice, thus confirming that the attenuated phenotype was due to the ΔleuD mutation. As a test of the vaccine potential of the leucine auxotroph, immunocompetent BALB/c mice, susceptible to fatal infection with wild-type M. tuberculosis, were immunized with the ΔleuD mutant and subsequently challenged with virulent M. tuberculosisby both the intravenous and aerosol routes. A comparison group of mice was immunized with conventional Mycobacterium bovis BCG vaccine. Whereas all unvaccinated mice succumbed to intravenous infection within 15 weeks, mice immunized with either BCG or the ΔleuD mutant of M. tuberculosis exhibited enhanced and statistically equivalent survival curves. However, theleuD auxotroph was less effective than live BCG in reducing organ burdens and tissue pathology of mice challenged by either route. We conclude that attenuation and protection against M. tuberculosis challenge can be achieved with a leucine auxotroph and suggest that to induce optimal protection, attenuated strains ofM. tuberculosis should persist long enough and be sufficiently metabolically active to synthesize relevant antigens for an extended period of time.


Microbiology | 2002

Specialized transduction: an efficient method for generating marked and unmarked targeted gene disruptions in Mycobacterium tuberculosis, M. bovis BCG and M. smegmatis

Stoyan Bardarov; Svetoslav Bardarov; Martin S. Pavelka; Vasan K. Sambandamurthy; Michelle H. Larsen; JoAnn M. Tufariello; John Chan; Graham F. Hatfull; William R. Jacobs

The authors have developed a simple and highly efficient system for generating allelic exchanges in both fast- and slow-growing mycobacteria. In this procedure a gene of interest, disrupted by a selectable marker, is cloned into a conditionally replicating (temperature-sensitive) shuttle phasmid to generate a specialized transducing mycobacteriophage. The temperature-sensitive mutations in the mycobacteriophage genome permit replication at the permissive temperature of 30 degrees C but prevent replication at the non-permissive temperature of 37 degrees C. Transduction at a non-permissive temperature results in highly efficient delivery of the recombination substrate to virtually all cells in the recipient population. The deletion mutations in the targeted genes are marked with antibiotic-resistance genes that are flanked by gammadelta-res (resolvase recognition target) sites. The transductants which have undergone a homologous recombination event can be conveniently selected on antibiotic-containing media. To demonstrate the utility of this genetic system seven different targeted gene disruptions were generated in three substrains of Mycobacterium bovis BCG, three strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, and Mycobacterium smegmatis. Mutants in the lysA, nadBC, panC, panCD, leuCD, Rv3291c and Rv0867c genes or operons were isolated as antibiotic-resistant (and in some cases auxotrophic) transductants. Using a plasmid encoding the gammadelta-resolvase (tnpR), the resistance genes could be removed, generating unmarked deletion mutations. It is concluded from the high frequency of allelic exchange events observed in this study that specialized transduction is a very efficient technique for genetic manipulation of mycobacteria and is a method of choice for constructing isogenic strains of M. tuberculosis, BCG or M. smegmatis which differ by defined mutations.


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.


Microbiology | 2002

Characterization of a Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv transposon library reveals insertions in 351 ORFs and mutants with altered virulence

Ruth Mcadam; Selwyn Quan; Debbie A. Smith; Stoyan Bardarov; Joanna Betts; Fiona C. Cook; Elizabeth U. Hooker; Alan Peter Lewis; Peter Woollard; Martin J. Everett; Pauline T. Lukey; Gregory J. Bancroft; William R. Jacobs; Ken Duncan

A library of Mycobacterium tuberculosis insertional mutants was generated with the transposon Tn5370. The junction sequence between the transposon and the mycobacterial chromosome was determined, revealing the positions of 1329 unique insertions, 1189 of which were located in 351 different ORFs. Transposition was not completely random and examination of the most susceptible genome regions revealed a lower-than-average G+C content ranging from 54 to 62 mol%. Mutants were obtained in all of the recognized M. tuberculosis functional protein-coding gene classes. About 30% of the disrupted ORFs had matches elsewhere in the genome that suggested redundancy of function. The effect of gene disruption on the virulence of a selected set of defined mutants was investigated in a severe combined immune deficiency (SCID) mouse model. A range of phenotypes was observed in these mutants, the most notable being the severe attenuation in virulence of a strain disrupted in the Rv1290c gene, which encodes a protein of unknown function. The library described in this study provides a resource of defined mutant strains for use in functional analyses aimed at investigating the role of particular M. tuberculosis genes in virulence and defining their potential as targets for new anti-mycobacterial drugs or as candidates for deletion in a rationally attenuated live vaccine.


Methods in molecular medicine | 2001

Transposon mutagenesis in mycobacteria using conditionally replicating mycobacteriophages.

Stoyan Bardarov; Svetoslav Bardarov; William R. Jacobs

Genetic analyses of pathogenic mycobacteria such as Mycobacterium tubeculosis and Mycobacterium bovis required improvement of existing methodologies for the generation of large representative libraries of mutants. Two basic methodologies have been used to generate mutant libraries in both fast- and slow-growing mycobacteria: chemical mutagenesis and transposon mutagenesis. Chemical mutagenesis has successfully been used to produce different auxotrophic mutants in the fast growing mycobacteria Mycobacterium phlei (1,2) and Mycobacterium smegmatis (3,4). A detailed chemical mutagenesis protocol for the generation of mutant libraries in the fast-growing mycobacteria can be found in the previous volume of this manual (5). Chemical mutagenesis is not the ideal method for producing large representative mutant libraries for the slow-growing mycobacteria because: (1) the mutation frequency is relatively low,(2) multiple mutations may occur in the same cells,(3) clumping of the mycobacteria makes the identification and purification of the mutant clones very difficult,and (4) no generalized transducing phage has been described for the slow-growing mycobacteria to allow transfer of the point mutations and construction of isogenic strains.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1997

Conditionally replicating mycobacteriophages: A system for transposon delivery to Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Stoyan Bardarov; Jordan Kriakov; Christian Carriere; Shengwei Yu; Carlos Vaamonde; Ruth A. McAdam; Barry R. Bloom; Graham F. Hatfull; William R. Jacobs


Journal of Bacteriology | 1996

Allelic exchange in Mycobacterium tuberculosis with long linear recombination substrates.

V. Balasubramanian; Martin S. Pavelka; Stoyan Bardarov; Jean Martin; Torin R. Weisbrod; Ruth A. McAdam; Barry R. Bloom; William R. Jacobs


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 1997

Conditionally replicating luciferase reporter phages: improved sensitivity for rapid detection and assessment of drug susceptibility of Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

Christian Carriere; Paul F. Riska; Oren Zimhony; Jordan Kriakov; Stoyan Bardarov; Judah Burns; John Chan; William R. Jacobs


Archive | 1999

One step allelic exchange in mycobacteria using in vitro generated conditional transducing phages

Stoyan Bardarov; William R. Jacobs


Archive | 2004

Use Of Mycrobacterial Vaccines In Cd4+ Or Cd8+ Lymphocyte-Deficient Mammals

William R. Jacobs; Tsungda Hsu; Vasan K. Sambandamurthy; Sheldon Morris; Stoyan Bardarov; Svetoslav Bardarvo

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Ruth A. McAdam

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Graham F. Hatfull

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Martin S. Pavelka

University of Rochester Medical Center

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Jean Martin

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Svetoslav Bardarov

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Torin R. Weisbrod

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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