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Dive into the research topics where Sudha R. Somarajan is active.

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Featured researches published by Sudha R. Somarajan.


Fems Microbiology Letters | 2014

Influence of isolate origin and presence of various genes on biofilm formation by Enterococcus faecium

Sam Almohamad; Sudha R. Somarajan; Kavindra V. Singh; Sreedhar R. Nallapareddy; Barbara E. Murray

Enterococcus faecium, a major cause of nosocomial infections, is often isolated from conditions where biofilm is considered to be important in the establishment of infections. We investigated biofilm formation among E. faecium isolates from diverse sources and found that the occurrence and amount of biofilm formation were significantly greater in clinical isolates than fecal isolates from community volunteers. We also found that the presence of the empfm (E. faecium pilus) operon was associated with the amount of biofilm formation. Furthermore, we analyzed the possible association between the distribution of 16 putative virulence genes and the occurrence of biofilm production. Even though the prevalence of these virulence genes was significantly higher in clinical isolates, we did not observe any correlation with the occurrence of biofilm formation.


Infection and Immunity | 2016

Role of the Emp Pilus Subunits of Enterococcus faecium in Biofilm Formation, Adherence to Host Extracellular Matrix Components, and Experimental Infection

Maria Camila Montealegre; Kavindra V. Singh; Sudha R. Somarajan; Puja Yadav; Chungyu Chang; Robert Spencer; Jouko Sillanpää; Hung Ton-That; Barbara E. Murray

ABSTRACT Enterococcus faecium is an important cause of hospital-associated infections, including urinary tract infections (UTIs), bacteremia, and infective endocarditis. Pili have been shown to play a role in the pathogenesis of Gram-positive bacteria, including E. faecium. We previously demonstrated that a nonpiliated ΔempABC::cat derivative of E. faecium TX82 was attenuated in biofilm formation and in a UTI model. Here, we studied the contributions of the individual pilus subunits EmpA, EmpB, and EmpC to pilus architecture, biofilm formation, adherence to extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins, and infection. We identified EmpA as the tip of the pili and found that deletion of empA reduced biofilm formation to the same level as deletion of the empABC operon, a phenotype that was restored by reconstituting in situ the empA gene. Deletion of empB also caused a reduction in biofilm, while EmpC was found to be dispensable. Significant reductions in adherence to fibrinogen and collagen type I were observed with deletion of empA and empB, while deletion of empC had no adherence defect. Furthermore, we showed that each deletion mutant was significantly attenuated in comparison to the isogenic parental strain, TX82, in a mixed-inoculum UTI model (P < 0.001 to 0.048), that reconstitution of empA restored virulence in the UTI model, and that deletion of empA also resulted in attenuation in an infective endocarditis model (P = 0.0088). Our results indicate that EmpA and EmpB, but not EmpC, contribute to biofilm and adherence to ECM proteins; however, all the Emp pilins are important for E. faecium to cause infection in the urinary tract.


Infection and Immunity | 2015

The Fibronectin-Binding Protein EfbA Contributes to Pathogenesis and Protects against Infective Endocarditis Caused by Enterococcus faecalis

Kavindra V. Singh; Sabina Leanti La Rosa; Sudha R. Somarajan; Jung Hyeob Roh; Barbara E. Murray

ABSTRACT EfbA is a PavA-like fibronectin adhesin of Enterococcus faecalis previously shown to be important in experimental urinary tract infection. Here, we expressed and purified the E. faecalis OG1RF EfbA and confirmed that this protein binds with high affinity to immobilized fibronectin, collagen I, and collagen V. We constructed an efbA deletion mutant and demonstrated that its virulence was significantly attenuated (P < 0.0006) versus the wild type in a mixed inoculum rat endocarditis model. Furthermore, efbA deletion resulted in diminished ability to bind fibronectin (P < 0.0001) and reduced biofilm (P < 0.001). Reintroduction of efbA into the original chromosomal location restored virulence, adherence to fibronectin, and biofilm formation to wild-type levels. Finally, vaccination of rats with purified recombinant EfbA protein protected against OG1RF endocarditis (P = 0.008 versus control). Taken together, our results demonstrate that EfbA is an important factor involved in E. faecalis endocarditis and that rEfbA immunization is effective in preventing such infection, likely by interfering with bacterial adherence.


Infection and Immunity | 2015

The Fibronectin-Binding Protein Fnm Contributes to Adherence to Extracellular Matrix Components and Virulence of Enterococcus faecium

Sudha R. Somarajan; Sabina Leanti La Rosa; Kavindra V. Singh; Jung Hyeob Roh; Magnus Höök; Barbara E. Murray

ABSTRACT The interaction between bacteria and fibronectin is believed to play an important role in the pathogenicity of clinically important Gram-positive cocci. In the present study, we identified a gene encoding a predicted fibronectin-binding protein of Enterococcus faeciu m (fnm), a homologue of Streptococcus pneumoniae pavA, in the genomes of E. faecium strain TX82 and all other sequenced E. faecium isolates. Full-length recombinant Fnm from strain TX82 bound to immobilized fibronectin in a concentration-dependent manner and also appeared to bind collagen type V and laminin, but not other proteins, such as transferrin, heparin, bovine serum albumin, mucin, or collagen IV. We demonstrated that the N-terminal fragment of Fnm is required for full fibronectin binding, since truncation of this region caused a 2.4-fold decrease (P < 0.05) in the adhesion of E. faecium TX82 to fibronectin. Deletion of fnm resulted in a significant reduction (P < 0.001) in the ability of the mutant, TX6128, to bind fibronectin relative to that of the wild-type strain; in situ reconstitution of fnm in the deletion mutant strain restored adherence. In addition, the Δfnm mutant was highly attenuated relative to TX82 (P ≤ 0.0001) in a mixed-inoculum rat endocarditis model. Taken together, these results demonstrate that Fnm affects the adherence of E. faecium to fibronectin and is important in the pathogenesis of experimental endocarditis.


Infection and Immunity | 2014

CcpA Is Important for Growth and Virulence of Enterococcus faecium

Sudha R. Somarajan; Jung Hyeob Roh; Kavindra V. Singh; George M. Weinstock; Barbara E. Murray

ABSTRACT The collagen adhesin Acm was the first virulence determinant reported to be important for the pathogenesis of Enterococcus faecium in a rat infective endocarditis model. We had previously reported that there was a slight growth delay associated with acm allelic replacement (cat) mutant strain TX6051 used in that study. Recently, we generated a nonpolar markerless acm deletion mutant and did not observe a delay in growth. We therefore performed comparative genome sequence analysis of wild-type strain TX82 and TX6051 and found a single mutation, a nonsense mutation in the ccpA gene of TX6051. After correcting this mutation, the growth defect of TX6051 was abolished, implicating a role for CcpA in the growth of E. faecium. To confirm this, we created a ccpA deletion mutant of TX82, which also exhibited a slight delay in growth. Furthermore, the ccpA deletion mutant was attenuated (P = 0.0024) in a mixed-inoculum (TX82 plus TX82 ΔccpA) rat endocarditis model and also in an in vitro competitive growth assay; a ccpA-complemented strain showed neither reduced growth nor reduced virulence. We also found attenuation in the endocarditis model with the new acm deletion mutant although not as great as that previously observed with TX6051 carrying the ccpA mutation. Taken together, our data confirm the role of Acm in the pathogenesis of endocarditis. We also show that CcpA affects the growth of E. faecium, that an intact ccpA gene is important for full virulence, and that a ccpA mutation was partly responsible for the highly attenuated phenotype of TX6051.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2013

Could a Phosphotransferase System Provide the Means to Control Outbreaks of Enterococcus faecium Infection

Sudha R. Somarajan; Barbara E. Murray

The epidemiology of enterococcal infections has changed dramatically over the past 100 years [1]. Until relatively recently, the vast majority were caused by Enterococcus faecalis and were acquired in the community; then, during the 1970s– 1980s, the percentage of nosocomial infections due to E. faecalis tripled [2,3],an increase temporally associated with increasing use of third-generation cephalosporins. In the United States, an increase in the proportion of nosocomial infections caused by Enterococcus faecium was observed in the 1980s [4, 5], and by 2006–2007, a Centers for Disease Control survey of healthcare-associated infections found that approximately 38% of clinical enterococcal isolates identified to the species level were E. faecium [6]. This increase was blamed on the acquisition of vancomycin resistance by E. faecium (which seldom occurred in E. faecalis) and the increasing use of vancomycin in hospitalized patients. However, the epidemiology of vancomycin-resistant E. faecium (VREfm) presented a quandary: at the time, VREfm was alreadyacommon cause of US healthcare-associated infections, such organisms were not found in the community [7].Yet, concurrently, VREfm was rare as a cause of infection in the European Union but were commonly found in feces of food animals in Europe, in products derived from these animals, in feces of individuals handling them, and even in feces of


Iranian journal of microbiology | 2015

Effect of alum co-adjuvantation of oil adjuvant vaccine on emulsion stability and immune responses against haemorhagic septicaemia in mice.

Sujeet Kumar; V.K. Chaturvedi; Bablu Kumar; Pankaj Kumar; Sudha R. Somarajan; Anil K. Mishra; Bhaskar Sharma


Indian Journal of Animal Sciences | 2012

Improved humoral immune response of oil adjuvant vaccine by saponin co- adjuvantation against haemorrhagic septicaemia in mice and buffalo calves

Sujeet Kumar; V.K. Chaturvedi; Brijendra Kumar; P. R. Kumar; Sudha R. Somarajan; A. Kumar; A S Yadav; B Sharma


Archive | 2015

against Infective Endocarditis Caused By Enterococcus faecalis 2

Kavindra V. Singh; Sabina Leanti La Rosa; Sudha R. Somarajan; Jung Hyeob; Barbara E. Murray


Journal of Immunology and Immunopathology | 2009

Standardization of the microtitre agglutination test for seromonitoring of haemorrhagic septicaemia vaccination

Sujeet Kumar; V.K. Chaturvedi; Brijendra Kumar; Sudha R. Somarajan; P. R. Kumar; Praveen Kumar Gupta; K.D. Pandey

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Kavindra V. Singh

Baylor College of Medicine

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V.K. Chaturvedi

Indian Veterinary Research Institute

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Jung Hyeob Roh

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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Sabina Leanti La Rosa

Norwegian University of Life Sciences

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A. Kumar

Defence Metallurgical Research Laboratory

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Anil K. Mishra

Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati

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Bablu Kumar

Indian Veterinary Research Institute

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Bhaskar Sharma

Indian Council of Agricultural Research

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