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Dive into the research topics where Susan E. Maslanka is active.

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Featured researches published by Susan E. Maslanka.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2004

Foodborne Botulism in the United States, 1990–2000

Jeremy Sobel; Nicole Tucker; Alana Sulka; Joseph McLaughlin; Susan E. Maslanka

Home-canned foods and Alaska Native foods are leading causes of U.S. foodborne botulism; botulism’s epidemic potential renders each case a public health emergency.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2010

Sequence Diversity of Genes Encoding Botulinum Neurotoxin Type F

Brian H. Raphael; Mallory J. Choudoir; Carolina Lúquez; Rafael Fernández; Susan E. Maslanka

ABSTRACT Botulism due to type F botulinum neurotoxin (BoNT/F) is rare (<1% of cases), and only a limited number of clostridial strains producing this toxin type have been isolated. As a result, analysis of the diversity of genes encoding BoNT/F has been challenging. In this study, the entire bont/F nucleotide sequences were determined from 33 type F botulinum toxin-producing clostridial strains isolated from environmental sources and botulism outbreak investigations. We examined proteolytic and nonproteolytic Clostridium botulinum type F strains, bivalent strains, including Bf and Af, and Clostridium baratii type F strains. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that the bont/F genes examined formed 7 subtypes (F1 to F7) and that the nucleotide sequence identities of these subtypes differed by up to 25%. The genes from proteolytic (group I) C. botulinum strains formed subtypes F1 through F5, while the genes from nonproteolytic (group II) C. botulinum strains formed subtype F6. Subtype F7 was composed exclusively of bont/F genes from C. baratii strains. The region of the bont/F5 gene encoding the neurotoxin light chain was found to be highly divergent compared to the other subtypes. Although the bont/F5 nucleotide sequences were found to be identical in strains harboring this gene, the gene located directly upstream (ntnh/F) demonstrated sequence variation among representative strains of this subtype. These results demonstrate that extensive nucleotide diversity exists among genes encoding type F neurotoxins from strains with different phylogenetic backgrounds and from various geographical sources.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2016

A Novel Botulinum Neurotoxin, Previously Reported as Serotype H, Has a Hybrid-Like Structure With Regions of Similarity to the Structures of Serotypes A and F and Is Neutralized With Serotype A Antitoxin

Susan E. Maslanka; Carolina Lúquez; Janet K. Dykes; William H. Tepp; Christina L. Pier; Sabine Pellett; Brian H. Raphael; Suzanne R. Kalb; John R. Barr; Agam K Rao; Eric A. Johnson

Botulism is a potentially fatal paralytic disease caused by the action of botulinum neurotoxin (BoNT) on nerve cells. There are 7 known serotypes (A-G) of BoNT and up to 40 genetic variants. Clostridium botulinum strain IBCA10-7060 was recently reported to produce BoNT serotype B (BoNT/B) and a novel BoNT, designated as BoNT/H. The BoNT gene (bont) sequence of BoNT/H was compared to known bont sequences. Genetic analysis suggested that BoNT/H has a hybrid-like structure containing regions of similarity to the structures of BoNT/A1 and BoNT/F5. This novel BoNT was serologically characterized by the mouse neutralization assay and a neuronal cell-based assay. The toxic effects of this hybrid-like BoNT were completely eliminated by existing serotype A antitoxins, including those contained in multivalent therapeutic antitoxin products that are the mainstay of human botulism treatment.


Analytical Chemistry | 2015

Functional Characterization of Botulinum Neurotoxin Serotype H as a Hybrid of Known Serotypes F and A (BoNT F/A)

Suzanne R. Kalb; Jakub Baudys; Brian H. Raphael; Janet K. Dykes; Carolina Lúquez; Susan E. Maslanka; John R. Barr

A unique strain of Clostridium botulinum (IBCA10-7060) was recently discovered which produces two toxins: botulinum neurotoxin (BoNT) serotype B and a novel BoNT reported as serotype H. Previous molecular assessment showed that the light chain (LC) of the novel BoNT most resembled the bont of the light chain of known subtype F5, while the C-terminus of the heavy chain (HC) most resembled the binding domain of serotype A. We evaluated the functionality of both toxins produced in culture by first incorporating an immunoaffinity step using monoclonal antibodies to purify BoNT from culture supernatants and tested each immune-captured neurotoxin with full-length substrates vesicle-associated membrane protein 2 (VAMP-2), synaptosomal-associated protein 25 (SNAP-25), syntaxin, and shortened peptides representing the substrates. The BoNT/B produced by this strain behaved as a typical BoNT/B, having immunoaffinity for anti-B monoclonal antibodies and cleaving both full length VAMP-2 and a peptide based on the sequence of VAMP-2 in the expected location. As expected, there was no activity toward SNAP-25 or syntaxin. The novel BoNT demonstrated immunoaffinity for anti-A monoclonal antibodies but did not cleave SNAP-25 as expected for BoNT/A. Instead, the novel BoNT cleaved VAMP-2 and VAMP-2-based peptides in the same location as BoNT/F5. This is the first discovery of a single botulinum neurotoxin with BoNT/A antigenicity and BoNT/F light chain function. This work suggests that the newly reported serotype H may actually be a hybrid of previously known BoNT serotype A and serotype F, specifically subtype F5.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2008

Genetic Homogeneity of Clostridium botulinum Type A1 Strains with Unique Toxin Gene Clusters

Brian H. Raphael; Carolina Lúquez; Loretta M. McCroskey; Lavin A. Joseph; Mark J. Jacobson; Eric A. Johnson; Susan E. Maslanka; Joanne D. Andreadis

ABSTRACT A group of five clonally related Clostridium botulinum type A strains isolated from different sources over a period of nearly 40 years harbored several conserved genetic properties. These strains contained a variant bont/A1 with five nucleotide polymorphisms compared to the gene in C. botulinum strain ATCC 3502. The strains also had a common toxin gene cluster composition (ha−/orfX+) similar to that associated with bont/A in type A strains containing an unexpressed bont/B [termed A(B) strains]. However, bont/B was not identified in the strains examined. Comparative genomic hybridization demonstrated identical genomic content among the strains relative to C. botulinum strain ATCC 3502. In addition, microarray data demonstrated the absence of several genes flanking the toxin gene cluster among the ha−/orfX+ A1 strains, suggesting the presence of genomic rearrangements with respect to this region compared to the C. botulinum ATCC 3502 strain. All five strains were shown to have identical flaA variable region nucleotide sequences. The pulsed-field gel electrophoresis patterns of the strains were indistinguishable when digested with SmaI, and a shift in the size of at least one band was observed in a single strain when digested with XhoI. These results demonstrate surprising genomic homogeneity among a cluster of unique C. botulinum type A strains of diverse origin.


BMC Microbiology | 2012

Analysis of a unique Clostridium botulinum strain from the Southern hemisphere producing a novel type E botulinum neurotoxin subtype

Brian H. Raphael; Matthew Lautenschlager; Suzanne R. Kalb; Laura I.T. de Jong; Michael Frace; Carolina Lúquez; John R. Barr; Rafael Fernández; Susan E. Maslanka

BackgroundClostridium botulinum strains that produce botulinum neurotoxin type E (BoNT/E) are most commonly isolated from botulism cases, marine environments, and animals in regions of high latitude in the Northern hemisphere. A strain of C. botulinum type E (CDC66177) was isolated from soil in Chubut, Argentina. Previous studies showed that the amino acid sequences of BoNT/E produced by various strains differ by < 6% and that the type E neurotoxin gene cluster inserts into the rarA operon.ResultsGenetic and mass spectral analysis demonstrated that the BoNT/E produced by CDC66177 is a novel toxin subtype (E9). Toxin gene sequencing indicated that BoNT/E9 differed by nearly 11% at the amino acid level compared to BoNT/E1. Mass spectrometric analysis of BoNT/E9 revealed that its endopeptidase substrate cleavage site was identical to other BoNT/E subtypes. Further analysis of this strain demonstrated that its 16S rRNA sequence clustered with other Group II C. botulinum (producing BoNT types B, E, and F) strains. Genomic DNA isolated from strain CDC66177 hybridized with fewer probes using a Group II C. botulinum subtyping microarray compared to other type E strains examined. Whole genome shotgun sequencing of strain CDC66177 revealed that while the toxin gene cluster inserted into the rarA operon similar to other type E strains, its overall genome content shared greater similarity with a Group II C. botulinum type B strain (17B).ConclusionsThese results expand our understanding of the global distribution of C. botulinum type E strains and suggest that the type E toxin gene cluster may be able to insert into C. botulinum strains with a more diverse genetic background than previously recognized.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2009

Neurotoxin Gene Clusters in Clostridium botulinum Type Ab Strains

Carolina Lúquez; Brian H. Raphael; Susan E. Maslanka

ABSTRACT There is limited knowledge of the neurotoxin gene diversity among Clostridium botulinum type Ab strains. Only the sequences of the bont/A and bont/B genes in C. botulinum type Ab strain CDC1436 and the sequence of the bont/B gene in C. botulinum type Ab strain CDC588 have been reported. In this study, we sequenced the entire bont/A- and bont/B-associated neurotoxin gene clusters of C. botulinum type Ab strain CDC41370 and the bont/A gene of strain CDC588. In addition, we analyzed the organization of the neurotoxin gene clusters in strains CDC588 and CDC1436. The bont/A nucleotide sequence of strain CDC41370 differed from those of the known bont/A subtypes A1 to A4 by 2 to 7%, and the predicted amino acid sequence differed by 4% to 14%. The bont/B nucleotide sequence in strain CDC41370 showed 99.7% identity to the sequence of subtype B1. The bont/A nucleotide sequence of strain CDC588 was 99.9% identical to that of subtype A1. Although all of the C. botulinum type Ab strains analyzed contained the two sets of neurotoxin clusters, similar to what has been found in other bivalent strains, the intergenic spacing of p21-orfX1 and orfX2-orfX3 varied among these strains. The type Ab strains examined in this study had differences in their toxin gene cluster compositions and bont/A and bont/B nucleotide sequences, suggesting that they may have arisen from separate recombination events.


Molecular and Cellular Probes | 2010

Detection and differentiation of Clostridium botulinum type A strains using a focused DNA microarray

Brian H. Raphael; Lavin A. Joseph; Loretta M. McCroskey; Carolina Lúquez; Susan E. Maslanka

A focused oligonucleotide microarray featuring 62 probes targeting strain variable regions of the Clostridium botulinum strain ATCC 3502 genome sequence was developed to differentiate C. botulinum type A strains. The strain variable regions were selected from deletions identified among a panel of 10 type A strains compared to the strain ATCC 3502 genome sequence using high density comparative genomic hybridization microarrays. The focused microarray also featured specific probes for the detection of the neurotoxin genes of various serotypes (A-G), toxin gene cluster components (ha70 and orfX1), and fldB as a marker for proteolytic clostridia (Group I). Eight pairs of strains selected from separate type A botulism outbreaks were included in the 27 subtype A1-A4 strains examined in this study. Each outbreak related strain pair consisted of strains isolated from different sources (stool and food). Of the eight outbreak related strain pairs, six groups of strains with indistinguishable hybridization patterns were identified. Outbreak related strains were shown to have identical hybridization patterns. Strain pairs from three separate outbreaks involving strains harboring both the type A neurotoxin gene (bont/A) and an unexpressed type B neurotoxin gene (bont/B) shared the same probe hybridization profile. The focused microarray format provides a rapid approach for neurotoxin gene detection and preliminary determination of the relatedness of strains isolated from different sources.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2010

First Report Worldwide of an Infant Botulism Case Due to Clostridium botulinum Type E

Carolina Lúquez; Janet K. Dykes; Patricia A. Yu; Brian H. Raphael; Susan E. Maslanka

ABSTRACT Clostridium botulinum type E has been associated with botulism in adults but never in infants. Infant botulism type E cases have been associated with neurotoxigenic strains of C. butyricum. We report the first infant botulism case due to C. botulinum type E worldwide.


The Botulinum J. | 2011

Utility of Botulinum Toxin ELISA A, B, E, F kits for clinical laboratory investigations of human botulism

Susan E. Maslanka; Carolina Lúquez; Brian H. Raphael; Janet K. Dykes; Lavin A. Joseph

The Botulinum Toxin ELISA effectively provided presumptive identification of toxin in 1381 investigation samples including clinical specimens, suspect foods, and cultures. Additionally, the ELISA detected all toxins produced by a panel of stock strains representing known subtypes and was negative for non-botulinum toxin producing Clostridium and enteric pathogens. ELISA results were reproducible both within the same kit (CV < 9%) and among different production lots (CV < 23%). Fifty-five of 57 laboratories correctly identified unknown samples in a multi-laboratory study. The ELISA provides a rapid, robust in vitro screening method which will reduce animal dependence during laboratory investigations of botulism.

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Brian H. Raphael

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Carolina Lúquez

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Janet K. Dykes

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Suzanne R. Kalb

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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John R. Barr

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Eric A. Johnson

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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George M. Carlone

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Lavin A. Joseph

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Brian D. Plikaytis

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Jeremy Sobel

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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