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Dive into the research topics where Susana Campoy is active.

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Featured researches published by Susana Campoy.


Science | 2009

The SOS Response Controls Integron Recombination

Emilie Guérin; Guillaume Cambray; Neus Sanchez-Alberola; Susana Campoy; Ivan Erill; Sandra Da Re; Bruno Gonzalez-Zorn; Jordi Barbé; Marie-Cécile Ploy; Didier Mazel

Bacteria can mobilize antibiotic resistance under stressful conditions. Integrons are found in the genome of hundreds of environmental bacteria but are mainly known for their role in the capture and spread of antibiotic resistance determinants among Gram-negative pathogens. We report a direct link between this system and the ubiquitous SOS response. We found that LexA controlled expression of most integron integrases and consequently regulated cassette recombination. This regulatory coupling enhanced the potential for cassette swapping and capture in cells under stress, while minimizing cassette rearrangements or loss in constant environments. This finding exposes integrons as integrated adaptive systems and has implications for antibiotic treatment policies.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2006

β-Lactam Antibiotics Induce the SOS Response and Horizontal Transfer of Virulence Factors in Staphylococcus aureus

Elisa Maiques; Carles Úbeda; Susana Campoy; Noelia Salvador; Iñigo Lasa; Richard P. Novick; Jordi Barbé; José R. Penadés

Antibiotics that interfere with DNA replication and cell viability activate the SOS response. In Staphylococcus aureus, the antibiotic-induced SOS response promotes replication and high-frequency horizontal transfer of pathogenicity island-encoded virulence factors. Here we report that beta-lactams induce a bona fide SOS response in S. aureus, characterized by the activation of the RecA and LexA proteins, the two master regulators of the SOS response. Moreover, we show that beta-lactams are capable of triggering staphylococcal prophage induction in S. aureus lysogens. Consequently, and as previously described for SOS induction by commonly used fluoroquinolone antibiotics, beta-lactam-mediated phage induction also resulted in replication and high-frequency transfer of the staphylococcal pathogenicity islands, showing that such antibiotics may have the unintended consequence of promoting the spread of bacterial virulence factors.


Infection and Immunity | 2002

Role of the High-Affinity Zinc Uptake znuABC System in Salmonella enterica Serovar Typhimurium Virulence

Susana Campoy; Mónica Jara; Núria Busquets; Ana Pérez de Rozas; Ignacio Badiola; Jordi Barbé

ABSTRACT The Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium znuABC genes encoding a high-affinity zinc uptake system and its regulatory zur gene have been cloned. Salmonella serovar Typhimurium zur and znuC knockout mutants have been constructed by marker exchange. The 50% lethal dose of the znuC mutant increased when either orally or intraperitoneally inoculated in BALB/c mice, while virulence of the zur mutant decreased only when mice were intraperitoneally challenged.


Nature | 2010

Moonlighting bacteriophage proteins derepress staphylococcal pathogenicity islands

María Ángeles Tormo-Más; Ignacio Mir; Archana Shrestha; Sandra M. Tallent; Susana Campoy; Iñigo Lasa; Jordi Barbé; Richard P. Novick; Gail E. Christie; José R. Penadés

Staphylococcal superantigen-carrying pathogenicity islands (SaPIs) are discrete, chromosomally integrated units of ∼15 kilobases that are induced by helper phages to excise and replicate. SaPI DNA is then efficiently encapsidated in phage-like infectious particles, leading to extremely high frequencies of intra- as well as intergeneric transfer. In the absence of helper phage lytic growth, the island is maintained in a quiescent prophage-like state by a global repressor, Stl, which controls expression of most of the SaPI genes. Here we show that SaPI derepression is effected by a specific, non-essential phage protein that binds to Stl, disrupting the Stl–DNA complex and thereby initiating the excision-replication-packaging cycle of the island. Because SaPIs require phage proteins to be packaged, this strategy assures that SaPIs will be transferred once induced. Several different SaPIs are induced by helper phage 80α and, in each case, the SaPI commandeers a different non-essential phage protein for its derepression. The highly specific interactions between different SaPI repressors and helper-phage-encoded antirepressors represent a remarkable evolutionary adaptation involved in pathogenicity island mobilization.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2002

Novel Complex sul1-Type Integron in Escherichia coli Carrying blaCTX-M-9

Montserrat Sabaté; Ferran Navarro; Elisenda Miró; Susana Campoy; Beatriz Mirelis; Jordi Barbé; Guillem Prats

ABSTRACT For the present report, a novel complex class 1 integron, In60, was characterized. Part of this integron includes the blaCTX-M-9 gene and its downstream nucleotide sequence, which shares 81% and 78% nucleotide identity with those of kluA-1 β-lactamase and orf3 of K. ascorbata, respectively. Furthermore, a new insertion sequence, IS3000, has been found in In60. PCR analysis indicates that integron In60 is present in 33 of 34 nonclonal enterobacterial isolates carrying the putative β-lactamase CTX-M-9.


Mobile Dna | 2011

Prevalence of SOS-mediated control of integron integrase expression as an adaptive trait of chromosomal and mobile integrons.

Guillaume Cambray; Neus Sanchez-Alberola; Susana Campoy; Emilie Guérin; Sandra Da Re; Bruno Gonzalez-Zorn; Marie-Cécile Ploy; Jordi Barbé; Didier Mazel; Ivan Erill

BackgroundIntegrons are found in hundreds of environmental bacterial species, but are mainly known as the agents responsible for the capture and spread of antibiotic-resistance determinants between Gram-negative pathogens. The SOS response is a regulatory network under control of the repressor protein LexA targeted at addressing DNA damage, thus promoting genetic variation in times of stress. We recently reported a direct link between the SOS response and the expression of integron integrases in Vibrio cholerae and a plasmid-borne class 1 mobile integron. SOS regulation enhances cassette swapping and capture in stressful conditions, while freezing the integron in steady environments. We conducted a systematic study of available integron integrase promoter sequences to analyze the extent of this relationship across the Bacteria domain.ResultsOur results showed that LexA controls the expression of a large fraction of integron integrases by binding to Escherichia coli-like LexA binding sites. In addition, the results provide experimental validation of LexA control of the integrase gene for another Vibrio chromosomal integron and for a multiresistance plasmid harboring two integrons. There was a significant correlation between lack of LexA control and predicted inactivation of integrase genes, even though experimental evidence also indicates that LexA regulation may be lost to enhance expression of integron cassettes.ConclusionsAncestral-state reconstruction on an integron integrase phylogeny led us to conclude that the ancestral integron was already regulated by LexA. The data also indicated that SOS regulation has been actively preserved in mobile integrons and large chromosomal integrons, suggesting that unregulated integrase activity is selected against. Nonetheless, additional adaptations have probably arisen to cope with unregulated integrase activity. Identifying them may be fundamental in deciphering the uneven distribution of integrons in the Bacteria domain.


EMBO Reports | 2009

The SOS response promotes qnrB quinolone-resistance determinant expression

Sandra Da Re; Fabien Garnier; Emilie Guérin; Susana Campoy; François Denis; Marie-Cécile Ploy

The qnr genes are plasmid‐borne fluoroquinolone‐resistance determinants widespread in Enterobacteriaceae. Three families of qnr determinants (qnrA, B and S) have been described, but little is known about their expression and regulation. Two new determinants, qnrC and qnrD, have been found recently. Here, we describe the characterization of the qnrB2 promoter and the identification of a LexA‐binding site in the promoter region of all qnrB alleles. LexA is the central regulator of the SOS response to DNA damage. We show that qnrB2 expression is regulated through the SOS response in a LexA/RecA‐dependent manner, and that it can be induced by the quinolone ciprofloxacin, a known inducer of the SOS system. This is the first description of direct SOS‐dependent regulation of an antibiotic‐resistance mechanism in response to the antibiotic itself.


Bioinformatics | 2003

In silico analysis reveals substantial variability in the gene contents of the gamma proteobacteria LexA-regulon

Ivan Erill; Marcos Escribano; Susana Campoy; Jordi Barbé

MOTIVATION Motif-prediction algorithm capabilities for the analysis of bacterial regulatory networks and the prediction of new regulatory sites can be greatly enhanced by the use of comparative genomics approaches. In this study, we make use of a consensus-building algorithm and comparative genomics to conduct an in-depth analysis of the LexA-regulon of gamma proteobacteria, and we use the inferred results to study the evolution of this regulatory network and to examine the usefulness of the control sequences and gene contents of regulons in phylogenetic analysis. RESULTS We show, for the first time, the substantial heterogeneity that the LexA-regulon of gamma proteobacteria displays in terms of gene content and we analyze possible branching points in its evolution. We also demonstrate the feasibility of using regulon-related information to derive sound phylogenetic inferences. AVAILABILITY Complementary analysis data and both the source code and the Windows-executable files of the consensus-building software are available at http://www.cnm.es/~ivan/RCGScanner/


Analytical Chemistry | 2009

Double-tagging polymerase chain reaction with a thiolated primer and electrochemical genosensing based on gold nanocomposite sensor for food safety.

Paulo Roberto Brasil de Oliveira Marques; Anabel Lermo; Susana Campoy; Hideko Yamanaka; Jordi Barbé; Salvador Alegret; M. Isabel Pividori

A novel material for electrochemical biosensing based on rigid conducting gold nanocomposite (nano-AuGEC) is presented. Islands of chemisorbing material (gold nanoparticles) surrounded by nonreactive, rigid, and conducting graphite epoxy composite are thus achieved to avoid the stringent control of surface coverage parameters required during immobilization of thiolated oligos in continuous gold surfaces. The spatial resolution of the immobilized thiolated DNA was easily controlled by merely varying the percentage of gold nanoparticles in the composition of the composite. As low as 9 fmol (60 pM) of synthetic DNA were detected in hybridization experiments when using a thiolated probe. Moreover, for the first time a double tagging PCR strategy was performed with a thiolated primer for the detection of Salmonella sp., one of the most important foodborne pathogens affecting food safety. This assay was performed by double-labeling the amplicon during the PCR with a -DIG and -SH set of labeled primers. The thiolated end allows the immobilization of the amplicon on the nano-AuGEC electrode, while digoxigenin allows the electrochemical detection with the antiDIG-HRP reporter in the femtomole range. Rigid conducting gold nanocomposite represents a good material for the improved and oriented immobilization of biomolecules with excellent transducing properties for the construction of a wide range of electrochemical biosensors such as immunosensors, genosensors, and enzymosensors.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2006

Dispersal and regulation of an adaptive mutagenesis cassette in the bacteria domain

Ivan Erill; Susana Campoy; Gerard Mazón; Jordi Barbé

Recently, a multiple gene cassette with mutagenic translation synthesis activity was identified and shown to be under LexA regulation in several proteobacteria species. In this work, we have traced down instances of this multiple gene cassette across the bacteria domain. Phylogenetic analyses show that this cassette has undergone several reorganizations since its inception in the actinobacteria, and that it has dispersed across the bacterial domain through a combination of vertical inheritance, lateral gene transfer and duplication. In addition, our analyses show that LexA regulation of this multiple gene cassette is persistent in all the phyla in which it has been detected, and suggest that this regulation is prompted by the combined activity of two of its constituent genes: a polymerase V homolog and an alpha subunit of the DNA polymerase III.

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Jordi Barbé

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Ivan Erill

University of Maryland

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María Isabel Pividori

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Salvador Alegret

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Anabel Lermo

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Gerard Mazón

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Montserrat Llagostera

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Pilar Cortés

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Susana Liébana

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Ana Pérez de Rozas

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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