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Dive into the research topics where Wandy L. Beatty is active.

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Featured researches published by Wandy L. Beatty.


Science | 2006

A Secreted Serine-Threonine Kinase Determines Virulence in the Eukaryotic Pathogen Toxoplasma gondii

Sonya Taylor; A. Barragan; C. Su; B. Fux; S. J. Fentress; K. Tang; Wandy L. Beatty; H. El Hajj; Maria Jerome; Michael S. Behnke; Michael W. White; John C. Wootton; L. D. Sibley

Toxoplasma gondii strains differ dramatically in virulence despite being genetically very similar. Genetic mapping revealed two closely adjacent quantitative trait loci on parasite chromosome VIIa that control the extreme virulence of the type I lineage. Positional cloning identified the candidate virulence gene ROP18, a highly polymorphic serine-threonine kinase that was secreted into the host cell during parasite invasion. Transfection of the virulent ROP18 allele into a nonpathogenic type III strain increased growth and enhanced mortality by 4 to 5 logs. These attributes of ROP18 required kinase activity, which revealed that secretion of effectors is a major component of parasite virulence.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Genomic transcriptional profiling of the developmental cycle of Chlamydia trachomatis

Robert J. Belland; Guangming Zhong; Deborah D. Crane; Daniel Hogan; Daniel E. Sturdevant; Jyotika Sharma; Wandy L. Beatty; Harlan D. Caldwell

Chlamydia trachomatis is one of the most common bacterial pathogens and is the etiological agent of debilitating sexually transmitted and ocular diseases in humans. The organism is an obligate intracellular prokaryote characterized by a highly specialized biphasic developmental cycle. We have performed genomic transcriptional analysis of the chlamydial developmental cycle. This approach has led to the identification of a small subset of genes that control the primary (immediate-early genes) and secondary (late genes) differentiation stages of the cycle. Immediate-early gene products initiate bacterial metabolism and potentially modify the bacterial phagosome to escape fusion with lysosomes. One immediate early gene (CT147) is a homolog of the human early endosomal antigen-1 that is localized to the chlamydial phagosome; suggesting a functional role for CT147 in establishing the parasitophorous vacuole in a nonfusogenic pathway. Late gene products terminate bacterial cell division and constitute structural components and remodeling activities involved in the formation of the highly disulfide cross-linked outer-membrane complex that functions in attachment and invasion of new host cells. Many of the genes expressed during the immediate-early and late differentiation stages are Chlamydia-specific and have evolutionary origins in eukaryotic lineages.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Four plasmepsins are active in the Plasmodium falciparum food vacuole, including a protease with an active-site histidine

Ritu Banerjee; Jun Liu; Wandy L. Beatty; Lorraine Pelosof; Michael Klemba; Daniel E. Goldberg

Hemoglobin degradation is a metabolic process that is central to the growth and maturation of the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum. Two aspartic proteases that initiate degradation, plasmepsins (PMs) I and II, have been identified and extensively characterized. Eight additional PM genes are present in the P. falciparum genome. To better understand the enzymology of hemoglobin degradation, it is necessary to determine which of these genes are expressed when hemoglobin degradation is occurring, which encode active enzymes, and which gene products are found in the food vacuole where catabolism takes place. Our genome-wide analysis reveals that PM I, II, and IV and histo-aspartic protease encode hemoglobin-degrading food vacuole proteases. Despite having a histidine in place of one of the catalytic aspartic acids conserved in other aspartic proteases, histo-aspartic protease is an active hydrolase.


Traffic | 2000

Trafficking and release of mycobacterial lipids from infected macrophages.

Wandy L. Beatty; Elizabeth R. Rhoades; Heinz-Joachim Ullrich; Delphi Chatterjee; John E. Heuser; David G. Russell

Analysis of infected macrophages revealed that lipid‐containing moieties of the mycobacterial cell wall are actively trafficked out of the mycobacterial vacuole. To facilitate the analysis of vesicular trafficking from mycobacteria‐containing phagosomes, surface‐exposed carbohydrates were labeled with hydrazide‐tagged markers. The distribution of labeled carbohydrate/lipid moieties and subsequent interaction with cellular compartments were analyzed by immunoelectron microscopy and by fluorescence microscopy of live cells. The released mycobacterial constituents were associated with several intracellular organelles and were enriched strikingly in tubular endocytic compartments. Subcellular fractionation of infected macrophages by density gradient electrophoresis showed temporal movement of labeled bacterial constituents through early and late endosomes. Thin layer chromatography analysis of these subcellular fractions confirmed their lipid nature and revealed five dominant bacteria‐derived species. These mycobacterial lipids were also found in extracellular vesicles isolated from the medium and could be observed in un‐infected ‘bystander’ cells. Their transfer to bystander cells could expand the bacterias sphere of influence beyond the immediate confines of the host cell.


Nature Immunology | 2014

Cell-intrinsic lysosomal lipolysis is essential for alternative activation of macrophages

Stanley Ching-Cheng Huang; Bart Everts; Yulia Ivanova; David O'Sullivan; Marcia Nascimento; Amber M. Smith; Wandy L. Beatty; Latisha Love-Gregory; Wing Y. Lam; Christina M. O'Neill; Cong Yan; Hong Du; Nada A. Abumrad; Joseph F. Urban; Maxim N. Artyomov; Erika L. Pearce; Edward J. Pearce

Alternative (M2) activation of macrophages driven via the α-chain of the receptor for interleukin 4 (IL-4Rα) is important for immunity to parasites, wound healing, the prevention of atherosclerosis and metabolic homeostasis. M2 polarization is dependent on fatty acid oxidation (FAO), but the source of the fatty acids that support this metabolic program has not been clear. We found that the uptake of triacylglycerol substrates via the scavenger receptor CD36 and their subsequent lipolysis by lysosomal acid lipase (LAL) was important for the engagement of elevated oxidative phosphorylation, enhanced spare respiratory capacity (SRC), prolonged survival and expression of genes that together define M2 activation. Inhibition of lipolysis suppressed M2 activation during infection with a parasitic helminth and blocked protective responses to this pathogen. Our findings delineate a critical role for cell-intrinsic lysosomal lipolysis in M2 activation.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Transcriptome analysis of chlamydial growth during IFN-γ-mediated persistence and reactivation

Robert J. Belland; David E. Nelson; Dezso Virok; Deborah D. Crane; Daniel Hogan; Daniel E. Sturdevant; Wandy L. Beatty; Harlan D. Caldwell

Chlamydia trachomatis is an obligatory intracellular prokaryotic parasite that causes a spectrum of clinically important chronic inflammatory diseases of humans. Persistent infection may play a role in the pathophysiology of chlamydial disease. Here we describe the chlamydial transcriptome in an in vitro model of IFN-γ-mediated persistence and reactivation from persistence. Tryptophan utilization, DNA repair and recombination, phospholipid utilization, protein translation, and general stress genes were up-regulated during persistence. Down-regulated genes included chlamydial late genes and genes involved in proteolysis, peptide transport, and cell division. Persistence was characterized by altered but active biosynthetic processes and continued replication of the chromosome. On removal of IFN-γ, chlamydiae rapidly reentered the normal developmental cycle and reversed transcriptional changes associated with cytokine treatment. The coordinated transcriptional response to IFN-γ implies that a chlamydial response stimulon has evolved to control the transition between acute and persistent growth of the pathogen. In contrast to the paradigm of persistence as a general stress response, our findings suggest that persistence is an alternative life cycle used by chlamydiae to avoid the host immune response.


Trends in Microbiology | 1994

Repeated and persistent infection with Chlamydia and the development of chronic inflammation and disease

Wandy L. Beatty; Gerald I. Byrne; Richard P. Morrison

Chlamydia trachomatis is an important human pathogen that mediates disease processes capable of inflicting permanent damage. Aggressive inflammatory responses to repeated infections, and to a persistent form of this intracellular bacterium, are thought to initiate the pathogenic events that lead to the debilitating sequelae of blinding trachoma and infertility.


The EMBO Journal | 2003

Rapid invasion of host cells by Toxoplasma requires secretion of the MIC2–M2AP adhesive protein complex

My Hang Huynh; Karen E. Rabenau; Jill M. Harper; Wandy L. Beatty; L. David Sibley; Vern B. Carruthers

Vertebrate cells are highly susceptible to infection by obligate intracellular parasites such as Toxoplasma gondii, yet the mechanism by which these microbes breach the confines of their target cell is poorly understood. While it is thought that Toxoplasma actively invades by secreting adhesive proteins from internal organelles called micronemes, no genetic evidence is available to support this contention. Here, we report successful disruption of M2AP, a microneme protein tightly associated with an adhesive protein called MIC2. M2AP knockout parasites were >80% impaired in host cell entry. This invasion defect was likely due to defective expression of MIC2, which partially accumulated in the parasite endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi. M2AP knockout parasites were also unable to rapidly secrete MIC2, an event that normally accompanies parasite attachment to a target cell. These findings indicate a critical role for the MIC2–M2AP protein complex in parasite invasion.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Binding of Plasmodium merozoite proteins RON2 and AMA1 triggers commitment to invasion

Prakash Srinivasan; Wandy L. Beatty; Ababacar Diouf; Raul Herrera; Xavier Ambroggio; J. Kathleen Moch; Jessica S. Tyler; David L. Narum; Susan K. Pierce; John C. Boothroyd; J. David Haynes; Louis H. Miller

The commitment of Plasmodium merozoites to invade red blood cells (RBCs) is marked by the formation of a junction between the merozoite and the RBC and the coordinated induction of the parasitophorous vacuole. Despite its importance, the molecular events underlying the parasite’s commitment to invasion are not well understood. Here we show that the interaction of two parasite proteins, RON2 and AMA1, known to be critical for invasion, is essential to trigger junction formation. Using antibodies (Abs) that bind near the hydrophobic pocket of AMA1 and AMA1 mutated in the pocket, we identified RON2’s binding site on AMA1. Abs specific for the AMA1 pocket blocked junction formation and the induction of the parasitophorous vacuole. We also identified the critical residues in the RON2 peptide (previously shown to bind AMA1) that are required for binding to the AMA1 pocket, namely, two conserved, disulfide-linked cysteines. The RON2 peptide blocked junction formation but, unlike the AMA1-specific Ab, did not block formation of the parasitophorous vacuole, indicating that formation of the junction and parasitophorous vacuole are molecularly distinct steps in the invasion process. Collectively, these results identify the binding of RON2 to the hydrophobic pocket of AMA1 as the step that commits Plasmodium merozoites to RBC invasion and point to RON2 as a potential vaccine candidate.


Infection and Immunity | 2000

Identification of Mycobacterial Surface Proteins Released into Subcellular Compartments of Infected Macrophages

Wandy L. Beatty; David G. Russell

ABSTRACT Considerable effort has focused on the identification of proteins secreted from Mycobacterium spp. that contribute to the development of protective immunity. Little is known, however, about the release of mycobacterial proteins from the bacterial phagosome and the potential role of these molecules in chronically infected macrophages. In the present study, the release of mycobacterial surface proteins from the bacterial phagosome into subcellular compartments of infected macrophages was analyzed. Mycobacterium bovis BCG was surface labeled with fluorescein-tagged succinimidyl ester, an amine-reactive probe. The fluorescein tag was then used as a marker for the release of bacterial proteins in infected macrophages. Fractionation studies revealed bacterial proteins within subcellular compartments distinct from mycobacteria and mycobacterial phagosomes. To identify these proteins, subcellular fractions free of bacteria were probed with mycobacterium-specific antibodies. The fibronectin attachment protein and proteins of the antigen 85-kDa complex were identified among the mycobacterial proteins released from the bacterial phagosome.

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L. David Sibley

Washington University in St. Louis

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Gerald I. Byrne

University of Tennessee Health Science Center

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Herbert W. Virgin

Washington University in St. Louis

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Robert J. Belland

University of Tennessee Health Science Center

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Heinz-Joachim Ullrich

Washington University in St. Louis

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Maxim N. Artyomov

Washington University in St. Louis

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Richard P. Morrison

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Amal Kambal

Washington University in St. Louis

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John E. Heuser

Washington University in St. Louis

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