Evolution And Function Of A Novel Lateral Flagellar Locus, Flag-2, In Pathogenic Escherichia Coli
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$465,158.00
Summary
This project will study how the bacteria that cause infant diarrhoea colonize the intestine and induce disease. We have identified a novel genetic region that allows E. coli to survive and persist in the intestine. Similar genes are also present in closely related organisms. This project will help us to undestand how new diseases evolve and emerge and may lead to the development of new vaccines to protect against infant diarrhoea.
Contribution Of Nuclear Targeting Of The NleE-OspZ Family Of Proteins To Escherichia Coli And Shigella Virulence
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$542,462.00
Summary
This project will study how the bacteria that cause infant diarrhoea colonize the intestine and induce disease. We have identified new bacterial proteins that allow E. coli to manipulate the normal host cell processes involved in killing an invading bacterium. Similar proteins are also present in the closely related organism, Shigella which causes dysentary. We will determine how these proteins act by finding the host cell proteins they bind.
Shigella Flexneri O Antigen Polysaccharides: Biosynthesis, Function In Virulence, And Interaction With IcsA/VirG
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$468,055.00
Summary
Shigella flexneri bacteria cause dysentery in millions of humans each year. The bacterium invades and replicates within the cells of the large intestine. Inside cells, S. flexneri is able to use the host cell's actin-based motility machinery to become motile within the cells, and this can be seen as F-actin comet tails extending from one end of the cell. Bacterial cell surface components residing in the outer membrane are important for the bacterium's ability to cause disease. Two of these compo ....Shigella flexneri bacteria cause dysentery in millions of humans each year. The bacterium invades and replicates within the cells of the large intestine. Inside cells, S. flexneri is able to use the host cell's actin-based motility machinery to become motile within the cells, and this can be seen as F-actin comet tails extending from one end of the cell. Bacterial cell surface components residing in the outer membrane are important for the bacterium's ability to cause disease. Two of these components (lipopolysaccharides (LPS) and their polysaccharide chains (O antigens), and IcsA-VirG protein)) are required for initiating actin polymerisation, and mutations affecting synthesis of these components reduce ability to cause disease. In previous studies we have found that O antigen and the synthesis and function of IcsA are interrelated. This project will study how the O antigens are synthesised and their chain length determined by the Wzz protein, and the Wzz structure in relation to its function will also be characterised. The role played by O antigen in intracellular motility will be studied to determine the mechanisms involved. Infection of cells and cell free extracts, antibodies, and an enzyme which specifically degrades the O antigen, will be used to study how O antigen affect the interaction between bacteria with human cell proteins. The relationship between O antigen and IcsA function will be studied using monoclonal antibodies raised to IcsA. The effect of LPS on the outer membrane protease IcsP will be investigated, as will the effect of LPS lipid A mutations on O antigen and virulence. These studies will contribute to a better understanding of the biosynthesis of an ubiquitous bacterial cell surface component (O antigen), its function as a virulence factor in bacterial interactions with host cells. This may lead to novel therapeutic strategies to prevent and control Shigellosis and other bacterial infections.Read moreRead less