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Latest Articles

  • <em>Ehrlichia chaffeensis</em> TRP75 Interacts with Host Cell Targets Involved in Homeostasis, Cytoskeleton Organization, and Apoptosis Regulation To Promote Infection
    Research Article | Host-Microbe Biology
    Ehrlichia chaffeensis TRP75 Interacts with Host Cell Targets Involved in Homeostasis, Cytoskeleton Organization, and Apoptosis Regulation To Promote Infection

    Human monocytic ehrlichiosis (HME) is caused by an obligatory intracellular bacterium, E. chaffeensis, and is one of the most prevalent, life-threatening emerging infectious zoonoses in the United States. The mechanisms through which E. chaffeensis invades and establishes an intracellular niche are...

    Tian Luo, Shubhajit Mitra, Jere W. McBride
    11 Apr 2018
  • Single-Cell Analysis Reveals Distinct Gene Expression and Heterogeneity in Male and Female <span class="named-content genus-species" id="named-content-1">Plasmodium falciparum</span> Gametocytes
    Research Article | Molecular Biology and Physiology
    Single-Cell Analysis Reveals Distinct Gene Expression and Heterogeneity in Male and Female Plasmodium falciparum Gametocytes

    Most human deaths that result from malaria are caused by the eukaryotic parasite Plasmodium falciparum. The only form of this parasite that is transmitted to the mosquito is the sexual form, called the gametocyte. The production of mature gametocytes can take up to 2 weeks and results in phenotypically distinct males and females, although what causes this gender-...

    Katelyn A. Walzer, Danielle M. Kubicki, Xiaohu Tang, Jen-Tsan Ashley Chi
    11 Apr 2018
  • High Salt Cross-Protects <em>Escherichia coli</em> from Antibiotic Treatment through Increasing Efflux Pump Expression
    Research Article | Molecular Biology and Physiology
    High Salt Cross-Protects Escherichia coli from Antibiotic Treatment through Increasing Efflux Pump Expression

    Environmental stresses often co-occur when bacteria confront antibiotic treatment. We provide a clear example that a natural stress condition (high salt) can cross-protect bacteria from antibiotic treatment by triggering the bacterial stress response program (elevated AcrAB-TolC efflux pump expression). Our study highlights the importance of taking the co-occurrence of bacterial environmental stresses into consideration when...

    Manlu Zhu, Xiongfeng Dai
    11 Apr 2018
  • Erratum for DiEuliis and Gronvall, “A Holistic Assessment of the Risks and Benefits of the Synthesis of Horsepox Virus”
    Erratum
    Erratum for DiEuliis and Gronvall, “A Holistic Assessment of the Risks and Benefits of the Synthesis of Horsepox Virus”
    Diane DiEuliis, Gigi Kwik Gronvall
    11 Apr 2018
  • Mutations Conferring Increased Sensitivity to Tripartite Motif 22 Restriction Accumulated Progressively in the Nucleoprotein of Seasonal Influenza A (H1N1) Viruses between 1918 and 2009
    Research Article | Host-Microbe Biology
    Mutations Conferring Increased Sensitivity to Tripartite Motif 22 Restriction Accumulated Progressively in the Nucleoprotein of Seasonal Influenza A (H1N1) Viruses between 1918 and 2009

    We have uncovered that long-term circulation of seasonal influenza A viruses (IAV) in the human population resulted in the progressive acquisition of increased sensitivity to a component of the innate immune response: the type I interferon-inducible TRIM22 protein, which acts as a restriction factor by inducing the polyubiquitination of the IAV nucleoprotein (NP). We show that four arginine residues present in the NP of the 1918 H1N1...

    Isabel Pagani, Andrea Di Pietro, Alexandra Oteiza, Michela Ghitti, Nadir Mechti, Nadia Naffakh, Elisa Vicenzi
    04 Apr 2018
  • Pseudotyping of HIV-1 with Human T-Lymphotropic Virus 1 (HTLV-1) Envelope Glycoprotein during HIV-1–HTLV-1 Coinfection Facilitates Direct HIV-1 Infection of Female Genital Epithelial Cells: Implications for Sexual Transmission of HIV-1
    Research Article | Host-Microbe Biology
    Pseudotyping of HIV-1 with Human T-Lymphotropic Virus 1 (HTLV-1) Envelope Glycoprotein during HIV-1–HTLV-1 Coinfection Facilitates Direct HIV-1 Infection of Female Genital Epithelial Cells: Implications for Sexual Transmission of HIV-1

    Young women in certain regions of the world are at very high risk of acquiring HIV-1, and there is an urgent need to identify the factors that promote HIV-1 transmission. HIV-1 infection is frequently accompanied by infection with other pathogenic viruses. We demonstrate that coinfection of cells by HIV-1 and HTLV-1 can lead to production of HIV-1 pseudotyped with HTLV-1 Env that is able to directly infect female genital epithelial...

    Yuyang Tang, Alvin M. George, Oksana Petrechko, Franklin J. Nouvet, Stephanie D. Sweet, Yuetsu Tanaka, Brian S. Imbiakha, Guochun Jiang, Wei Gao, Kathryn Anastos, James E. K. Hildreth
    04 Apr 2018
  • Assembly, Biochemical Characterization, Immunogenicity, Adjuvanticity, and Efficacy of <em>Shigella</em> Artificial Invaplex
    Research Article | Therapeutics and Prevention
    Assembly, Biochemical Characterization, Immunogenicity, Adjuvanticity, and Efficacy of Shigella Artificial Invaplex

    Shigella species are bacteria that cause severe diarrheal disease worldwide primarily in young children. Treatment of shigellosis includes oral fluids and antibiotics, but the high burden of disease, increasing prevalence of antibiotic resistance, and long-term health consequences clearly warrant the development of an effective vaccine. One Shigella vaccine under development is termed the invasin complex or Invaplex...

    K. Ross Turbyfill, Kristen A. Clarkson, Anthony R. Vortherms, Edwin V. Oaks, Robert W. Kaminski
    28 Mar 2018
  • Shifts in the Gut Metabolome and <em>Clostridium difficile</em> Transcriptome throughout Colonization and Infection in a Mouse Model
    Research Article | Host-Microbe Biology
    Shifts in the Gut Metabolome and Clostridium difficile Transcriptome throughout Colonization and Infection in a Mouse Model

    Clostridium difficile is a bacterial pathogen of global significance that is a major cause of antibiotic-associated diarrhea. Antibiotics deplete the indigenous gut microbiota and change the metabolic environment in the gut to one favoring C. difficile growth. Here we used metabolomics and...

    Joshua R. Fletcher, Samantha Erwin, Cristina Lanzas, Casey M. Theriot
    28 Mar 2018
  • Investigating Colonization of the Healthy Adult Gastrointestinal Tract by Fungi
    Editor's Pick Research Article | Host-Microbe Biology
    Investigating Colonization of the Healthy Adult Gastrointestinal Tract by Fungi

    We sought to identify the fungi that colonize healthy GI tracts and that have a sustained influence on the diverse functions of the gut microbiome. Instead, we found that all fungi in the stool of healthy volunteers could be explained by their presence in oral and dietary sources and that our results, together with those from other analyses, support the model that there is little or no gastrointestinal colonization by fungi. This may be...

    Thomas A. Auchtung, Tatiana Y. Fofanova, Christopher J. Stewart, Andrea K. Nash, Matthew C. Wong, Jonathan R. Gesell, Jennifer M. Auchtung, Nadim J. Ajami, Joseph F. Petrosino
    28 Mar 2018
  • Construction and Use of a Recyclable Marker To Examine the Role of Major Facilitator Superfamily Protein Members in <em>Candida glabrata</em> Drug Resistance Phenotypes
    Editor's Pick Research Article | Molecular Biology and Physiology
    Construction and Use of a Recyclable Marker To Examine the Role of Major Facilitator Superfamily Protein Members in Candida glabrata Drug Resistance Phenotypes

    Export of drugs is a problem for chemotherapy of infectious organisms. A class of membrane proteins called the major facilitator superfamily contains a large number of proteins that often elevate drug resistance when overproduced but do not impact this phenotype when the gene is removed. We wondered if this absence of a phenotype for a disruption allele might be due to the redundancy of this group of membrane proteins. We describe the...

    Bao G. Vu, W. Scott Moye-Rowley
    28 Mar 2018

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