A major cause of morbidity in females is urinary tract infections (UTI) caused by Escherichia coli. UTIs are thought to be initiated by the binding of a bacterial adhesin (PapG) to the Gal-alpha (1-4)Gal receptor present in the host. PaG is presented at the distal ends of thin tip fibrillae which are joined to long rigid pilus rods on the bacterial cell surface. These composite adhesive fibers are called P pili. P pilus assembly requires the PapD chaperone, a member of a family of periplasmic chaperones required for the assembly of virulence-associated pili in diverse gram negative pathogens. PapD binds to six P pilus subunit types and escorts them from the cytoplasmic membrane to an outer membrane assembly site called an usher. In the first Aim,the molecular basis of the chaperone-subunit interactions will be investigated. The C-terminus of pilus subunits has been identified as part of a site recognized by papD and a peptide corresponding to the C-terminus of PapG was co-crystallized with PapD. The role of hydrophobic interactions in determining binding specificity will be investigated using an alanine scan and a deletion series of an optimal short peptide and testing the ability of the peptides to bind to PapD. other regions critical for chaperone recognition will be revealed by identifying regions of PapG that when fused to ?(BP result in PapD binding to the MBP-G fusion in vivo and in vitro. Relevant peptides will be co-crystallized with PapD to establish the structural basis of the interaction. In the second Aim, the molecular basis for PapD function will be examined by site directed mutagenesis of amino acids strictly conserved in all pilus chaperones. The mutant chaperones will be analyzed by in vivo and in vitro experiments using X ray crystallography, genetics, biochemistry, and synthetic chemistry to elucidate the structural basis of the chaperone recognition function and chaperone-subunit-usher interactions.
The third Aim i s to investigate the function of chaperone- subunit interactions using an in vivo import model in which expression of pilus subunits in the absence of a chaperone (or in the absence of an interaction with a chaperone) is toxic to the cells.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
2R01AI029549-04A1
Application #
2065050
Study Section
Bacteriology and Mycology Subcommittee 2 (BM)
Project Start
1991-03-01
Project End
1999-03-31
Budget Start
1994-07-01
Budget End
1995-03-31
Support Year
4
Fiscal Year
1994
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Washington University
Department
Microbiology/Immun/Virology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
062761671
City
Saint Louis
State
MO
Country
United States
Zip Code
63130
Spaulding, Caitlin N; Klein, Roger D; Schreiber 4th, Henry L et al. (2018) Precision antimicrobial therapeutics: the path of least resistance? NPJ Biofilms Microbiomes 4:4
Omattage, Natalie S; Deng, Zengqin; Pinkner, Jerome S et al. (2018) Structural basis for usher activation and intramolecular subunit transfer in P pilus biogenesis in Escherichia coli. Nat Microbiol 3:1362-1368
Kalas, Vasilios; Pinkner, Jerome S; Hannan, Thomas J et al. (2017) Evolutionary fine-tuning of conformational ensembles in FimH during host-pathogen interactions. Sci Adv 3:e1601944
Floyd, Kyle A; Mitchell, Courtney A; Eberly, Allison R et al. (2016) The UbiI (VisC) Aerobic Ubiquinone Synthase Is Required for Expression of Type 1 Pili, Biofilm Formation, and Pathogenesis in Uropathogenic Escherichia coli. J Bacteriol 198:2662-72
O'Brien, Valerie P; Hannan, Thomas J; Nielsen, Hailyn V et al. (2016) Drug and Vaccine Development for the Treatment and Prevention of Urinary Tract Infections. Microbiol Spectr 4:
Spaulding, Caitlin N; Hultgren, Scott J (2016) Adhesive Pili in UTI Pathogenesis and Drug Development. Pathogens 5:
O'Brien, Valerie P; Hannan, Thomas J; Schaeffer, Anthony J et al. (2015) Are you experienced? Understanding bladder innate immunity in the context of recurrent urinary tract infection. Curr Opin Infect Dis 28:97-105
Greene, Sarah E; Hibbing, Michael E; Janetka, James et al. (2015) Human Urine Decreases Function and Expression of Type 1 Pili in Uropathogenic Escherichia coli. MBio 6:e00820
Werneburg, Glenn T; Henderson, Nadine S; Portnoy, Erica B et al. (2015) The pilus usher controls protein interactions via domain masking and is functional as an oligomer. Nat Struct Mol Biol 22:540-6
Dang, Hung The; Chorell, Erik; Uvell, Hanna et al. (2014) Syntheses and biological evaluation of 2-amino-3-acyl-tetrahydrobenzothiophene derivatives; antibacterial agents with antivirulence activity. Org Biomol Chem 12:1942-56

Showing the most recent 10 out of 79 publications