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result(s) for
"Peters, Danielle L"
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Novel Stenotrophomonas maltophilia temperate phage DLP4 is capable of lysogenic conversion
by
Dennis, Jonathan J.
,
Stothard, Paul
,
Peters, Danielle L.
in
Analysis
,
Animal Genetics and Genomics
,
Antibacterial agents
2019
Background
Temperate bacteriophages are capable of lysogenic conversion of new bacterial hosts. This phenomenon is often ascribed to “moron” elements that are acquired horizontally and transcribed independently from the rest of the phage genes. Whereas some bacterial species exhibit relatively little prophage-dependent phenotypic changes, other bacterial species such as
Stenotrophomonas maltophilia
appear to commonly adopt prophage genetic contributions.
Results
The novel
S. maltophilia
bacteriophage DLP4 was isolated from soil using the highly antibiotic-resistant
S. maltophilia
strain D1585. Genome sequence analysis and functionality testing showed that DLP4 is a temperate phage capable of lysogenizing D1585. Two moron genes of interest,
folA
(BIT20_024) and
ybiA
(BIT20_065), were identified and investigated for their putative activities using complementation testing and phenotypic and transcriptomic changes between wild-type D1585 and the D1585::DLP4 lysogen. The gp24 /
folA
gene encodes dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR: FolA), an enzyme responsible for resistance to the antibiotic trimethoprim. I-TASSER analysis of DLP4 FolA predicted structural similarity to
Bacillus anthracis
DHFR and minimum inhibitory concentration experiments demonstrated that lysogenic conversion of D1585 by DLP4 provided the host cell with an increase in trimethoprim resistance. The gp65 /
ybiA
gene encodes N-glycosidase YbiA, which in
E. coli
BW25113 is required for its swarming motility phenotype. Expressing DLP4
ybiA
in strain
ybiA
770(del)::kan restored its swarming motility activity to wildtype levels. Reverse transcription-PCR confirmed the expression of both of these genes during DLP4 lysogeny.
Conclusions
S. maltophilia
temperate phage DLP4 contributes to the antibiotic resistance exhibited by its lysogenized host strain. Genomic analyses can greatly assist in the identification of phage moron genes potentially involved in lysogenic conversion. Further research is required to fully understand the specific contributions temperate phage moron genes provide with respect to the antibiotic resistance and virulence of
S. maltophilia
host cells.
Journal Article
The isolation and characterization of Stenotrophomonas maltophilia T4-like bacteriophage DLP6
by
Jonathan J. Dennis
,
Paul Stothard
,
Danielle L. Peters
in
Algorithms
,
Antibiotic resistance
,
Antibiotics
2017
Increasing isolation of the extremely antibiotic resistant bacterium Stenotrophomonas maltophilia has caused alarm worldwide due to the limited treatment options available. A potential treatment option for fighting this bacterium is 'phage therapy', the clinical application of bacteriophages to selectively kill bacteria. Bacteriophage DLP6 (vB_SmoM-DLP6) was isolated from a soil sample using clinical isolate S. maltophilia strain D1571 as host. Host range analysis of phage DLP6 against 27 clinical S. maltophilia isolates shows successful infection and lysis in 13 of the 27 isolates tested. Transmission electron microscopy of DLP6 indicates that it is a member of the Myoviridae family. Complete genome sequencing and analysis of DLP6 reveals its richly recombined evolutionary history, featuring a core of both T4-like and cyanophage genes, which suggests that it is a member of the T4-superfamily. Unlike other T4-superfamily phages however, DLP6 features a transposase and ends with 229 bp direct terminal repeats. The isolation of this bacteriophage is an exciting discovery due to the divergent nature of DLP6 in relation to the T4-superfamily of phages.
Journal Article
Identification and Characterization of Type IV Pili as the Cellular Receptor of Broad Host Range Stenotrophomonas maltophilia Bacteriophages DLP1 and DLP2
by
Peters, Danielle L.
,
Dennis, Jonathan J.
,
McCutcheon, Jaclyn G.
in
Antibiotic resistance
,
Antibiotics
,
Bacteria
2018
Bacteriophages DLP1 and DLP2 are capable of infecting both Stenotrophomonas maltophilia and Pseudomonas aeruginosa strains, two highly antibiotic resistant bacterial pathogens, which is unusual for phages that typically exhibit extremely limited host range. To explain their unusual cross-order infectivity and differences in host range, we have identified the type IV pilus as the primary receptor for attachment. Screening of a P. aeruginosa PA01 mutant library, a host that is susceptible to DLP1 but not DLP2, identified DLP1-resistant mutants with disruptions in pilus structural and regulatory components. Subsequent complementation of the disrupted pilin subunit genes in PA01 restored DLP1 infection. Clean deletion of the major pilin subunit, pilA, in S. maltophilia strains D1585 and 280 prevented phage binding and lysis by both DLP1 and DLP2, and complementation restored infection by both. Transmission electron microscopy shows a clear interaction between DLP1 and pili of both D1585 and PA01. These results support the identity of the type IV pilus as the receptor for DLP1 and DLP2 infection across their broad host ranges. This research further characterizes DLP1 and DLP2 as potential “anti-virulence” phage therapy candidates for the treatment of multidrug resistant bacteria from multiple genera.
Journal Article
Cell-free expression system: a promising platform for bacteriophage production and engineering
by
Chen, Wangxue
,
Lam, Serena
,
El-Din, Hanzada Nour
in
Analysis
,
Antimicrobial resistance
,
Applied Microbiology
2025
Cell-free expression is a technique used to synthesize proteins without utilising living cells. This technique relies mainly on the cellular machinery —ribosomes, enzymes, and other components — extracted from cells to produce proteins in vitro. Thus far, cell-free expression systems have been used for an array of biologically important purposes, such as studying protein functions and interactions, designing synthetic pathways, and producing novel proteins and enzymes. In this review article, we aim to provide bacteriophage (phage) researchers with an understanding of the cell-free expression process and the potential it holds to accelerate phage production and engineering for phage therapy and other applications. Throughout the review, we summarize the system’s main steps and components, both generally and particularly for the self-assembly and engineering of phages and discuss their potential optimization for better protein and phage production. Cell-free expression systems have the potential to serve as a platform for the biosynthetic production of personalized phage therapeutics. This is an area of in vitro biosynthesis that is becoming increasingly attractive, given the current high interest in phages and their promising potential role in the fight against antimicrobial resistant infections.
Journal Article
Characterization of virulent T4-Like Acinetobacter baumannii bacteriophages DLP1 and DLP2
by
Davis, Carly M
,
Rather, Philip N
,
Hrapovic, Sabahudin
in
Acinetobacter baumannii
,
Acinetobacter phage
,
Anti-Bacterial Agents
2023
The world is currently facing a global health crisis due to the rapid increase in antimicrobial-resistant bacterial infections. One of the most concerning pathogens is Acinetobacter baumannii, which is listed as a Priority 1 pathogen by the World Health Organization. This Gram-negative bacterium has many intrinsic antibiotic resistance mechanisms and the ability to quickly acquire new resistance determinants from its environment. A limited number of effective antibiotics against this pathogen complicates the treatment of A. baumannii infections. A potential treatment option that is rapidly gaining interest is “phage therapy”, or the clinical application of bacteriophages to selectively kill bacteria. The myoviruses DLP1 and DLP2 (vB_AbaM-DLP_1 and vB_AbaM-DLP_2, respectively) were isolated from sewage samples using a capsule minus variant of A. baumannii strain AB5075. Host range analysis of these phages against 107 A. baumannii strains shows a limited host range, infecting 15 and 21 for phages DLP1 and DLP2, respectively. Phage DLP1 has a large burst size of 239 PFU/cell, a latency period of 20 min, and virulence index of 0.93. In contrast, DLP2 has a smaller burst size of 24 PFU/cell, a latency period of 20 min, and virulence index of 0.86. Both phages show potential for use as therapeutics to combat A. baumannii infections.
Journal Article
Isolation, characterization, and genomic analysis of bacteriophages against Pseudomonas aeruginosa clinical isolates from early and chronic cystic fibrosis patients for potential phage therapy
by
Nour El-Din, Hanzada T
,
Sad, Subash
,
Oktay, Umut
in
Antibiotic resistance
,
Antibiotics
,
antimicrobial resistance
2025
NRC publication: Yes
Journal Article
The isolation and characterization of two Stenotrophomonas maltophilia bacteriophages capable of cross-taxonomic order infectivity
by
Lynch, Karlene H.
,
Dennis, Jonathan J.
,
Stothard, Paul
in
Analysis
,
Animal Genetics and Genomics
,
Antibiotic resistance
2015
Background
A rapid worldwide increase in the number of human infections caused by the extremely antibiotic resistant bacterium
Stenotrophomonas maltophilia
is prompting alarm. One potential treatment solution to the current antibiotic resistance dilemma is “phage therapy”, the clinical application of bacteriophages to selectively kill bacteria.
Results
Towards that end, phages DLP1 and DLP2 (vB_SmaS-DLP_1 and vB_SmaS-DLP_2, respectively) were isolated against
S. maltophilia
strain D1585. Host range analysis for each phage was conducted using 27 clinical
S. maltophilia
isolates and 11
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
strains. Both phages exhibit unusually broad host ranges capable of infecting bacteria across taxonomic orders. Transmission electron microscopy of the phage DLP1 and DLP2 morphology reveals that they belong to the
Siphoviridae
family of bacteriophages. Restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis and complete genome sequencing and analysis indicates that phages DLP1 and DLP2 are closely related but different phages, sharing 96.7 % identity over 97.2 % of their genomes. These two phages are also related to
P. aeruginosa
phages vB_Pae-Kakheti_25 (PA25), PA73, and vB_PaeS_SCH_Ab26 (Ab26) and more distantly related to
Burkholderia cepacia
complex phage KL1, which together make up a taxonomic sub-family. Phages DLP1 and DLP2 exhibited significant differences in host ranges and growth kinetics.
Conclusions
The isolation and characterization of phages able to infect two completely different species of bacteria is an exciting discovery, as phages typically can only infect related bacterial species, and rarely infect bacteria across taxonomic families, let alone across taxonomic orders.
Journal Article
Complete Genome Sequence of Temperate Stenotrophomonas maltophilia Bacteriophage DLP5
2018
ABSTRACTStenotrophomonas maltophilia bacteriophage DLP5 is a temperate phage with Siphoviridae family morphotype. DLP5 (vB_SmaS_DLP_5) is the first S. maltophilia phage shown to exist as a phagemid. The DLP5 genome is 96,542 bp, encoding 149 open reading frames (ORFs), including four tRNAs. Genomic characterization reveals moron genes potentially involved in host cell membrane modification.
Journal Article
Characterization of Virulent T4-Like IAcinetobacter baumannii/I Bacteriophages DLP1 and DLP2
by
Davis, Carly M
,
Rather, Philip N
,
Hrapovic, Sabahudin
in
Acinetobacter baumannii
,
Acinetobacter infections
,
Bacteriophages
2023
The world is currently facing a global health crisis due to the rapid increase in antimicrobial-resistant bacterial infections. One of the most concerning pathogens is Acinetobacter baumannii, which is listed as a Priority 1 pathogen by the World Health Organization. This Gram-negative bacterium has many intrinsic antibiotic resistance mechanisms and the ability to quickly acquire new resistance determinants from its environment. A limited number of effective antibiotics against this pathogen complicates the treatment of A. baumannii infections. A potential treatment option that is rapidly gaining interest is “phage therapy”, or the clinical application of bacteriophages to selectively kill bacteria. The myoviruses DLP1 and DLP2 (vB_AbaM-DLP_1 and vB_AbaM-DLP_2, respectively) were isolated from sewage samples using a capsule minus variant of A. baumannii strain AB5075. Host range analysis of these phages against 107 A. baumannii strains shows a limited host range, infecting 15 and 21 for phages DLP1 and DLP2, respectively. Phage DLP1 has a large burst size of 239 PFU/cell, a latency period of 20 min, and virulence index of 0.93. In contrast, DLP2 has a smaller burst size of 24 PFU/cell, a latency period of 20 min, and virulence index of 0.86. Both phages show potential for use as therapeutics to combat A. baumannii infections.
Journal Article
Understanding the sources of diabetes distress in adults with type 1 diabetes
by
Fisher, Lawrence
,
Blumer, Ian
,
Masharani, Umesh
in
Adult
,
Anxiety - epidemiology
,
Anxiety - etiology
2015
To identify the unique sources of diabetes distress (DD) for adults with type 1 diabetes (T1D).
Sources of DD were developed from qualitative interviews with 25 T1D adults and 10 diabetes health care providers. Survey items were then developed and analyzed using both exploratory (EFA) and confirmatory CFA) analyses on two patient samples. Construct validity was assessed by correlations with depressive symptoms (PHQ8), complications, HbA1C, BMI, and hypoglycemia worry scale (HWS). Scale cut-points were created using multiple regression.
An EFA with 305 U.S. participants yielded 7 coherent, reliable sources of distress that were replicated by a CFA with 109 Canadian participants: Powerlessness, Negative Social Perceptions, Physician Distress, Friend/Family Distress, Hypoglycemia Distress, Management Distress, Eating Distress. Prevalence of DD was high with 41.6% reporting at least moderate DD. Higher DD was reported for women, those with complications, poor glycemic control, younger age, without a partner, and non-White patients.
We identified a profile of seven major sources of DD among T1D using a newly developed assessment instrument. The prevalence of DD is high and is related to glycemic control and several patient demographic and disease-related patient characteristics, arguing for a need to address DD in clinical care.
Journal Article