REGIONAL CENTRE FOR BIOTECHNOLOGY Seminar series Chittur Srikanth, PhD Department of Microbiology and Immunology University of Massachusetts Medical School.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Immunity to Infectious Diseases
Advertisements

Apoptosis By Douglas R. Green
Chapter 9: Inversion of a Transcription- Changing Region that Switches Salmonella Flagellar Antigens By Cheryl Weddle October 10, 2002.
Microbial Interactions with Humans
Evading Immune Responses and Tumor Immunology
Immunity to Infectious Diseases BIOS 486A/586A K.J.Goodrum 2006.
Immune Response against Infectious Diseases
Regulation of cellular antimicrobial activity by a single microbiota metabolite Zeni Crisp 1, Nandita Kohli 2, Carrie Mueller 1, Arul Jayaraman 1,2, Robert.
General Microbiology (Micr300)
Medical biology, microbiology, virology, immunology department by As. Prof. O.V. Pokryshko.
Sequencing capacitiesacademic company based microarray facilitiesacademic company based bioinformaticsacademic proteomic facilitiesacedemic Genome Research.
Hannover Medical School January 25 th 2010 Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium exploits inflammation to compete with the intestinal microbiota Stecher.
Department of Chemistry Seminar Announcement Date/Time/VenueTitle/Speaker 21 Feb (Mon) 4pm – S8 Level 3 Executive Classroom Natural products and.
What is it? What is it? Causes What’s Happening What’s Happening Symptoms Treatments Diagnosis Research.
STUDY OF IMMUNITY. NON-SPECIFIC RESISTANCE
SlyA function in Salmonella Enterica Authors: Period 6 Research Methods SD3R-02 Teacher: Ms. Ross Mentor: Dr. Bonneau Abstract: SlyA plays an important.
Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings PowerPoint ® Lecture Slide Presentation prepared by Christine L. Case Microbiology.
Plant Immunology.
The Sackler Faculty of Medicine
460 MIC ( MEDICAL BACTERIOLOGY ) 3(1+2) / الشعبة ( ) د / أمل بنت عبد العزيز الهزاني 542/7/1.
Bacterial Virulence Factors Dongwoo Shin Laboratory of Molecular Bacteriology Department of Molecular Cell Biology Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine.
Genetic Screenings for Studying Bacterial Pathogenesis Dongwoo Shin, Ph.D. Associate Professor, Department of Molecular Cell Biology, Sungkyunkwan University.
CHAPTER 1 - INTRODUCTION. CONTENT 1) A brief history of medical microbiology 2) Host – parasite relationships 3) Mechanism of pathogenesis  Pathogenic.
Innate Immunity Rui He Department of Immunology Shanghai Medical School Fudan University.
Mechanisms of Innate Immunity & Antigen Presentation
Pathogenomics How this project began: Ann Rose - take advantage of DNA sequence information - genomics Julian Davies - use the information to understand.
Department of Chemistry Seminar Announcement Date/Time/VenueTitle/Speaker 12 Jan (Wed) 11am – S8 Level 3 Executive Classroom PET in Neuroscience.
Defense against Disease Non-specific and specific strategies.
Bioengineering Bacterial Derived Immunomodulants: a Novel IBD Therapeutic Approach Andrew S. Neish, MD Department of Pathology Emory University School.
Mechanisms of Pathogenicity
Nature reviews Microbiology January Gram-negative Enterobacteria Diameter µm S. enterica serovar Typhimurium serovar Typhi Daniel Elmer.
1 Detecting & Responding 2 Unit 3 Biology Area of Study 2.
Chapter 27 Phage Strategies
CAS Key Laboratory of Pathogenic Microbiology and Immunology, Institute of Microbiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China.
Microbes. BACTERIAVIRUSFUNGI Microbes Remember a living organism must be able to demonstrate that it can perform ALL the 7 life processes MRSGRENMRSGREN.
Medical Bacteriology MBIO 460 Lecture 9 Dr. Turki Dawoud 2 nd Semester 1436/1437 H.
Modulation of Gene Expression via Disruption Of NF-kB Signaling by a
M1 – Immunology EFFECTOR T CELL FUNCTIONS (Part I) March 27, 2009 Ronald B. Smeltz, Ph.D. Microbiology and Immunology
Department of Medical Microbiology & Immunology
Pathogenesis of Infectious Diseases
MyD88 Signaling in the Intestine: Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde?
Honours in Microbiology
CELL MEDIATED IMMUNITY
Principles of Medical Microbiology
Microbial Diseases of the Digestive System
Spatial Segregation of Virulence Gene Expression during Acute Enteric Infection with Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium Richard C. Laughlin, Leigh.
Abstarct Neutrophils express Toll-like receptors (TLRs) for the recognition of conserved bacterial elements to initiate antimicrobial responses.
Salmonella typhimurium paves its own road into target cells
C.J. Dorman  Clinical Microbiology and Infection 
Salmonella Typhimurium Diarrhea Reveals Basic Principles of Enteropathogen Infection and Disease-Promoted DNA Exchange  Sandra Y. Wotzka, Bidong D. Nguyen,
Immunity to Infectious Diseases
Lung Homeostasis: Influence of Age, Microbes, and the Immune System
Heptose 1,7-Bisphosphate Directed TIFA Oligomerization: A Novel PAMP-Recognizing Signaling Platform in the Control of Bacterial Infections  Kumar Pachathundikandi,
MyD88 Signaling in the Intestine: Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde?
6.3 Defense against infectious disease
Are pathogenic bacteria just looking for food
Type III secretion system
Role of the Microbiota in Immunity and Inflammation
Complement Complement proteins become activated when they encounter antigen Cascading enzyme reactions concentrate activated complement at infection site.
Overview of structural and functional mechanisms by which enterovirulent bacteria cause diarrhea. Overview of structural and functional mechanisms by which.
Salmonella Typhimurium Diarrhea Reveals Basic Principles of Enteropathogen Infection and Disease-Promoted DNA Exchange  Sandra Y. Wotzka, Bidong D. Nguyen,
Evolution of Salmonella within Hosts
Qiuhe Lu, Shan Li, Feng Shao  Trends in Microbiology 
Volume 16, Issue 2, Pages (August 2014)
A Commensal Protozoan Strikes a Balance in the Gut
Roles of different bacterial SMases and PLases in virulence.
Signal Transduction & Virulence
Introduction to Microbiology
Pathogenesis model of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium
Presentation transcript:

REGIONAL CENTRE FOR BIOTECHNOLOGY Seminar series Chittur Srikanth, PhD Department of Microbiology and Immunology University of Massachusetts Medical School Worcester MA, USA Wednesday, February 10, :00 am Seminar Room Novel role for Caspase-3 in Salmonella effector processing: a twist in the tale

Chittur Srikanth, PhD Abstract REGIONAL CENTRE FOR BIOTECHNOLOGY Seminar series The enteric pathogen, Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, causes food poisoning resulting in gastroenteritis. The S. Typhimurium effector protein, SipA, promotes gastroenteritis via distinct functional motifs that trigger inflammation, as well as mechanisms of bacterial entry. We demonstrate that during infection of intestinal epithelial cells, SipA is responsible for the early activation of caspase-3, an enzyme that is required for SipA cleavage at a specific recognition motif, which divides the protein into its two functional domains. Moreover, cleavage of the caspase- 3 motif activates SipA in a manner central to this organism’s pathogenicity. Effectors from Salmonella and several others bacterial pathogens harbor such potential caspase-3 sites. Thus, these findings reveal a novel mechanism and writes a new chapter in the study of host-pathogen interactions that can be used to elucidate the role of several Salmonella virulence factors. To gain an understanding of the mechanism underlying caspase-3 processing, we initiated a SipA-receptor screen using a Yeast two-hybrid assay system. A host membrane protein, Perp, was identified which has previously been demonstrated to be involved in caspase-3 activation. Overall, the ultimate goal of these studies is to find novel methods of therapeutic intervention to combat inflammatory disorders, both from infectious and non-infectious origins.