Publications by authors named "Dawn L Taylor-Mulneix"

Whooping cough is resurging in the United States despite high vaccine coverage. The rapid rise of Bordetella pertussis isolates lacking pertactin (PRN), a key vaccine antigen, has led to concerns about vaccine-driven evolution. Previous studies showed that pertactin can mediate binding to mammalian cells in vitro and act as an immunomodulatory factor in resisting neutrophil-mediated clearance.

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Article Synopsis
  • Acute and chronic otitis media (OM) primarily affects children and leads to numerous doctor visits and antibiotic prescriptions, with common pathogens in humans not effectively modeling in rodents.
  • Bordetella pseudohinzii, a mouse respiratory pathogen, naturally ascends to the middle ears in mice, causing persistent inflammation and hearing loss similar to human OM.
  • This mouse model is valuable for studying how the immune system, specifically T and B cells, controls bacterial infection and transmission in the middle ear, offering insights into host-pathogen interactions that are difficult to explore with other animal models.
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Background: Why resistance to specific antibiotics emerges and spreads rapidly in some bacteria confronting these drugs but not others remains a mystery. Resistance to erythromycin in the respiratory pathogens Staphylococcus aureus and Streptococcus pneumoniae emerged rapidly and increased problematically. However, resistance is uncommon amongst the classic Bordetella species despite infections being treated with this macrolide for decades.

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Article Synopsis
  • The genus discussed includes several bacterial species that inhabit the respiratory tracts of mammals, with one species specifically causing Whooping Cough in humans.
  • Recent research has revealed that these bacteria likely evolved from ancestors in soil and water, and studies have identified new strains in various environments.
  • The interaction with amoeba appears crucial in the bacteria's adaptation to eukaryotic cells, but as some species become specialized for humans, they lose the ability to thrive in environmental reservoirs.
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Resistance-nodulation-division (RND) efflux systems are ubiquitous transporters in Gram-negative bacteria that are essential for antibiotic resistance. The RND efflux systems also contribute to diverse phenotypes independent of antimicrobial resistance, but the mechanism by which they affect most of these phenotypes is unclear. This is the case in Vibrio cholerae where the RND systems function in antimicrobial resistance and virulence factor production.

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Background: The lack of animal models to experimentally study how infectious agents transmit between hosts limits our understanding of what makes some pathogens so contagious.

Methods: We recently developed a Bordetella bronchiseptica mouse model to study transmission and have used it to assess, for the first time, which of several well-studied "virulence factors" common to classical Bordetella species contribute to transmission.

Results: Among 13 mutants screened, a mutant lacking an extracellular polysaccharide (EPS) locus consistently failed to transmit.

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Multiple lines of evidence suggest that Bordetella species have a significant life stage outside of the mammalian respiratory tract that has yet to be defined. The Bordetella virulence gene (BvgAS) two-component system, a paradigm for a global virulence regulon, controls the expression of many "virulence factors" expressed in the Bvg positive (Bvg+) phase that are necessary for successful respiratory tract infection. A similarly large set of highly conserved genes are expressed under Bvg negative (Bvg-) phase growth conditions; however, these appear to be primarily expressed outside of the host and are thus hypothesized to be important in an undefined extrahost reservoir.

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