Publications by authors named "J E Clark-Curtiss"

The Mycobacterium tuberculosis protein kinase K regulates growth adaptation by facilitating mycobacterial survival in response to a variety of and stress conditions. Here, we further add that transcription is responsive to carbon and nitrogen starvation signals. The increased survival of an M.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A programmed self-destructive Salmonella vaccine delivery system was developed to facilitate efficient colonization in host tissues that allows release of the bacterial cell contents after lysis to stimulate mucosal, systemic, and cellular immunities against a diversity of pathogens. Adoption and modification of these technological improvements could form part of an integrated strategy for cost-effective control and prevention of infectious diseases, including those caused by parasitic pathogens. Avian coccidiosis is a common poultry disease caused by Eimeria.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The DevR response regulator of is an established regulator of the dormancy response in mycobacteria and can also be activated during aerobic growth conditions in avirulent strains, suggesting a complex regulatory system. Previously, we reported culture medium-specific aerobic induction of the DevR regulon genes in avirulent H37Ra that was absent in the virulent H37Rv strain. To understand the underlying basis of this differential response, we have investigated aerobic expression of the operon using H37Ra and H37Rv overexpression strains, designated as LIX48 and LIX50, respectively.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Vaccines afford a better and more cost-effective approach to combatting infectious diseases than continued reliance on antibiotics or antiviral or antiparasite drugs in the current era of increasing incidences of diseases caused by drug-resistant pathogens. Recombinant attenuated vaccines (RASVs) have been significantly improved to exhibit the same or better attributes than wild-type parental strains to colonize internal lymphoid tissues and persist there to serve as factories to continuously synthesize and deliver rAgs. Encoded by codon-optimized pathogen genes, Ags are selected to induce protective immunity to infection by that pathogen.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF