Awardee OrganizationBOSTON UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CAMPUS
Description
Abstract Text
The aim of this research is to understand the structure and assembly of
adhesion pili found on pathogenic bacteria, thereby providing insight
into how the architecture of these pili supports their role as a
virulence factor. Bacterial survival and colonization require
attachment of the bacteria to hosts. In many stains, this process is
initiated and maintained by pili; in Escherichia coli that cause
pyelonephritis, adhesion and virulence depend on P-pili. Hib-pili
expressed on the surface of Haemophilus influenzae mediate H. flu's
colonization of the upper respiratory tract, and thus its ability to
cause diseases such as childhood meningitis, otitis media, and pneumonia
of the elderly. As bacteria become more resistant to traditional
antibiotics, it is important to develop new therapies against bacterial
infections. Structural information about adhesion pili will provide a
basis for future rational design of new therapies to prevent bacterial
binding or to remove pathogenic bacteria bound to the human host. The
proposed research addresses this long-term goal through structural
studies of bacterial adhesion pili. These studies focus on: 1) electron
microscopy and three-dimensional (3-D) helical reconstruction of P-pili
preserved in vitreous ice and of Hib-pili negative stain, 2) controlled
damage/recovery of pili to investigate the possibility of re-formation
of intact helical filaments, 3) investigation of the 3-D structure of
P-pili with mutant structural proteins (pilins), to examine regions of
the PapA pilin essential for their assembly into tightly coiled helical
filaments, 4) bacterial attachment assays, to assess the effect of
mutations and the effect of damage on bacterial binding, and 5) in vitro
reconstitution of hetero-pilin polymers from chaperone-pilin complexes,
to improve our understanding of the bioassembly process of a
prototypical macromolecule.
No Sub Projects information available for 5R01GM055722-04
Publications
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Outcomes
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Clinical Studies
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