journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38598600/high-resolution-comparative-atomic-structures-of-two-giardiavirus-prototypes-infecting-g-duodenalis-parasite
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Han Wang, Gianluca Marucci, Anna Munke, Mohammad Maruf Hassan, Marco Lalle, Kenta Okamoto
The Giardia lamblia virus (GLV) is a non-enveloped icosahedral dsRNA and endosymbiont virus that infects the zoonotic protozoan parasite Giardia duodenalis (syn. G. lamblia, G. intestinalis), which is a pathogen of mammals, including humans. Elucidating the transmission mechanism of GLV is crucial for gaining an in-depth understanding of the virulence of the virus in G. duodenalis. GLV belongs to the family Totiviridae, which infects yeast and protozoa intracellularly; however, it also transmits extracellularly, similar to the phylogenetically, distantly related toti-like viruses that infect multicellular hosts...
April 10, 2024: PLoS Pathogens
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38598560/sars-cov-2-infects-cells-lining-the-blood-retinal-barrier-and-induces-a-hyperinflammatory-immune-response-in-the-retina-via-systemic-exposure
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Monu Monu, Faraz Ahmad, Rachel M Olson, Vaishnavi Balendiran, Pawan Kumar Singh
SARS-CoV-2 has been shown to cause wide-ranging ocular abnormalities and vision impairment in COVID-19 patients. However, there is limited understanding of SARS-CoV-2 in ocular transmission, tropism, and associated pathologies. The presence of viral RNA in corneal/conjunctival tissue and tears, along with the evidence of viral entry receptors on the ocular surface, has led to speculation that the eye may serve as a potential route of SARS-CoV-2 transmission. Here, we investigated the interaction of SARS-CoV-2 with cells lining the blood-retinal barrier (BRB) and the role of the eye in its transmission and tropism...
April 10, 2024: PLoS Pathogens
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38598556/mathematical-models-of-drug-resistant-tuberculosis-lack-bacterial-heterogeneity-a-systematic-review
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Naomi M Fuller, Christopher F McQuaid, Martin J Harker, Chathika K Weerasuriya, Timothy D McHugh, Gwenan M Knight
Drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB) threatens progress in the control of TB. Mathematical models are increasingly being used to guide public health decisions on managing both antimicrobial resistance (AMR) and TB. It is important to consider bacterial heterogeneity in models as it can have consequences for predictions of resistance prevalence, which may affect decision-making. We conducted a systematic review of published mathematical models to determine the modelling landscape and to explore methods for including bacterial heterogeneity...
April 10, 2024: PLoS Pathogens
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38598555/sja-let-7-suppresses-the-development-of-liver-fibrosis-via-schistosoma-japonicum-extracellular-vesicles
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Haoran Zhong, Bowen Dong, Danlin Zhu, Zhiqiang Fu, Jinming Liu, Yamei Jin
Schistosomiasis is a fatal zoonotic parasitic disease that also threatens human health. The main pathological features of schistosomiasis are granulomatous inflammation and subsequent liver fibrosis, which is a complex, chronic, and progressive disease. Extracellular vesicles (EVs) derived from schistosome eggs are broadly involved in host-parasite communication and act as important contributors to schistosome-induced liver fibrosis. However, it remains unclear whether substances secreted by the EVs of Schistosoma japonicum, a long-term parasitic "partner" in the hepatic portal vein of the host, also participate in liver fibrosis...
April 10, 2024: PLoS Pathogens
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38598552/wolbachia-infection-responsive-immune-genes-suppress-plasmodium-falciparum-infection-in-anopheles-stephensi
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Vandana Vandana, Shengzhang Dong, Tanaya Sheth, Qiang Sun, Han Wen, Amanda Maldonado, Zhiyong Xi, George Dimopoulos
Wolbachia, a maternally transmitted symbiotic bacterium of insects, can suppress a variety of human pathogens in mosquitoes, including malaria-causing Plasmodium in the Anopheles vector. However, the mechanistic basis of Wolbachia-mediated Plasmodium suppression in mosquitoes is not well understood. In this study, we compared the midgut and carcass transcriptomes of stably infected Anopheles stephensi with Wolbachia wAlbB to uninfected mosquitoes in order to discover Wolbachia infection-responsive immune genes that may play a role in Wolbachia-mediated anti-Plasmodium activity...
April 10, 2024: PLoS Pathogens
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38578798/in-vivo-single-cell-high-dimensional-mass-cytometry-analysis-to-track-the-interactions-between-klebsiella-pneumoniae-and-myeloid-cells
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ricardo Calderon-Gonzalez, Amy Dumigan, Joana Sá-Pessoa, Adrien Kissenpfennig, José A Bengoechea
In vivo single-cell approaches have transformed our understanding of the immune populations in tissues. Mass cytometry (CyTOF), that combines the resolution of mass spectrometry with the ability to conduct multiplexed measurements of cell molecules at the single cell resolution, has enabled to resolve the diversity of immune cell subsets, and their heterogeneous functionality. Here we assess the feasibility of taking CyTOF one step further to immuno profile cells while tracking their interactions with bacteria, a method we term Bac-CyTOF...
April 5, 2024: PLoS Pathogens
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38578790/alpha-herpesvirus-exocytosis-from-neuron-cell-bodies-uses-constitutive-secretory-mechanisms-and-egress-and-spread-from-axons-is-independent-of-neuronal-firing-activity
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anthony E Ambrosini, Kayla M Borg, Nikhil Deshmukh, Michael J Berrye, Lynn W Enquist, Ian B Hogue
Alpha herpesviruses naturally infect the peripheral nervous system, and can spread to the central nervous system, causing severe debilitating or deadly disease. Because alpha herpesviruses spread along synaptic circuits, and infected neurons exhibit altered electrophysiology and increased spontaneous activity, we hypothesized that alpha herpesviruses use activity-dependent synaptic vesicle-like regulated secretory mechanisms for egress and spread from neurons. Using live-cell fluorescence microscopy, we show that Pseudorabies Virus (PRV) particles use the constitutive Rab6 post-Golgi secretory pathway to exit from the cell body of primary neurons, independent of local calcium signaling...
April 5, 2024: PLoS Pathogens
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38574119/the-rotavirus-vp5-vp8-conformational-transition-permeabilizes-membranes-to-ca2
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marilina de Sautu, Tobias Herrmann, Gustavo Scanavachi, Simon Jenni, Stephen C Harrison
Rotaviruses infect cells by delivering into the cytosol a transcriptionally active inner capsid particle (a "double-layer particle": DLP). Delivery is the function of a third, outer layer, which drives uptake from the cell surface into small vesicles from which the DLPs escape. In published work, we followed stages of rhesus rotavirus (RRV) entry by live-cell imaging and correlated them with structures from cryogenic electron microscopy and tomography (cryo-EM and cryo-ET). The virus appears to wrap itself in membrane, leading to complete engulfment and loss of Ca2+ from the vesicle produced by the wrapping...
April 4, 2024: PLoS Pathogens
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38574111/rna-three-dimensional-structure-drives-the-sequence-organization-of-potato-spindle-tuber-viroid-quasispecies
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jian Wu, Yuhong Zhang, Yuxin Nie, Fei Yan, Craig L Zirbel, David M Bisaro
RNA viruses and viroids exist and evolve as quasispecies due to error-prone replication. Quasispecies consist of a few dominant master sequences alongside numerous variants that contribute to genetic diversity. Upon environmental changes, certain variants within quasispecies have the potential to become the dominant sequences, leading to the emergence of novel infectious strains. However, the emergence of new infectious variants remains unpredictable. Using mutant pools prepared by saturation mutagenesis of selected stem and loop regions, our study of potato spindle tuber viroid (PSTVd) demonstrates that mutants forming local three-dimensional (3D) structures similar to the wild type (WT) are more likely to accumulate in PSTVd quasispecies...
April 4, 2024: PLoS Pathogens
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38558079/characterization-and-genomic-analysis-of-the-lyme-disease-spirochete-bacteriophage-%C3%AF-bb-1
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dominick R Faith, Margie Kinnersley, Diane M Brooks, Dan Drecktrah, Laura S Hall, Eric Luo, Andrew Santiago-Frangos, Jenny Wachter, D Scott Samuels, Patrick R Secor
Lyme disease is a tick-borne infection caused by the spirochete Borrelia (Borreliella) burgdorferi. Borrelia species have highly fragmented genomes composed of a linear chromosome and a constellation of linear and circular plasmids some of which are required throughout the enzootic cycle. Included in this plasmid repertoire by almost all Lyme disease spirochetes are the 32-kb circular plasmid cp32 prophages that are capable of lytic replication to produce infectious virions called ϕBB-1. While the B. burgdorferi genome contains evidence of horizontal transfer, the mechanisms of gene transfer between strains remain unclear...
April 1, 2024: PLoS Pathogens
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38557908/broad-spectrum-delta-ba-2-tandem-fused-heterodimer-mrna-vaccine-delivered-by-lipopolyplex
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Pei Du, Lei Huang, Yi Fang, Fanfan Zhao, Qianyun Li, Xuehui Ma, Ruiqi Li, Qian Chen, Haifa Shen, Qihui Wang, Hangwen Li, George Fu Gao
Since the beginning of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), the causative agent of COVID-19, continues to mutate and generates new variants with increasingly severe immune escape, urging the upgrade of COVID-19 vaccines. Here, based on a similar dimeric RBD design as our previous ZF2001 vaccine, we developed a novel broad-spectrum COVID-19 mRNA vaccine, SWIM516, with chimeric Delta-BA.2 RBD dimer delivered by lipopolyplex (LPP). Unlike the popular lipid nanoparticle (LNP), this LPP-delivered mRNA expresses only in the injection site, which avoids potential toxicity to the liver...
April 1, 2024: PLoS Pathogens
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38557892/investigating-the-dose-dependency-of-the-midgut-escape-barrier-using-a-mechanistic-model-of-within-mosquito-dengue-virus-population-dynamics
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rebecca M Johnson, Isaac J Stopard, Helen M Byrne, Philip M Armstrong, Douglas E Brackney, Ben Lambert
Arboviruses can emerge rapidly and cause explosive epidemics of severe disease. Some of the most epidemiologically important arboviruses, including dengue virus (DENV), Zika virus (ZIKV), Chikungunya (CHIKV) and yellow fever virus (YFV), are transmitted by Aedes mosquitoes, most notably Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus. After a mosquito blood feeds on an infected host, virus enters the midgut and infects the midgut epithelium. The virus must then overcome a series of barriers before reaching the mosquito saliva and being transmitted to a new host...
April 1, 2024: PLoS Pathogens
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38551993/a-divergent-protein-kinase-a-regulatory-subunit-essential-for-morphogenesis-of-the-human-pathogen-leishmania
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Renana Fischer Weinberger, Sabine Bachmaier, Veronica Ober, George B Githure, Ramu Dandugudumula, Isabelle Q Phan, Michal Almoznino, Eleni Polatoglou, Polina Tsigankov, Roni Nitzan Koren, Peter J Myler, Michael Boshart, Dan Zilberstein
Parasitic protozoa of the genus Leishmania cycle between the phagolysosome of mammalian macrophages, where they reside as rounded intracellular amastigotes, and the midgut of female sand flies, which they colonize as elongated extracellular promastigotes. Previous studies indicated that protein kinase A (PKA) plays an important role in the initial steps of promastigote differentiation into amastigotes. Here, we describe a novel regulatory subunit of PKA (which we have named PKAR3) that is unique to Leishmania and most (but not all) other Kinetoplastidae...
March 29, 2024: PLoS Pathogens
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38551978/classical-swine-fever-virus-non-structural-protein-5b-hijacks-host-mettl14-mediated-m6a-modification-to-counteract-host-antiviral-immune-response
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jing Chen, Hui-Xin Song, Jia-Huan Hu, Ji-Shan Bai, Xiao-Han Li, Rui-Cong Sun, Bing-Qian Zhao, Mei-Zhen Li, Bin Zhou
Classical Swine Fever (CSF), caused by the Classical Swine Fever Virus (CSFV), inflicts significant economic losses on the global pig industry. A key factor in the challenge of eradicating this virus is its ability to evade the host's innate immune response, leading to persistent infections. In our study, we elucidate the molecular mechanism through which CSFV exploits m6A modifications to circumvent host immune surveillance, thus facilitating its proliferation. We initially discovered that m6A modifications were elevated both in vivo and in vitro upon CSFV infection, particularly noting an increase in the expression of the methyltransferase METTL14...
March 29, 2024: PLoS Pathogens
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38547321/a-novel-sorf-gene-mutant-strain-of-yersinia-pestis-vaccine-ev76-offers-enhanced-safety-and-improved-protection-against-plague
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Xiao Guo, Youquan Xin, Zehui Tong, Shiyang Cao, Yuan Zhang, Gengshan Wu, Hongyan Chen, Tong Wang, Yajun Song, Qingwen Zhang, Ruifu Yang, Zongmin Du
We recently identified two virulence-associated small open reading frames (sORF) of Yersinia pestis, named yp1 and yp2, and null mutants of each individual genes were highly attenuated in virulence. Plague vaccine strain EV76 is known for strong reactogenicity, making it not suitable for use in humans. To improve the immune safety of EV76, three mutant strains of EV76, Δyp1, Δyp2, and Δyp1&yp2 were constructed and their virulence attenuation, immunogenicity, and protective efficacy in mice were evaluated...
March 28, 2024: PLoS Pathogens
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38547316/chronic-viral-infection-impairs-immune-memory-to-a-different-pathogen
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Cheng Yang, Zhicui Liu, Ying Yang, Luis J Cocka, Yongguo Li, Weihong Zeng, Hao Shen
Chronic viral infections cause T cell dysfunction in both animal models and human clinical settings, thereby affecting the ability of the host immune system to clear viral pathogens and develop proper virus-specific immune memory. However, the impact of chronic viral infections on the host's immune memory to other pathogens has not been well described. In this study, we immunized mice with recombinant Listeria monocytogenes expressing OVA (Lm-OVA) to generate immunity to Lm and allow analysis of OVA-specific memory T (Tm) cells...
March 28, 2024: PLoS Pathogens
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38547310/the-wolbachia-wale1-effector-alters-drosophila-endocytosis
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
MaryAnn Martin, Sergio López-Madrigal, Irene L G Newton
The most common intracellular bacterial infection is Wolbachia pipientis, a microbe that manipulates host reproduction and is used in control of insect vectors. Phenotypes induced by Wolbachia have been studied for decades and range from sperm-egg incompatibility to male killing. How Wolbachia alters host biology is less well understood. Previously, we characterized the first Wolbachia effector-WalE1, which encodes an alpha-synuclein domain at the N terminus. Purified WalE1 sediments with and bundles actin and when heterologously expressed in flies, increases Wolbachia titer in the developing oocyte...
March 28, 2024: PLoS Pathogens
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38547254/a-clinically-attenuated-double-mutant-of-porcine-reproductive-and-respiratory-syndrome-virus-2-that-does-not-prompt-overexpression-of-proinflammatory-cytokines-during-co-infection-with-a-secondary-pathogen
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chia-Ming Su, Jineui Kim, Junyu Tang, Yu Fan Hung, Federico A Zuckermann, Robert Husmann, Patrick Roady, Jiyoun Kim, Young-Min Lee, Dongwan Yoo
Porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus (PRRSV) is known to suppress the type I interferon (IFNs-α/β) response during infection. PRRSV also activates the NF-κB signaling pathway, leading to the production of proinflammatory cytokines during infection. In swine farms, co-infections of PRRSV and other secondary bacterial pathogens are common and exacerbate the production of proinflammatory cytokines, contributing to the porcine respiratory disease complex (PRDC) which is clinically a severe disease...
March 28, 2024: PLoS Pathogens
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38530853/local-scale-phylodynamics-reveal-differential-community-impact-of-sars-cov-2-in-a-metropolitan-us-county
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Miguel I Paredes, Amanda C Perofsky, Lauren Frisbie, Louise H Moncla, Pavitra Roychoudhury, Hong Xie, Shah A Mohamed Bakhash, Kevin Kong, Isabel Arnould, Tien V Nguyen, Seffir T Wendm, Pooneh Hajian, Sean Ellis, Patrick C Mathias, Alexander L Greninger, Lea M Starita, Chris D Frazar, Erica Ryke, Weizhi Zhong, Luis Gamboa, Machiko Threlkeld, Jover Lee, Jeremy Stone, Evan McDermot, Melissa Truong, Jay Shendure, Hanna N Oltean, Cécile Viboud, Helen Chu, Nicola F Müller, Trevor Bedford
SARS-CoV-2 transmission is largely driven by heterogeneous dynamics at a local scale, leaving local health departments to design interventions with limited information. We analyzed SARS-CoV-2 genomes sampled between February 2020 and March 2022 jointly with epidemiological and cell phone mobility data to investigate fine scale spatiotemporal SARS-CoV-2 transmission dynamics in King County, Washington, a diverse, metropolitan US county. We applied an approximate structured coalescent approach to model transmission within and between North King County and South King County alongside the rate of outside introductions into the county...
March 26, 2024: PLoS Pathogens
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38530845/differential-carbonic-anhydrase-activities-control-ebv-induced-b-cell-transformation-and-lytic-cycle-reactivation
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Samaresh Malik, Joyanta Biswas, Purandar Sarkar, Subhadeep Nag, Chandrima Gain, Shatadru Ghosh Roy, Bireswar Bhattacharya, Dipanjan Ghosh, Abhik Saha
Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) contributes to ~1% of all human cancers including several B-cell neoplasms. A characteristic feature of EBV life cycle is its ability to transform metabolically quiescent B-lymphocytes into hyperproliferating B-cell blasts with the establishment of viral latency, while intermittent lytic cycle induction is necessary for the production of progeny virus. Our RNA-Seq analyses of both latently infected naïve B-lymphocytes and transformed B-lymphocytes upon lytic cycle replication indicate a contrasting expression pattern of a membrane-associated carbonic anhydrase isoform CA9, an essential component for maintaining cell acid-base homeostasis...
March 26, 2024: PLoS Pathogens
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