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Creators/Authors contains: "Townsend, Steven_D"

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  1. Abstract Streptococcus agalactiaeor Group BStreptococcus(GBS) is a Gram‐positive bacterial pathobiont that is the etiological cause of severe perinatal infections. GBS can colonize the vagina of pregnant patients and invade tissues causing ascending infections of the gravid reproductive tract that lead to adverse outcomes including preterm birth, neonatal sepsis, and maternal or fetal demise. Additionally, transmission of GBS during labor or breastfeeding can also cause invasive infections of neonates and infants. However, human milk has also been shown to have protective effects against infection; a characteristic that is likely derived from antimicrobial and immunomodulatory properties of molecules that comprise human milk. Recent evidence suggests that human milk oligosaccharides (HMOs), short‐chain sugars that comprise 8–20 % of breast milk, have antimicrobial and anti‐biofilm activity against GBS and other bacterial pathogens. Additionally, HMOs have been shown to potentiate the activity of antibiotics against GBS. This review presents the most recent published work that studies the interaction between HMOs and GBS. 
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  2. Abstract The members of the infant microbiome are governed by feeding method (breastmilk vs. formula). Regardless of the source of nutrition, a competitive growth advantage can be provided to commensals through prebiotics – either human milk oligosaccharides (HMOs) or plant oligosaccharides that are supplemented into formula. To characterize how prebiotics modulate commensal – pathogen interactions, we have designed and studied a minimal microbiome where a pathogen,Streptococcus agalactiaeengages with a commensal,Streptococcus salivarius. We discovered that whileS. agalactiaesuppresses the growth ofS. salivariusvia increased lactic acid production, galacto‐oligosaccharides (GOS) supplementation reverses the effect. This result has major implications in characterizing how single species survive in the gut, what niche they occupy, and how they engage with other community members. 
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  3. Abstract Group BStreptococcus(GBS) is an encapsulated Gram‐positive bacterial pathogen that causes severe perinatal infections. Human milk oligosaccharides (HMOs) are short‐chain sugars that have recently been shown to possess antimicrobial and anti‐biofilm activity against a variety of bacterial pathogens, including GBS. We have expanded these studies to demonstrate that HMOs can inhibit and dismantle biofilm in both invasive and colonizing strains of GBS. A cohort of 30 diverse strains of GBS were analyzed for susceptibility to HMO‐dependent biofilm inhibition or destruction. HMOs were significantly effective at inhibiting biofilm in capsular‐type‐ and sequence‐type‐specific fashion, with significant efficacy in CpsIb, CpsII, CpsIII, CpsV, and CpsVI strains as well as ST‐1, ST‐12, ST‐19, and ST‐23 strains. Interestingly, CpsIa as well as ST‐7 and ST‐17 were not susceptible to the anti‐biofilm activity of HMOs, underscoring the strain‐specific effects of these important antimicrobial molecules against the perinatal pathogenStreptococcus agalactiae. 
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  4. Abstract Chronic infection withHelicobacter pyloriincreases risk of gastric diseases including gastric cancer. Despite development of a robust immune response,H. pyloripersists in the gastric niche. Progression of gastric inflammation to serious disease outcomes is associated with infection withH. pyloristrains which encode thecagType IV Secretion System (cag T4SS). ThecagT4SS is responsible for translocating the oncogenic protein CagA into host cells and inducing pro‐inflammatory and carcinogenic signaling cascades. Our previous work demonstrated that nutrient iron modulates the activity of the T4SS and biogenesis of T4SS pili. In response toH. pyloriinfection, the host produces a variety of antimicrobial molecules, including the iron‐binding glycoprotein, lactoferrin. Our work shows that apo‐lactoferrin exerts antimicrobial activity againstH. pyloriunder iron‐limited conditions, while holo‐lactoferrin enhances bacterial growth. CulturingH. pyloriin the presence of holo‐lactoferrin prior to co‐culture with gastric epithelial cells, results in repression of thecag T4SS activity. Concomitantly, a decrease in biogenesis ofcag T4SS pili at the host‐pathogen interface was observed under these culture conditions by high‐resolution electron microscopy analyses. Taken together, these results indicate that acquisition of alternate sources of nutrient iron plays a role in regulating the pro‐inflammatory activity of a bacterial secretion system and present novel therapeutic targets for the treatment ofH. pylori‐related disease. 
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