Abstract

Braun/murein lipoprotein (Lpp) is involved in inflammatory responses and septic shock. We previously characterized a lpp mutant of Yersinia pestis CO92 and found that this mutant was defective in surviving in macrophages and was attenuated in a mouse inhalation model of plague when compared to the highly virulent wild-type (WT) bacterium. We performed global transcriptional profiling of WT Y. pestis and its lpp mutant using microarrays. The organisms were cultured at 26 and 37 degrees Celsius to simulate the flea vector and mammalian host environments, respectively. Our data revealed vastly different effects of lpp mutation on the transcriptomes of Y. pestis grown at 37 versus . While the absence of Lpp resulted mainly in the downregulation of metabolic genes at , the Y. pestis lpp mutant cultured at exhibited profound alterations in stress response and virulence genes, compared to WT bacteria. We investigated one of the stress-related genes (htrA) downregulated in the lpp mutant relative to WT Y. pestis. Indeed, complementation of the lpp mutant with the htrA gene restored intracellular survival of the Y. pestis lpp mutant. Our results support a role for Lpp in Y. pestis adaptation to the host environment, possibly via transcriptional activation of htrA.

1. Introduction

Yersinia pestis is the causative agent of plague, and its current relevance as a potential bioweapon is garnered because of its high virulence and the development of multiantibiotic resistant strains by several governments prior to the 1972 Biological and Toxic Weapons Convention ban [1]. This gram-negative bacterium is naturally transmitted via a flea vector and prefers rodents as a reservoir. Plague can manifest itself in three different stages of disease progression: bubonic, septicemic, and pneumonic forms. Bubonic plague is the classic form where a flea vector bite leads to fever, headache, and the prototypical “buboes” or swollen lymph nodes in humans. Septicemic plague may result from a flea bite or inspiration; however, the disease progression leads quickly to high mortality with emesis, hemorrhagic rash, and high fever as its signs. Finally, pneumonic plague is spread person-to-person and is marked by fever, coughs, dyspnea, and hemoptysis. The aerosol is short-lived, as sunlight and desiccation destroy the bacterium. However, the dogma that Y. pestis is not hardy in the environment has been questioned as of late because it has been shown to remain viable on some fomites for over 72 hours [2] and can remain viable in the soil for approximately 40 weeks [3]. Even more notable than bacterial persistence is its virulence.

A variety of virulence factor-encoding genes are found both on the chromosome and in plasmids. The pPCP1 plasmid contains the plasminogen-activating protease (Pla) which has been shown to interfere with the complement activation cascade and blood coagulation as well as decrease the extracellular matrix around the foci facilitating bacterial dissemination to peripheral organs [4]. Surface-bound Pla has also been shown to bind DEC-205 on phagocytic cells, which enhances bacterial uptake and consequently increases initial dissemination at the foci [5]. The plasmid pMT1 contains the murine toxin, which is integral for bacterial survival in the flea vector [6] and the F1 capsular protein, which protects the bacteria from phagocytosis [7] and possibly masks surface antigens from immune detection [8].

Another series of virulence factor-encoding genes, contained on the pCD1 plasmid, are the Yersinia outer membrane proteins (Yops) and a type three secretion system (T3SS) that translocates Yops. YopB, YopD, and the low calcium response antigen V (LcrV) have been shown to facilitate the translocation of the other Yops across the secretion apparatus, while some Yops act as effectors in the host cytoplasm [9]. For example, YopH is a protein tyrosine phosphatase that impedes the kinase-signaling cascades integral to the immune system’s arbitration of infection [10]. YopT is a cysteine protease that cleaves the RhoA GTPase and consequently leads to the disruption of the actin cytoskeleton [11]. YopO is a Ser/Thr kinase that is activated by G-actin and also disrupts actin formation [12]. Similarly, YopE restricts signaling cascades [13] and acts with YopT and YopO to prevent internalization and subsequent MHC processing by phagocytic cells. YopJ also affects immune signaling cascades and has been shown to block the inflammasome [14] via acetylation of Ser/Thr residues, which blocks phosphorylation by MAPK kinases [15]. YopM has been shown to decrease the number of NK cells during infection [16]. Consequently, a therapeutic or vaccine therapy that can attenuate bacteremia prior to the translocation of high concentrations of these proteins into the host is desirable. Prior vaccine candidates, including the only licensed and now defunct Greer vaccine, have had limited success using whole bacteria. New specific markers on the immunopeptidome need to be investigated as candidates for a new generation of vaccines.

The Braun lipoprotein (Lpp) anchors the outer membrane to the peptidoglycan layer and is prevalent in many gram-negative enteric pathogens. Structurally, it acts as a spacer between the inner and outer membrane, keeping the periplasmic space open and helping to maintain outer membrane integrity [17]. Found on rough and smooth lipopolysaccharide (LPS) [18], we have recently examined the Y. pestis CO92 Lpp mutant in both bubonic and pneumonic murine plague models [19]. We have shown a statistical increase in animal survival utilizing this mutant, along with a decrease in general pathology of the tissues. Next, we examined the effect of this mutation on the host by analyzing the transcriptomes of mouse spleen, liver, and lungs during infection, using Affymetrix GeneChips. Overall, many immunological changes were seen in comparing the Lpp mutant with that of the WT bacterium [20]. Of note, many interferon (IFN)- -related genes were specifically down-regulated in the lpp mutant-infected mice. The Lpp mutant showed a general global decrease in transcriptional response by the host [20]. In conjunction with the effect bacteria have on the host transcriptome, the host also induces changes in the bacteria.

In this study, we discerned if the mutation in the lpp gene would affect the bacterial transcriptome. Many conditions such as temperature, iron, and calcium have been shown to initiate large changes in Yersinia transcriptional regulation. Temperature and growth phase have recently been shown to heavily influence the production of outer member proteins [21], and nutrient exhaustion extensively regulates the transportation machinery [22]. Other studies have examined the effect of iron depletion [23], temperature extremes [24], and herbal remedies on the Y. pestis transcriptome [25]. We utilized bacterial microarrays to assess the host’s ability to respond to Lpp, as it has been shown to initiate a toll-like receptor (TLR)-2 response and apoptosis in host cells [26]. Consequently, the effect of deletion of the lpp gene on the bacterial transcriptome will provide important information on how Lpp might modulate bacterial virulence at both flea and human body temperatures.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Bacteria Strains

WT Y. pestis CO92 was obtained from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC, Atlanta, GA) and maintained in our restricted access biosafety level (BSL)-2 laboratory. The creation and characterization of the strain deficient in the expression of the lpp gene were described in detail previously [19]. All Yersinia strains were grown in either Brain Heart Infusion broth (BHI, Difco, Voigt Global Distribution Inc, Lawrence, KS) or Heart Infusion Broth (HIB, Difco) at 26– [19, 27, 28].

2.2. Harvesting Bacterial RNA

Prior to RNA isolation, bacteria were grown in BHI broth overnight at 26°C. The overnight culture was diluted 1  :  20 in BHI broth and grown at 26°C for an additional 6 hours. In another set of experiments, after 2 hours of cultivation at 26°C, the temperature was shifted to 37°C and calcium was added for 4 hours to facilitate activation of the T3SS and production of Yops. Bacteria were harvested and RNA isolated using RiboPure (Ambion/Applied Biosystems, Austin, TX). The experiments were performed in triplicate, with each microarray representing a separate biological culture of Y. pestis. Microarrays for Y. pestis are available to our laboratory through the NIAID’s Pathogen Functional Genomics Resource Center at The Institute for Genomic Research (TIGR), Rockville, MD. RNA was processed and hybridized by the Molecular Genomics Core Facility at UTMB, as we previously described [29, 30].

2.3. Microarray Data Analysis

Lowess normalization and statistical analyses were performed using GeneSpring GX 10 software (Agilent Technologies, Santa Clara, CA) as previously described [29]. Altered genes were deemed as significant if the fold-change was at least 1.5 and the -value (based on Student’s test with Benjamini and Hochberg correction) was less than  .05. Hierarchical clustering was performed on normalized and log-transformed hybridization signals using CLUSFAVOR 6.0 (Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX). Raw and processed data (a total of 6 arrays) were deposited in the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) online (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo) database (Accession GSE19840).

2.4. Amplification of the htrA Gene and Its in trans Expression in the lpp Mutant

The htrA gene (1443 bp) was amplified from the chromosomal DNA of Y. pestis CO92 by using polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and primers that targeted 200 bp upstream ( CGCGGATCCTAGTA T GCAAAAATTTGAATTGTCCG -forward) and 53 bp downstream ( ACGCGTCGACTG CATCTATTGTGTCAATACCTTAC -reverse) of the target gene. The PCR product was purified using the QIAquick PCR purification kit (Qiagen, Valencia, CA) and digested using the restriction endonucleases BamHI and SalI (New England BioLabs, Ipswich, MA) to prepare the fragment for ligation into pBR322 vector (Fermentas, Glen Burnie, MD) at the appropriate restriction enzyme sites. The target sites for these enzymes are underlined in the forward (BamHI) and reverse (SalI) primers, respectively. The resulting recombinant plasmid (designated as pBR322htrA) retains ampicillin resistance but is sensitive to tetracycline (Tc), as BamHI/SalI enzyme digestion removed the Tc cassette from plasmid pBR322.

By using a similar strategy, a derivative of pBR322 plasmid (designated as ), in which its Tc cassette was also removed by the BamHI/SalI digestion, was constructed and was used as control. The control plasmid as well as pBR322htrA were then electroporated into their corresponding Y. pestis strains (i.e., WT and lpp Y. pestis CO92 strains), respectively, by using a Gene Pulser Xcell (BioRad, Hercules, CA) in 2 mm cuvettes [31, 32]. The presence of the transformed plasmids in the corresponding Y. pestis strains was verified by plasmid isolation and restriction enzyme digestion.

2.5. Intracellular Survival of Y. Pestis Strains

Y. pestis strains were grown overnight in 3 mL of HIB broth at then stored at until the day of infection. Cultures were serially diluted and plated on trypticase soy agar plates with 5% sheep blood (SBA) in order to quantitate colony forming units (cfus) per mL. RAW 264.7 murine macrophages at approximately 3 106 cells/well (70% confluence) were infected with Y. pestis CO92 strains at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 1, as previously described [19, 27, 28]. Plates were incubated at and 5% CO2 for 45 minutes to facilitate infection of RAW cells with the bacteria. After 45 minutes, infection medium was removed from the wells, and Dulbecco’s modified Eagle’s medium supplemented with 200  g/mL gentamicin was added to the monolayers to kill any extracellular bacteria. After 1 hour, the gentamicin-supplemented medium was replaced with medium containing a lower concentration of gentamicin (10  g/mL) in all plates except the 0-hour control plates for the duration of the experiment.

Beginning with the 0-h control plate, cells were harvested every 4 hours by the following method. After assessing the cell viability using light microscopy, the medium from each well was removed and the monolayers carefully washed 2X with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). The cells were lysed using 300  L of ice-cold sterile water and released from the well using a sterile cell scrapper. The macrophage suspensions were serially diluted and cultured on SBA plates, which were then incubated at for 48 hours and the number of bacteria in each well was quantitated.

3. Results

3.1. Microarray Analysis of WT Y. Pestis CO92, Compared to Its Δlpp Mutant, Reveals Vastly Different Gene Expression Profiles at Vector and Mammalian Host Temperatures

WT Y. pestis CO92 and its Δlpp mutant were cultured at 26 and , which represent the ambient temperatures of the flea vector and its mammalian hosts, respectively. To better understand how deletion of the lpp gene might influence gene expression, we performed two color microarrays on the Y. pestis CO92 Δlpp mutant, compared to the WT strain at each temperature. The WT and mutant strains were grown simultaneously under identical conditions, and the experiment was performed in triplicate, resulting in six dual-color arrays (3 arrays for bacteria grown at and 3 arrays at and then shifting the temperature to ). Lowess normalization was performed on all three arrays for each temperature set using GeneSpring GX10 microarray analysis software, and hybridization signals below background were removed before further analysis. Student’s test with Benjamini and Hochberg correction was performed, and only those genes with a value that were differentially expressed in the mutant bacteria by at least 1.5-fold for each replicate were considered as significantly altered.

Based on these criteria, there were 51 genes that exhibited significant reduction in expression at in the Δlpp mutant, compared to WT Y. pestis CO92 (Table 1). Hierarchical clustering produced a heat map that similarly demonstrated significant differences in expression for these genes and also successfully separated the three replicate experiments for the Δlpp mutant and WT strains, as shown in Figure 1. As expected, the lpp gene itself (listed as mlpA in Table 1) was identified by the analysis as down-regulated 362-fold in the Δlpp mutant, compared to WT Y. pestis CO92 (Table 1). The majority of genes that were down-regulated in the absence of lpp (at ) were those involved in various metabolic processes (e.g., protein and nucleic acid synthesis and energy production). There were also nine virulence genes, mainly T3SS components, and effectors that were down-regulated in the Δlpp mutant, compared to WT Y. pestis, when both were grown at (Table 1). Interestingly, there were no genes more highly expressed in the mutant grown at , compared to WT Y. pestis cultured under the same conditions.

When the temperature was shifted from to and the experiment was repeated, there were only 39 genes that were significantly altered in expression in the Δlpp mutant, compared to WT Y. pestis based on microarray analysis (Table 2). The gene encoding Lpp was significantly repressed ( 1,138-fold) in the mutant, compared to WT Y. pestis CO92, as was found for the Δlpp mutant grown at (Table 1). In addition to the lpp gene, there were three other genes that were similarly reduced in expression in the Y. pestis CO92 Δlpp mutant when cultured at or first at and then at : two hypothetical genes encoding proteins and the gene encoding D-lactate dehydrogenase (data not shown). The remaining 35 gene expression alterations were specific to , suggesting that Lpp plays a role in bacterial gene expression that occurs during the transition between Yersinia’s flea vector and the mammalian host environment.

Another notable difference between bacteria grown at 26 and was that the transcriptome of the Δlpp mutant cultured at included four upregulated genes: two stress response genes, one gene that codes for a putative membrane protein and a gene whose product is involved in gamma-aminobutyrate metabolism (Table 2). Most interesting was the nearly complete lack of overlap in gene functions between bacteria grown at and those cultured at in the absence of the lpp gene. The only functions that the two gene sets had in common were cell envelope structure maintenance and metabolism (Figure 2). Only the Δlpp mutant that was shifted from to exhibited alterations (mainly downregulation compared to WT Y. pestis) in genes important for protein secretion and trafficking (non-T3SS components), stress response, toxin production and resistance, and other notable virulence factors (Table 2 and Figure 2). For example, the iron-sulfur cluster assembly genes iscR and nifS were both down-regulated in the Δlpp mutant compared to the WT bacterium (2-fold and 1.9-fold, resp., Table 2). Other down-regulated stress response genes included htpN (reduced 3.5-fold) degQ (reduced 1.9-fold) and htrA (reduced 2.9-fold, Table 2). We also noted down-regulation of qacE and ymoA genes (reduced 4.1- and 2.2-fold, resp., Table 2), which are important for bacterial virulence.

3.2. Intracellular Survival of Y. pestis CO92 Δlpp Mutant Is Restored Following Complementation with the htrA Gene

RAW murine macrophages were infected with Y. pestis strains at an MOI of 1. At 0, 4, 8, and 12 hours post infection (p.i.) monolayers were lysed, harvested, and cultured on SBA plates to enumerate the number of bacteria in each well. Our previous studies have shown that lack of the lpp gene decreases the ability of this mutant bacterium to survive within the harsh environment of macrophages [19, 27]. As our microarray analysis data showed, there was a decrease in the htrA gene expression in the lpp mutant after temperature shift as compared to WT-infected cells (Table 2). This gene (also referred to as gsrA) was previously shown to be important for intracellular survival of Y. enterocolitica in macrophages [33, 34]. Therefore, we hypothesized that complementation of the Δlpp mutant with the htrA gene in trans would facilitate the restoration of intracellular survival of this mutant in macrophages.

At 4 hours p.i. (Figure 3), the number of Y. pestis Δlpp mutant bacteria containing only the control plasmid recovered from the macrophages significantly decreased as compared to those from macrophages infected with the WT bacteria harboring the control plasmid. The number of Y. pestis Δlpp mutant bacteria containing the pBR322/htrA plasmid that were recovered from macrophages, however, did not decrease after 4 hours of infection and, in fact, was about 10% higher than the number of WT bacteria containing the plasmid recovered from macrophages. At 8 hours p.i., the recovery of Y pestis Δlpp mutant bacteria was significantly lower than that of WT bacteria-infected macrophages. Additionally, the number of Δlpp mutant bacteria containing the pBR322/htrA plasmid recovered from macrophages was significantly higher than that of WT bacteria-infected cells. This trend continues through 12 hours p.i., indicating a possible protective effect from the harsh environment of macrophages on Y. pestis Δlpp mutant bacteria following complementation with the htrA gene.

4. Discussion

In the present study, we compared the global transcriptomes of a lpp mutant of Y. pestis CO92 to the WT strain at and by shifting temperature from 26 to , we demonstrated that vastly different transcriptional responses to the lpp gene deletion occurred under the two different temperature conditions. At , which simulates the flea vector temperature conditions, mainly metabolic genes were altered in response to the lpp gene deletion, compared to WT Y. pestis. More interesting was the down-regulation of the T3SS components, as well as the ail (attachment-invasion locus) gene, which encodes a virulence-associated outer membrane protein that promotes invasion of epithelial cells [35], inhibits the antibody-mediated classical pathway of complement activation via binding the complement regulator C4b-binding protein [36], and is uniquely expressed in virulent strains of Y. enterocolitica [37].

In Y. pestis, the Ail protein was recently shown to mediate binding and delivery of Yop proteins to human epithelial cells and human monocytes [38] and was additionally demonstrated to be critical for Y. pestis infection of mice [38]. It is unclear why these potent virulence factor-encoding genes would be expressed at in the presence of the lpp gene since this temperature simulates the environment in the flea where type 3 secretion and mammalian immune evasion are not needed. It is possible that Lpp plays a role in directly or indirectly modulating the function of these genes; however, we did not observe any alteration in T3SS components or ail when the temperature was shifted to to mimic the temperature of the Y. pestis during infection of the mammalian host. It is possible that transcriptional regulation of T3SS components is related to differential modification of Lpp at these two temperatures, a phenomenon which has been demonstrated for LPS [39]. Our previous studies, in which we observed differential sensitivity of Y. pestis CO92 to polymyxin B when cultured in vitro versus in vivo [28], support this hypothesis, which we plan to further investigate in future. Polymyxin B appears to bind differentially to various forms of LPS produced by Y. pestis under in vitro versus in vivo growth conditions, thus showing differential susceptibility of bacteria to this antibiotic in these two environments.

While survival of Y. pestis in its flea vector is only peripherally related to pathogenicity in humans, it is nonetheless a critical part of the infective cycle, and some genes that are important for virulence might also play a role in survival outside the mammalian host. The protein encoded by guaB for instance, which was reduced in expression by 22-fold in Y. pestis lpp mutant compared to the WT strain at , is a key enzyme in the purine salvage pathway that seems to play a dual role in Borrelia burgdorferi. The activity of GuaB was recently shown to be essential for B. burgdorferi infection of mice and was also demonstrated to provide a growth advantage to the bacteria in the tick [40]. The authors concluded that GuaB is critical for the survival of B. burgdorferi in the infection cycle and that there are likely differences in the requirements for purine salvage in the tick and mammalian environments. Our results support their conclusions and further suggest that Lpp plays a role in adaptation to the different metabolic needs of Y. pestis in the flea and mammalian environments.

In contrast to what was observed for the lpp mutant cultured at , Y. pestis that was grown in the absence of lpp at exhibited a significant perturbation in the transcription of multiple stress response and virulence genes (Table 2 and Figure 2). Also altered in expression were genes related to Type VI secretion and the regulation of protein translocation and trafficking (Table 2). Some of the genes altered in the absence of the lpp gene at play multiple roles related to cell survival and virulence. For example, the iscR gene, which was down-regulated in the Y. pestis lpp mutant as compared to the WT bacterium (Table 2), encodes a transcriptional regulator that controls the expression of genes required for the biosynthesis of iron-sulfur clusters. In E. coli, iscR controls iron-dependent biofilm formation [41], and more generally the ISC system is important for survival during oxidative stress and in response to iron deprivation [42]. Likewise, the gene encoding NifS that was down-regulated in the lpp mutant compared to WT Y. pestis (Table 2) is also a regulator of iron-sulfur cluster biosynthesis and is important for the survival of various bacteria in hostile environments [43, 44].

There were three genes involved in toxin production and/or antibiotic resistance that were down-regulated in the lpp mutant at , as compared to WT Y. pestis. One of these genes encodes QacE (Table 2), which was shown to be associated with multiple resistances to antibiotics and antiseptics in clinical isolates of Enterobacter cloacae, Citrobacter freundii, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Stenotrophomonas maltophilia [45], as well as environmental and clinical isolates of Vibrio parahaemolyticus and V. cholerae [46]. Two genes related to spheroplast formation (pesticin and a gene similar to the Bacillus subtilis stage V sporulation protein R) were down-regulated in the lpp mutant, compared to WT Y. pestis (Table 2). YmoA, also down-regulated in expression in the Y. pestis lpp mutant compared to WT bacteria (Table 2), has been shown to negatively regulate the expression of Y. enterocolitica [47] and pseudotuberculosis [48] invasin, important for the initiation of infection. The importance of invasin in these two species of Yersinia is understandable as these are gastrointestinal pathogens. However, since Y. pestis directly enters the blood stream, the importance of this invasin gene in plague needs to be further explored.

The vast majority of genes that were altered in expression in the Y. pestis lpp mutant cultured at , compared to WT bacteria, were those related to survival during stress, including increases in temperature. For example, the gene encoding HtpN was down-regulated 3.5-fold in the Y. pestis lpp mutant, relative to the WT strain (Table 2), and this protein is important for survival of E. coli at higher temperatures (up to ) [49] and has additionally been proposed to play a role in E. coli biofilm formation [50]. The expression of the gene encoding DegQ was reduced by 1.9-fold in the lpp mutant compared to WT Y. pestis (Table 2). This protein was originally identified in E. coli as an essential component for growth at elevated (30 ) temperatures [51], and mutations in the degQ gene were also shown to affect survival of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium in the host [52]. Similarly, HtrA is a heat-shock inducible chaperone and protease, and the human homologue can additionally associate with microtubules and thereby inhibit cell migration [53]. In Streptococcus pneumoniae, HtrA regulates bacteriocin activity [54], and when mutated in Mycobacterium tuberculosis, it attenuates virulence in mice [55]. In this study, we demonstrated that HtrA can restore the ability of the Y. pestis lpp mutant to survive in macrophages (Figure 3). This suggests that Lpp-mediated intracellular survival of bacteria in host immune cells is mediated through the activation of the htrA gene transcription.

Interestingly, the IcrQ/yscM genes, which code for putative T3SS regulatory proteins, were down-regulated in the lpp mutant of Y. pestis CO92 compared to its WT bacterium(5.3-fold).The potential function of these regulatory genes is to block transcription of the yop genes.However, our recent studies indicated that the T3SS was intact in the Δlpp mutant and it translocated YopH and YopE effectors into HeLa cells similar to that of WT bacteria [19]. Further, HeLa cells infected with the WT and mutant bacteria exhibited similar T3SS-associated cytotoxicity [19]. Consequently, the role of these protein secretion and trafficking genes in the context of transcription of yop genes needs to further investigated.

5. Conclusions

This study provided the first comprehensive assessment of the global effects of lpp gene mutation on Y. pestis CO92 gene expression, as well as a comparison of the Y. pestis lpp mutant transcriptomes at versus , which simulate the flea vector and mammalian host environments, respectively. Our results support a role for Lpp in survival of Y. pestis in the harsh environment of the host and the switch in gene expression from mainly metabolic functions to stress response and virulence genes when the temperature of growth was shifted from 26 to . We additionally propose that inhibition of intracellular survival of Y. pestis lpp mutant in macrophages is mediated via repression of htrA gene transcription, based on our ability to restore survivability of Δlpp mutant of Y. pestis CO92 complemented with the htrA gene. This study underscores the importance of performing experiments such as these at the host temperature and comparing gene expression alterations under different culturing conditions. Finally, our data tend to suggest that the lpp gene may also have a regulatory role in addition to its role as a structural gene.

Acknowledgments

This research was supported by NIH/NIAID grants AI06438 and N01-AI-30065. The fourth author was a predoctoral fellow supported by the NIAID T32 Emerging and Tropical Infectious Diseases (AI07526) and Biodefense (AI060549) training grants. The first author was supported by the NIH/NIAID Western Regional Center of Excellence in Biodefense.