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Thomas Candela

Thomas Candela

Faculté de Pharmacie
Paris Sud XI
EA 4043–Ecosystème Microbien Digestif et Santé

bat E1-3ème étage
5 rue Jean-Baptiste Clément
92296 Châtenay-Malabry (France)
thomas.candela@u-psud.fr
POSITION:
Associate Professor in Bacteriology and member of the academic research team EA 4043: Ecosystem Digestive and Health, at the Faculty of Pharmacy (Université Paris-Sud 11), France

EDUCATION AND DIPLOMAS:
2008/2009 Research associate at Newcastle university (ICaMB).
subject: Bacterial Actin MreB in Cell Morphogenesis and Cell Division supervised by Kenn Gerdes

2006/2008 Post-doc, French National Institute of Agronomy (INRA)
subject: Does Bacillus cereus form biofilms in vivo (insect)? Supervised by M.Gohar and C. Nielsen-Leroux.
Microbiology and Molecular Genetics Unit, team directed by S. Aymerich,
Microbial Genetics and Environment Unit, directed by D. Lereclus.

2001/2005 Ph.D. in Microbiology, Pasteur Institute, Paris
subject: Bacillus anthracis surface components: capsule, S layer, peptidoglycan. Mentor: A. Fouet.
Toxins and Bacterial Pathogenesis Unit directed by M. Mock.

Journal articles

2011
Thomas Candela, Emmanuel Maes, Estelle Garenaux, Yoann Rombouts, Frederic Krzewinski, Michel Gohar, Yann Guerardel (2011)  Environmental and biofilm-dependent changes in a Bacillus cereus secondary cell wall polysaccharide.   J Biol Chem Jul  
Abstract: Bacterial species from the Bacillus genus, including Bacillus cereus and Bacillus anthracis, synthesize secondary cell wall polymers (SCWP) covalently associated to the peptidoglycan through a phospho-diester linkage. Although such components were observed in a wide panel of B. cereus and B. anthracis strains, the effect of culture conditions or of bacterial growth state on their synthesis has never been addressed. Herein we show that B. cereus ATCC 14579 can synthesize not only one, as previously reported, but two structurally unrelated SCWP polysaccharides. The first of these SCWP →4)[GlcNAc(β1-3)]GlcNAc(β1-6)[Glc(β1-3)][ManNAc(α1-4)]GalNAc(α1-4)ManNAc(β1→, although presenting an original sequence, fits to the already described the canonical sequence motif of SCWP. In contrast, the second polysaccharide was made up by a totally original sequence →6)Gal(α1-2)(2-R-hydroxyglutar-5-ylamido)Fuc2NAc4N(α1-6)GlcNAc(β1→ which none equivalent has ever been identified in the Bacillus genus. In addition, we established that the synthesis of these two polysaccharides were differently regulated; whereas the first is constantly expressed at the surface of the bacteria, the expression of the second is tightly regulated depending on culture conditions and on growth in planktonic state or in biofilm.
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Diana Chapetón Montes, Thomas Candela, Anne Collignon, Claire Janoir (2011)  Localization of the Clostridium difficile cysteine protease Cwp84 and insights into its maturation process.   J Bacteriol Jul  
Abstract: Clostridium difficile is a nosocomial pathogen involved in antibiotic-associated diarrhea. C. difficile expresses a cysteine protease, Cwp84, which has been shown to degrade some proteins of the extracellular matrix and play a role in the maturation of the precursor of the S-layer proteins. We sought to analyze the localization and the maturation process of this protease. Two identifiable forms of the protease were found to be associated in the bacteria: a form of about 80 kDa and a cleaved one of 47 kDa, identified as the mature protease. They were found mainly in the bacterial cell surface fractions, and weakly in the extracellular fraction. The 80 kDa protein was non covalently associated to the S-layer proteins, while the 47 kDa form was found to be tightly associated with the underlying cell wall. Our data supported that the anchoring of the Cwp84 47 kDa form is presumably due to a re-association of the secreted protein. Moreover, we showed that the complete maturation of the recombinant protein Cwp84(30-803) is a sequential process beginning at the C-terminal end, followed by one or more cleavages at the N-terminal end. The processing sites of recombinant Cwp84 are likely to be residues Ser-92 and Lys-518. No proteolytic activity was detected with the mature recombinant protease Cwp84(92-518) (47 kDa). In contrast, a fragment including the pro-peptide (Cwp84(30-518)) displayed proteolytic activity on azocasein and fibronectin. These results showed that Cwp84 is processed essentially at the bacterial cell surface, and that its different forms may display different proteolytic activity.
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2009
Thomas Candela, Marie Moya, Michel Haustant, Agnès Fouet (2009)  Fusobacterium nucleatum, the first Gram-negative bacterium demonstrated to produce polyglutamate.   Can J Microbiol 55: 5. 627-632 May  
Abstract: Poly-gamma-glutamate has been described in many Gram-positive organisms. When anchored to the surface, it is a capsule and as such a virulence factor. Based on sequence similarities, few Gram-negative organisms have been suggested to synthesize poly-gamma-glutamate. For the first time, a Gram-negative bacterium, Fusobacterium nucleatum, is shown to produce and secrete poly-gamma-glutamate. Putative poly-gamma-glutamate-synthesizing genes from Gram-negative organisms have been compared with their Gram-positive homologs by in silico analysis, i.e., gene sequence and phylogenetic analysis. Clusters of three instead of four genes were highlighted by our screen. The products of the first two genes display similarity with their Gram-positive equivalents, yet the sequences from the Gram-negative organisms can be distinguished from those of the Gram-positives. Interestingly, the sequence of the predicted product of the third gene is conserved among Gram-negative bacteria but displays no similarity to that of either the third or fourth gene of the Gram-positive operons. It is suggested that, like for Gram-positive bacteria, poly-gamma-glutamate has a role in virulence for pathogens and one in survival for other Gram-negative bacteria.
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Alejandro Piris-Gimenez, Jean-Philippe Corre, Gregory Jouvion, Thomas Candela, Huot Khun, Pierre L Goossens (2009)  Encapsulated Bacillus anthracis interacts closely with liver endothelium.   J Infect Dis 200: 9. 1381-1389 Nov  
Abstract: The Bacillus anthracis poly-gamma-D-glutamate capsule is essential for virulence. It impedes phagocytosis and protects bacilli from the immune system, thus promoting systemic dissemination.
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2007
Catherine Raynaud, Karin L Meibom, Marie-Annick Lety, Iharilalao Dubail, Thomas Candela, Eric Frapy, Alain Charbit (2007)  Role of the wbt locus of Francisella tularensis in lipopolysaccharide O-antigen biogenesis and pathogenicity.   Infect Immun 75: 1. 536-541 Jan  
Abstract: Francisella tularensis is a highly infectious bacterial pathogen, responsible for the zoonotic disease tularemia. We screened a bank of transposon insertion mutants of F. tularensis subsp. holarctica LVS for colony morphology alterations and selected a mutant with a transposon insertion in wbtA, the first gene of the predicted lipopolysaccharide O-antigen gene cluster. Inactivation of wbtA led to the complete loss of O antigen, conferred serum sensitivity, impaired intracellular replication, and severely attenuated virulence in the mouse model. Notably, this mutant afforded protection against a challenge against virulent LVS.
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Benoit Raymond, Dominique Leduc, Lucas Ravaux, Ronan Le Goffic, Thomas Candela, Michel Raymondjean, Pierre Louis Goossens, Lhousseine Touqui (2007)  Edema toxin impairs anthracidal phospholipase A2 expression by alveolar macrophages.   PLoS Pathog 3: 12. Dec  
Abstract: Bacillus anthracis, the etiological agent of anthrax, is a spore-forming gram-positive bacterium. Infection with this pathogen results in multisystem dysfunction and death. The pathogenicity of B. anthracis is due to the production of virulence factors, including edema toxin (ET). Recently, we established the protective role of type-IIA secreted phospholipase A2 (sPLA2-IIA) against B. anthracis. A component of innate immunity produced by alveolar macrophages (AMs), sPLA2-IIA is found in human and animal bronchoalveolar lavages at sufficient levels to kill B. anthracis. However, pulmonary anthrax is almost always fatal, suggesting the potential impairment of sPLA2-IIA synthesis and/or action by B. anthracis factors. We investigated the effect of purified ET and ET-deficient B. anthracis strains on sPLA2-IIA expression in primary guinea pig AMs. We report that ET inhibits sPLA2-IIA expression in AMs at the transcriptional level via a cAMP/protein kinase A-dependent process. Moreover, we show that live B. anthracis strains expressing functional ET inhibit sPLA2-IIA expression, whereas ET-deficient strains induced this expression. This stimulatory effect, mediated partly by the cell wall peptidoglycan, can be counterbalanced by ET. We conclude that B. anthracis down-regulates sPLA2-IIA expression in AMs through a process involving ET. Our study, therefore, describes a new molecular mechanism implemented by B. anthracis to escape innate host defense. These pioneering data will provide new molecular targets for future intervention against this deadly pathogen.
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2006
Thomas Candela, Agnès Fouet (2006)  Poly-gamma-glutamate in bacteria.   Mol Microbiol 60: 5. 1091-1098 Jun  
Abstract: Poly-gamma-glutamate (PGA), a natural polymer, is synthesized by several bacteria (all Gram-positive), one archaea and one eukaryote. PGA has diverse biochemical properties, enabling it to play different roles, depending on the organism and its environment. Indeed, PGA allows bacteria to survive at high salt concentrations and may also be involved in virulence. The minimal gene sets required for PGA synthesis were recently defined. There are currently two nomenclatures depending on the PGA final status: cap, for 'capsule', when PGA is surface associated or pgs, for 'polyglutamate synthase', when PGA is released. The minimal gene sets contain four genes termed cap or pgs B, C, A and E. The PGA synthesis complex is membrane-anchored and uses glutamate and ATP as substrates. Schematically, the reaction may be divided into two steps, PGA synthesis and PGA transport through the membrane. PGA synthesis depends primarily on CapB-CapC (or PgsB-PgsC), whereas PGA transport requires the presence, or the addition, of CapA-CapE (or PgsAA-PgsE). The synthesis complex is probably responsible for the stereochemical specificity of PGA composition. Finally, PGA may be anchored to the bacterial surface or released. An additional enzyme is involved in this reaction: either CapD, a gamma-glutamyl-transpeptidase that catalyses anchorage of the PGA, or PgsS, a hydrolase that facilitates release. The anchoring of PGA to the bacterial surface is important for virulence. All cap genes are therefore potential targets for inhibitors specifically blocking PGA synthesis or anchorage.
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2005
Thomas Candela, Tâm Mignot, Xavier Hagnerelle, Michel Haustant, Agnès Fouet (2005)  Genetic analysis of Bacillus anthracis Sap S-layer protein crystallization domain.   Microbiology 151: Pt 5. 1485-1490 May  
Abstract: Bacillus anthracis, the aetiological agent of anthrax, synthesizes two surface-layer (S-layer) proteins. S-layers are two-dimensional crystalline arrays that completely cover bacteria. In rich medium, the B. anthracis S-layer consists of Sap during the exponential growth phase. Sap is a modular protein composed of an SLH (S-layer homology)-anchoring domain followed by a putative crystallization domain (Sap c). A projection map of the two-dimensional Sap array has been established on deflated bacteria. In this work, the authors used two approaches to investigate whether Sap c is the crystallization domain. The purified Sap c polypeptide (604 aa) was sufficient to form a crystalline structure, as illustrated by electron microscopy. Consistent with this result, the entire Sap c domain promoted auto-interaction in a bacterial two-hybrid screen developed for the present study. The screen was derived from a system that takes advantage of the Bordetella pertussis cyclase subdomain structure to enable one to identify peptides that interact. A screening strategy was then employed to study Sap c subdomains that mediate interaction. A random library, derived from the Sap c domain, was constructed and screened. The selected polypeptides interacting with the complete Sap c were all larger (155 aa and above) than the mean size of the randomly cloned peptides (approx. 60 residues). This result suggests that, in contrast with observations for other interactions studied with this two-hybrid system, large fragments were required to ensure efficient interaction. It was noteworthy that only one polypeptide, which spanned aa 148-358, was able to interact with less than the complete Sap c, in fact, with itself.
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Thomas Candela, Michèle Mock, Agnès Fouet (2005)  CapE, a 47-amino-acid peptide, is necessary for Bacillus anthracis polyglutamate capsule synthesis.   J Bacteriol 187: 22. 7765-7772 Nov  
Abstract: Polyglutamate is found in various bacteria, but displays different functions depending on the species and their environment. Here, we describe a minimal polyglutamate synthesis system in Bacillus anthracis. In addition to the three genes previously described as sufficient for polyglutamate synthesis, this system includes a small open reading frame, capE, belonging to the cap operon. The polyglutamate system's requirement for the five cap genes, for capsulation and anchoring, was assayed in nonpolar mutants. The capA, capB, capC, and capE genes are all necessary and are sufficient for polyglutamate synthesis by B. anthracis. capD is required for polyglutamate anchoring to the peptidoglycan. The 47-amino-acid peptide encoded by capE is localized in the B. anthracis membrane. It is not a regulator and it is required for polyglutamate synthesis, suggesting that it has a structural role in polyglutamate synthesis. CapE appears to interact with CapA. Bacillus subtilis ywtC is similar to capE and we named it pgsE. Genes similar to capE or pgsE were found in B. subtilis natto, Bacillus licheniformis, and Staphylococcus epidermidis, species that produce polyglutamate. All the bacterial polyglutamate synthesis systems analyzed show a similar genetic organization and, we suggest, the same protein requirements.
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Sophie Davison, Evelyne Couture-Tosi, Thomas Candela, Michèle Mock, Agnès Fouet (2005)  Identification of the Bacillus anthracis (gamma) phage receptor.   J Bacteriol 187: 19. 6742-6749 Oct  
Abstract: Bacillus anthracis, a gram-positive, spore-forming bacterium, is the etiological agent of anthrax. It belongs to the Bacillus cereus group, which also contains Bacillus cereus and Bacillus thuringiensis. Most B. anthracis strains are sensitive to phage gamma, but most B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains are resistant to the lytic action of phage gamma. Here, we report the identification of a protein involved in the bacterial receptor for the gamma phage, which we term GamR (Gamma phage receptor). It is an LPXTG protein (BA3367, BAS3121) and is anchored by the sortase A. A B. anthracis sortase A mutant is not as sensitive as the parental strain nor as the sortase B and sortase C mutants, whereas the GamR mutant is resistant to the lytic action of the phage. Electron microscopy reveals the binding of the phage to the surface of the parental strain and its absence from the GamR mutant. Spontaneous B. anthracis mutants resistant to the phage harbor mutations in the gene encoding the GamR protein. A B. cereus strain that is sensitive to the phage possesses a protein similar (89% identity) to GamR. B. thuringiensis 97-27, a strain which, by sequence analysis, is predicted to harbor a GamR-like protein, is resistant to the phage but nevertheless displays phage binding.
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Thomas Candela, Agnès Fouet (2005)  Bacillus anthracis CapD, belonging to the gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase family, is required for the covalent anchoring of capsule to peptidoglycan.   Mol Microbiol 57: 3. 717-726 Aug  
Abstract: Several examples of bacterial surface-structure anchoring have been described, but they do not include polyglutamate capsule. Bacillus anthracis capsule, which is composed only of poly-gamma- d-glutamate, is one of the two major virulence factors of the bacterium. We analysed its anchoring. We report that the polyglutamate is anchored directly to the peptidoglycan and that the bond is covalent. We constructed a capD mutant strain, capD being the fourth gene of the capsule biosynthetic operon. The mutant bacilli are surrounded by polyglutamate material that is not covalently anchored. Thus, CapD is required for the covalent anchoring of polyglutamate to the peptidoglycan. Sequence similarities suggest that CapD is a gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase. Furthermore, CapD is cleaved at the gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase consensus cleavage site, and the two subunits remain associated, as necessary for gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase activity. Other Gram-positive gamma-glutamyltranspeptidases are secreted, but CapD is located at the Bacillus surface, associated both with the membrane and the peptidoglycan. Polyglutamate is hydrolysed by CapD indicating that it is a CapD substrate. We suggest that CapD catalyses the capsule anchoring reaction. Interestingly, the CapD(-) strain is far less virulent than the parental strain.
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