The University of Texas Medical School at Houston
Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics

Hung Ton-That, Ph.D.

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  • Hung Ton-That, Ph.D.Associate Professor
  • Department of Microbiology &
    Molecular Genetics
  • University of Texas-Houston Medical School
    6431 Fannin Street, MSE R224
    Houston, Texas 77030
  • Telephone: (713) 500-5468
    Laboratory telephone: (713) 500-5462
    e-mail:ton-that.hung@uth.tmc.edu

Education:

Ph.D., University of California, Los Angeles, 2000

Postdoctoral Fellow, University of Chicago

Research Interests:

Pilus assembly of Gram-positive pathogens, host-pathogen interactions and bacterial pathogenesis

Gram-positive bacteria assemble on their surface covalently linked protein polymers, known as pili or fimbriae, that enable these bacteria to adhere to specific host tissues and initiate a pathogenic program. A typical pilus contains a major pilin forming the shaft and one or more minor pilin subunits. The heteromeric pilus is assembled by a specific transpeptidase enzyme called sortase. While the joining of individual pilins into a polymer is catalyzed by a pilus-specific sortase, anchoring of the pilus to the cell wall peptidoglycan is carried out by the housekeeping sortase. We use Actinomyces naeslundi, Corynebacterium diphtheriae and Streptococcus agalactiae (group B Streptococcus, GBS) as experimental models to answer three fundamental problems: (1) the mechanism of pilus assembly in Gram-positive bacteria, (2) the universality of the proposed mechanism, and (3) the role of pili in bacterial pathogenesis.

Some of outstanding questions are:
•            What governs the decision between pilus polymerization and cell wall anchoring?
•            What determines the substrate specificity of a sortase?
•            How does the housekeeping sortase modulate pilus assembly?
•            Is pilus expression and assembly regulated by host cues during infection?
•            What roles do pili play during in vivo infection?
•            How do pilins trigger inflammatory responses?

Lab Rotations: Available

The projects will be designed centering on the three major problems above and individual student interests. Our multidisciplinary approaches to these studies is a combination of immuno-fluorescence and electron microscopy, mass spectrometry, biochemical assays, molecular biology, immunology and in vitro and in vivo infection models (tissue cultures, Caenorhabditis elegans and rodent models).

Selected Publications:
  • Khare B, Krishnan V, Rajashankar K, Huang IH, Ma X, Ton-That H, and Narayana SV (2011). Structural Differences Between the Streptococcus agalactiae Housekeeping and Pilus-specific Sortases SrtA and SrtC1. PloS One, 6(8):e22995.[abstract]
  • Mishra A, Devarajan B, Reardon ME, Dwivedi P, Krishnan V, Cisar JO, Das A, Narayana SV and Ton-That H (2011). Two Autonomous Structural Modules in the Fimbrial Shaft Adhesin FimA Mediate Actinomyces Interactions with Streptococci and Host Cells during Oral Biofilm Development. Molecular Microbiology, 81(5):1205–1220. [abstract]
  • Rogers EA, Das A and Ton-That H (2011). Adhesion by Pathogenic Corynebacteria. Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology, 715:91-103. [abstract]
  • Wu C, Mishra A, Yang J, Cisar JO, Das A and Ton-That H (2011). Dual function of a tip fimbrillin of Actinomyces in fimbrial assembly and receptor binding. Journal of Bacteriology, 193(13):3197-206. [abstract]
  • Vengadesan K, Ma X, Dwivedi P, Ton-That H, Narayana SV (2011). A Model for Group B Streptococcus Pilus Type 1: The Structure of a 35-kDa C-Terminal Fragment of the Major Pilin GBS80. Journal of Molecular Biology, 407(5):731-43. [abstract]
  • Chang C, Mandlik A, Das A, Ton-That H (2011). Cell surface display of minor pilin adhesins in the form of a simple heterodimeric assembly in Corynebacterium diphtheriae. Molecular Microbiology, 79(5):1236-47. [abstract]
  • Mishra A, Wu C, Yang J, Cisar JO, Das A, Ton-That H. (2010) The Actinomyces oris type 2 fimbrial shaft FimA mediates co-aggregation with oral streptococci, adherence to red blood cells and biofilm development. Molecular Microbiology, 77(4), 841–854. [abstract]
  • Wu C, Ton-That H. (2010) Allelic exchange in Actinomyces oris with mCherry fluorescence counterselection. Appl Environ Microbiol, 76(17):5987-9. [abstract]
  • Sillanpää J, Nallapareddy SR, Singh KV, Prakash VP, Fothergill T, Ton-That H, Murray BE. (2010) Characterization of the ebp pilus-encoding operon of Enterococcus faecium and its role in biofilm formation and virulence in a murine model of urinary tract infection. Virulence, 1(4):236-246. [abstract]
  • Khare B, Samal A, Vengadesan K, Rajashankar KR, Ma X, Huang IH, Ton-That H, Narayana SV. (2010) Preliminary crystallographic study of the Streptococcus agalactiae sortases, sortase A and sortase C1. Acta Crystallogr Sect F Struct Biol Cryst Commun. 66(Pt 9):1096-100. [abstract]
  • Vengadesan K, Ma X, Dwivedi P, Ton-That H, Narayana SV. (2010) Purification, crystallization and halide phasing of a Streptococcus agalactiae backbone pilin GBS80 fragment. Acta Crystallogr Sect F Struct Biol Cryst Commun. 66(Pt 12):1666-9. [abstract]
  • Kang HJ, Paterson NG, Gaspar AH, Ton-That H* and Baker EN*. (2009) The Corynebacterium diphtheriae shaft pilin SpaA is built of tandem Ig-like modules with stabilizing isopeptide and disulfide bonds. PNAS, 106(40):16967-71. [abstract]
  • Guttilla IK, Gaspar AH, Swierczynski A, SwaminathanA, Dwivedi P, Das A, Ton-That H. (2009) Acyl enzyme intermediates in the sortase-catalyzed pilus morphogenesis in Gram-positive bacteria. Journal of Bacteriology, 191(18):5603-12. [abstract]
  • A Mandlik, A Das and Ton-That H. (2008) The molecular switch that activates the cell wall anchoring step of pilus assembly in gram-positive bacteria. PNAS, 105(37):14147-14152. [abstract]
  • A Mandlik, A Swierczynski, A Das and Ton-That H. (2008) Pili in Gram-positive bacteria: assembly, involvement in colonization and biofilm development. Trends in Microbiology, 16(1):33-40. [abstract]
  • A Swaminathan, A Mandlik, A Swierczynski, A Gaspar, A Das and Ton-That H. (2007) Housekeeping sortase facilitates the cell wall anchoring of pilus polymers in Corynebacterium diphtheriae. Molecular Microbiology, 66(4): 961–974 [abstract]
  • A Mandlik, A Swierczynski, A Das and Ton-That H. (2007) Corynebacterium diphtheriae employs specific minor pilins to target human pharyngeal epithelial cells. Molecular Microbiology, 64(1):111-124. [abstract]
  • A Mishra, A Das, J O Cisar and Ton-That H. (2007) Sortase-catalyzed assembly of distinct heteromeric fimbriae in Actinomyces naeslundii. Journal of Bacteriology, 189(8):3156-3165. [abstract]
[Search PubMed for more papers by Hung Ton-That]