J

Jaydeep K. Srimani

BioMarin (United States)

Publishes on Bacterial Genetics and Biotechnology, Antibiotic Resistance in Bacteria, Bacterial biofilms and quorum sensing. 17 papers and 1.3k citations.

17Publications
1.3kTotal Citations

Is this you? Claim your profile.

Add your photo, update your bio, and get notified when your ranking changes.

Top publicationsby citations

Persistence and reversal of plasmid-mediated antibiotic resistance
Allison J. Lopatkin, Hannah R. Meredith, Jaydeep K. Srimani et al.|Nature Communications|2017
Cited by 372Open Access

In the absence of antibiotic-mediated selection, sensitive bacteria are expected to displace their resistant counterparts if resistance genes are costly. However, many resistance genes persist for long periods in the absence of antibiotics. Horizontal gene transfer (primarily conjugation) could explain this persistence, but it has been suggested that very high conjugation rates would be required. Here, we show that common conjugal plasmids, even when costly, are indeed transferred at sufficiently high rates to be maintained in the absence of antibiotics in Escherichia coli. The notion is applicable to nine plasmids from six major incompatibility groups and mixed populations carrying multiple plasmids. These results suggest that reducing antibiotic use alone is likely insufficient for reversing resistance. Therefore, combining conjugation inhibition and promoting plasmid loss would be an effective strategy to limit conjugation-assisted persistence of antibiotic resistance.

The inoculum effect and band‐pass bacterial response to periodic antibiotic treatment
Cheemeng Tan, Robert P. Smith, Jaydeep K. Srimani et al.|Molecular Systems Biology|2012
Cited by 105Open Access

The inoculum effect (IE) refers to the decreasing efficacy of an antibiotic with increasing bacterial density. It represents a unique strategy of antibiotic tolerance and it can complicate design of effective antibiotic treatment of bacterial infections. To gain insight into this phenomenon, we have analyzed responses of a lab strain of Escherichia coli to antibiotics that target the ribosome. We show that the IE can be explained by bistable inhibition of bacterial growth. A critical requirement for this bistability is sufficiently fast degradation of ribosomes, which can result from antibiotic-induced heat-shock response. Furthermore, antibiotics that elicit the IE can lead to 'band-pass' response of bacterial growth to periodic antibiotic treatment: the treatment efficacy drastically diminishes at intermediate frequencies of treatment. Our proposed mechanism for the IE may be generally applicable to other bacterial species treated with antibiotics targeting the ribosomes.

Division of labour between Myc and G1 cyclins in cell cycle commitment and pace control
Peng Dong, Manoj V. Maddali, Jaydeep K. Srimani et al.|Nature Communications|2014
Cited by 96Open Access

A body of evidence has shown that the control of E2F transcription factor activity is critical for determining cell cycle entry and cell proliferation. However, an understanding of the precise determinants of this control, including the role of other cell-cycle regulatory activities, has not been clearly defined. Here, recognizing that the contributions of individual regulatory components could be masked by heterogeneity in populations of cells, we model the potential roles of individual components together with the use of an integrated system to follow E2F dynamics at the single-cell level and in real time. These analyses reveal that crossing a threshold amplitude of E2F accumulation determines cell cycle commitment. Importantly, we find that Myc is critical in modulating the amplitude, whereas cyclin D/E activities have little effect on amplitude but do contribute to the modulation of duration of E2F activation, thereby affecting the pace of cell cycle progression. The transcription factor E2F is critical for determining cell proliferation. By monitoring E2F activity in single cells throughout the cell cycle, Dong et al.provide evidence that Myc and G1 cyclin/CDKs regulate different aspects of E2F temporal dynamics, resulting in distinct phenotypic outputs.