| Literature DB >> 18509454 |
Pierre-Edouard Fournier1, Lokmane Belghazi, Catherine Robert, Khalid Elkarkouri, Allen L Richards, Gilbert Greub, François Collyn, Motohiko Ogawa, Arantxa Portillo, Jose A Oteo, Anna Psaroulaki, Idir Bitam, Didier Raoult.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Since its first detection, characterization of R. felis has been a matter of debate, mostly due to the contamination of an initial R. felis culture by R. typhi. However, the first stable culture of R. felis allowed its precise phenotypic and genotypic characterization, and demonstrated that this species belonged to the spotted fever group rickettsiae. Later, its genome sequence revealed the presence of two forms of the same plasmid, physically confirmed by biological data. In a recent article, Gillespie et al. (PLoS One. 2007;2(3):e266.) used a bioinformatic approach to refute the presence of the second plasmid form, and proposed the creation of a specific phylogenetic group for R. felis. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18509454 PMCID: PMC2384004 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0002289
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1The R. felis plasmids.
Specific PCR amplification of the two R. felis plasmid forms. Lane 1: Molecular size (bp); lane 2: pRFa-pRFb amplicon; lane 3: pRFc-pRFd amplicon; lane 4: pRFa-pRFd amplicon; b) Schematic representation of R. felis plasmids indicating the position of PCR primers used to amplify the pRF (pRFa/pRFb and pRFc/pRFd primer pairs) and pRFδ (pRFa/pRFd primer pair) plasmids.
PCR results obtained by all five tester laboratories
| DNA specimen (species) | PCR assay (primers) | |||
| B–E (pRFa-pRFd) | B-C (pRFa-pRFb) | D-E (pRFc-pRFd) | AF-AR | |
| DNA1 ( | + | + | + | + |
| DNA2 ( | - | - | - | + |
| DNA3 ( | - | - | - | + |
Figure 2Cloning of R. felis cells using a plaque assay.
White arrows show individual lysis plaques. Right, a lysis plaque was enlarged.
Figure 3Determination of the R. felis plasmid ratio.
The Southern blot obtained by hybridizing R. felis genomic DNA digested with PvuI and resolved by PFGE with probes specific for each plasmid form [18] was digitalized by transmission scanning (ImageScanner, Amersham Biosciences). The quantification of each labelled plasmid band was estimated by analysis with the ImageMaster 2D Platinium Version 6.0 software (Amersham Biosciences). The pRF and pRFδ spots represented 57% and 43%, respectively, of the hybridization intensity.
Genetic variability of R. felis strain URRWXCal2 T compared to other studied strains
| Strain | LSU | LSU | Algerian |
| URRWXCal2 T | D | I | D |
Sequences from the LSU strain were determined by Bouyer et al. [25];
Sequences from the LSU strain were determined by Pornwiroon et al. [14];
D = different genotype;
I = Identical genotype;
= ompA gene;
= gltA gene.
Figure 4Phylogenetic tree inferred from the comparison of 667 concatenated Rickettsia core protein-coding genes using the maximum parsimony method.
Bootstrap values are indicated at branch nodes. A similar topology was obtained using the Neighbor-Joining analysis method.
DNA specimens sent to expert laboratories
| Anonymized DNA label | Species | Strain |
| DNA1 |
| URRWXCal2 T (ATCC VR1525) |
| DNA2 |
| Malish 7 T (ATCC VR613) |
| DNA3 |
| ESF-5T |