| Literature DB >> 18826580 |
Roy Gross1, Carlos A Guzman, Mohammed Sebaihia, Vítor A P Martins dos Santos, Dietmar H Pieper, Ralf Koebnik, Melanie Lechner, Daniela Bartels, Jens Buhrmester, Jomuna V Choudhuri, Thomas Ebensen, Lars Gaigalat, Stefanie Herrmann, Amit N Khachane, Christof Larisch, Stefanie Link, Burkhard Linke, Folker Meyer, Sascha Mormann, Diana Nakunst, Christian Rückert, Susanne Schneiker-Bekel, Kai Schulze, Frank-Jörg Vorhölter, Tetyana Yevsa, Jacquelyn T Engle, William E Goldman, Alfred Pühler, Ulf B Göbel, Alexander Goesmann, Helmut Blöcker, Olaf Kaiser, Rosa Martinez-Arias.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bordetella petrii is the only environmental species hitherto found among the otherwise host-restricted and pathogenic members of the genus Bordetella. Phylogenetically, it connects the pathogenic Bordetellae and environmental bacteria of the genera Achromobacter and Alcaligenes, which are opportunistic pathogens. B. petrii strains have been isolated from very different environmental niches, including river sediment, polluted soil, marine sponges and a grass root. Recently, clinical isolates associated with bone degenerative disease or cystic fibrosis have also been described.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18826580 PMCID: PMC2572626 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-9-449
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
General features of the Bordetella genomes
| Size (bp) | 4,086,186 | 4,773,551 | 5,338,400 | 3,732,255 | 5,287,950 |
| GC content (%) | 67.72 | 68.10 | 68.07 | 61.58 | 65.48 |
| Coding sequences | 3,816 | 4,404 | 5,007 | 3,417 | 5,034 |
| Pseudogenes | 358 | 220 | 18 | 68 | 125 |
| Coding density | 91.6% | 92.2% | 92.0% | 88.6% | 90,6% |
| Average gene size (bp) | 978 | 987 | 978 | 972 | 957 |
| rRNA operons | 3 | 3 | 3 | 3 | 3 |
| tRNA | 51 | 53 | 55 | 61 | 51 |
| IS | 238 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| IS | 0 | 22 | 0 | 0 | 1 (truncated) |
| IS | 6 | 90 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| IS | 17 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 6 |
| IS | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 98 |
Figure 1Circular representations of the genome of . The circles represent, from the outside in; 1+2, all transcribed CDS (clockwise and counter-clockwise, respectively) [Colour coding: dark blue, pathogenicity/adaptation; black, energy metabolism; red, information transfer; dark green, surface associated; cyan, degradation of large molecules; magenta, degradation of small molecules; yellow, central/intermediary metabolism; pale green, unknown; pale blue, regulators; orange, conserved hypothetical; brown, pseudogenes; pink, phage and IS elements; grey, miscellaneous]; 3, genomic islands [grey: GI; red (clockwise): GI1, 2, 3 and 6; dark purple: GI4; blue: GI5; Green: GI7; light purple: prophages; brown: remnants of prophages or GI]; 4, aromatic compounds metabolism (purple) and bug (green) genes, a gene family which has experienced a vast amplification in the Bordetellae possibly encoding periplasmic binding proteins [53]; 5, IS elements; 6, GC content (plotted using a 10 kb window); 8, GC deviation [(G-C)/(G+C) plotted using a 10 kb window; khaki indicates values > 1, purple < 1].
Figure 2. Syntenic plot between the genomes of B. petrii strain DSMZ12804, B. bronchiseptica RB50, B. parapertussis 12822, B. pertussis Tohama I and B. avium 197N. The diagram depicts x-y plots of dots forming syntenic regions between B. petrii (x-axis) and the three other Bordetella genomes (y-axis), with coordinates corresponding to the CDS number in each genome. Each coloured dot (green, B. bronchiseptica RB50; orange, B. parapertussis 12822; lilac, B. pertussis Tohama I; red, B. avium 197N) represents a B. petrii strain DSMZ12804 CDS having an orthologue in one of the three compared genomes. The orthologues were identified by bi-directional best BLASTP matches of amino acid sequences (e-value < e-30).
Major features of the B. petrii genomic islands
| GI (Bpet0187-0310) | 201731..346691 (144961) | No integrase and direct repeats (DR) |
| Capsular polysaccharide genes | ||
| 2 autotransporters | ||
| Metabolism of phthalate and protocatechuate, urea amidohydrolase | ||
| GI1 (Bpet1009-1275) | 1084007..1339483 (255477) | |
| Metabolism of an unknown aromatic compound (Bpet1116-1123) | ||
| GI2 (Bpet1288-1437) | 1350143..1493539 (143397) | |
| Metabolism of benzoate, benzylalcohol, 3-hydroxybenzoate, putative monooxygenase (Bpet1330) | ||
| Putative (chloro)phenol monooxygenase (Bpet1331) | ||
| nitrile hydratase (Bpet1415-1416) | ||
| GI3 (Bpet1438-1545) | 1493557..1595653 (102110) | Almost identical to the |
| Metabolism of chlorocatechol, anthranilate | ||
| Short chain dehydrogenase (Bpet1512) | ||
| GI4 (Bpet2166-2216) | 2250672..2297721 (47176) | Tn |
| GI5 (Bpet3699-3770) | 3912214..3979917 (67704) | Integrase, features of conjugative transposons |
| Metabolism of chlorocatechol (2 gene clusters), tetrachlorobenzene | ||
| 4 glutathione S-transferase (Bpet3724-3727) | ||
| GI6 (Bpet4174-4316) | 4417761..4576856 (159096) | |
| Multidrug efflux pump | ||
| Iron transport system. | ||
| GI7 (Bpet4544-4630) | 4804478..4893272 (88795) | Integrase, DR (3' end of tRNAPhe), features of conjugative transposons |
| Several heavy metal resistance systems | ||
Figure 3Schematic representation of the region encompassing GI1, GI2 and GI3 in the wild type strain (A) and in a spontaneous deletion variant (B). The duplicated sequence at the insertion site is shown in red and marked as DR. The position of the tRNAGly genes (blue) are indicated, as well as the location of the integrase encoding genes (red arrows).
Figure 4Schematic presentation of the central intermediate metabolism of . Dotted arrows indicate the presence of multiple reaction steps between two metabolites. Black triangles indicated phage particles. On the bottom left the meaning of the various symbols for membrane components are explained. The electron micrograph shows the sequenced B. petrii strain.
Figure 5Overview of the degradation capacity of aromatic compounds by . Aromatic compounds (boxed) are funneled through a variety of peripheral reactions (represented by arrows) into central intermediates, which are then processed by a central pathway to TCA cycle intermediates. However, neither salicylate nor phenylacetate could be used by B. petrii as sole source of carbon and energy (data not shown), probably due to the absence of a ferredoxin reductase encoding gene within the salicylate 5-hydroxylase encoding gene cluster (Bpet2804-2806 cluster), and an incomplete paaZ gene in the phenylacetate catabolic gene cluster (Bpet 1923–1935). 4-hydroxyphenylacetate is used as sole source of carbon and energy (data not shown), even though no gene with similarity to those encoding 4-hydroxyphenylacetate 3-hydroxylase was found in the genome (see Methods for experimental details).