| Literature DB >> 20502684 |
Candice M Mitchell1, Susan Hutton, Garry S A Myers, Robert Brunham, Peter Timms.
Abstract
Chlamydia pneumoniae is a common human and animal pathogen associated with a wide range of diseases. Since the first isolation of C. pneumoniae TWAR in 1965, all human isolates have been essentially clonal, providing little evolutionary insight. To address this gap, we investigated the genetic diversity of 30 isolates from diverse geographical locations, from both human and animal origin (amphibian, reptilian, equine and marsupial). Based on the level of variation that we observed at 23 discreet gene loci, it was clearly evident that the animal isolates were more diverse than the isolates of human origin. Furthermore, we show that C. pneumoniae isolates could be grouped into five major genotypes, A-E, with A, B, D and E genotypes linked by geographical location, whereas genotype C was found across multiple continents. Our evidence strongly supports two separate animal-to-human cross species transfer events in the evolutionary history of this pathogen. The C. pneumoniae human genotype identified in the USA, Canada, Taiwan, Iran, Japan, Korea and Australia (non-Indigenous) most likely originated from a single amphibian or reptilian lineage, which appears to have been previously geographically widespread. We identified a separate human lineage present in two Australian Indigenous isolates (independent geographical locations). This lineage is distinct and is present in Australian amphibians as well as a range of Australian marsupials.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20502684 PMCID: PMC2873915 DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1000903
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Pathog ISSN: 1553-7366 Impact factor: 6.823
Figure 1Sequence comparison of CPK_ORF00679.
Shown is a multiple sequence alignment of CPK_ORF00679 from bandicoot (B26), koala (LPCoLN), frog (DE177), horse (N16) and human sequences (AR39, CWL029, J138, TW183, TOR1, WA97001, 1979 and SH511. There are two distinct indels: (i) an extended segment at the 5′ end of the amino acid coding sequence, and (ii) a five amino acid indel between positions 244–248. The alignment was generated using Geneious version 4.7, where each amino acid is assigned its own colour. White shading indicates an amino acid variant.
Figure 2Variable number of tandem repeats polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for the pmpG6 gene.
Results from isolates with varying tandem repeats are as follows: lane 1 koala LPCoLN/3 repeats; lane 2 bandicoot B26/3 repeats; lane 3 frog DE177/3 repeats; lane 4 human SH511/3 repeats; lane 5 human 1979/3 repeats; lane 6 human AR39/2 repeats; lane 7 human TOR1/2 repeats; lane 8 human WA97001/2 repeats; lane 9 no template control, and; lane 10 MW, molecular weight maker X (Roche, Castle Hill, Australia).