| Literature DB >> 21187921 |
Liang Ma1, Jørgen S Jensen, Miriam Mancuso, Ryoichi Hamasuna, Qiuyao Jia, Chris L McGowin, David H Martin.
Abstract
Mycoplasma genitalium has been increasingly recognized as an important microbe not only because of its significant association with human genital tract diseases but also because of its utility as a model for studying the minimum set of genes necessary to sustain life. Despite its small genome, 4.7% of the total genome sequence is devoted to making the MgPa adhesin operon and its nine chromosomal repetitive elements (termed MgPars). The MgPa operon, along with 9 MgPars, is believed to play an important role in pathogenesis of M. genitalium infection and has also served as the main target for development of diagnostic tools. However, genetic variation in the complete MgPa operon and MgPars among clinical strains of M. genitalium has not been addressed. In this study we examined the genetic variation in the complete MgPa operon (approximately 8.5 kb) and full or partial MgPar sequences (0.4-2.6 kb) in 15 geographically diverse strains of M. genitalium. Extensive variation was present in four repeat regions of the MgPa operon (with homology to MgPars) among and within strains while the non-repeat regions (without homology to MgPars) showed low-level variation among strains and no variation within strains. MgPars showed significant variation among strains but were highly homogeneous within strains, supporting gene conversion as the likely recombination mechanism. When applying our sequence data to evaluate published MgPa operon-based diagnostic PCR assays and genotyping systems, we found that 11 of 19 primers contain up to 19 variable nucleotides and that the target for one of two typing systems is located in a hypervariable repeat region, suggesting the likelihood of false results with some of these assays. This study not only provides new insights into the role of the MgPa operon in the pathogenesis of M. genitalium infection but has important implications for the development of diagnostic tools.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 21187921 PMCID: PMC3004944 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0015660
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Sequence variability in the full-length MgPa operon of M. genitalium.
(A) Schematic representation of the MgPa operon structure based on the G37 genome sequence (GenBank accession number NC_000908). Regions B, EF, G and JKLM highlighted in colors are referred to in the text as repeat regions, which are homologous to various parts of the nine MgPar regions scattered around the genome as shown in Fig. 2. The two horizontal bars labeled a and b represent the regions used as markers for the genotyping systems described by Hjorth et al. [14] and Musatovova et al. [26], respectively. (B) Similarity plot of the MgPa operon sequences from 15 M. genitalium strains as shown in the right. Each curve is a comparison between the strain being analyzed and G37. Each point plotted is the percent identity within a sliding window of 100 bp centered on the position plotted, with a step size between points of 20 bp. Dotted vertical lines indicate borders for the repeat regions. Stars indicate the location of variable trinucleotide tandem repeats, with the repeat units alongside the star. Details on these trinucleotide tandem repeats are to be reported elsewhere (Ma et al., unpublished data).
Figure 2Schematic representation of sequence homology of the MG191 and MG192 genes with MgPars based on the M. genitalium G37 genome (GenBank accession number NC_000908).
Divisions A through M indicated by dotted vertical lines represent the restriction fragments described previously [13], [31]. The four repeat regions B, EF, G and JKLM are highlighted in colors (consistent with colors used in Fig. 1). Homologous regions between MG191/MG192 and MgPars are indicated in identical colors. The hatched box represents intervening sequences that are unusually A-T rich and contain stop codons. The numbers bordering each segment of each of the MgPars refer to the nucleotide positions in the full-length MgPars as described elsewhere [10]. The line length in the diagrams is not always proportional to the number of nucleotides involved due to the presence of minor deletions/insertions. MgPars found in clinical strains involved in this study showed the same architecture but divergent sequences (with different coordinates for each region shown) compared to G37 MgPars.
Sequence variation of the MgPa operon among M. genitalium axenic isolates and urine specimens.
| Specimen | Origin (reference) | Size (bp)/nucleotide difference (%) compared to G37 | |||
| MgPa operon | MG190 | MG191 | MG192 | ||
| Axenic isolates | |||||
| M30 | U.K. | 8446/3.3 | 957/0 | 4332/5.6 | 3150/4.5 |
| M2282 | Denmark | 8455/3.2 | 957/0.1 | 4332/5.3 | 3159/4.9 |
| M2288 | Denmark | 8491/5.1 | 957/0.5 | 4380/8.7 | 3147/8.2 |
| M2300 | Denmark | 8455/3.1 | 957/0 | 4326/5.9 | 3165/4.3 |
| M2321 | Denmark | 8470/4.4 | 957/1.1 | 4344/8.6 | 3162/6.0 |
| M2341 | Denmark | 8467/4.6 | 957/0 | 4359/6.5 | 3144/7.8 |
| M6257 | Sweden | 8464/4.9 | 957/0.6 | 4326/7.8 | 3174/7.2 |
| M6280 | Sweden | 8437/4.6 | 957/0.6 | 4335/7.1 | 3138/7.5 |
| M6282 | Japan | 8470/4.8 | 957/0.5 | 4344/8.0 | 3162/7.4 |
| M6283 | Japan | 8443/4.7 | 957/0.6 | 4344/8.1 | 3135/7.2 |
| M6284 | Japan | 8434/3.4 | 957/0 | 4329/5.4 | 3141/4.9 |
| M6285 (or R65G) | Sweden | 8458/5.6 | 957/0.5 | 4323/9.3 | 3171/8.9 |
| M6286 (or R67G) | Sweden | 8473/5.3 | 957/1.0 | 4353/8.4 | 3156/7.9 |
| Urine specimens | |||||
| 199.0 | U.S.A. | 8434/5.3 | 957/0.5 | 4323/8.3 | 3147/7.5 |
| 199.1 | U.S.A. | 8434/5.2 | 957/0.5 | 4323/8.6 | 3147/7.6 |
| 64.0 | U.S.A. | 8506/4.0 | 957/0.6 | 4359/7.3 | 3183/7.0 |
| 64.1 | U.S.A. | 8497/4.5 | 957/0.6 | 4350/7.6 | 3183/7.4 |
) Difference includes nucleotide substitutions, deletions and additions in the coding region compared to the published G37 sequence with 8458 bp in MgPa operon, 957 bp in MG190, 4335 bp in MG191 and 3162 bp in MG192 (GenBank accession number NC_000908).
) Specimens 199.0 and 199.1 were from the patient no. 199 at the first visit and a 10-day follow-up visit, respectively, whereas specimens 64.0 and 64.1 were from the patient no. 64 at the first visit and a 11-day follow-up visit, respectively.
Sequence variation in the MG191 and MG192 repeat regions.
| Specimen | Nucleotide/amino acid difference (%) compared to G37 | |||
| MG191-B(575–1016) | MG191-EF(2292–2876) | MG191-G(3305–3550) | MG192-JKLM(126–1548) | |
| M30 | 19.7/36.6 | 15.5/30.5 | 14.2/22.2 | 9.7/19.7 |
| M2282 | 20.1/43.7 | 11.3/22.2 | 20.3/37.0 | 10.2/21.4 |
| M2288 | 15.7/31.7 | 21.0/39.5 | 27.1/35.0 | 15.8/27.3 |
| M2300 | 19.9/37.1 | 16.7/35.6 | 12.9/25.3 | 9.1/18.9 |
| M2321 | 21.9/30.3 | 17.7/31.8 | 16.9/31.2 | 12.0/18.6 |
| M2341 | 18.3/32.2 | 17.9/36.8 | 10.2/25.3 | 13.0/24.2 |
| M6257 | 20.9/33.3 | 17.7/34.4 | 9.5/13.4 | 13.6/25.3 |
| M6280 | 19.3/32.8 | 18.0/36.9 | 11.9/22.5 | 14.3/27.1 |
| M6282 | 25.2/43.0 | 17.0/30.9 | 20.3/31.2 | 14.7/25.9 |
| M6283 | 21.5/33.8 | 16.4/31.1 | 17.6/30.4 | 13.5/21.8 |
| M6284 | 18.1/37.9 | 15.0/31.0 | 14.2/30.0 | 10.4/22.5 |
| M6285 | 22.4/31.5 | 21.0/39.1 | 20.0/35.0 | 13.8/25.3 |
| M6286 | 19.9/26.9 | 15.9/27.4 | 22.0/30.0 | 15.1/29.8 |
| 199.0 | 23.0/37.0 | 19.9/39.7 | 19.7/32.9 | 14.6/26.7 |
| 199.1 | 23.0/37.0 | 19.9/39.7 | 22.0/33.8 | 14.7/26.8 |
| 64.0 | 20.1/39.3 | 14.0/26.0 | 18.3/30.0 | 11.1/20.6 |
| 64.1 | 20.1/39.3 | 18.6/36.3 | 18.3/30.0 | 11.9/22.1 |
) Numbers in parentheses below each region refer to the nucleotide positions relative to the presumed MG191 and MG192 translational start site based on the published G37 genome (GenBank accession number NC_000908).
Figure 3Sequence shifts in MG191 and MG192 repeat regions in two sequential urine specimens from each of two Mycoplasma genitalium–infected patients (199 and 64, ).
(A) In patient 199, sequence shifts were identified in MG191 repeat region G as shown here as well as MG192 repeat region JKLM as described elsewhere [11]. The sequence change between these two variant sequences in repeat region G (a and b) could be explained by homologous recombination with MgPar 3, which was identical between the first- and second-visit specimens. (B) Sequence shifts in the MG191 repeat region EF in patient 64. (C) Sequence shift in the MG192 repeat region JKLM in patient 64. Except for two single base substitutions in (B) all sequence changes could be explained by homologous recombination with a MgPar sequence found in the first- and/or the second-visit specimen as shown. MgPars 2, 7, 8 and 9 were obtained from both specimens with MgPars 2, 8 and 9 being identical between the first- and second-visit specimens while all remaining MgPars were obtained only from one specimen. Each repeat region along with its upstream and downstream conserved regions was amplified as one fragment and sequenced after subcloning, with the number of plasmid clones analyzed shown on the right of each bar. Sequence changes in each variant and their matching MgPars are indicated by texture. The sequences for the two variants of MG191 repeat region in A, and five variants of MG191 repeat region EF (a through e) and 2 variants of MgPar 7 (7a and 7b) in B are available under GenBank accession numbers HQ011255-61, FJ872565 and FJ872566. The remaining accession numbers are listed in Methods.
Sequence variation in published PCR primers targeting the MgPa operon.
| Study | Forward primer | Reverse primer |
| Jensen | MgPa-1, | MgPa-3, |
| Palmer | Mg1 (outer), | Mg2, |
| Jensen | MgPa-476, | MgPa-903, |
| Cadieux | G3A, | G3B, |
| de Barbeyrac, | MGS-1, | MGS-4, |
| Deguchi | Mg1a, | Mg2, same as above |
| Totten | ModMgPa1, | ModMgPa3, |
| Mena | MgPaW1, | MgPaWR1, |
| Jensen | MgPa-355F | MgPa-432R, |
) Variable nucleotides are shown in lowercase.
) The nucleotide T is missing as a mistake in the report [35].
) Variation in positions underlined was also reported in reference [15].
Primers used to amplify the MgPa operon and MgPar sequences.
| Primer | Sequence (5′→ 3′) | Target (sequence location |
| 189F1 |
| MG189 (220412–220427) |
| 906F |
| MG190 (221409–221429) |
| 976R |
| MG190 (221460–221479) |
| 2113F |
| MG191 (222616–222635) |
| 2235R |
| MG191 (222718–222738) |
| 2833F |
| MG191 (223336–223352) |
| 3087R |
| MG191 (223569–223590) |
| 3942F |
| MG191 (224445–224463) |
| 4146R |
| MG191 (224630–224649) |
| 5360F |
| MG192 (225876–225895) |
| 5518R |
| MG192 (220598–220621) |
| 6959F |
| MG192 (227462–227480) |
| 227529R |
| MG192 (227505–227531) |
| MG192A |
| MG192 (225974–226003) |
| 8730R |
| 3′-UTR |
| 1F8 |
| MgPar 1 (85501–85514) |
| 4F1 |
| MgPar 4 (213363–213383) |
| 5F2 |
| MgPar 5 (228988–229007) |
| 191R |
| MgPars 1, 4 and 5 (86574–86591) |
This list does not include primers for MgPars in our previous report [11].
) On the M. genitalium G37 genome sequence (GenBank accession number NC_000908).
) From the report of Musatovova et al. [26].
) 3′-untranslated region of the MG192 gene.
) Used with primers 1F8, 4F1 and 5F2 to amplify the 5′-portion of MgPars 1, 4 and 5, respectively.