| Literature DB >> 21611187 |
Zhuofei Xu1, Min Yue, Rui Zhou, Qi Jin, Yang Fan, Weicheng Bei, Huanchun Chen.
Abstract
Haemophilus parasuis can be either a commensal bacterium of the porcine respiratory tract or an opportunistic pathogen causing Glässer's disease, a severe systemic disease that has led to significant economical losses in the pig industry worldwide. We determined the complete genomic sequence of H. parasuis SH0165, a highly virulent strain of serovar 5, which was isolated from a hog pen in North China. The single circular chromosome was 2,269,156 base pairs in length and contained 2,031 protein-coding genes. Together with the full spectrum of genes detected by the analysis of metabolic pathways, we confirmed that H. parasuis generates ATP via both fermentation and respiration, and possesses an intact TCA cycle for anabolism. In addition to possessing the complete pathway essential for the biosynthesis of heme, this pathogen was also found to be well-equipped with different iron acquisition systems, such as the TonB system and ABC-type transport complexes, to overcome iron limitation during infection and persistence. We identified a number of genes encoding potential virulence factors, such as type IV fimbriae and surface polysaccharides. Analysis of the genome confirmed that H. parasuis is naturally competent, as genes related to DNA uptake are present. A nine-mer DNA uptake signal sequence (ACAAGCGGT), identical to that found in Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae and Mannheimia haemolytica, followed by similar downstream motifs, was identified in the SH0165 genome. Genomic and phylogenetic comparisons with other Pasteurellaceae species further indicated that H. parasuis was closely related to another swine pathogenic bacteria A. pleuropneumoniae. The comprehensive genetic analysis presented here provides a foundation for future research on the metabolism, natural competence and virulence of H. parasuis.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21611187 PMCID: PMC3096633 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0019631
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1The circular representation of the complete genome of H. parasuis SH0165.
Circles range from 1 (the outermost circle) to 8 (the innermost circle). The outer two circles show protein-coding genes on the forward and reverse strands in SH1605, colored according to COG categories. All genes are colored based on biological functions: maroon for translation, ribosomal structure and biogenesis; tomato for RNA processing and modification; navy for transcription; purple for DNA replication, recombination and repair; light brown for cell division and chromosome partitioning; gold for defense mechanisms; light purple for signal transduction; teal for cell envelope biogenesis and outer membrane; chocolate for intracellular trafficking, secretion and vesicular transport; aqua for posttranslational modification, protein turnover and chaperones; olive for energy production and conversion; lime for carbohydrate transport and metabolism; green for amino acid transport and metabolism; fuchsia for nucleotide transport and metabolism; light pink for coenzyme metabolism; red for lipid metabolism; orange for inorganic ion transport and metabolism; yellow for secondary metabolites biosynthesis, transport and catabolism; gray for general functional prediction; silver for function-unassigned conserved proteins; and black for unknown proteins not in the COG collection. The third circle shows the coordinates of BLAST hits of the H. parasuis SH1605 complete genome against genomic contigs of H. parasuis strain 29755 and these are colored in maroon. Fourth circle, insertion sequence elements in green. Fifth circle, tRNA genes in red. Sixth circle, rRNA operons in blue. Seventh circle, G+C content. Eighth circle, GC skew plot [(G−C)/(G+C); green indicates values >0; purple indicates values <0].
General features of whole genomes of H. parasuis (SH0165), H. somni (129Pt), H. influenzae (Rd), H. ducreyi (35000HP), A. pleuropneumoniae (JL03) and P. multocida (Pm70).
| GenBank accession No. | CP001321 | CP000436 | L42023 | AE017143 | CP000687 | AE017143 |
| Strain | SH0165 | 129Pt | Rd | 35000HP | JL03 | Pm70 |
| Total length (bp) | 2,269,156 | 2,007,700 | 1,830,138 | 1,698,955 | 2,242,062 | 2,257,487 |
| Number of CDSs | 2,031 | 1,792 | 1,709 | 1,717 | 2,036 | 2,014 |
| Average length of CDS (bp) | 907 | 989 | 918 | 842 | 944 | 997 |
| CDS genome coverage | 81% | 88% | 86% | 85% | 86% | 89% |
| GC content | 40.0% | 37.2% | 38.2% | 38.2% | 41.2% | 40.4% |
| Ribosome RNA | ||||||
| 16S rRNA | 6 | 5 | 6 | 6 | 6 | 6 |
| 23S rRNA | 6 | 5 | 6 | 6 | 6 | 6 |
| 5S rRNA | 8 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 7 | 6 |
| Number of tRNA | 56 | 50 | 54 | 45 | 63 | 57 |
Orthologs of predicted CDSs of H. parasuis SH0165 compared with complete genomes of related organisms.
| number of orthologs | % of CDSs in | |
| Homologous to | 1,341 | 66.0% |
| Homologous to | 1,213 | 59.7% |
| Homologous to | 1,184 | 58.3% |
| Homologous to | 1,149 | 56.6% |
| Homologous to | 1,145 | 56.4% |
| Homologous to | 1,111 | 54.7% |
| Homologous to | 1,103 | 54.3% |
| Homologous to | 1,096 | 54.0% |
| Homologous to | 1,095 | 53.9% |
Figure 2Neighbor-joining phylogeny.
Tree derived from 727 concatenated, conserved protein sequences in the complete genomes of 10 Pasteurellaceae species. The scale indicates the number of substitutions per residue. Node support after 1,000 bootstrap replicates is shown.
Figure 3The metabolic pathways of central carbon flow in H. parasuis SH0165.
Genes encoding key enzymes and functional proteins involved in the metabolic pathways are illustrated while the corresponding coding sequences (CDSs) indicated by HAPS numbers are list in Table S1 in the supplemental material.
Figure 4WebLogos from alignments of the sequences flanking the H. parasuis uptake signal sequences (USSs) in the complete genome of SH0165.
Logos based on 50-bp fragments containing the exact 9-bp USS plus 11 bases upstream and 30 bases downstream.
Genes encoding proteins with a putative role in adherence and secretion of strain SH0165.
| CDS no. | Name | Function |
| HAPS0003 |
| virulence-associated trimeric autotransporter |
| HAPS0129 |
| signal peptidase I |
| HAPS0206 |
| virulence-associated trimeric autotransporter |
| HAPS0226 |
| preprotein translocase subunit SecA |
| HAPS0229 |
| lipoprotein copper homeostasis and adhesion, NlpE |
| HAPS0250 |
| outer-membrane lipoprotein carrier protein precursor |
| HAPS0368 |
| virulence-associated trimeric autotransporters |
| HAPS0427 |
| preprotein translocase subunit SecG |
| HAPS0452 |
| virulence-associated trimeric autotransporters |
| HAPS0499 |
| virulence-associated trimeric autotransporters |
| HAPS0519 |
| virulence-associated trimeric autotransporters |
| HAPS0687 |
| virulence-associated trimeric autotransporters |
| HAPS0753 |
| Type V secretory pathway, adhesin AidA |
| HAPS0764 |
| fimbrial assembly chaperone |
| HAPS0956 |
| virulence-associated trimeric autotransporters |
| HAPS0966 |
| preprotein translocase subunit SecF |
| HAPS0967 |
| preprotein translocase subunit SecD |
| HAPS0968 |
| preprotein translocase subunit YajC |
| HAPS1305 |
| lipoprotein signal peptidase |
| HAPS1378 |
| extracellular serine protease (autotransporter) |
| HAPS1381 |
| extracellular serine protease (autotransporter) |
| HAPS1391 |
| Sec-independent protein translocase protein TatC |
| HAPS1392 |
| Sec-independent protein translocase protein TatB |
| HAPS1393 |
| Sec-independent protein translocase protein TatA |
| HAPS1394 |
| putative inner membrane protein translocase component |
| HAPS1434 |
| preprotein translocase subunit SecY |
| HAPS1477 |
| preprotein translocase subunit SecB |
| HAPS1508 |
| signal recognition particle GTPase |
| HAPS1511 |
| virulence-associated trimeric autotransporters |
| HAPS1817 |
| preprotein translocase subunit SecE |
| HAPS1856 |
| cell division protein, signal recognition particle GTPase |
| HAPS2009 |
| Tfp pilus assembly pathway, fimbrial leader peptidase PilD |
| HAPS2010 |
| Tfp pilus assembly pathway, component PilC |
| HAPS2011 |
| Tfp pilus assembly pathway, ATPase PilB |
| HAPS2013 |
| Tfp pilus assembly protein, major pilin PilA |
| HAPS2037 |
| outer membrane lipoprotein LolB |
| HAPS2063 |
| virulence-associated trimeric autotransporters |
| HAPS2143 |
| fimbrial biogenesis and twitching motility protein |
| HAPS2243 |
| Type II secretory pathway, pseudopilin PulG |
Figure 5The genetic organization of the LPS O-antigen biosynthetic region in H. parasuis SH0165.
The coding sequences (CDSs) are drawn to scale, with 1 kb increments indicated.
Figure 6Schematic comparisons of the topological models of transmembrane proteins and functional assignment of genes encoding enzymes with a putative role in the biogenesis of O-antigen.
A. HAPS0041 (APJL1491, wzx), encoding an O-antigen flippase; B. HAPS0043 (APJL1490, wzy), encoding a putative O-antigen polymerase; C. HAPS0051 (APJL1485, wzz), encoding an O-antigen chain length determining protein. All the amino acid sequences were retrieved from the genomes of H. parasuis SH0165 and A. pleuropneumoniae JL03. The posterior probability of the transmembrane helix, intracellular side and extracellular side are indicated in green, red and blue, respectively.