| Literature DB >> 24201373 |
Zuowei Wu1, Orhan Sahin, Zhangqi Shen, Peng Liu, William G Miller, Qijing Zhang.
Abstract
Campylobacter jejuni clone SA recently emerged as the predominant cause of sheep abortion in the United States and is also associated with foodborne gastroenteritis in humans. A distinct phenotype of this clone is its ability to induce bacteremia and abortion. To facilitate understanding the pathogenesis of this hypervirulent clone, we analyzed a clinical isolate (IA3902) of clone SA using multi-omics approaches. The genome of IA3902 contains a circular chromosome of 1,635,045 bp and a circular plasmid of 37,174 bp. Comparative genomic analysis revealed that IA3902 is most closely related to C. jejuni NCTC11168, which is a reference strain and was previously shown to be non-abortifacient in pregnant animals. Despite the high genomic synteny and sequence homology, there are 12 variable regions (VRs) and 8,696 single-nucleotide polymorphisms and indels between the two genomes. Notably, the variable genes in the capsular polysaccharides biosynthesis and O-linked glycosylation loci of IA3902 are highly homogenous to their counterparts in C. jejuni subsp. doylei and C. jejuni G1, which are known to be frequently associated with bacteremia. Transcriptomic and proteomic profiles were conducted to compare IA3902 with NCTC11168, which revealed that the pathways of energy generation, motility, and serine utilization were significantly up-regulated in IA3902, whereas the pathways of iron uptake and proline, glutamate, aspartate, and lactate utilization were significantly down-regulated. These results suggest that C. jejuni clone SA has evolved distinct genomic content and gene expression patterns that modulate surface polysacharide structures, motilitiy, and metabolic pathways. These changes may have contributed to its hyper-virulence in abortion induction.Entities:
Keywords: Campylobacter jejuni; comparative genomics; functional genomics; virulence evolution
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24201373 PMCID: PMC3845652 DOI: 10.1093/gbe/evt172
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Biol Evol ISSN: 1759-6653 Impact factor: 3.416
FPhylogenetic analysis of Campylobacter jejuni IA3902 and other genome-sequenced strains. (A) The maximum-likelihood protein tree for genome-sequenced C. jejuni strains were generated from concatenated multiple alignments of 12 conserved proteins (InfB, FusA, Tuf, RplB, RpsE, RpsH, RpsK,TopA, Ffh, GyrB, LepA, and PyrG). The numbers along the branches of the tree denote percent occurrence of nodes among 100 bootstrap replicates. The scale bar represents the number of amino acid substitutions per site. (B) A dendrogram generated from whole genomic Blast shows the genetic relationship of C. jejuni strains, for which whole-genome sequences are available in GenBank. Genome accession numbers are shown in the parentheses. The scale bar represents the number of nucleotide substitutions per site.
FWhole genome comparison between Campylobacter jejuni IA3902 and C. jejuni NCTC11168 (A) and the comparison between pVir of C. jejuni IA3902 and pVir of C. jejuni 81-176 (B). Strain-specific regions (VRs) are indicated by discontinuities on the diagonal line (marked by arrows). The numbers along the axes denote the genomic coordinates of the strains.
FGene enrichment analysis of the differentially expressed genes between Campylobacter jejuni IA3902 and NCTC11168 detected by microarray. COG category codes are indicated on the x axis. The fraction of genes in each COG category is shown on the y axis. Red bars indicate genes up-regulated in IA3902, and green bars indicate genes down-regulated in IA3902. COG categories that are significantly enriched (P < 0.05, Fisher’s exact test) are indicated by an asterisk. COG category codes: J, translation; L, replication, recombination, and repair; K, transcription; D, cell cycle control, mitosis, and meiosis; V, defense mechanisms; T, signal transduction mechanisms; M, cell wall/membrane biogenesis; N, cell motility; U, intracellular trafficking and secretion; O, posttranslational modification, protein turnover, chaperones; C, energy production and conversion; G, carbohydrate transport and metabolism; E, amino acid transport and metabolism; F, nucleotide transport and metabolism; H, coenzyme transport and metabolism; I, lipid transport and metabolism; P, inorganic ion transport and metabolism; Q, secondary metabolites biosynthesis, transport and catabolism; R, general function prediction only; S, function unknown; and -, not in COGs.
FComparative proteomics analysis of Campylobacter jejuni strains by 2D-DIGE and Western blotting analysis of CfrA expression. (A) Overlay image for in-gel comparison between IA3902 (red) and NCTC11168 (green). (B) Overlay image for in-gel comparison between IA5908 (red) and NCTC11168 (green). The circled and numbered protein spots in gel A and gel B indicate the differentially expressed protein spots between the strains, and those in gel A were extracted and subjected to MALDI TOF/TOF mass spectroscopy. (C) Western blotting analysis of the whole cell lysates of C. jejuni isolates grown in MH broth. (D) Western blotting analysis of the whole cell lysates of C. jejuni isolates grown in MH broth supplemented with desferrioxamine (20 µM). The CfrA protein was detected with an anti-CfrA antibody, while MOMP, which is used as an internal control, was detected with a MOMP-specific antibody.
Key Features of C. jejuni IA3902 Revealed by Combined Analysis of the Genomic, Transcriptomic and Proteomic Data
| Features of IA3902 Revealed by Muti-omics Approaches | Potential Implication for IA3902 Pathogenesis | |
|---|---|---|
| Comparative genomics | Unique genes in O-linked glycosylation | Flagellar modification, host cell specificity, colonization, and translocation |
| Unique genes in capsule biosynthesis and modification | Serum resistance and bacteremia induction | |
| Tissue damage | ||
| Antibiotics resistance and persistence | ||
| SNPs and indels | Global regulation of gene expression | |
| Transcriptomics | ↓ Iron uptake systems | Adaptation to iron-limited condition |
| ↑ Energy production and conversion | Motility, colonization, and translocation | |
| ↑ Cell motility | ||
| ↑ Anaerobic respiration | Adaptation to oxygen limitation | |
| ↑ Serine utilization | Selective utilization of amino acid and growth in different tissues | |
| ↓ Proline, glutamate, aspartate, and lactate utilization | ||
| Proteomics | ↓ P19 | Adaptation to iron-limited condition |
| ↓ CfrA | ||
| ↓ ChuZ | ||
| ↓ChuA | ||
| ↑ PseC | Flagellar modification and host cell specificity | |
Note.—Genes with increased mRNA or protein expression in IA3902 are indicated by upward arrows and those with decreased mRNA or protein expression in IA3902 are indicated by downward arrows.