Literature DB >> 26104459

Virulence Plasmids of Spore-Forming Bacteria.

Vicki Adams1, Jihong Li2, Jessica A Wisniewski1, Francisco A Uzal3, Robert J Moore1, Bruce A McClane1, Julian I Rood1.   

Abstract

Plasmid-encoded virulence factors are important in the pathogenesis of diseases caused by spore-forming bacteria. Unlike many other bacteria, the most common virulence factors encoded by plasmids in Clostridium and Bacillus species are protein toxins. Clostridium perfringens causes several histotoxic and enterotoxin diseases in both humans and animals and produces a broad range of toxins, including many pore-forming toxins such as C. perfringens enterotoxin, epsilon-toxin, beta-toxin, and NetB. Genetic studies have led to the determination of the role of these toxins in disease pathogenesis. The genes for these toxins are generally carried on large conjugative plasmids that have common core replication, maintenance, and conjugation regions. There is considerable functional information available about the unique tcp conjugation locus carried by these plasmids, but less is known about plasmid maintenance. The latter is intriguing because many C. perfringens isolates stably maintain up to four different, but closely related, toxin plasmids. Toxin genes may also be plasmid-encoded in the neurotoxic clostridia. The tetanus toxin gene is located on a plasmid in Clostridium tetani, but the botulinum toxin genes may be chromosomal, plasmid-determined, or located on bacteriophages in Clostridium botulinum. In Bacillus anthracis it is well established that virulence is plasmid determined, with anthrax toxin genes located on pXO1 and capsule genes on a separate plasmid, pXO2. Orthologs of these plasmids are also found in other members of the Bacillus cereus group such as B. cereus and Bacillus thuringiensis. In B. thuringiensis these plasmids may carry genes encoding one or more insecticidal toxins.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 26104459     DOI: 10.1128/microbiolspec.PLAS-0024-2014

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Microbiol Spectr        ISSN: 2165-0497


  12 in total

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2.  Pasteur revisited: An unexpected finding in Bacillus anthracis vaccine strains.

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3.  Conjugation-Mediated Horizontal Gene Transfer of Clostridium perfringens Plasmids in the Chicken Gastrointestinal Tract Results in the Formation of New Virulent Strains.

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Review 4.  Clostridium perfringens type A-E toxin plasmids.

Authors:  John C Freedman; James R Theoret; Jessica A Wisniewski; Francisco A Uzal; Julian I Rood; Bruce A McClane
Journal:  Res Microbiol       Date:  2014-10-02       Impact factor: 3.992

Review 5.  Expansion of the Clostridium perfringens toxin-based typing scheme.

Authors:  Julian I Rood; Vicki Adams; Jake Lacey; Dena Lyras; Bruce A McClane; Stephen B Melville; Robert J Moore; Michel R Popoff; Mahfuzur R Sarker; J Glenn Songer; Francisco A Uzal; Filip Van Immerseel
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8.  Completed Genomic Sequence of Bacillus thuringiensis HER1410 Reveals a Cry-Containing Chromosome, Two Megaplasmids, and an Integrative Plasmidial Prophage.

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9.  Poultry and beef meat as potential seedbeds for antimicrobial resistant enterotoxigenic Bacillus species: a materializing epidemiological and potential severe health hazard.

Authors:  Kamelia M Osman; Anthony D Kappell; Ahmed Orabi; Khalid S Al-Maary; Ayman S Mubarak; Turki M Dawoud; Hassan A Hemeg; Ihab M I Moussa; Ashgan M Hessain; Hend M Y Yousef; Krassimira R Hristova
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2018-08-02       Impact factor: 4.379

10.  The genomic basis of Red Queen dynamics during rapid reciprocal host-pathogen coevolution.

Authors:  Andrei Papkou; Thiago Guzella; Wentao Yang; Svenja Koepper; Barbara Pees; Rebecca Schalkowski; Mike-Christoph Barg; Philip C Rosenstiel; Henrique Teotónio; Hinrich Schulenburg
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