| Literature DB >> 27765069 |
Shivanand Hegde1,2, Martina Zimmermann1, Martina Flöck3, Rene Brunthaler4, Joachim Spergser1, Renate Rosengarten1, Rohini Chopra-Dewasthaly5.
Abstract
Mycoplasmas are amongst the most successful pathogens of both humans and animals yet the molecular basis of mycoplasma pathogenesis is poorly understood. This is partly due to the lack of classical virulence factors and little similarity to common bacterial pathogenic determinants. Using Mycoplasma agalactiae as a model we initiated research in this direction by screening a transposon mutant library in the natural sheep host using a negative selection method. Having successfully identified putative factors involved in the colonization of local infection and lymphogenic sites, the current study assessed mutants unable to spread systemically in sheep after experimental intramammary infection. Analysis of distant body sites for complete absence of mutants via SSM PCR revealed that additional set of genes, such as pdhB, oppC, oppB, gtsB, MAG1890, MAG5520 and MAG3650 are required for systemic spreading apart from those that were necessary for initial colonization. Additional in vitro studies with the mutants absent at these systemic sites confirmed the potential role of some of the respective gene products concerning their interaction with host cells. Mutants of pdhB, oppC and MAG4460 exhibited significantly slower growth in the presence of HeLa cells in MEM medium. This first attempt to identify genes exclusively required for systemic spreading provides a basis for further in-depth research to understand the exact mechanism of chronicity and persistence of M. agalactiae.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27765069 PMCID: PMC5073455 DOI: 10.1186/s13567-016-0387-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Res ISSN: 0928-4249 Impact factor: 3.683
List of mutants screened in the initial round of screening in an intramammary sheep infection model
| Group I-15 mutants | Group II-17 mutants | Group III-19 mutants | |||
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| Mutant | Genes disrupted | Mutant | Genes disrupted | Mutant | Genes disrupted |
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| 3-20 | NADH oxidase ( |
| Apo6 | Sugar isomerase ( | 1-3-0 | Hypothetical protein (MAG2810) | 13 | VpmaX |
| 26 | Oligopeptide transporter ATP binding protein ( | 15-2 | Hypothetical protein, predicted lipoprotein (MAG6200) | 14 | DNA methylase (MAG1790) |
| 3-15 | Elongation factor G ( | 170 | Hypothetical protein (MAG0110) |
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| 8-1 | Deoxyguaosine kinase ( |
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| 4-1-0 | GTP-dependent nucleic acid-binding protein (engD) | 1-2-0 | Pentitol posphotransferase |
| 6-21 | Cell division protein ( | 8 + 1-4 | ABC transporter ATP-binding protein (MAG5960) | 96-2 | ATP synthase ( |
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| 8 + 1-8 | Transport protein SGAT ( | 5-1 | Hypothetical protein (MAG0250) |
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| 6-13 | Hypothetical protein (MAG1570) |
| 7 + 1-8 | Hypothetical protein (MAG4010) | 9-28 | Conserved hypothetical protein (MAG0390) |
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| 62 | Lipoate Protein Ligase A ( |
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| 9-8 | Dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase ( | 6-12 | Transcriptional regulator (MAG6310) | ||
| 212 | Type III restriction modification system (MAG1530) | San5 | Predicted lipoprotein (MAG3120) | ||
| 9-16 | Conserved hypothetical protein (MAG1450) | 3-23 | Lipoprotein (MAG6410) | ||
| 6-15 | VpmaY | ||||
Mutants kept common (“watermarks”) between the groups are underlined and those shortlisted for secondary screening showing >95% absence are in italics.
Mutants showing complete absence exclusively at the systemic sites of all three infected sheep
| Mutant | Gene | Pathogenicity associated studies |
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| MAG1890 | 45 |
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| MAG0360_oppC | 29-34 |
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| MAG0370_oppB | |
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| MAG0940_pdhB | 19, 40-44 |
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| MAG2320_gtsB | 28, 36-37 |
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| MAG3650 | |
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| MAG5520_aminopeptidase | 44 |
Figure 1Growth analysis of selected transposon mutants during co-cultivation with HeLa cells. Doubling time, in presence of HeLa cells 48 h pi, of the wild type strain PG2 and transposon mutants deficient in systemic spreading is shown. Each bar represents the average doubling time ± standard deviation of three independent experiments done in duplicates. *p < 0.05; **p < 0.005.
Figure 2Macrophage cytotoxicity assay of selected transposon mutants in murine macrophages. Percentage cytotoxicity of the wild type strain PG2 and selected transposon mutants in J774.A1 cells at 48 h pi is depicted. Each bar represents the average percentage cytotoxicity ± standard deviation of three independent experiments done in triplicates.
Figure 3Genomic loci that play a potential role in the systemic spread of . Transposon mutants completely absent in LNs and udders are depicted in red (LU) whereas those that were present at latter sites but exclusively absent only at systemic sites are shown in green (S). The black arrows represent the location of transposon insertion sites in the respective genes.