| Literature DB >> 31768029 |
Pedro H Oliveira1, John W Ribis2, Elizabeth M Garrett3, Dominika Trzilova3, Alex Kim1, Ognjen Sekulovic2, Edward A Mead1, Theodore Pak1, Shijia Zhu1, Gintaras Deikus1, Marie Touchon4,5, Martha Lewis-Sandari1, Colleen Beckford1, Nathalie E Zeitouni1, Deena R Altman1,6, Elizabeth Webster1, Irina Oussenko1, Supinda Bunyavanich1, Aneel K Aggarwal7, Ali Bashir1, Gopi Patel6, Frances Wallach6, Camille Hamula6, Shirish Huprikar6, Eric E Schadt1,8, Robert Sebra1, Harm van Bakel1, Andrew Kasarskis1, Rita Tamayo3, Aimee Shen9, Gang Fang10.
Abstract
Clostridioides (formerly Clostridium) difficile is a leading cause of healthcare-associated infections. Although considerable progress has been made in the understanding of its genome, the epigenome of C. difficile and its functional impact has not been systematically explored. Here, we perform a comprehensive DNA methylome analysis of C. difficile using 36 human isolates and observe a high level of epigenomic diversity. We discovered an orphan DNA methyltransferase with a well-defined specificity, the corresponding gene of which is highly conserved across our dataset and in all of the approximately 300 global C. difficile genomes examined. Inactivation of the methyltransferase gene negatively impacts sporulation, a key step in C. difficile disease transmission, and these results are consistently supported by multiomics data, genetic experiments and a mouse colonization model. Further experimental and transcriptomic analyses suggest that epigenetic regulation is associated with cell length, biofilm formation and host colonization. These findings provide a unique epigenetic dimension to characterize medically relevant biological processes in this important pathogen. This study also provides a set of methods for comparative epigenomics and integrative analysis, which we expect to be broadly applicable to bacterial epigenomic studies.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31768029 PMCID: PMC6925328 DOI: 10.1038/s41564-019-0613-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Microbiol ISSN: 2058-5276 Impact factor: 17.745