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Comparative analysis of two complete Corynebacterium ulcerans genomes and detection of candidate virulence factors

BACKGROUND: Corynebacterium ulcerans has been detected as a commensal in domestic and wild animals that may serve as reservoirs for zoonotic infections. During the last decade, the frequency and severity of human infections associated with C. ulcerans appear to be increasing in various countries. As...

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Autores principales: Trost, Eva, Al-Dilaimi, Arwa, Papavasiliou, Panagiotis, Schneider, Jessica, Viehoever, Prisca, Burkovski, Andreas, Soares, Siomar C, Almeida, Sintia S, Dorella, Fernanda A, Miyoshi, Anderson, Azevedo, Vasco, Schneider, Maria P, Silva, Artur, Santos, Cíntia S, Santos, Louisy S, Sabbadini, Priscila, Dias, Alexandre A, Hirata, Raphael, Mattos-Guaraldi, Ana L, Tauch, Andreas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3164646/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21801446
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-12-383
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author Trost, Eva
Al-Dilaimi, Arwa
Papavasiliou, Panagiotis
Schneider, Jessica
Viehoever, Prisca
Burkovski, Andreas
Soares, Siomar C
Almeida, Sintia S
Dorella, Fernanda A
Miyoshi, Anderson
Azevedo, Vasco
Schneider, Maria P
Silva, Artur
Santos, Cíntia S
Santos, Louisy S
Sabbadini, Priscila
Dias, Alexandre A
Hirata, Raphael
Mattos-Guaraldi, Ana L
Tauch, Andreas
author_facet Trost, Eva
Al-Dilaimi, Arwa
Papavasiliou, Panagiotis
Schneider, Jessica
Viehoever, Prisca
Burkovski, Andreas
Soares, Siomar C
Almeida, Sintia S
Dorella, Fernanda A
Miyoshi, Anderson
Azevedo, Vasco
Schneider, Maria P
Silva, Artur
Santos, Cíntia S
Santos, Louisy S
Sabbadini, Priscila
Dias, Alexandre A
Hirata, Raphael
Mattos-Guaraldi, Ana L
Tauch, Andreas
author_sort Trost, Eva
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Corynebacterium ulcerans has been detected as a commensal in domestic and wild animals that may serve as reservoirs for zoonotic infections. During the last decade, the frequency and severity of human infections associated with C. ulcerans appear to be increasing in various countries. As the knowledge of genes contributing to the virulence of this bacterium was very limited, the complete genome sequences of two C. ulcerans strains detected in the metropolitan area of Rio de Janeiro were determined and characterized by comparative genomics: C. ulcerans 809 was initially isolated from an elderly woman with fatal pulmonary infection and C. ulcerans BR-AD22 was recovered from a nasal sample of an asymptomatic dog. RESULTS: The circular chromosome of C. ulcerans 809 has a total size of 2,502,095 bp and encodes 2,182 predicted proteins, whereas the genome of C. ulcerans BR-AD22 is 104,279 bp larger and comprises 2,338 protein-coding regions. The minor difference in size of the two genomes is mainly caused by additional prophage-like elements in the C. ulcerans BR-AD22 chromosome. Both genomes show a highly similar order of orthologous coding regions; and both strains share a common set of 2,076 genes, demonstrating their very close relationship. A screening for prominent virulence factors revealed the presence of phospholipase D (Pld), neuraminidase H (NanH), endoglycosidase E (EndoE), and subunits of adhesive pili of the SpaDEF type that are encoded in both C. ulcerans genomes. The rbp gene coding for a putative ribosome-binding protein with striking structural similarity to Shiga-like toxins was additionally detected in the genome of the human isolate C. ulcerans 809. CONCLUSIONS: The molecular data deduced from the complete genome sequences provides considerable knowledge of virulence factors in C. ulcerans that is increasingly recognized as an emerging pathogen. This bacterium is apparently equipped with a broad and varying set of virulence factors, including a novel type of a ribosome-binding protein. Whether the respective protein contributes to the severity of human infections (and a fatal outcome) remains to be elucidated by genetic experiments with defined bacterial mutants and host model systems.
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spelling pubmed-31646462011-09-02 Comparative analysis of two complete Corynebacterium ulcerans genomes and detection of candidate virulence factors Trost, Eva Al-Dilaimi, Arwa Papavasiliou, Panagiotis Schneider, Jessica Viehoever, Prisca Burkovski, Andreas Soares, Siomar C Almeida, Sintia S Dorella, Fernanda A Miyoshi, Anderson Azevedo, Vasco Schneider, Maria P Silva, Artur Santos, Cíntia S Santos, Louisy S Sabbadini, Priscila Dias, Alexandre A Hirata, Raphael Mattos-Guaraldi, Ana L Tauch, Andreas BMC Genomics Research Article BACKGROUND: Corynebacterium ulcerans has been detected as a commensal in domestic and wild animals that may serve as reservoirs for zoonotic infections. During the last decade, the frequency and severity of human infections associated with C. ulcerans appear to be increasing in various countries. As the knowledge of genes contributing to the virulence of this bacterium was very limited, the complete genome sequences of two C. ulcerans strains detected in the metropolitan area of Rio de Janeiro were determined and characterized by comparative genomics: C. ulcerans 809 was initially isolated from an elderly woman with fatal pulmonary infection and C. ulcerans BR-AD22 was recovered from a nasal sample of an asymptomatic dog. RESULTS: The circular chromosome of C. ulcerans 809 has a total size of 2,502,095 bp and encodes 2,182 predicted proteins, whereas the genome of C. ulcerans BR-AD22 is 104,279 bp larger and comprises 2,338 protein-coding regions. The minor difference in size of the two genomes is mainly caused by additional prophage-like elements in the C. ulcerans BR-AD22 chromosome. Both genomes show a highly similar order of orthologous coding regions; and both strains share a common set of 2,076 genes, demonstrating their very close relationship. A screening for prominent virulence factors revealed the presence of phospholipase D (Pld), neuraminidase H (NanH), endoglycosidase E (EndoE), and subunits of adhesive pili of the SpaDEF type that are encoded in both C. ulcerans genomes. The rbp gene coding for a putative ribosome-binding protein with striking structural similarity to Shiga-like toxins was additionally detected in the genome of the human isolate C. ulcerans 809. CONCLUSIONS: The molecular data deduced from the complete genome sequences provides considerable knowledge of virulence factors in C. ulcerans that is increasingly recognized as an emerging pathogen. This bacterium is apparently equipped with a broad and varying set of virulence factors, including a novel type of a ribosome-binding protein. Whether the respective protein contributes to the severity of human infections (and a fatal outcome) remains to be elucidated by genetic experiments with defined bacterial mutants and host model systems. BioMed Central 2011-07-30 /pmc/articles/PMC3164646/ /pubmed/21801446 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-12-383 Text en Copyright ©2011 Trost et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Trost, Eva
Al-Dilaimi, Arwa
Papavasiliou, Panagiotis
Schneider, Jessica
Viehoever, Prisca
Burkovski, Andreas
Soares, Siomar C
Almeida, Sintia S
Dorella, Fernanda A
Miyoshi, Anderson
Azevedo, Vasco
Schneider, Maria P
Silva, Artur
Santos, Cíntia S
Santos, Louisy S
Sabbadini, Priscila
Dias, Alexandre A
Hirata, Raphael
Mattos-Guaraldi, Ana L
Tauch, Andreas
Comparative analysis of two complete Corynebacterium ulcerans genomes and detection of candidate virulence factors
title Comparative analysis of two complete Corynebacterium ulcerans genomes and detection of candidate virulence factors
title_full Comparative analysis of two complete Corynebacterium ulcerans genomes and detection of candidate virulence factors
title_fullStr Comparative analysis of two complete Corynebacterium ulcerans genomes and detection of candidate virulence factors
title_full_unstemmed Comparative analysis of two complete Corynebacterium ulcerans genomes and detection of candidate virulence factors
title_short Comparative analysis of two complete Corynebacterium ulcerans genomes and detection of candidate virulence factors
title_sort comparative analysis of two complete corynebacterium ulcerans genomes and detection of candidate virulence factors
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3164646/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21801446
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-12-383
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