Cargando…

Conserved Patterns of Symmetric Inversion in the Genome Evolution of Bordetella Respiratory Pathogens

Whooping cough (pertussis), primarily caused by Bordetella pertussis, has resurged in the United States, and circulating strains exhibit considerable chromosome structural fluidity in the form of rearrangement and deletion. The genus Bordetella includes additional pathogenic species infecting variou...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Weigand, Michael R., Peng, Yanhui, Batra, Dhwani, Burroughs, Mark, Davis, Jamie K., Knipe, Kristen, Loparev, Vladimir N., Johnson, Taccara, Juieng, Phalasy, Rowe, Lori A., Sheth, Mili, Tang, Kevin, Unoarumhi, Yvette, Williams, Margaret M., Tondella, M. Lucia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6867878/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31744907
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.00702-19
_version_ 1783472148323500032
author Weigand, Michael R.
Peng, Yanhui
Batra, Dhwani
Burroughs, Mark
Davis, Jamie K.
Knipe, Kristen
Loparev, Vladimir N.
Johnson, Taccara
Juieng, Phalasy
Rowe, Lori A.
Sheth, Mili
Tang, Kevin
Unoarumhi, Yvette
Williams, Margaret M.
Tondella, M. Lucia
author_facet Weigand, Michael R.
Peng, Yanhui
Batra, Dhwani
Burroughs, Mark
Davis, Jamie K.
Knipe, Kristen
Loparev, Vladimir N.
Johnson, Taccara
Juieng, Phalasy
Rowe, Lori A.
Sheth, Mili
Tang, Kevin
Unoarumhi, Yvette
Williams, Margaret M.
Tondella, M. Lucia
author_sort Weigand, Michael R.
collection PubMed
description Whooping cough (pertussis), primarily caused by Bordetella pertussis, has resurged in the United States, and circulating strains exhibit considerable chromosome structural fluidity in the form of rearrangement and deletion. The genus Bordetella includes additional pathogenic species infecting various animals, some even causing pertussis-like respiratory disease in humans; however, investigation of their genome evolution has been limited. We studied chromosome structure in complete genome sequences from 167 Bordetella species isolates, as well as 469 B. pertussis isolates, to gain a generalized understanding of rearrangement patterns among these related pathogens. Observed changes in gene order primarily resulted from large inversions and were only detected in species with genomes harboring multicopy insertion sequence (IS) elements, most notably B. holmesii and B. parapertussis. While genomes of B. pertussis contain >240 copies of IS481, IS elements appear less numerous in other species and yield less chromosome structural diversity through rearrangement. These data were further used to predict all possible rearrangements between IS element copies present in Bordetella genomes, revealing that only a subset is observed among circulating strains. Therefore, while it appears that rearrangement occurs less frequently in other species than in B. pertussis, these clinically relevant respiratory pathogens likely experience similar mutation of gene order. The resulting chromosome structural fluidity presents both challenges and opportunity for the study of Bordetella respiratory pathogens. IMPORTANCE Bordetella pertussis is the primary agent of whooping cough (pertussis). The Bordetella genus includes additional pathogens of animals and humans, including some that cause pertussis-like respiratory illness. The chromosome of B. pertussis has previously been shown to exhibit considerable structural rearrangement, but insufficient data have prevented comparable investigation in related species. In this study, we analyze chromosome structure variation in several Bordetella species to gain a generalized understanding of rearrangement patterns in this genus. Just as in B. pertussis, we observed inversions in other species that likely result from common mutational processes. We used these data to further predict additional, unobserved inversions, suggesting that specific genome structures may be preferred in each species.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6867878
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher American Society for Microbiology
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-68678782019-11-25 Conserved Patterns of Symmetric Inversion in the Genome Evolution of Bordetella Respiratory Pathogens Weigand, Michael R. Peng, Yanhui Batra, Dhwani Burroughs, Mark Davis, Jamie K. Knipe, Kristen Loparev, Vladimir N. Johnson, Taccara Juieng, Phalasy Rowe, Lori A. Sheth, Mili Tang, Kevin Unoarumhi, Yvette Williams, Margaret M. Tondella, M. Lucia mSystems Research Article Whooping cough (pertussis), primarily caused by Bordetella pertussis, has resurged in the United States, and circulating strains exhibit considerable chromosome structural fluidity in the form of rearrangement and deletion. The genus Bordetella includes additional pathogenic species infecting various animals, some even causing pertussis-like respiratory disease in humans; however, investigation of their genome evolution has been limited. We studied chromosome structure in complete genome sequences from 167 Bordetella species isolates, as well as 469 B. pertussis isolates, to gain a generalized understanding of rearrangement patterns among these related pathogens. Observed changes in gene order primarily resulted from large inversions and were only detected in species with genomes harboring multicopy insertion sequence (IS) elements, most notably B. holmesii and B. parapertussis. While genomes of B. pertussis contain >240 copies of IS481, IS elements appear less numerous in other species and yield less chromosome structural diversity through rearrangement. These data were further used to predict all possible rearrangements between IS element copies present in Bordetella genomes, revealing that only a subset is observed among circulating strains. Therefore, while it appears that rearrangement occurs less frequently in other species than in B. pertussis, these clinically relevant respiratory pathogens likely experience similar mutation of gene order. The resulting chromosome structural fluidity presents both challenges and opportunity for the study of Bordetella respiratory pathogens. IMPORTANCE Bordetella pertussis is the primary agent of whooping cough (pertussis). The Bordetella genus includes additional pathogens of animals and humans, including some that cause pertussis-like respiratory illness. The chromosome of B. pertussis has previously been shown to exhibit considerable structural rearrangement, but insufficient data have prevented comparable investigation in related species. In this study, we analyze chromosome structure variation in several Bordetella species to gain a generalized understanding of rearrangement patterns in this genus. Just as in B. pertussis, we observed inversions in other species that likely result from common mutational processes. We used these data to further predict additional, unobserved inversions, suggesting that specific genome structures may be preferred in each species. American Society for Microbiology 2019-11-19 /pmc/articles/PMC6867878/ /pubmed/31744907 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.00702-19 Text en https://doi.org/10.1128/AuthorWarrantyLicense.v1 This is a work of the U.S. Government and is not subject to copyright protection in the United States. Foreign copyrights may apply.
spellingShingle Research Article
Weigand, Michael R.
Peng, Yanhui
Batra, Dhwani
Burroughs, Mark
Davis, Jamie K.
Knipe, Kristen
Loparev, Vladimir N.
Johnson, Taccara
Juieng, Phalasy
Rowe, Lori A.
Sheth, Mili
Tang, Kevin
Unoarumhi, Yvette
Williams, Margaret M.
Tondella, M. Lucia
Conserved Patterns of Symmetric Inversion in the Genome Evolution of Bordetella Respiratory Pathogens
title Conserved Patterns of Symmetric Inversion in the Genome Evolution of Bordetella Respiratory Pathogens
title_full Conserved Patterns of Symmetric Inversion in the Genome Evolution of Bordetella Respiratory Pathogens
title_fullStr Conserved Patterns of Symmetric Inversion in the Genome Evolution of Bordetella Respiratory Pathogens
title_full_unstemmed Conserved Patterns of Symmetric Inversion in the Genome Evolution of Bordetella Respiratory Pathogens
title_short Conserved Patterns of Symmetric Inversion in the Genome Evolution of Bordetella Respiratory Pathogens
title_sort conserved patterns of symmetric inversion in the genome evolution of bordetella respiratory pathogens
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6867878/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31744907
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.00702-19
work_keys_str_mv AT weigandmichaelr conservedpatternsofsymmetricinversioninthegenomeevolutionofbordetellarespiratorypathogens
AT pengyanhui conservedpatternsofsymmetricinversioninthegenomeevolutionofbordetellarespiratorypathogens
AT batradhwani conservedpatternsofsymmetricinversioninthegenomeevolutionofbordetellarespiratorypathogens
AT burroughsmark conservedpatternsofsymmetricinversioninthegenomeevolutionofbordetellarespiratorypathogens
AT davisjamiek conservedpatternsofsymmetricinversioninthegenomeevolutionofbordetellarespiratorypathogens
AT knipekristen conservedpatternsofsymmetricinversioninthegenomeevolutionofbordetellarespiratorypathogens
AT loparevvladimirn conservedpatternsofsymmetricinversioninthegenomeevolutionofbordetellarespiratorypathogens
AT johnsontaccara conservedpatternsofsymmetricinversioninthegenomeevolutionofbordetellarespiratorypathogens
AT juiengphalasy conservedpatternsofsymmetricinversioninthegenomeevolutionofbordetellarespiratorypathogens
AT roweloria conservedpatternsofsymmetricinversioninthegenomeevolutionofbordetellarespiratorypathogens
AT shethmili conservedpatternsofsymmetricinversioninthegenomeevolutionofbordetellarespiratorypathogens
AT tangkevin conservedpatternsofsymmetricinversioninthegenomeevolutionofbordetellarespiratorypathogens
AT unoarumhiyvette conservedpatternsofsymmetricinversioninthegenomeevolutionofbordetellarespiratorypathogens
AT williamsmargaretm conservedpatternsofsymmetricinversioninthegenomeevolutionofbordetellarespiratorypathogens
AT tondellamlucia conservedpatternsofsymmetricinversioninthegenomeevolutionofbordetellarespiratorypathogens