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Classification of Parabacteroides distasonis and other Bacteroidetes using O- antigen virulence gene: RfbA-Typing and hypothesis for pathogenic vs. probiotic strain differentiation

Parabacteroides distasonis (Pdis) is the type species for the new Parabacteroides genus, and a gut commensal of the Bacteroidetes phylum. Emerging reports (primarily based on reference strain/ATCC-8503) concerningly propose that long-known opportunistic pathogen Pdis is a probiotic. We posit there i...

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Autores principales: Bank, Nicholas C., Singh, Vaidhvi, Rodriguez-Palacios, Alex
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Taylor & Francis 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8803095/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35090379
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19490976.2021.1997293
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author Bank, Nicholas C.
Singh, Vaidhvi
Rodriguez-Palacios, Alex
author_facet Bank, Nicholas C.
Singh, Vaidhvi
Rodriguez-Palacios, Alex
author_sort Bank, Nicholas C.
collection PubMed
description Parabacteroides distasonis (Pdis) is the type species for the new Parabacteroides genus, and a gut commensal of the Bacteroidetes phylum. Emerging reports (primarily based on reference strain/ATCC-8503) concerningly propose that long-known opportunistic pathogen Pdis is a probiotic. We posit there is an urgent need to characterize the pathogenicity of Pdis strain-strain variability. Unfortunately, no methods/insights exist to classify Bacteroidetes for this purpose. Herein, we developed a virulence gene-based classification system for Pdis and Bacteroidetes to facilitate pathogenic-vs-probiotic characterization. We used DNA in silico methods to develop a system based on the virulence (lipopolysaccharide/bacterial wall) ‘rfbA O-antigen-synthesis gene’. We then performed phylogenetic analysis of rfbA from fourteen Pdis complete genomes (21 genes), other Parabacteroides, Bacteroidetes, and Enterobacteriaceae; and proposed a PCR-based Restriction-Fragment Length Polymorphism method. Cluster analysis revealed that Pdis can be classified into four lineages (based on gene gaps/insertions) which we designated rfbA-Types I, II, III, and IV. In context, we found 14 additional rfbA-types (I–XVIII) interspersed with numerous Bacteroidetes and pathogenic Enterobacteriaceae forming three major “rfbA-superclusters.” For laboratory rfbA-Typing implementation, we developed a PCR-primer strategy to amplify Pdis rfbA genes (100%-specificity) to conduct MboII-RFLP and sub-classify Pdis. In-silico primers for other Bacteroidetes are proposed/discussed. Comparative analysis of lipopolysaccharide/lipid-A gene lpxK confirmed rfbA as highly discriminant. In conclusion, rfbA-Typing classifies Bacteroidetes/Pdis into unique clusters/superclusters given rfbA copy/sequence variability. Analysis revealed that most pathogenic Pdis strains are single-copy rfbA-Type I . The relevance of the rfbA strain variability in disease might depend on their hypothetical modulatory interactions with other O-antigens/lipopolysaccharides and TLR4 lipopolysaccharide-receptors in human/animal cells.
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spelling pubmed-88030952022-02-01 Classification of Parabacteroides distasonis and other Bacteroidetes using O- antigen virulence gene: RfbA-Typing and hypothesis for pathogenic vs. probiotic strain differentiation Bank, Nicholas C. Singh, Vaidhvi Rodriguez-Palacios, Alex Gut Microbes Research Paper Parabacteroides distasonis (Pdis) is the type species for the new Parabacteroides genus, and a gut commensal of the Bacteroidetes phylum. Emerging reports (primarily based on reference strain/ATCC-8503) concerningly propose that long-known opportunistic pathogen Pdis is a probiotic. We posit there is an urgent need to characterize the pathogenicity of Pdis strain-strain variability. Unfortunately, no methods/insights exist to classify Bacteroidetes for this purpose. Herein, we developed a virulence gene-based classification system for Pdis and Bacteroidetes to facilitate pathogenic-vs-probiotic characterization. We used DNA in silico methods to develop a system based on the virulence (lipopolysaccharide/bacterial wall) ‘rfbA O-antigen-synthesis gene’. We then performed phylogenetic analysis of rfbA from fourteen Pdis complete genomes (21 genes), other Parabacteroides, Bacteroidetes, and Enterobacteriaceae; and proposed a PCR-based Restriction-Fragment Length Polymorphism method. Cluster analysis revealed that Pdis can be classified into four lineages (based on gene gaps/insertions) which we designated rfbA-Types I, II, III, and IV. In context, we found 14 additional rfbA-types (I–XVIII) interspersed with numerous Bacteroidetes and pathogenic Enterobacteriaceae forming three major “rfbA-superclusters.” For laboratory rfbA-Typing implementation, we developed a PCR-primer strategy to amplify Pdis rfbA genes (100%-specificity) to conduct MboII-RFLP and sub-classify Pdis. In-silico primers for other Bacteroidetes are proposed/discussed. Comparative analysis of lipopolysaccharide/lipid-A gene lpxK confirmed rfbA as highly discriminant. In conclusion, rfbA-Typing classifies Bacteroidetes/Pdis into unique clusters/superclusters given rfbA copy/sequence variability. Analysis revealed that most pathogenic Pdis strains are single-copy rfbA-Type I . The relevance of the rfbA strain variability in disease might depend on their hypothetical modulatory interactions with other O-antigens/lipopolysaccharides and TLR4 lipopolysaccharide-receptors in human/animal cells. Taylor & Francis 2022-01-28 /pmc/articles/PMC8803095/ /pubmed/35090379 http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19490976.2021.1997293 Text en © 2021 The Author(s). Published with license by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) ), which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Bank, Nicholas C.
Singh, Vaidhvi
Rodriguez-Palacios, Alex
Classification of Parabacteroides distasonis and other Bacteroidetes using O- antigen virulence gene: RfbA-Typing and hypothesis for pathogenic vs. probiotic strain differentiation
title Classification of Parabacteroides distasonis and other Bacteroidetes using O- antigen virulence gene: RfbA-Typing and hypothesis for pathogenic vs. probiotic strain differentiation
title_full Classification of Parabacteroides distasonis and other Bacteroidetes using O- antigen virulence gene: RfbA-Typing and hypothesis for pathogenic vs. probiotic strain differentiation
title_fullStr Classification of Parabacteroides distasonis and other Bacteroidetes using O- antigen virulence gene: RfbA-Typing and hypothesis for pathogenic vs. probiotic strain differentiation
title_full_unstemmed Classification of Parabacteroides distasonis and other Bacteroidetes using O- antigen virulence gene: RfbA-Typing and hypothesis for pathogenic vs. probiotic strain differentiation
title_short Classification of Parabacteroides distasonis and other Bacteroidetes using O- antigen virulence gene: RfbA-Typing and hypothesis for pathogenic vs. probiotic strain differentiation
title_sort classification of parabacteroides distasonis and other bacteroidetes using o- antigen virulence gene: rfba-typing and hypothesis for pathogenic vs. probiotic strain differentiation
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8803095/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35090379
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19490976.2021.1997293
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