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2.
Characterization of cross-reacting serotypes of Campylobacter jejuni   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Some strains of Campylobacter jejuni react with more than one reference antiserum from the serotyping scheme based on heat-stable lipopolysaccharide antigens. To investigate the molecular basis of these cross-reactions, lipopolysaccharides from the reference strains for serotypes 4, 13, 16, 43, and 50 and isolates recovered during two different outbreaks of C. jejuni enteritis were analyzed by passive haemagglutination and sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis coupled with silver staining or immunoblotting. The results showed that lipopolysaccharides from the reference strains and the isolates reacted with antisera prepared against heterologous strains in various combinations and that both silver-stainable, low Mr and non-silver-stainable, high Mr lipopolysaccharide components provided the antigenic determinants associated with the cross-reactions. There were strain-to-strain differences in the structural and antigenic properties of these macromolecules and shared antigenic determinants were not always provided by a common structure. Analysis of the silver-stained lipopolysaccharide profiles, outer membrane protein patterns, and chromosomal DNA restriction patterns indicated that strains with the same lipopolysaccharide profile could have the same outer membrane protein pattern and the same DNA restriction pattern. These results provided evidence for the presence of clones within this antigenic complex and implicated antigenic variation in some strains as the phenomenon responsible for the multiplicity of cross-reactions.  相似文献   

3.
Evidence for a Genetically Stable Strain of Campylobacter jejuni   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The genetic stability of selected epidemiologically linked strains of Campylobacter jejuni during outbreak situations was investigated by using subtyping techniques. Strains isolated from geographically related chicken flock outbreaks in 1998 and from a human outbreak in 1981 were investigated. There was little similarity in the strains obtained from the different chicken flock outbreaks; however, the strains from each of three chicken outbreaks, including strains isolated from various environments, were identical as determined by fla typing, amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) analysis, and pulsed-field gel electrophoresis, which confirmed the genetic stability of these strains during the short time courses of chicken flock outbreaks. The human outbreak samples were compared with strain 81116, which originated from the same outbreak but has since undergone innumerable laboratory passages. Two main AFLP profiles were recognized from this outbreak, which confirmed the serotyping results obtained at the time of the outbreak. The major type isolated from this outbreak (serotype P6:L6) was exemplified by strain 81116. Despite the long existence of strain 81116 as a laboratory strain, the AFLP profile of this strain was identical to the profiles of all the other historical P6:L6 strains from the outbreak, indicating that the genotype has remained stable for almost 20 years. Interestingly, the AFLP profiles of the P6:L6 group of strains from the human outbreak and the strains from one of the recent chicken outbreaks were also identical. This similarity suggests that some clones of C. jejuni remain genetically stable in completely different environments over long periods of time and considerable geographical distances.  相似文献   

4.
Poultry isolates of Campylobacter jejuni derived from a survey of meat processing batches were genotyped by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) of chromosomal DNA to establish the clonal relationships between single-colony isolates. In the majority of batches studied, one or two genotype patterns predominated. However, in one batch (batch A), 21 single-colony isolates gave 14 different PFGE genotypes. The banding patterns obtained with SmaI were sufficiently different to distinguish between genotypes, although the patterns also produced many common bands. The question of whether these isolates represented different clones or had a common clonal ancestry was addressed by additional genotypic and phenotypic methods. Restriction length polymorphism of PCR products obtained from the flagellin genes showed an identical flagellin genotype for all of these isolates. In contrast, unrelated control isolates resulted in different flagellin genotypes. Moreover, all 14 different PFGE genotypes of batch A had identical Penner serotypes and identical or similar biotypes and phage types. It was concluded that the isolates were of clonal origin and that the diversity in the PFGE banding patterns had most likely originated from genomic rearrangements. However, the PFGE genotypes were shown to be stable upon subculturing in vitro and after in vivo passage in chickens, and natural transformation between isogenic mutants carrying antibiotic markers did not occur in vivo in a chick colonization model. The possible mechanisms for the hypothesized genomic recombinations and the conditions that allow, induce, or select for such events are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Western blots of whole-cell sonicates of 10 different clones of a faecal isolate of Campylobacter jejuni 533 detected the expression of flagella antigens of either 59 or 62 kDa. Other antigenic proteins appeared identical both in the parent and all the clones. The mechanism for this phenotypic variation was studied using Southern blotting with a flagellin-specific gene probe and products of a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) using flagellin-gene primers. Restriction-enzyme digestion and Southern blotting did not detect any genomic rearrangements in the flagellin genes of the different phenotypes nor did restriction-enzyme analysis of the PCR products.  相似文献   

6.
Campylobacter jejuni, one of the most common causes of human gastroenteritis, is a thermophilic and microaerophilic bacterium. These characteristics make it a fastidious organism, which limits its ability to survive outside animal hosts. Nevertheless, C. jejuni can be transmitted to both humans and animals via environmental pathways, especially through contaminated water. Biofilms may play a crucial role in the survival of the bacterium under unfavorable environmental conditions. The goal of this study was to investigate survival strategies of C. jejuni in mono- and mixed-culture biofilms. We grew monoculture biofilms of C. jejuni and mixed-culture biofilms of C. jejuni with Pseudomonas aeruginosa. We found that mono- and mixed-culture biofilms had significantly different structures and activities. Monoculture C. jejuni biofilms did not consume a measurable quantity of oxygen. Using a confocal laser scanning microscope (CLSM), we found that cells from monoculture biofilms were alive according to live/dead staining but that these cells were not culturable. In contrast, in mixed-culture biofilms, C. jejuni remained in a culturable physiological state. Monoculture C. jejuni biofilms could persist under lower flow rates (0.75 ml/min) but were unable to persist at higher flow rates (1 to 2.5 ml/min). In sharp contrast, mixed-culture biofilms were more robust and were unaffected by higher flow rates (2.5 ml/min). Our results indicate that biofilms provide an environmental refuge that is conducive to the survival of C. jejuni.  相似文献   

7.
Whether or not bacteria form coherent evolutionary groups via means of genetic exchange and, hence, elicit distinct species boundaries remains an unsettled issue. A recent report implied that not only may the former be true but also, in fact, the clearly distinct Campylobacter jejuni and Campylobacter coli species may be converging as a consequence of increased interspecies gene flow fostered, presumably, by the recent invasion of an overlapping ecological niche (S. K. Sheppard, N. D. McCarthy, D. Falush, and M. C. Maiden, Science 320:237-239, 2008). We have reanalyzed the Campylobacter multilocus sequence typing database used in the previous study and found that the number of interspecies gene transfer events may actually be too infrequent to account, unequivocally, for species convergence. For instance, only 1 to 2% of the 4,507 Campylobacter isolates examined appeared to have imported gene alleles from another Campylobacter species. Furthermore, by analyzing the available Campylobacter genomic sequences, we show that although there seems to be a slightly higher number of exchanged genes between C. jejuni and C. coli relative to other comparable species (∼10% versus 2 to 3% of the total genes in the genome, respectively), the function and spatial distribution in the genome of the exchanged genes are far from random, and hence, inconsistent with the species convergence hypothesis. In fact, the exchanged genes appear to be limited to a few environmentally selected cellular functions. Accordingly, these genes may represent important pathogenic determinants of pathogenic Campylobacter, and convergence of (any) two bacterial species remains to be seen.High-throughput sequencing studies during the last decade have revealed that bacterial genomes are much more diverse and “fluid” than previously anticipated (14, 31). This genomic fluidity is primarily attributable to the great pervasiveness and promiscuity of horizontal gene transfer (HGT) in the bacterial world (5, 17). Nonetheless, evidence of any two distinct bacterial species or lineages merging due to directed (as opposed to promiscuous) interspecies genetic exchange was reported, probably for the first time ever, by the recent study of Sheppard et al. (26). Species convergence, if occurring, has major theoretical implications for the bacterial species concept (reviewed extensively elsewhere [9, 10, 14, 24, 30]) and important practical consequences for accurate identification of bacterial pathogens in the clinical setting.Sheppard and colleagues reported that as many as ∼18.6% of the unique alleles of housekeeping genes found in Campylobacter coli isolates may have been recently imported (through HGT) from a close relative, Campylobacter jejuni (26). The results were based on the analysis of 4,507 Campylobacter spp. isolates, which were genotyped at seven genes (loci), available though the Campylobacter multilocus sequence typing (MLST) database (4). In brief, the 4,507 genotyped isolates contained a total of 2,917 unique sequence types (STs). A unique ST represents the concatenated sequence of the seven genes present in the genome of an isolate and contains a unique sequence (allele) for at least one of the seven genes when compared against any other unique ST in the database (different isolates may be characterized by the same ST). The unique STs were assigned to either C. coli or C. jejuni species by using the program STRUCTURE (6). Neighbor-joining phylogenetic trees of all available unique alleles for each individual gene were subsequently built. Instances where the ST assignment to a species differed from the assignment of an individual gene sequence, which comprised the ST, were attributed to interspecies transfer of the gene, and the number of such instances was reported (26).Here, we have reevaluated the available Campylobacter MLST data set and show that the predominant STs, i.e., the STs characterizing >98% of the isolates, do not contain imported alleles and, hence, do not support the species convergence hypothesis. In agreement with these findings, analyses of the available Campylobacter genomic sequences indicate that the interspecies genetic exchange is limited and heavily biased toward a few genes under positive selection. In fact, housekeeping genes (such as those used in MLST) were found to be exchanged between the two species only in (rare) hitchhiking events associated with the horizontal transfer of adaptive genes. Accordingly, a clear species boundary between the C. jejuni and C. coli species is evident and it is unlikely that this boundary is being eroded.  相似文献   

8.
Zhang M  He L  Li Q  Sun H  Gu Y  You Y  Meng F  Zhang J 《PloS one》2010,5(11):e15060
Campylobacter jejuni ICDCCJ07001 (HS:41, ST2993) was isolated from a Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) patient during a 36-case GBS outbreak triggered by C. jejuni infections in north China in 2007. Sequence analysis revealed that the ICDCCJ07001 genome consisted of 1,664,840 base pairs (bp) and one tetracycline resistance plasmid of 44,084 bp. The GC content was 59.29% and 1,579 and 37 CDSs were identified on the chromosome and plasmid, respectively. The ICDCCJ07001 genome was compared to C. jejuni subsp. jejuni strains 81-176, 81116, NCTC11168, RM1221 and C. jejuni subsp. doylei 269.97. The length and organization of ICDCCJ07001 was similar to that of NCTC11168, 81-176 and 81-116 except that CMLP1 had a reverse orientation in strain ICDCCJ07001. Comparative genomic analyses were also carried out between GBS-associated C. jejuni strains. Thirteen common genes were present in four GBS-associated strains and 9 genes mapped to the LOS cluster and the ICDCCJ07001_pTet (44 kb) plasmid was mosaic in structure. Thirty-seven predicted CDS in ICDCCJ07001_pTet were homologous to genes present in three virulence-associated plasmids in Campylobacter: 81-176_pTet, pCC31 and 81-176_pVir. Comparative analysis of virulence loci and virulence-associated genes indicated that the LOS biosynthesis loci of ICDCCJ07001 belonged to type A, previously reported to be associated with cases of GBS. The polysaccharide capsular biosynthesis (CPS) loci and the flagella modification (FM) loci of ICDCCJ07001 were similar to corresponding sequences of strain 260.94 of similar serotype as strain ICDCCJ07001. Other virulence-associated genes including cadF, peb1, jlpA, cdt and ciaB were conserved between the C. jejuni strains examined.  相似文献   

9.
Campylobacter jejuni   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
This review describes characteristics of the family Campylobacteraceae and traits of Campylobacter jejuni. The review then focuses on the worldwide problem of C. jejuni antimicrobial resistance and mechanisms of pathogenesis and virulence. Unravelling these areas will help with the development of new therapeutic agents and ultimately decrease illness caused by this important human pathogen.  相似文献   

10.
Campylobacter jejuni is a major cause of human diarrheal disease in many industrialized countries and is a source of public health and economic burden. C. jejuni, present as normal flora in the intestinal tract of commercial broiler chickens and other livestock, is probably the main source of human infections. The presence of C. jejuni in biofilms found in animal production watering systems may play a role in the colonization of these animals. We have determined that C. jejuni can form biofilms on a variety of abiotic surfaces commonly used in watering systems, such as acrylonitrile butadiene styrene and polyvinyl chloride plastics. Furthermore, C. jejuni biofilm formation was inhibited by growth in nutrient-rich media or high osmolarity, and thermophilic and microaerophilic conditions enhanced biofilm formation. Thus, nutritional and environmental conditions affect the formation of C. jejuni biofilms. Both flagella and quorum sensing appear to be required for maximal biofilm formation, as C. jejuni flaAB and luxS mutants were significantly reduced in their ability to form biofilms compared to the wild-type strain.  相似文献   

11.
Campylobacter jejuni is a major cause of human diarrheal disease in many industrialized countries and is a source of public health and economic burden. C. jejuni, present as normal flora in the intestinal tract of commercial broiler chickens and other livestock, is probably the main source of human infections. The presence of C. jejuni in biofilms found in animal production watering systems may play a role in the colonization of these animals. We have determined that C. jejuni can form biofilms on a variety of abiotic surfaces commonly used in watering systems, such as acrylonitrile butadiene styrene and polyvinyl chloride plastics. Furthermore, C. jejuni biofilm formation was inhibited by growth in nutrient-rich media or high osmolarity, and thermophilic and microaerophilic conditions enhanced biofilm formation. Thus, nutritional and environmental conditions affect the formation of C. jejuni biofilms. Both flagella and quorum sensing appear to be required for maximal biofilm formation, as C. jejuni flaAB and luxS mutants were significantly reduced in their ability to form biofilms compared to the wild-type strain.  相似文献   

12.
We report that C. jejuni modifies its outer membrane protein (OMP) repertoire when cultivated under iron-limiting conditions such as during incubation with epithelial cells. To identify genes encoding de novo expressed OMPs, a C. jejuni cosmid library was screened with antisera raised against proteins expressed in the presence of epithelial cells. A single clone was identified encoding an 80-kDa antigen. Sequence analysis of subclones identified an operon of three open reading frames (ORFs) encoding proteins that are homologous to the E. coli ferrichrome uptake system encoded by the fhu locus. Under low-iron conditions, C. jejuni expressed the 80-kDa OMP, indicating that its expression is regulated by the presence of iron. Southern blot analysis indicated that six of eleven isolates of C. jejuni harbor a fhuA homolog which, like all other DNA in this region sequenced thus far, is strikingly GC-rich (65%) compared with the C. jejuni genome (35% G+C). Received: 19 June 2000 / Accepted: 30 August 2000  相似文献   

13.
Campylobacter jejuni is a foodborne bacterial pathogen, which is now considered as a leading cause of human bacterial gastroenteritis. The information regarding ribonucleases in C. jejuni is very scarce but there are hints that they can be instrumental in virulence mechanisms. Namely, PNPase (polynucleotide phosphorylase) was shown to allow survival of C. jejuni in refrigerated conditions, to facilitate bacterial swimming, cell adhesion, colonization and invasion. In several microorganisms PNPase synthesis is auto-controlled in an RNase III (ribonuclease III)-dependent mechanism. Thereby, we have cloned, overexpressed, purified and characterized Cj-RNase III (C. jejuni RNase III). We have demonstrated that Cj-RNase III is able to complement an Escherichia coli rnc-deficient strain in 30S rRNA processing and PNPase regulation. Cj-RNase III was shown to be active in an unexpectedly large range of conditions, and Mn2+ seems to be its preferred co-factor, contrarily to what was described for other RNase III orthologues. The results lead us to speculate that Cj-RNase III may have an important role under a Mn2+-rich environment. Mutational analysis strengthened the function of some residues in the catalytic mechanism of action of RNase III, which was shown to be conserved.  相似文献   

14.
UDP-galactopyranose mutases (UGM) are the enzymes responsible for the synthesis of UDP-galactofuranose (UDP-Galf) from UDP-galactopyranose (UDP-Galp). The enzyme, encoded by the glf gene, is present in bacteria, parasites, and fungi that express Galf in their glycoconjugates. Recently, a UGM homologue encoded by the cj1439 gene has been identified in Campylobacter jejuni 11168, an organism possessing no Galf-containing glycoconjugates. However, the capsular polysaccharide from this strain contains a 2-acetamido-2-deoxy-d-galactofuranose (GalfNAc) moiety. Using an in vitro high performance liquid chromatography assay and complementation studies, we characterized the activity of this UGM homologue. The enzyme, which we have renamed UDP-N-acetylgalactopyranose mutase (UNGM), has relaxed specificity and can use either UDP-Gal or UDP-GalNAc as a substrate. Complementation studies of mutase knock-outs in C. jejuni 11168 and Escherichia coli W3110, the latter containing Galf residues in its lipopolysaccharide, demonstrated that the enzyme recognizes both UDP-Gal and UDP-GalNAc in vivo. A homology model of UNGM and site-directed mutagenesis led to the identification of two active site amino acid residues involved in the recognition of the UDP-GalNAc substrate. The specificity of UNGM was characterized using a two-substrate co-incubation assay, which demonstrated, surprisingly, that UDP-Gal is a better substrate than UDP-GalNAc.  相似文献   

15.
The major flagellin of Campylobacter jejuni strain 81-176, FlaA, has been shown to be glycosylated at 19 serine or threonine sites, and this glycosylation is required for flagellar filament formation. Some enzymatic components of the glycosylation machinery of C. jejuni 81-176 are localized to the poles of the cell in an FlhF-independent manner. Flagellin glycosylation could be detected in flagellar mutants at multiple levels of the regulatory hierarchy, indicating that glycosylation occurs independently of the flagellar regulon. Mutants were constructed in which each of the 19 serine or threonines that are glycosylated in FlaA was converted to an alanine. Eleven of the 19 mutants displayed no observable phenotype, but the remaining 8 mutants had two distinct phenotypes. Five mutants (mutations S417A, S436A, S440A, S457A, and T481A) were fully motile but defective in autoagglutination (AAG). Three other mutants (mutations S425A, S454A, and S460A) were reduced in motility and synthesized truncated flagellar filaments. The data implicate certain glycans in mediating filament-filament interactions resulting in AAG and other glycans appear to be critical for structural subunit-subunit interactions within the filament.Flagellins from many polarly flagellated bacteria are glycosylated (reviewed in reference 22). The best-characterized examples are the flagellins from Campylobacter spp. that are decorated with as many as 19 O-linked glycans that can contribute ∼10% to the weight of flagellin (38). The genes encoding the enzymes for biosynthesis of the glycans found on Campylobacter flagellins and the respective glycosyltransferases are located adjacent to the flagellin structural genes in one of the more hypervariable regions of the Campylobacter genome (3, 16, 28, 37). Most strains appear to carry the genes for synthesis of two distinct nine-carbon sugars that decorate flagellin: pseudaminic acid (PseAc) and an acetamidino form of legionaminic acid (LegAm) (23). In contrast, Campylobacter jejuni strain 81-176 contains only the pathway for synthesis of PseAc (9) and derivatives of PseAc that include an acetylated form (PseAcOAc), an acetamidino form (PseAm), and a form of PseAm with a glutamic acid moiety attached (PseAmOGln) (25, 34, 38). The flagellins of C. jejuni strain NCTC 11168 have recently been shown to be glycosylated with PseAc and LegAm, as well as two novel derivatives of PseAc, a di-O-methylglyceric acid and a related acetamidino form (24). Thus, although all of the flagellar glycans appear to be based on either PseAc and/or LegAm, there are variations among strains that contribute to serospecificity and reflect the heterogeneity of the flagellin glycosylation loci (23, 24).The function of the glycosyl modifications to flagellar structure and to the biology of campylobacters is not fully understood. Although most polarly flagellated bacteria appear to glycosylate flagellin, mutation of the genes involved in glycosylation does not generally result in loss of motility (22). However, flagella from C. jejuni, Campylobacter coli, and Helicobacter pylori, all members of the epsilon division of Proteobacteria, are unable to assemble a filament in the absence of a functional glycosylation system (7, 33). Also, changes in the glycans on campylobacter flagellins have been shown to affect autoagglutination (AAG) and microcolony formation on intestinal epithelial cells in vitro (5, 9). Thus, a mutant of C. jejuni 81-176 that was unable to synthesize PseAm assembled a flagellar filament, but the sites on the flagellin subunits that were normally glycosylated with PseAm were instead glycosylated with PseAc. This mutant was reduced in AAG, adherence, and invasion of INT407 cells and was also attenuated in a ferret diarrheal disease model (9). C. coli VC167 has both PseAc and LegAm pathways. Mutants that were defective in either pathway could still assemble flagellar filaments composed of subunits that were modified with the alternate sugar, but these mutants showed defects in AAG (7). A VC167 double mutant, defective in both PseAc and LegAm synthesis, was nonflagellated (7). Collectively, these data suggest that some glycosylation is required for either secretion of flagellin or for interactions between subunits within the filament.Flagellar biogenesis in C. jejuni is a complex process that is highly controlled by the alternate sigma factors σ28 and σ54, a two-component regulatory system composed of the sensor kinase FlgS and the σ54-response regulator FlgR, and the flagellar export apparatus (15, 39). Both flgR and flgS genes undergo slip strand mismatch repair in C. jejuni strain 81-176, resulting in an on/off-phase variation of flagellar expression (13, 14). The major flagellin gene, flaA, and some other late flagellar genes are regulated by σ28; the genes encoding the minor flagellin, flaB, and the hook and rod structures are regulated by σ54. Here, we examine several aspects of glycosylation to flagellar function in C. jejuni 81-176. We demonstrate that some components of the flagellar glycosylation machinery are localized to the poles of the cell, but independently of the signal recognition particle-like flagellar protein, FlhF, and that flagellin glycosylation occurs independently of the flagellar regulon. We also show that the glycans on some amino acids appear to play a structural role in subunit interactions in the filament, while others affect interactions with adjacent filaments that result in AAG.  相似文献   

16.
Microbial cell surface glycans in the form of glycolipids and glycoproteins frequently play important roles in cell-cell interaction and host immune responses. Given the likely importance of these surface structures in the survival and pathogenesis of Campylobacter jejuni, a concerted effort has been made to characterise these determinants genetically and structurally since the genome was sequenced in 2000. We review the considerable progress made in characterising the Campylobacter glycome including the lipooligosaccharide (LOS), the capsule and O- and N-linked protein glycosylation systems, and speculate on the roles played by glycan surface structures in the life-cycle of C. jejuni.  相似文献   

17.
The global significance of Campylobacter jejuni and Campylobacter coli as gastrointestinal human pathogens has motivated numerous studies to characterize their population biology and evolution. These bacteria are a common component of the intestinal microbiota of numerous bird and mammal species and cause disease in humans, typically via consumption of contaminated meat products, especially poultry meat. Sequence-based molecular typing methods, such as multilocus sequence typing (MLST) and whole genome sequencing (WGS), have been instructive for understanding the epidemiology and evolution of these bacteria and how phenotypic variation relates to the high degree of genetic structuring in C. coli and C. jejuni populations. Here, we describe aspects of the relatively short history of coevolution between humans and pathogenic Campylobacter, by reviewing research investigating how mutation and lateral or horizontal gene transfer (LGT or HGT, respectively) interact to create the observed population structure. These genetic changes occur in a complex fitness landscape with divergent ecologies, including multiple host species, which can lead to rapid adaptation, for example, through frame-shift mutations that alter gene expression or the acquisition of novel genetic elements by HGT. Recombination is a particularly strong evolutionary force in Campylobacter, leading to the emergence of new lineages and even large-scale genome-wide interspecies introgression between C. jejuni and C. coli. The increasing availability of large genome datasets is enhancing understanding of Campylobacter evolution through the application of methods, such as genome-wide association studies, but MLST-derived clonal complex designations remain a useful method for describing population structure.Campylobacter jejuni and Campylobacter coli remain among the most common causes of human bacterial gastroenteritis worldwide (Friedman et al. 2000). In high-income countries, Campylobacteriosis is much more common than gastroenteritis caused by Escherichia coli, Listeria, and Salmonella, and accounts for an estimated 2.5 million annual cases of gastrointestinal disease in the United States alone (Kessel et al. 2001). Infection with these bacteria is also a major cause of morbidity and mortality in low- and middle-income countries, although it is almost certainly underreported in these settings, especially as culture confirmation remains challenging. Poor understanding of the transmission of these food-borne pathogens to humans in all income settings has contributed to the failure of public health systems to adequately address this problem. As a consequence, over the past 20 years, much investment has been directed at understanding how these bacteria are transmitted from reservoir hosts to humans through the food chain.Although the disease was first recognized by Theodor Escherich in 1886, who described the symptoms of intestinal Campylobacter infections in children as “cholera infantum” (Samie et al. 2007) or “summer complaint” (Condran and Murphy 2008), difficulties in the culture and characterization of these organisms precluded their recognition as major causes of disease until the 1970s. Campylobacteriosis is usually nonfatal and self-limiting; however, the symptoms of diarrhea, fever, abdominal pain, and nausea can be severe (Allos 2001), and sequelae, including Guillain–Barre syndrome and reactive arthritis, can have serious long-term consequences. Subsequently, recognition of the very high disease burden of human Campylobacter infection stimulated research on these bacteria and their relatives. Since the 1970s, C. coli and C. jejuni have been isolated from a wide range of wild and domesticated bird and mammal species, in which, typically, they are thought to cause few if any disease symptoms. Humans are usually infected by the consumption of contaminated food (especially poultry meat), water, milk, or contact with animals or animal feces (Niemann et al. 2003).Most of what is known about these species comes from isolates obtained from humans with disease, the food chain, and the agricultural environment. It is, however, important to note that such isolates are by no means representative of natural Campylobacter populations, and it is becoming increasingly apparent that much of the diversity present among the Campylobacters is in strains that colonize wild animals. Increasing numbers of novel genotypes are being found as Campylobacter populations are analyzed in different animal species, especially wild birds (Carter et al. 2009; French et al. 2009); these populations undoubtedly contain many as-yet-undescribed lineages. Most human disease isolates from cases of gastroenteritis in countries, such as the United Kingdom and the United States, are C. jejuni, which typically accounts for 90% of cases in these settings, with the remaining ∼10% of cases mostly caused by C. coli. The majority of the genotypes isolated from human disease have also been isolated as commensal gastrointestinal inhabitants of domesticated and, especially, food animals. Furthermore, clinical isolates are a nonrandom subset of these strains. Asymptomatic carriage of C. jejuni and C. coli is thought to be rare in humans, especially among people in industrialized countries, suggesting that humans are not a primary host for these organisms in these settings and that people are sporadically, and frequently pathologically, infected via the food chain from animal reservoir hosts.An understanding of the relatively short history of coevolution between humans and pathogenic Campylobacters can be obtained by examining their population structure and ecology. This approach has formed the basis of many recent investigations of the cryptic epidemiology of these organisms (Lang et al. 2010; Müllner et al. 2010; Thakur et al. 2010; Hastings et al. 2011; Jorgensen et al. 2011; Kittl et al. 2011; Magnússon et al. 2011; Sheppard et al. 2011a,b; Sproston et al. 2011; Read et al. 2013) and will be the focus of this review. Such studies have included molecular epidemiological and evolutionary analyses and, in the past 15 years or so, the application of high-throughput DNA sequencing technologies of increasing capacity has enhanced the integration of these two areas of investigation to their mutual benefit.  相似文献   

18.
Campylobacter species.are phenotypically diverse in many aspects including host habitats and pathogenicities, which demands comprehensive characterization of the entire Campylobacter genus to study their underlying genetic diversification. Up to now, 34 Campylobacter strains have been sequenced and published in public databases, providing good opportunity to systemically analyze their genomic diversities. In this study, we first conducted genomic characterization, which includes genome-wide alignments, pan-genome analysis, and phylogenetic identification, to depict the genetic diversity of Campylobacter genus. Afterward, we improved the tetranucleotide usage pattern-based naïve Bayesian classifier to identify the abnormal composition fragments (ACFs, fragments with significantly different tetranucleotide frequency profiles from its genomic tetranucleotide frequency profiles) including horizontal gene transfers (HGTs) to explore the mechanisms for the genetic diversity of this organism. Finally, we analyzed the HGTs transferred via bacteriophage transductions. To our knowledge, this study is the first to use single nucleotide polymorphism information to construct liable microevolution phylogeny of 21 Campylobacter jejuni strains. Combined with the phylogeny of all the collected Campylobacter species based on genome-wide core gene information, comprehensive phylogenetic inference of all 34 Campylobacter organisms was determined. It was found that C. jejuni harbors a high fraction of ACFs possibly through intraspecies recombination, whereas other Campylobacter members possess numerous ACFs possibly via intragenus recombination. Furthermore, some Campylobacter strains have undergone significant ancient viral integration during their evolution process. The improved method is a powerful tool for bacterial genomic analysis. Moreover, the findings would provide useful information for future research on Campylobacter genus.  相似文献   

19.
AIMS: To determine the level and mechanism(s) of antimicrobial resistance in Campylobacter isolates obtained from human and environmental sources from South Canterbury, New Zealand. METHODS AND RESULTS: A total of 251 Campylobacter isolates were tested for susceptibility to ciprofloxacin, erythromycin, nalidixic acid and tetracycline using disc diffusion assays. Five pig offal isolates were observed to be highly erythromycin resistant, with minimal inhibitory concentrations determined to be >/=256 microg ml(-1). Nucleotide sequencing of the 23S ribosomal DNA (rDNA) in these resistant isolates identified an A --> G change at Escherichia coli position 2059 that has been previously implicated in erythromycin resistance in Campylobacter coli. Macrorestriction profiling using pulsed-field gel electrophoresis showed these isolates were nonclonal. CONCLUSIONS: The majority of Campylobacter isolates from South Canterbury remain sensitive to the most clinically relevant antimicrobial agents. Our results support other reports showing that specific variations in the 23S rDNA contribute to erythromycin resistance. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACTS OF THE STUDY: This study defines the baseline frequency of antimicrobial resistance associated with Campylobacter isolates from South Canterbury, and discusses the likely molecular mechanisms conferring erythromycin resistance in this organism. Resistance to erythromycin in these isolates is not linked to a dominant Campylobacter clone and has likely arisen independently in different genetic lines exposed to selective antimicrobial pressure.  相似文献   

20.
In many industrialized countries, the incidence of campylobacteriosis exceeds that of salmonellosis. Campylobacter bacteria are transmitted to humans mainly in food, especially poultry meat products. Total prevention of Campylobacter colonization in broiler flocks is the best way to reduce (or eliminate) the contamination of poultry products. The aim of this study was to establish the sources and routes of contamination of broilers at the farm level. Molecular typing methods (DNA macrorestriction pulsed-field gel electrophoresis and analysis of gene polymorphism by PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism) were used to characterize isolates collected from seven broiler farms. The relative genomic diversity of Campylobacter coli and Campylobacter jejuni was determined. Analysis of the similarity among 116 defined genotypes was used to determine clusters within the two species. Furthermore, evidence of recombination suggested that there were genomic rearrangements within the Campylobacter populations. Recovery of related clusters from different broiler farms showed that some Campylobacter strains might be specifically adapted to poultry. Analysis of the Campylobacter cluster distribution on three broiler farms showed that soil in the area around the poultry house was a potential source of Campylobacter contamination. The broilers were infected by Campylobacter spp. between days 15 and 36 during rearing, and the type of contamination changed during the rearing period. A study of the effect of sanitary barriers showed that the chickens stayed Campylobacter spp. free until they had access to the open area. They were then rapidly colonized by the Campylobacter strains isolated from the soil.  相似文献   

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