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1.
Mycobacterium ulcerans is the causative agent of Buruli ulcer, a severe necrotizing skin disease that causes significant morbidity in Africa and Australia. Person-to-person transmission of Buruli ulcer is rare. Throughout Africa and Australia infection is associated with residence near slow-moving or stagnant water bodies. Although M. ulcerans DNA has been detected in over 30 taxa of invertebrates, fish, water filtrate, and plant materials and one environmental isolate cultured from a water strider (Gerridae), the invertebrate taxa identified are not adapted to feed on humans, and the mode of transmission for Buruli ulcer remains an enigma. Recent epidemiological reports from Australia describing the presence of M. ulcerans DNA in adult mosquitoes have led to the hypothesis that mosquitoes play an important role in the transmission of M. ulcerans. In this study we have investigated the potential of mosquitoes to serve as biological or mechanical vectors or as environmental reservoirs for M. ulcerans. Here we show that Aedes aegypti, A. albopictus, Ochlerotatus triseriatus, and Culex restuans larvae readily ingest wild-type M. ulcerans, isogenic toxin-negative mutants, and Mycobacterium marinum isolates and remain infected throughout larval development. However, the infections are not carried over into the pupae or adult mosquitoes, suggesting an unlikely role for mosquitoes as biological vectors. By following M. ulcerans through a food chain consisting of primary (mosquito larvae), secondary (predatory mosquito larva from Toxorhynchites rutilus septentrionalis), and tertiary (Belostoma species) consumers, we have shown that M. ulcerans can be productively maintained in an aquatic food web.Infection with Mycobacterium ulcerans, the causative agent of Buruli ulcer (BU) disease, is associated with residence near stagnant and slow-moving water bodies in areas in which the disease is endemic (5, 36, 40, 45, 50). A plasmid-encoded macrolide toxin, mycolactone, is the primary virulence determinant of M. ulcerans (8, 41). Biting aquatic insects, such as several taxa in the Belostomatidae and Naucoridae families (Hemiptera), have been suggested as possible vectors of M. ulcerans in several laboratory experiments (16, 19, 20, 24, 31, 32); however, there is little empirical evidence from field studies to support the contention that these biting insects vector M. ulcerans to humans (2). In Melbourne, Australia, recent epidemiological evidence suggests that mosquitoes may serve as vectors in the transmission of BU disease (10, 11, 12, 34, 35). In this study, 957 pools consisting of over 11,000 mosquitoes of four different species were collected and tested by quantitative PCR (qPCR) for the presence of M. ulcerans DNA, and positive results were obtained from 48 of 957 pools tested (10). Of the 48 positive pools, 13 were positive for PCR directed against two insertion sequences (IS2404 and IS2606) as well as against sequence based on the ketoreductase domain of the mycolactone toxin genes. Because all of these target sequences are present multiple times in the genome, it was difficult to assign genome equivalents to these results. However, data from laboratory experiments suggested that 10 to 100 M. ulcerans isolates per mosquito were present in the positive pools. Epidemiological work also suggested a seasonal relationship between Buruli ulcer and mosquito-vectored diseases in Australia (12). These studies are extremely provocative and raise a number of questions for further work. What is the prevalence of M. ulcerans in other invertebrate taxa in the same environment? What is the infection rate in equal numbers of mosquitoes collected from areas in which the disease is not endemic? Is it possible to obtain physical evidence for the presence of M. ulcerans through microscopy or culture of mosquitoes in areas in which the disease is endemic, and, finally, what can we learn from laboratory studies concerning the interaction between mosquitoes and M. ulcerans?The recent work from Australia suggesting that M. ulcerans is spread by mosquitoes is particularly significant because adult mosquitoes are the most important group of insects in the spread of human disease. They may serve as biological vectors that provide a major environment for pathogen replication, as in malaria or yellow fever, or as mechanical vectors that carry organisms between hosts without serving as a site of replication (1, 4, 7, 9, 38). Larval mosquitoes are common in habitats associated with BU disease, most notably lentic or standing water habitats, and feed by filtering particles in the water using labral head fans (21). Members of some genera (i.e., Anopheles) aggregate at the air-water interface in microlayers near plant stems and algal mats (27, 28, 46), where they feed on microorganisms such as bacteria and algae (47). Because of their collecting-filtering feeding mode, there is potential for larvae to consume M. ulcerans and concentrate mycobacteria through their feeding activities (22, 23).In Ghana, the occurrence of M. ulcerans among invertebrate communities in lentic habitats has been documented from regions in Ga West and Ga East Districts in which the disease is endemic as well as those in which it is not endemic (2, 49) but not in geographically distinct areas in which the disease is not endemic such as the Volta region (49). M. ulcerans has been identified in a suite of environmental samples such as filtered water, biofilms, and algae as well as among a broad spectrum of invertebrate taxa, including both larval and adult mosquitoes (2, 11, 17, 49). However, the replication and trophic movement of M. ulcerans within these environmental samples and invertebrate communities have not been experimentally investigated. Conceptual models have been proposed that assume that the primary consumers of M. ulcerans (e.g., mosquito larvae, cladocerans, and chironomid larvae) may feed on bacteria and algae in biofilms, filter suspended matter from the water column, and then initiate the passage of M. ulcerans through an aquatic food web (2, 22, 31). This model predicts the movement of M. ulcerans through secondary and tertiary consumers and implies a complex trophic relationship in the ecology of M. ulcerans as well as an important role of aquatic invertebrates in the disease ecology of M. ulcerans.In the studies reported here, we have explored the role of mosquitoes as biological or mechanical vectors of M. ulcerans, as well as the potential of mosquito larvae to play a central role in the movement of M. ulcerans through an aquatic food web. In order to investigate the ability of mosquito larvae to ingest and maintain M. ulcerans within their digestive tract as well as to persist throughout the mosquito development cycle, we took advantage of the fact that mosquito larvae naturally feed upon bacteria. Results presented here show that strains of M. ulcerans from Africa and Australia, as well as Mycobacterium marinum, were maintained at high levels in the larval mosquito gut for 6 days. However, neither M. ulcerans nor M. marinum was detected in adult mosquitoes that were infected in the larval stage. These results suggest that mosquitoes are unlikely to serve as biological vectors of M. ulcerans.We further developed a model for following the passage of M. ulcerans through a series of consumers to determine whether M. ulcerans could be passed up a trophic chain from primary to tertiary consumers. In this model, we conducted similar experiments using four species of nonpredatory mosquito larvae, Aedes aegypti (Linnaeus), Aedes albopictus (Skuse), Ochlerotatus triseriatus (Theobald), and Culex restuans (Theobald), as primary consumers. These larvae were infected with isogenic wild-type (WT) and toxin-negative isolates of M. ulcerans and of M. marinum, the closest relative to M. ulcerans (13, 14, 51). We have shown that M. ulcerans in mosquito larvae survive passage through secondary and tertiary consumers, thus providing the first laboratory evidence that M. ulcerans has the potential to move between and be maintained within different species in an aquatic food web.  相似文献   

2.
Several mycoplasma species feature a membrane protrusion at a cell pole, and unknown mechanisms provide gliding motility in the direction of the pole defined by the protrusion. Mycoplasma gallisepticum, an avian pathogen, is known to form a membrane protrusion composed of bleb and infrableb and to glide. Here, we analyzed the gliding motility of M. gallisepticum cells in detail. They glided in the direction of the bleb at an average speed of 0.4 μm/s and remained attached around the bleb to a glass surface, suggesting that the gliding mechanism is similar to that of a related species, Mycoplasma pneumoniae. Next, to elucidate the cytoskeletal structure of M. gallisepticum, we stripped the envelopes by treatment with Triton X-100 under various conditions and observed the remaining structure by negative-staining transmission electron microscopy. A unique cytoskeletal structure, about 300 nm long and 100 nm wide, was found in the bleb and infrableb. The structure, resembling an asymmetrical dumbbell, is composed of five major parts from the distal end: a cap, a small oval, a rod, a large oval, and a bowl. Sonication likely divided the asymmetrical dumbbell into a core and other structures. The cytoskeletal structures of M. gallisepticum were compared with those of M. pneumoniae in detail, and the possible protein components of these structures were considered.Mycoplasmas are commensal and occasionally pathogenic bacteria that lack a peptidoglycan layer (50). Several species feature a membrane protrusion at a pole; for Mycoplasma mobile, this protrusion is called the head, and for Mycoplasma pneumoniae, it is called the attachment organelle (25, 34-37, 52, 54, 58). These species bind to solid surfaces, such as glass and animal cell surfaces, and exhibit gliding motility in the direction of the protrusion (34-37). This motility is believed to be essential for the mycoplasmas'' pathogenicity (4, 22, 27, 36). Recently, the proteins directly involved in the gliding mechanisms of mycoplasmas were identified and were found to have no similarities to those of known motility systems, including bacterial flagellum, pilus, and slime motility systems (25, 34-37).Mycoplasma gallisepticum is an avian pathogen that causes serious damage to the production of eggs for human consumption (50). The cells are pear-shaped and have a membrane protrusion, consisting of the so-called bleb and infrableb (29), and gliding motility (8, 14, 22). Their putative cytoskeletal structures may maintain this characteristic morphology because M. gallisepticum, like other mycoplasma species, does not have a cell wall (50). In sectioning electron microscopy (EM) studies of M. gallisepticum, an intracellular electron-dense structure in the bleb and infrableb was observed, suggesting the existence of a cytoskeletal structure (7, 24, 29, 37, 58). Recently, the existence of such a structure has been confirmed by scanning EM of the structure remaining after Triton X-100 extraction (13), although the details are still unclear.A human pathogen, M. pneumoniae, has a rod-shaped cytoskeletal structure in the attachment organelle (9, 15, 16, 31, 37, 57). M. gallisepticum is related to M. pneumoniae (63, 64), as represented by 90.3% identity between the 16S rRNA sequences, and it has some open reading frames (ORFs) homologous to the component proteins of the cytoskeletal structures of M. pneumoniae (6, 17, 48). Therefore, the cytoskeletal structures of M. gallisepticum are expected to be similar to those of M. pneumoniae, as scanning EM images also suggest (13).The fastest-gliding species, M. mobile, is more distantly related to M. gallisepticum; it has novel cytoskeletal structures that have been analyzed through negative-staining transmission EM after extraction by Triton X-100 with image averaging (45). This method of transmission EM following Triton X-100 extraction clearly showed a cytoskeletal “jellyfish” structure. In this structure, a solid oval “bell,” about 235 nm wide and 155 nm long, is filled with a 12-nm hexagonal lattice. Connected to this bell structure are dozens of flexible “tentacles” that are covered with particles 20 nm in diameter at intervals of about 30 nm. The particles appear to have 180° rotational symmetry and a dimple at the center. The involvement of this cytoskeletal structure in the gliding mechanism was suggested by its cellular localization and by analyses of mutants lacking proteins essential for gliding.In the present study, we applied this method to M. gallisepticum and analyzed its unique cytoskeletal structure, and we then compared it with that of M. pneumoniae.  相似文献   

3.
Analysis of Lyme borreliosis (LB) spirochetes, using a novel multilocus sequence analysis scheme, revealed that OspA serotype 4 strains (a rodent-associated ecotype) of Borrelia garinii were sufficiently genetically distinct from bird-associated B. garinii strains to deserve species status. We suggest that OspA serotype 4 strains be raised to species status and named Borrelia bavariensis sp. nov. The rooted phylogenetic trees provide novel insights into the evolutionary history of LB spirochetes.Multilocus sequence typing (MLST) and multilocus sequence analysis (MLSA) have been shown to be powerful and pragmatic molecular methods for typing large numbers of microbial strains for population genetics studies, delineation of species, and assignment of strains to defined bacterial species (4, 13, 27, 40, 44). To date, MLST/MLSA schemes have been applied only to a few vector-borne microbial populations (1, 6, 30, 37, 40, 41, 47).Lyme borreliosis (LB) spirochetes comprise a diverse group of zoonotic bacteria which are transmitted among vertebrate hosts by ixodid (hard) ticks. The most common agents of human LB are Borrelia burgdorferi (sensu stricto), Borrelia afzelii, Borrelia garinii, Borrelia lusitaniae, and Borrelia spielmanii (7, 8, 12, 35). To date, 15 species have been named within the group of LB spirochetes (6, 31, 32, 37, 38, 41). While several of these LB species have been delineated using whole DNA-DNA hybridization (3, 20, 33), most ecological or epidemiological studies have been using single loci (5, 9-11, 29, 34, 36, 38, 42, 51, 53). Although some of these loci have been convenient for species assignment of strains or to address particular epidemiological questions, they may be unsuitable to resolve evolutionary relationships among LB species, because it is not possible to define any outgroup. For example, both the 5S-23S intergenic spacer (5S-23S IGS) and the gene encoding the outer surface protein A (ospA) are present only in LB spirochete genomes (36, 43). The advantage of using appropriate housekeeping genes of LB group spirochetes is that phylogenetic trees can be rooted with sequences of relapsing fever spirochetes. This renders the data amenable to detailed evolutionary studies of LB spirochetes.LB group spirochetes differ remarkably in their patterns and levels of host association, which are likely to affect their population structures (22, 24, 46, 48). Of the three main Eurasian Borrelia species, B. afzelii is adapted to rodents, whereas B. valaisiana and most strains of B. garinii are maintained by birds (12, 15, 16, 23, 26, 45). However, B. garinii OspA serotype 4 strains in Europe have been shown to be transmitted by rodents (17, 18) and, therefore, constitute a distinct ecotype within B. garinii. These strains have also been associated with high pathogenicity in humans, and their finer-scale geographical distribution seems highly focal (10, 34, 52, 53).In this study, we analyzed the intra- and interspecific phylogenetic relationships of B. burgdorferi, B. afzelii, B. garinii, B. valaisiana, B. lusitaniae, B. bissettii, and B. spielmanii by means of a novel MLSA scheme based on chromosomal housekeeping genes (30, 48).  相似文献   

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Immunogold localization revealed that OmcS, a cytochrome that is required for Fe(III) oxide reduction by Geobacter sulfurreducens, was localized along the pili. The apparent spacing between OmcS molecules suggests that OmcS facilitates electron transfer from pili to Fe(III) oxides rather than promoting electron conduction along the length of the pili.There are multiple competing/complementary models for extracellular electron transfer in Fe(III)- and electrode-reducing microorganisms (8, 18, 20, 44). Which mechanisms prevail in different microorganisms or environmental conditions may greatly influence which microorganisms compete most successfully in sedimentary environments or on the surfaces of electrodes and can impact practical decisions on the best strategies to promote Fe(III) reduction for bioremediation applications (18, 19) or to enhance the power output of microbial fuel cells (18, 21).The three most commonly considered mechanisms for electron transfer to extracellular electron acceptors are (i) direct contact between redox-active proteins on the outer surfaces of the cells and the electron acceptor, (ii) electron transfer via soluble electron shuttling molecules, and (iii) the conduction of electrons along pili or other filamentous structures. Evidence for the first mechanism includes the necessity for direct cell-Fe(III) oxide contact in Geobacter species (34) and the finding that intensively studied Fe(III)- and electrode-reducing microorganisms, such as Geobacter sulfurreducens and Shewanella oneidensis MR-1, display redox-active proteins on their outer cell surfaces that could have access to extracellular electron acceptors (1, 2, 12, 15, 27, 28, 31-33). Deletion of the genes for these proteins often inhibits Fe(III) reduction (1, 4, 7, 15, 17, 28, 40) and electron transfer to electrodes (5, 7, 11, 33). In some instances, these proteins have been purified and shown to have the capacity to reduce Fe(III) and other potential electron acceptors in vitro (10, 13, 29, 38, 42, 43, 48, 49).Evidence for the second mechanism includes the ability of some microorganisms to reduce Fe(III) that they cannot directly contact, which can be associated with the accumulation of soluble substances that can promote electron shuttling (17, 22, 26, 35, 36, 47). In microbial fuel cell studies, an abundance of planktonic cells and/or the loss of current-producing capacity when the medium is replaced is consistent with the presence of an electron shuttle (3, 14, 26). Furthermore, a soluble electron shuttle is the most likely explanation for the electrochemical signatures of some microorganisms growing on an electrode surface (26, 46).Evidence for the third mechanism is more circumstantial (19). Filaments that have conductive properties have been identified in Shewanella (7) and Geobacter (41) species. To date, conductance has been measured only across the diameter of the filaments, not along the length. The evidence that the conductive filaments were involved in extracellular electron transfer in Shewanella was the finding that deletion of the genes for the c-type cytochromes OmcA and MtrC, which are necessary for extracellular electron transfer, resulted in nonconductive filaments, suggesting that the cytochromes were associated with the filaments (7). However, subsequent studies specifically designed to localize these cytochromes revealed that, although the cytochromes were extracellular, they were attached to the cells or in the exopolymeric matrix and not aligned along the pili (24, 25, 30, 40, 43). Subsequent reviews of electron transfer to Fe(III) in Shewanella oneidensis (44, 45) appear to have dropped the nanowire concept and focused on the first and second mechanisms.Geobacter sulfurreducens has a number of c-type cytochromes (15, 28) and multicopper proteins (12, 27) that have been demonstrated or proposed to be on the outer cell surface and are essential for extracellular electron transfer. Immunolocalization and proteolysis studies demonstrated that the cytochrome OmcB, which is essential for optimal Fe(III) reduction (15) and highly expressed during growth on electrodes (33), is embedded in the outer membrane (39), whereas the multicopper protein OmpB, which is also required for Fe(III) oxide reduction (27), is exposed on the outer cell surface (39).OmcS is one of the most abundant cytochromes that can readily be sheared from the outer surfaces of G. sulfurreducens cells (28). It is essential for the reduction of Fe(III) oxide (28) and for electron transfer to electrodes under some conditions (11). Therefore, the localization of this important protein was further investigated.  相似文献   

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《Journal of bacteriology》2009,191(6):1951-1960
We have identified a clonal complex of Mycobacterium bovis present at high frequency in cattle in population samples from several sub-Saharan west-central African countries. This closely related group of bacteria is defined by a specific chromosomal deletion (RDAf1) and can be identified by the absence of spacer 30 in the standard spoligotype typing scheme. We have named this group of strains the African 1 (Af1) clonal complex and have defined the spoligotype signature of this clonal complex as being the same as the M. bovis BCG vaccine strain but with the deletion of spacer 30. Strains of the Af1 clonal complex were found at high frequency in population samples of M. bovis from cattle in Mali, Cameroon, Nigeria, and Chad, and using a combination of variable-number tandem repeat typing and spoligotyping, we show that the population of M. bovis in each of these countries is distinct, suggesting that the recent mixing of strains between countries is not common in this area of Africa. Strains with the Af1-specific deletion (RDAf1) were not identified in M. bovis isolates from Algeria, Burundi, Ethiopia, Madagascar, Mozambique, South Africa, Tanzania, and Uganda. Furthermore, the spoligotype signature of the Af1 clonal complex has not been identified in population samples of bovine tuberculosis from Europe, Iran, and South America. These observations suggest that the Af1 clonal complex is geographically localized, albeit to several African countries, and we suggest that the dominance of the clonal complex in this region is the result of an original introduction into cows naïve to bovine tuberculosis.Mycobacterium bovis causes bovine tuberculosis (TB), an important disease of domesticated cattle that has a major economic and health impact throughout the world (61, 64, 65). The pathogen is a member of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex, which includes many species and subspecies that cause similar pathologies in a variety of mammalian hosts. The most notable member of the complex is M. tuberculosis, the most important bacterial pathogen of humans. In contrast to M. tuberculosis, which is largely host restricted to humans, M. bovis is primarily maintained in bovids, in particular, domesticated cattle, although the pathogen can frequently be recovered from other mammals, including humans (61). Bovine TB is found in cattle throughout the world and has been reported on every continent where cattle are farmed (3).Bovine TB has been reduced or eliminated from domestic cattle in many developed countries by the application of a test-and-cull policy that removes infected cattle (3, 8, 16, 17, 61, 64, 65). However, in Africa, although bovine TB is known to be common in both cattle and wildlife, control policies have not been enforced in many countries due to cost implications, lack of capacity, and infrastructure limitations (8, 16, 17, 57). In 1998, Cosivi et al. reported of bovine TB, “Of all nations in Africa, only seven apply disease control measures as part of a test-and-slaughter policy and consider bovine TB a notifiable disease; the remaining 48 control the disease inadequately or not at all” (16). In the intervening years, the situation is not thought to have improved (8); however, preliminary surveys of bovine TB have been carried out in some African countries (4, 7, 12, 37, 44, 49, 53, 54, 56).The most common epidemiological molecular-typing method applied to strains of M. bovis is spoligotyping. This method identifies polymorphism in the presence of spacer units in the direct-repeat (DR) region in strains of the M. tuberculosis complex (36, 67). The DR is composed of multiple, virtually identical 36-bp regions interspersed with unique DNA spacer sequences of similar size (direct variant repeat [DVR] units). Spacer sequences are unique to the DR region, and copies are not located elsewhere in the chromosome (68). The DR region may contain over 60 DVR units; however, 43 of the spacer units were selected from the spacer sequences of the M. tuberculosis reference strain H37Rv and M. bovis BCG strain P3 and are used in the standard application of spoligotyping to strains of the M. tuberculosis complex (29, 36). The DR region is polymorphic because of the loss (deletion) of single or multiple spacers, and each spoligotype pattern from strains of M. bovis is given an identifier (http://www.Mbovis.org).Several studies of the DR regions in closely related strains of M. tuberculosis have concluded that the evolutionary trend for this region is primarily loss of single DVRs or multiple contiguous DVRs (22, 29, 68); duplication of DVR units or point mutations in spacer sequences were found to be rare. The loss of discrete units observed by Groenen et al. (29) led them to suggest that the mechanism for spacer loss was homologous recombination between repeat units. However, a study by Warren et al. (69) suggested that for strains of M. tuberculosis, insertion of IS6110 sequences into the DR region and recombination between adjacent IS6110 elements were more important mechanisms for the loss of spacer units.The population structure of the M. tuberculosis group of organisms is apparently highly clonal, without any transfer and recombination of chromosomal sequences between strains (15, 30, 60, 61). In a strictly clonal population, the loss by deletion of unique chromosomal DNA cannot be replaced by recombination from another strain, and the deleted region will act as a molecular marker for the strain and all its descendants. Deletions of specific chromosomal regions (regions of difference [RDs] or large sequence polymorphisms) have been very successful at identifying phylogenetic relationships in the M. tuberculosis complex (11, 25, 26, 35, 48, 50, 61, 62, 66). However, because the loss of spoligotype spacer sequences is so frequent, identical spoligotype patterns can occur independently in unrelated lineages (homoplasy), and therefore, the deletion of spoligotype spacers may be an unreliable indicator of phylogenetic relationship (61, 69).In samples of M. bovis strains from Cameroon, Nigeria, Chad, and Mali, spoligotyping was used to show that many of the strains had similar spoligotype patterns that lacked spacer 30, and it has been suggested that strains from these four countries are phylogenetically related (12, 18, 49, 53). We have extended the previous observations of spoligotype similarities between strains from these countries and confirmed the existence of a unique clonal complex of M. bovis, all descended from a single strain in which a specific deletion of chromosomal DNA occurred. We have named this clonal complex of M. bovis strains African 1 (Af1), and we show that this clonal complex is dominant in these four west-central African countries but rare in eastern and southern Africa. Extended genotyping, using variable-number tandem repeats (VNTR), of strains with the most common spoligotype patterns suggests that each of these four west-central African countries has a unique population structure. Evolutionary scenarios that may have led to the present day distribution of the Af1 clonal complex are discussed.  相似文献   

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Adhesive pili on the surface of the serotype M1 Streptococcus pyogenes strain SF370 are composed of a major backbone subunit (Spy0128) and two minor subunits (Spy0125 and Spy0130), joined covalently by a pilin polymerase (Spy0129). Previous studies using recombinant proteins showed that both minor subunits bind to human pharyngeal (Detroit) cells (A. G. Manetti et al., Mol. Microbiol. 64:968-983, 2007), suggesting both may act as pilus-presented adhesins. While confirming these binding properties, studies described here indicate that Spy0125 is the pilus-presented adhesin and that Spy0130 has a distinct role as a wall linker. Pili were localized predominantly to cell wall fractions of the wild-type S. pyogenes parent strain and a spy0125 deletion mutant. In contrast, they were found almost exclusively in culture supernatants in both spy0130 and srtA deletion mutants, indicating that the housekeeping sortase (SrtA) attaches pili to the cell wall by using Spy0130 as a linker protein. Adhesion assays with antisera specific for individual subunits showed that only anti-rSpy0125 serum inhibited adhesion of wild-type S. pyogenes to human keratinocytes and tonsil epithelium to a significant extent. Spy0125 was localized to the tip of pili, based on a combination of mutant analysis and liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry analysis of purified pili. Assays comparing parent and mutant strains confirmed its role as the adhesin. Unexpectedly, apparent spontaneous cleavage of a labile, proline-rich (8 of 14 residues) sequence separating the N-terminal ∼1/3 and C-terminal ∼2/3 of Spy0125 leads to loss of the N-terminal region, but analysis of internal spy0125 deletion mutants confirmed that this has no significant effect on adhesion.The group A Streptococcus (S. pyogenes) is an exclusively human pathogen that commonly colonizes either the pharynx or skin, where local spread can give rise to various inflammatory conditions such as pharyngitis, tonsillitis, sinusitis, or erysipelas. Although often mild and self-limiting, GAS infections are occasionally very severe and sometimes lead to life-threatening diseases, such as necrotizing fasciitis or streptococcal toxic shock syndrome. A wide variety of cell surface components and extracellular products have been shown or suggested to play important roles in S. pyogenes virulence, including cell surface pili (1, 6, 32). Pili expressed by the serotype M1 S. pyogenes strain SF370 mediate specific adhesion to intact human tonsil epithelia and to primary human keratinocytes, as well as cultured keratinocyte-derived HaCaT cells, but not to Hep-2 or A549 cells (1). They also contribute to adhesion to a human pharyngeal cell line (Detroit cells) and to biofilm formation (29).Over the past 5 years, pili have been discovered on an increasing number of important Gram-positive bacterial pathogens, including Bacillus cereus (4), Bacillus anthracis (4, 5), Corynebacterium diphtheriae (13, 14, 19, 26, 27, 44, 46, 47), Streptococcus agalactiae (7, 23, 38), and Streptococcus pneumoniae (2, 3, 24, 25, 34), as well as S. pyogenes (1, 29, 32). All these species produce pili that are composed of a single major subunit plus either one or two minor subunits. During assembly, the individual subunits are covalently linked to each other via intermolecular isopeptide bonds, catalyzed by specialized membrane-associated transpeptidases that may be described as pilin polymerases (4, 7, 25, 41, 44, 46). These are related to the classical housekeeping sortase (usually, but not always, designated SrtA) that is responsible for anchoring many proteins to Gram-positive bacterial cell walls (30, 31, 33). The C-terminal ends of sortase target proteins include a cell wall sorting (CWS) motif consisting, in most cases, of Leu-Pro-X-Thr-Gly (LPXTG, where X can be any amino acid) (11, 40). Sortases cleave this substrate between the Thr and Gly residues and produce an intermolecular isopeptide bond linking the Thr to a free amino group provided by a specific target. In attaching proteins to the cell wall, the target amino group is provided by the lipid II peptidoglycan precursor (30, 36, 40). In joining pilus subunits, the target is the ɛ-amino group in the side chain of a specific Lys residue in the second subunit (14, 18, 19). Current models of pilus biogenesis envisage repeated transpeptidation reactions adding additional subunits to the base of the growing pilus, until the terminal subunit is eventually linked covalently via an intermolecular isopeptide bond to the cell wall (28, 41, 45).The major subunit (sometimes called the backbone or shaft subunit) extends along the length of the pilus and appears to play a structural role, while minor subunits have been detected either at the tip, the base, and/or at occasional intervals along the shaft, depending on the species (4, 23, 24, 32, 47). In S. pneumoniae and S. agalactiae one of the minor subunits acts as an adhesin, while the second appears to act as a linker between the base of the assembled pilus and the cell wall (7, 15, 22, 34, 35). It was originally suggested that both minor subunits of C. diphtheriae pili could act as adhesins (27). However, recent data showed one of these has a wall linker role (26, 44) and may therefore not function as an adhesin.S. pyogenes strain SF370 pili are composed of a major (backbone) subunit, termed Spy0128, plus two minor subunits, called Spy0125 and Spy0130 (1, 32). All three are required for efficient adhesion to target cells (1). Studies employing purified recombinant proteins have shown that both of the minor subunits, but not the major subunit, bind to Detroit cells (29), suggesting both might act as pilus-presented adhesins. Here we report studies employing a combination of recombinant proteins, specific antisera, and allelic replacement mutants which show that only Spy0125 is the pilus-presented adhesin and that Spy0130 has a distinct role in linking pili to the cell wall.  相似文献   

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The effects of nitrite and ammonium on cultivated methanotrophic bacteria were investigated. Methylomicrobium album ATCC 33003 outcompeted Methylocystis sp. strain ATCC 49242 in cultures with high nitrite levels, whereas cultures with high ammonium levels allowed Methylocystis sp. to compete more easily. M. album pure cultures and cocultures consumed nitrite and produced nitrous oxide, suggesting a connection between denitrification and nitrite tolerance.The application of ammonium-based fertilizers has been shown to immediately reduce the uptake of methane in a number of diverse ecological systems (3, 5, 7, 8, 11-13, 16, 27, 28), due likely to competitive inhibition of methane monooxygenase enzymes by ammonia and production of nitrite (1). Longer-term inhibition of methane uptake by ammonium has been attributed to changes in methanotrophic community composition, often favoring activity and/or growth of type I Gammaproteobacteria methanotrophs (i.e., Gammaproteobacteria methane-oxidizing bacteria [gamma-MOB]) over type II Alphaproteobacteria methanotrophs (alpha-MOB) (19-23, 25, 26, 30). It has been argued previously that gamma-MOB likely thrive in the presence of high N loads because they rapidly assimilate N and synthesize ribosomes whereas alpha-MOB thrive best under conditions of N limitation and low oxygen levels (10, 21, 23).Findings from studies with rice paddies indicate that N fertilization stimulates methane oxidation through ammonium acting as a nutrient, not as an inhibitor (2). Therefore, the actual effect of ammonium on growth and activity of methanotrophs depends largely on how much ammonia-N is used for assimilation versus cometabolism. Many methanotrophs can also oxidize ammonia into nitrite via hydroxylamine (24, 29). Nitrite was shown previously to inhibit methane consumption by cultivated methanotrophs and by organisms in soils through an uncharacterized mechanism (9, 17, 24), although nitrite inhibits purified formate dehydrogenase from Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b (15). Together, the data from these studies show that ammonium and nitrite have significant effects on methanotroph activity and community composition and reveal the complexity of ammonia as both a nutrient and a competitive inhibitor. The present study demonstrates the differential influences of high ammonium or nitrite loads on the competitive fitness of a gamma-MOB versus an alpha-MOB strain.  相似文献   

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Methanogens are of great importance in carbon cycling and alternative energy production, but quantitation with culture-based methods is time-consuming and biased against methanogen groups that are difficult to cultivate in a laboratory. For these reasons, methanogens are typically studied through culture-independent molecular techniques. We developed a SYBR green I quantitative PCR (qPCR) assay to quantify total numbers of methyl coenzyme M reductase α-subunit (mcrA) genes. TaqMan probes were also designed to target nine different phylogenetic groups of methanogens in qPCR assays. Total mcrA and mcrA levels of different methanogen phylogenetic groups were determined from six samples: four samples from anaerobic digesters used to treat either primarily cow or pig manure and two aliquots from an acidic peat sample stored at 4°C or 20°C. Only members of the Methanosaetaceae, Methanosarcina, Methanobacteriaceae, and Methanocorpusculaceae and Fen cluster were detected in the environmental samples. The three samples obtained from cow manure digesters were dominated by members of the genus Methanosarcina, whereas the sample from the pig manure digester contained detectable levels of only members of the Methanobacteriaceae. The acidic peat samples were dominated by both Methanosarcina spp. and members of the Fen cluster. In two of the manure digester samples only one methanogen group was detected, but in both of the acidic peat samples and two of the manure digester samples, multiple methanogen groups were detected. The TaqMan qPCR assays were successfully able to determine the environmental abundance of different phylogenetic groups of methanogens, including several groups with few or no cultivated members.Methanogens are integral to carbon cycling, catalyzing the production of methane and carbon dioxide, both potent greenhouse gases, during organic matter degradation in anaerobic soils and sediment (8). Methanogens are widespread in anaerobic environments, including tundra (36), freshwater lake and wetland sediments (9, 12), estuarine and marine sediments (2), acidic peatlands (4, 14), rice field soil (10, 16), animal guts (41), landfills (30), and anaerobic digesters treating animal manure (1), food processing wastewater (27), and municipal wastewater and solid waste (37, 57). Methane produced in anaerobic digesters may be captured and used for energy production, thus offsetting some or all of the cost of operation and reducing the global warming potential of methane release to the atmosphere.Methanogens are difficult to study through culture-based methods, and therefore many researchers have instead used culture-independent techniques to study methanogen populations. The 16S rRNA gene is the most widely used target for gene surveys, and a number of primers and probes have been developed to target methanogen groups (9, 11, 31, 36, 38, 40, 46, 48, 57). To eliminate potential problems with nonspecific amplification, some researchers have developed primers for the gene sequence of the α-subunit of the methyl coenzyme M reductase (mcrA) (17, 30, 49). The Mcr is exclusive to the methanogens with the exception of the methane-oxidizing Archaea (18) and shows mostly congruent phylogeny to the 16S rRNA gene, allowing mcrA analysis to be used in conjunction with, or independently of, that of the 16S rRNA gene (3, 30, 49). A number of researchers have examined methanogen communities with mcrA and have found uncultured clades quite different in sequence from cultured methanogen representatives (9, 10, 12, 14, 17, 22, 28, 47).Previous studies described methanogen communities by quantitation of different clades through the use of rRNA-targeted or rRNA gene-targeted probes with techniques such as dot blot hybridization (1, 27, 37, 38, 48) and fluorescent in situ hybridization (11, 40, 44, 57). Real-time quantitative PCR (qPCR) is an alternate technique capable of determining the copy number of a particular gene present in the DNA extracted from an environmental sample. Only a few studies have used qPCR to quantitatively examine different clades within methanogen communities, and most of these studies have exclusively targeted the 16S rRNA gene (19, 41, 42, 54-56). Far fewer researchers have used qPCR to quantify methanogen clades by targeting the mcrA (21, 34, 45), and these studies were limited to only a few phylogenetic groups.In this paper we present a methodology for determining methanogen gene copy numbers through the use of qPCR targeting the mcrA. Methanogens were quantified in total using methanogen-specific primers in SYBR green assays and also as members of nine different phylogenetic groups using TaqMan probes targeting specific subsets of methanogens.  相似文献   

14.
Soil substrate membrane systems allow for microcultivation of fastidious soil bacteria as mixed microbial communities. We isolated established microcolonies from these membranes by using fluorescence viability staining and micromanipulation. This approach facilitated the recovery of diverse, novel isolates, including the recalcitrant bacterium Leifsonia xyli, a plant pathogen that has never been isolated outside the host.The majority of bacterial species have never been recovered in the laboratory (1, 14, 19, 24). In the last decade, novel cultivation approaches have successfully been used to recover “unculturables” from a diverse range of divisions (23, 25, 29). Most strategies have targeted marine environments (4, 23, 25, 32), but soil offers the potential for the investigation of vast numbers of undescribed species (20, 29). Rapid advances have been made toward culturing soil bacteria by reformulating and diluting traditional media, extending incubation times, and using alternative gelling agents (8, 21, 29).The soil substrate membrane system (SSMS) is a diffusion chamber approach that uses extracts from the soil of interest as the growth substrate, thereby mimicking the environment under investigation (12). The SSMS enriches for slow-growing oligophiles, a proportion of which are subsequently capable of growing on complex media (23, 25, 27, 30, 32). However, the SSMS results in mixed microbial communities, with the consequent difficulty in isolation of individual microcolonies for further characterization (10).Micromanipulation has been widely used for the isolation of specific cell morphotypes for downstream applications in molecular diagnostics or proteomics (5, 15). This simple technology offers the opportunity to select established microcolonies of a specific morphotype from the SSMS when combined with fluorescence visualization (3, 11). Here, we have combined the SSMS, fluorescence viability staining, and advanced micromanipulation for targeted isolation of viable, microcolony-forming soil bacteria.  相似文献   

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Striped bass (Morone saxatilis) in the Chesapeake Bay are currently experiencing a very high prevalence of mycobacteriosis associated with newly described Mycobacterium species, Mycobacterium pseudoshottsii and M. shottsii. The ecology of these mycobacteria outside the striped bass host is currently unknown. In this work, we developed quantitative real-time PCR assays for M. pseudoshottsii and M. shottsii and applied these assays to DNA extracts from Chesapeake Bay water and sediment samples, as well as to tissues from two dominant prey of striped bass, Atlantic menhaden (Brevoortia tyrannus) and bay anchovy (Anchoa mitchilli). Mycobacterium pseudoshottsii was found to be ubiquitous in water samples from the main stem of the Chesapeake Bay and was also present in water and sediments from the Rappahannock River, Virginia. M. pseudoshottsii was also detected in menhaden and anchovy tissues. In contrast, M. shottsii was not detected in water, sediment, or prey fish tissues. In conjunction with its nonpigmented phenotype, which is frequently found in obligately pathogenic mycobacteria of humans, this pattern of occurrence suggests that M. shottsii may be an obligate pathogen of striped bass.Mycobacteriosis is a common disease affecting a large variety of wild and aquacultured fishes worldwide (9). Chronic disease is most commonly observed and is characterized by granulomatous inflammation that may affect all host tissues. External clinical signs include scale loss, dermal ulceration, spinal defects, emaciation, and ascites (5, 6, 16, 25, 31).Mycobacteriosis in Chesapeake Bay striped bass (Morone saxatilis) was first observed in 1997 from histologic findings of acid-fast bacilli in granulomatous lesions (W. Vogelbein, unpublished data). Since the initial finding, surveys have demonstrated a very high prevalence of this disease in Chesapeake Bay striped bass, exceeding 50% in many samples (8, 17). Concomitantly with detection of high prevalence, tag recapture analysis has indicated that natural, nonfishing mortality of Chesapeake Bay striped bass has increased since 1999 (13), and modeling of apparent prevalence data has indicated that some mortality is associated with disease (8). Because the striped bass is an ecologically and economically important finfish along the U.S. Atlantic coast, the high prevalence of this disease creates considerable concern about the continuing health of the resource.Mycobacteriosis of fishes has traditionally been considered to be caused by Mycobacterium marinum, M. fortuitum, or M. chelonae; however, the recognized diversity of Mycobacterium spp. infecting fishes has increased markedly in recent years (9). To date, neither M. fortuitum nor M. chelonae have been isolated from internal tissues of striped bass in the Chesapeake Bay, and M. marinum has been cultured from only a small fraction (3%) of fish (20). Instead, a variety of slow-growing mycobacteria have been isolated, dominated by the recently described species M. pseudoshottsii and M. shottsii (9, 20-22). The 16S rRNA gene sequences of M. pseudoshottsii, M. shottsii, M. marinum, and M. ulcerans are highly similar (≥99.4%), and like M. ulcerans, M. pseudoshottsii possesses the insertion sequences IS2404 and IS2606 and produces mycolactone toxin (19). M. shottsii has been reported to be positive for IS2404 under specific PCR conditions by some authors (22), but not by others (10), and this species is not known to produce mycolactone. IS2606 has been reported to amplify weakly or not at all in M. shottsii (22). M. pseudoshottsii and M. shottsii differ in pigment production, with the former being a photochromogen and the latter being nonpigmented (22).In this study, we performed a quantitative real-time PCR-based survey of the presence and density of M. pseudoshottsii and M. shottsii in water and sediments of Chesapeake Bay, as well as in two dominant prey of striped bass, the Atlantic menhaden (Brevoortia tyrannus) and the bay anchovy (Anchoa mitchilli) (12, 30). Mycobacterium pseudoshottsii was detected by amplification of IS2404 in a manner similar to that used in previous studies (7, 24). We also amplified and sequenced mycobacterial interspersed repetitive unit (MIRU) loci from menhaden, water, and sediment samples in order to confirm that IS2404 amplification in these samples was likely to represent the presence of M. pseudoshottsii and not another IS2404-positive bacterium.No unique insertion sequences have yet been described for M. shottsii, and the high degree of similarity between M. pseudoshottsii and M. shottsii in genes for which sequences are available (e.g., hsp60, erp, 16S rRNA, 23S rRNA, internal transcribed spacer [ITS]) makes development of M. shottsii-specific assays problematic. We therefore performed genomic subtractive hybridization in a manner similar to that originally described by Akopyants et al. (3) to characterize sequences specific to M. shottsii relative to M. pseudoshottsii. An M. shottsii-specific quantitative PCR (qPCR) assay was developed to target sequences identified in this manner.  相似文献   

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Factors potentially contributing to the lower incidence of Lyme borreliosis (LB) in the far-western than in the northeastern United States include tick host-seeking behavior resulting in fewer human tick encounters, lower densities of Borrelia burgdorferi-infected vector ticks in peridomestic environments, and genetic variation among B. burgdorferi spirochetes to which humans are exposed. We determined the population structure of B. burgdorferi in over 200 infected nymphs of the primary bridging vector to humans, Ixodes pacificus, collected in Mendocino County, CA. This was accomplished by sequence typing the spirochete lipoprotein ospC and the 16S-23S rRNA intergenic spacer (IGS). Thirteen ospC alleles belonging to 12 genotypes were found in California, and the two most abundant, ospC genotypes H3 and E3, have not been detected in ticks in the Northeast. The most prevalent ospC and IGS biallelic profile in the population, found in about 22% of ticks, was a new B. burgdorferi strain defined by ospC genotype H3. Eight of the most common ospC genotypes in the northeastern United States, including genotypes I and K that are associated with disseminated human infections, were absent in Mendocino County nymphs. ospC H3 was associated with hardwood-dominated habitats where western gray squirrels, the reservoir host, are commonly infected with LB spirochetes. The differences in B. burgdorferi population structure in California ticks compared to the Northeast emphasize the need for a greater understanding of the genetic diversity of spirochetes infecting California LB patients.In the United States, Lyme borreliosis (LB) is the most commonly reported vector-borne illness and is caused by infection with the spirochete Borrelia burgdorferi (3, 9, 52). The signs and symptoms of LB can include a rash, erythema migrans, fever, fatigue, arthritis, carditis, and neurological manifestations (50, 51). The black-legged tick, Ixodes scapularis, and the western black-legged tick, Ixodes pacificus, are the primary vectors of B. burgdorferi to humans in the United States, with the former in the northeastern and north-central parts of the country and the latter in the Far West (9, 10). These ticks perpetuate enzootic transmission cycles together with a vertebrate reservoir host such as the white-footed mouse, Peromyscus leucopus, in the Northeast and Midwest (24, 35), or the western gray squirrel, Sciurus griseus, in California (31, 46).B. burgdorferi is a spirochete species with a largely clonal population structure (14, 16) comprising several different strains or lineages (8). The polymorphic ospC gene of B. burgdorferi encodes a surface lipoprotein that increases expression within the tick during blood feeding (47) and is required for initial infection of mammalian hosts (25, 55). To date, approximately 20 North American ospC genotypes have been described (40, 45, 49, 56). At least four, and possibly up to nine, of these genotypes are associated with B. burgdorferi invasiveness in humans (1, 15, 17, 49, 57). Restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) and, subsequently, sequence analysis of the 16S-23S rRNA intergenic spacer (IGS) are used as molecular typing tools to investigate genotypic variation in B. burgdorferi (2, 36, 38, 44, 44, 57). The locus maintains a high level of variation between related species, and this variation reflects the heterogeneity found at the genomic level of the organism (37). The IGS and ospC loci appear to be linked (2, 8, 26, 45, 57), but the studies to date have not been representative of the full range of diversity of B. burgdorferi in North America.Previous studies in the northeastern and midwestern United States have utilized IGS and ospC genotyping to elucidate B. burgdorferi evolution, host strain specificity, vector-reservoir associations, and disease risk to humans. In California, only six ospC and five IGS genotypes have been described heretofore in samples from LB patients or I. pacificus ticks (40, 49, 56) compared to approximately 20 ospC and IGS genotypes identified in ticks, vertebrate hosts, or humans from the Northeast and Midwest (8, 40, 45, 49, 56). Here, we employ sequence analysis of both the ospC gene and IGS region to describe the population structure of B. burgdorferi in more than 200 infected I. pacificus nymphs from Mendocino County, CA, where the incidence of LB is among the highest in the state (11). Further, we compare the Mendocino County spirochete population to populations found in the Northeast.  相似文献   

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