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1.
Immunoelectron microscopy demonstrated antigenic heat-stable 120- to 130-kilodalton proteins (PS120) of spotted fever group (SFG) rickettsiae with antiserum against recombinant PS120 of Rickettsia japonica. In the case of R. japonica, a major part of the protein was shown to be localized outside the electron-lucent nucleoid-like region in the cytoplasm of the organisms. The other SFG rickettsiae represented a similar localization of the PS120 antigens cross-reactive to that of R. japonica. On the other hand, a typhus group rickettsia demonstrated no antigens cross-reactive to the PS120 of SFG rickettsiae.  相似文献   

2.
Restriction fragment length polymorphism of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification products differentiated Rickettsia japonica, a causative agent of Oriental spotted fever, from other spotted fever group (SFG) rickettsiae. Primer pair Rr190. 70p and Rr190. 602n of R. rickettsii 190-kDa antigen gene sequence primed genomic DNAs obtained from R. japonica, type strain YH and strains NT, NK, YKI, and TKN. The products were cleaved by PstI but not by AfaI restriction endonuclease. The PstI digestion pattern of PCR-products amplified from all strains of R. japonica was identical and easily differentiated from that of other SFG rickettsiae. The present study demonstrated a genotypic difference between R. japonica and other pathogenic SFG rickettsiae.  相似文献   

3.
The 3,438-nucleotide (nt) sequence containing a 3,054-nt open reading frame of the gene (rps120) encoding an antigenic, intracytoplasmic, spotted fever group-specific and heat-stable 120-kilodalton protein (PS120) of Rickettsia japonica was determined. The nt and deduced 1,018 amino-acid (aa) sequences were compared to those of R. conorii since only those of this species had been determined among SFG rickettsiae. The homologies of these sequences between R. japonica and R. conorii were considerably high at 97 and 95%, respectively. These high homologies were comparable to those of beta-peptides encoded by the ompB genes among SFG rickettsiae. It was also found that the genome of R. prowazekii contained a nt sequence with 68% homology to that of the rps120 gene of R. japonica.  相似文献   

4.
Rickettsia conorii, a member of the spotted fever group (SFG) of the genus Rickettsia and causative agent of Mediterranean spotted fever, is an obligate intracellular pathogen capable of infecting various mammalian cell types. SFG rickettsiae express two major immunodominant s urface c ell a ntigen (Sca) proteins, OmpB (Sca5) and OmpA (Sca0). While OmpB‐mediated entry has been characterized, the contribution of OmpA has not been well defined. Here we show OmpA expression in Escherichia coli is sufficient to mediate adherence to and invasion of non‐phagocytic human endothelial cells. A recombinant soluble C‐terminal OmpA protein domain (954–1735) with predicted structural homology to the Bordetella pertussis pertactin protein binds mammalian cells and perturbs R. conorii invasion by interacting with several mammalian proteins including β1 integrin. Using functional blocking antibodies, small interfering RNA transfection, and mouse embryonic fibroblast cell lines, we illustrate the contribution of α2β1 integrin as a mammalian ligand involved in R. conorii invasion of primary endothelial cells. We further demonstrate that OmpA‐mediated attachment to mammalian cells is in part dependent on a conserved non‐continuous RGD motif present in a predicted C‐terminal ‘pertactin’ domain in OmpA.Our results demonstrate that multiple adhesin–receptor pairs are sufficient in mediating efficient bacterial invasion of R. conorii.  相似文献   

5.
Major surface polypeptides of Rickettsia japonica migrated to the position of 120, 135, and 145 kDa on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, when the organisms were solubilized at room temperature. Two major bands at the position of 135 and 185 kDa were seen, when the organisms were solubilized by heating before electrophoresis. Heat-denaturation of the 120- and 145-kDa polypeptides in excised gel bands changed their mobility and caused them to migrate to 135- and 185-kDa positions, respectively. Two polypeptides at the 120-kDa position were demonstrated: one is a major heat-modifiable polypeptide and the other a minor heat-stable. Peptide mapping was performed to determine the identity between native and denatured polypeptides.  相似文献   

6.
We describe the isolation and characterization of Rickettsia monacensis sp. nov. (type strain, IrR/MunichT) from an Ixodes ricinus tick collected in a city park, the English Garden in Munich, Germany. Rickettsiae were propagated in vitro with Ixodes scapularis cell line ISE6. BLAST analysis of the 16S rRNA, the citrate synthase, and the partial 190-kDa rickettsial outer membrane protein A (rOmpA) gene sequences demonstrated that the isolate was a spotted fever group (SFG) rickettsia closely related to several yet-to-be-cultivated rickettsiae associated with I. ricinus. Phylogenetic analysis of partial rompA sequences demonstrated that the isolate was genotypically different from other validated species of SFG rickettsiae. R. monacensis also replicated in cell lines derived from the ticks I. ricinus (IRE11) and Dermacentor andersoni (DAE100) and in the mammalian cell lines L-929 and Vero, causing cell lysis. Transmission electron microscopy of infected ISE6 and Vero cells showed rickettsiae within the cytoplasm, pseudopodia, nuclei, and vacuoles. Hamsters inoculated with R. monacensis had immunoglobulin G antibody titers as high as 1:16,384, as determined by indirect immunofluorescence assay. Western blot analyses demonstrated that the hamster sera cross-reacted with peptides from other phylogenetically distinct rickettsiae, including rOmpA. R. monacensis induced actin tails in both tick and mammalian cells similar to those reported for R. rickettsii. R. monacensis joins a growing list of SFG rickettsiae that colonize ticks but whose infectivity and pathogenicity for vertebrates are unknown.  相似文献   

7.
An embryonic cell line (DAE100) of the Rocky Mountain wood tick, Dermacentor andersoni, was observed by microscopy to be chronically infected with a rickettsialike organism. The organism was identified as a spotted fever group (SFG) rickettsia by PCR amplification and sequencing of portions of the 16S rRNA, citrate synthase, Rickettsia genus-specific 17-kDa antigen, and SFG-specific 190-kDa outer membrane protein A (rOmpA) genes. Sequence analysis of a partial rompA gene PCR fragment and indirect fluorescent antibody data for rOmpA and rOmpB indicated that this rickettsia was a strain (DaE100R) of Rickettsia peacockii, an SFG species presumed to be avirulent for both ticks and mammals. R. peacockii was successfully maintained in a continuous culture of DAE100 cells without apparent adverse effects on the host cells. Establishing cell lines from embryonic tissues of ticks offers an alternative technique for isolation of rickettsiae that are transovarially transmitted.  相似文献   

8.

Background

Rickettsia raoultii is a novel Rickettsia species recently isolated from Dermacentor ticks and classified within the spotted fever group (SFG). The inability of R. raoultii to spread within L929 cells suggests that this bacterium is unable to polymerize host cell actin, a property exhibited by all SFG rickettsiae except R. peacocki. This result led us to investigate if RickA, the protein thought to generate actin nucleation, was expressed within this rickettsia species.

Methodology/Principal Findings

Amplification and sequencing of R. raoultii rickA showed that this gene encoded a putative 565 amino acid protein highly homologous to those found in other rickettsiae. Using immunofluorescence assays, we determined that the motility pattern (i.e. microcolonies or cell-to-cell spreading) of R. raoultii was different depending on the host cell line in which the bacteria replicated. In contrast, under the same experimental conditions, R. conorii shares the same phenotype both in L929 and in Vero cells. Transmission electron microscopy analysis of infected cells showed that non-motile bacteria were free in the cytosol instead of enclosed in a vacuole. Moreover, western-blot analysis demonstrated that the defect of R. raoultii actin-based motility within L929 cells was not related to lower expression of RickA.

Conclusion/Significance

These results, together with previously published data about R. typhi, strongly suggest that another factor, apart from RickA, may be involved with be responsible for actin-based motility in bacteria from the Rickettsia genus.  相似文献   

9.
RecombinantEscherichia coli strains harboring pAG1, pAG2, pKBB100, and pKBB101 were cloned by using antiserum constructed against 130-kDa crystal protein antigen ofBacillus thuringiensis serovarjaponensis strain Buibui. DNAs in the recombinant strains hybridized to the 26-base oligonucleotide probe corresponding to N-terminal amino acids of the 130-kDa crystal protein of strain Buibui. Cultures of the recombinant strains were toxic to larvae of the cupreous chafer,anomala cuprea. Furthermore, the production of the 130-kDa polypeptide was demonstrated in the cells harboring pAG1 and pAG2 by immunoblot analysis with antiserum against the 130-kDa crystal protein. Southern hybridization analysis showed that the 130-kDa crystal protein gene is located on the chromosomal DNA of strain Buibui. On the other hand, DNA probes derived fromcryIA(a) andcryIIIA genes did not hybridize to the DNA of strain Buibui.  相似文献   

10.
The PCR product amplified from Rickettsia japonica with the primer pair Rr 190.70p and Rr 190.602n of R. rickettsii 190-kDa antigen gene was cloned into M13mp19 RF DNA at the EcoRI site and sequenced by chemiluminescent DNA sequencing. The sequence revealed a molecular size of 533 base pairs (bp). The primer-flanking region of 491 bp, an open reading frame, was compared with the corresponding region of R. rickettsii, demonstrating 35 nucleotide substitutions in R. japonica. The sequence of primer portions in R. japonica DNA was also analyzed, revealing one nucleotide substitution in the Rr 190.70p and two in the Rr 190.602n portion. The homology in the overall sequence of PCR-amplified regions between R. japonica and R. rickettsii was 93% in nucleotide and 85% in putative amino acid structure. The sequence contains no cleavage site for the restriction endonuclease AfaI but two PstI sites giving three fragments of 121, 159, and 253 bp, which differentiated R. japonica from other spotted fever group rickettsiae in addition to R. rickettsii. The cleavage sites for endonucleases AluI, HinfI, and MunI that disappeared or appeared in the sequence by nucleotide substitution differentiated R. japonica from others, as did PstI. The estimation of molecular size of DNA fragments on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
The crystalline surface layer (S-layer) protein (SLP) of Rickettsia typhi is known as the protective antigen against murine typhus. We previously reported a cloning and sequence analysis of the SLP gene of R. typhi (slpT) and showed that the open reading frame of this gene encodes both the SLP and a 32-kDa protein. To express only the SLP from this gene, the putative signal sequence and the 32-kDa protein portion were removed from the slpT. This protein was expressed in Escherichia coli as a fusion protein, consisting of the SLP and maltose binding protein. The recombinant protein reacted strongly with polyclonal antiserum of a patient with murine typhus.  相似文献   

12.
13.
《Gene》1997,184(2):149-154
Ehrlichia chaffeensis is the tick-borne, obligately intracellular bacterium that causes human monocytic ehrlichiosis. A 120-kDa protein is one of the immunodominant proteins of E. chaffeensis that stimulates production of specific antibodies in infected humans. A genomic library of E. chaffeensis was constructed in a λZAP II phage vector, and a clone expressing the 120-kDa protein of E. chaffeensis was identified using canine anti-E. chaffeensis serum. DNA sequence analysis of the cloned 120-kDa protein gene of E. chaffeensis identified a 1884-bp open reading frame with an ehrlichial promoter. Five identical 240-bp tandem repeat units were identified in the 120-kDa protein gene of E. chaffeensis, comprising 60% of the entire gene. Aside from the first repeat unit, all the other repeat units are identical. In the first repeat unit there are four nucleotides that are different from the other repeats. Hydropathy analysis of the deduced amino-acid sequence demonstrated that the repeat domain contains highly hydrophilic segments. The 120-kDa protein should be evaluated for a role in stimulating protective immunity.  相似文献   

14.
We describe the isolation and characterization of Rickettsia monacensis sp. nov. (type strain, IrR/Munich(T)) from an Ixodes ricinus tick collected in a city park, the English Garden in Munich, Germany. Rickettsiae were propagated in vitro with Ixodes scapularis cell line ISE6. BLAST analysis of the 16S rRNA, the citrate synthase, and the partial 190-kDa rickettsial outer membrane protein A (rOmpA) gene sequences demonstrated that the isolate was a spotted fever group (SFG) rickettsia closely related to several yet-to-be-cultivated rickettsiae associated with I. ricinus. Phylogenetic analysis of partial rompA sequences demonstrated that the isolate was genotypically different from other validated species of SFG rickettsiae. R. monacensis also replicated in cell lines derived from the ticks I. ricinus (IRE11) and Dermacentor andersoni (DAE100) and in the mammalian cell lines L-929 and Vero, causing cell lysis. Transmission electron microscopy of infected ISE6 and Vero cells showed rickettsiae within the cytoplasm, pseudopodia, nuclei, and vacuoles. Hamsters inoculated with R. monacensis had immunoglobulin G antibody titers as high as 1:16,384, as determined by indirect immunofluorescence assay. Western blot analyses demonstrated that the hamster sera cross-reacted with peptides from other phylogenetically distinct rickettsiae, including rOmpA. R. monacensis induced actin tails in both tick and mammalian cells similar to those reported for R. rickettsii. R. monacensis joins a growing list of SFG rickettsiae that colonize ticks but whose infectivity and pathogenicity for vertebrates are unknown.  相似文献   

15.
Spotted fever group (SFG) rickettsial DNAs were detected in 2.4% of 340 canine blood samples and a pool of 84 tick pool samples (229 ticks) collected in Okinawa, Japan by PCR using a citrate synthase and an SFG rickettsial 190-kDa surface antigen gene primer pair. The sequences of both genes from canine blood and tick samples showed high levels of similarity with those of Rickettsiajaponica and several SFG rickettsiae (R. aeschlimannii, R. massiliae, R. rhipicephali and Bar-29 strain). Phylogenesis of canine blood and tick samples was closely related to that of reference SFG rickettsiae. Serological evidence of SFG rickettsial infection in dogs and humans in Okinawa, where no clinical human cases have been reported, has been obtained. In this study, genetical characterization of SFG rickettsia in Okinawa was investigated phylogenetically.  相似文献   

16.
An embryonic cell line (DAE100) of the Rocky Mountain wood tick, Dermacentor andersoni, was observed by microscopy to be chronically infected with a rickettsialike organism. The organism was identified as a spotted fever group (SFG) rickettsia by PCR amplification and sequencing of portions of the 16S rRNA, citrate synthase, Rickettsia genus-specific 17-kDa antigen, and SFG-specific 190-kDa outer membrane protein A (rOmpA) genes. Sequence analysis of a partial rompA gene PCR fragment and indirect fluorescent antibody data for rOmpA and rOmpB indicated that this rickettsia was a strain (DaE100R) of Rickettsia peacockii, an SFG species presumed to be avirulent for both ticks and mammals. R. peacockii was successfully maintained in a continuous culture of DAE100 cells without apparent adverse effects on the host cells. Establishing cell lines from embryonic tissues of ticks offers an alternative technique for isolation of rickettsiae that are transovarially transmitted.  相似文献   

17.
Rickettsia conorii, the etiologic agent of Mediterranean spotted fever is widely distributed in Southern Europe, the Middle East, Africa, India and the Caspian region. In the Mediterranean region, the brown dog tick, Rhipicephalus sanguineus, is the recognized vector of R. conorii. To study tick-pathogen relationships and pathogenesis of infection caused in model animals by the bite of an infected tick, we attempted to establish a laboratory colony of Rh. sanguineus persistently infected with R. conorii. Rhipicephalus sanguineus ticks of North American and Mediterranean origin were exposed to R. conorii isolates of African (R. conorii conorii strain Malish) and Mediterranean (R. conorii israelensis strain ISTT) origin. Feeding of ticks upon infected mice and dogs, intra-hemocoel inoculation, and submersion in suspensions of purified rickettsiae were used to introduce the pathogen into uninfected ticks. Feeding success, molting success and the longevity of molted ticks were measured to assess the effects of R. conorii on the survival of Rh. sanguineus. In concordance with previously published results, Rh. sanguineus larvae and nymphs from both North American and Mediterranean colonies exposed to R. conorii conorii Malish experienced high mortality during feeding and molting or immediately after. The prevalence of infection in surviving ticks did not exceed 5%. On the other hand, exposure to ISTT strain had lesser effect on tick survival and resulted in 35–66% prevalence of infection. Rh. sanguineus of Mediterranean origin were more susceptible to infection with either strain of R. conorii than those from North America. Previous experimental studies had demonstrated transovarial and transstadial transmission of R. conorii in Rh. sanguineus; however, our data suggest that different strains of R. conorii may employ different means of maintenance in nature. The vertebrate host may be a more important reservoir than previously thought, or co-feeding transmission between different generations of ticks may obviate or lessen the requirement for transovarial maintenance of R. conorii.  相似文献   

18.
19.

Background  

Rickettsiae closely related to the Malish strain, the reference Rickettsia conorii strain, include Indian tick typhus rickettsia (ITTR), Israeli spotted fever rickettsia (ISFR), and Astrakhan fever rickettsia (AFR). Although closely related genotypically, they are distinct serotypically. Using multilocus sequence typing (MLST), we have recently found that distinct serotypes may not always represent distinct species within the Rickettsia genus. We investigated the possibility of classifying rickettsiae closely related to R. conorii as R. conorii subspecies as proposed by the ad hoc committee on reconciliation of approaches to bacterial systematics. For this, we first estimated their genotypic variability by using MLST including the sequencing of 5 genes, of 31 rickettsial isolates closely related to R. conorii strain Malish, 1 ITTR isolate, 2 isolates and 3 tick amplicons of AFR, and 2 ISFR isolates. Then, we selected a representative of each MLST genotype and used multi-spacer typing (MST) and mouse serotyping to estimate their degree of taxonomic relatedness.  相似文献   

20.
The present study was undertaken to investigate the ability of members of two different groups of Rickettsia to stimulate macrophages or immune lymphocytes to produce TNF. It was found that R. conorii, a spotted fever group rickettsia, readily induced murine peritoneal macrophages or the macrophage-like cell line P388D1 to produce relatively high levels of TNF. The interaction of macrophages with viable organisms or heat-killed organisms resulted in TNF production. In contrast, viable or killed R. tsutsugamushi did not stimulate the production of detectable TNF even though viable organisms grew to high numbers in both cell types. It was found that the appropriate immune spleen cells stimulated with heat-killed R. tsutsugamushi or R. conorii produced TNF, and TNF activity was found in the sera of immune mice after injection with rickettsial antigen. Infection of naive mice with viable R. tsutsugamushi resulted in high TNF levels in ascites, but TNF was not found in ascites obtained from infected athymic (nu/nu) mice. These data support the suggestion that spotted fever group rickettsiae, such as R. conorii, possess components perhaps on the surface that interact with macrophages to induce TNF production and this component is lacking in R. tsutsugamushi. Antigens of R. tsutsugamushi and R. conorii will stimulate immune cells to produce TNF activity. These data are compatible with the suggestion that the TH-1 subset of T cells is predominant in immunity to R. tsutsugamushi.  相似文献   

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