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41.
Previous studies indicated that gnotobiotic Anopheles stephensi mosquitoes were less susceptible to infection with Plasmodium berghei than xenobiotic ones (Munderloh and Kurtti, 1985). Groups of 100 to 200 mosquitoes were fed on infected hamsters, heparinized gametocytemic blood (via a membrane feeder), and in vitro-formed ookinetes suspended in blood (membrane feeder). Xenobiotic A. stephensi were readily infected by all 3 routes. Gnotobiotic mosquitoes consistently acquired infection after engorging on hamsters (average level of infected females in 8 experiments: 54.1%), but the parasite yield was low (average number of oocysts per infected female: 21.6). In 7 experiments where gnotobiotic A. stephensi were membrane-fed infected hamster blood, an average of only 8.8% of the females became infected, harboring a mean of 2.4 oocysts, and in 7 additional cases no infection was achieved. This pattern was reversed when gnotobiotic A. stephensi were fed ookinetes. A larger proportion of them became infected (mean level of infection in 8 experiments: 76.2%) and they acquired a higher mean number of oocysts per female (94.4) than did xenobiotic mosquitoes. Thus, gnotobiotic A. stephensi are as able as xenobiotic ones to support the sporogonic development of P. berghei, but are less able to support ookinete development.  相似文献   
42.
Anaplasma phagocytophilum, the causative agent of Human Granulocytic Anaplasmosis (HGA), is an obligately intracellular α-proteobacterium that is transmitted by Ixodes spp ticks. However, the pathogen is not transovarially transmitted between tick generations and therefore needs to survive in both a mammalian host and the arthropod vector to complete its life cycle. To adapt to different environments, pathogens rely on differential gene expression as well as the modification of proteins and other molecules. Random transposon mutagenesis of A. phagocytophilum resulted in an insertion within the coding region of an o-methyltransferase (omt) family 3 gene. In wild-type bacteria, expression of omt was up-regulated during binding to tick cells (ISE6) at 2 hr post-inoculation, but nearly absent by 4 hr p.i. Gene disruption reduced bacterial binding to ISE6 cells, and the mutant bacteria that were able to enter the cells were arrested in their replication and development. Analyses of the proteomes of wild-type versus mutant bacteria during binding to ISE6 cells identified Major Surface Protein 4 (Msp4), but also hypothetical protein APH_0406, as the most differentially methylated. Importantly, two glutamic acid residues (the targets of the OMT) were methyl-modified in wild-type Msp4, whereas a single asparagine (not a target of the OMT) was methylated in APH_0406. In vitro methylation assays demonstrated that recombinant OMT specifically methylated Msp4. Towards a greater understanding of the overall structure and catalytic activity of the OMT, we solved the apo (PDB_ID:4OA8), the S-adenosine homocystein-bound (PDB_ID:4OA5), the SAH-Mn2+ bound (PDB_ID:4PCA), and SAM- Mn2+ bound (PDB_ID:4PCL) X-ray crystal structures of the enzyme. Here, we characterized a mutation in A. phagocytophilum that affected the ability of the bacteria to productively infect cells from its natural vector. Nevertheless, due to the lack of complementation, we cannot rule out secondary mutations.  相似文献   
43.
Plasmids have been identified in most species of Rickettsia examined, with some species maintaining multiple different plasmids. Three distinct plasmids were demonstrated in Rickettsia amblyommii AaR/SC by Southern analysis using plasmid specific probes. Copy numbers of pRAM18, pRAM23 and pRAM32 per chromosome in AaR/SC were estimated by real-time PCR to be 2.0, 1.9 and 1.3 respectively. Cloning and sequencing of R. amblyommii AaR/SC plasmids provided an opportunity to develop shuttle vectors for transformation of rickettsiae. A selection cassette encoding rifampin resistance and a fluorescent marker was inserted into pRAM18 yielding a 27.6 kbp recombinant plasmid, pRAM18/Rif/GFPuv. Electroporation of Rickettsia parkeri and Rickettsia bellii with pRAM18/Rif/GFPuv yielded GFPuv-expressing rickettsiae within 2 weeks. Smaller vectors, pRAM18dRG, pRAM18dRGA and pRAM32dRGA each bearing the same selection cassette, were made by moving the parA and dnaA-like genes from pRAM18 or pRAM32 into a vector backbone. R. bellii maintained the highest numbers of pRAM18dRGA (13.3 - 28.1 copies), and R. parkeri, Rickettsia monacensis and Rickettsia montanensis contained 9.9, 5.5 and 7.5 copies respectively. The same species transformed with pRAM32dRGA maintained 2.6, 2.5, 3.2 and 3.6 copies. pRM, the plasmid native to R. monacensis, was still present in shuttle vector transformed R. monacensis at a level similar to that found in wild type R. monacensis after 15 subcultures. Stable transformation of diverse rickettsiae was achieved with a shuttle vector system based on R. amblyommii plasmids pRAM18 and pRAM32, providing a new research tool that will greatly facilitate genetic and biological studies of rickettsiae.  相似文献   
44.
Antigenic variation of major surface proteins is considered an immune-evasive maneuver used by pathogens as divergent as bacteria and protozoa. Likewise, major surface protein 2 (Msp2) of the tick-borne pathogen, Anaplasma marginale, is thought to be involved in antigenic variation to evade the mammalian host immune response. However, this dynamic process also works in the tick vector in the absence of immune selection pressure. We examined Msp2 variants expressed during infection of four tick and two mammalian cell-lines to determine if the presence of certain variants correlated with specific host cell types. Anaplasma marginale colonies differed in their development and appearance in each of the cell lines (P<0.001). Using Western blots probed with two Msp2-monospecific and one Msp2-monoclonal antibodies, we detected expression of variants with differences in molecular weight. Immunofluorescence-assay revealed that specific antibodies bound from 25 to 60% of colonies, depending on the host cell-line (P<0.001). Molecular analysis of cloned variant-encoding genes demonstrated expression of different predominant variants in tick (V1) and mammalian (V2) cell-lines. Analysis of the putative secondary structure of the variants revealed a change in structure when A. marginale was transferred from one cell-type to another, suggesting that the expression of particular Msp2 variants depended on the cell-type (tick or mammalian) in which A. marginale developed. Similarly, analysis of the putative secondary structure of over 200 Msp2 variants from ticks, blood samples, and other mammalian cells available in GenBank showed the predominance of a specific structure during infection of a host type (tick versus blood sample), demonstrating that selection of a possible structure also occurred in vivo. The selection of a specific structure in surface proteins may indicate that Msp2 fulfils an important role in infection and adaptation to diverse host systems. Supplemental Abstract in Spanish (File S1) is provided.  相似文献   
45.
Rickettsia prowazekii, the causative agent of epidemic typhus, grows only within the cytosol of eukaryotic host cells. This obligate intracellular lifestyle has restricted the genetic analysis of this pathogen and critical tools, such as replicating plasmid vectors, have not been developed for this species. Although replicating plasmids have not been reported in R. prowazekii, the existence of well-characterized plasmids in several less pathogenic rickettsial species provides an opportunity to expand the genetic systems available for the study of this human pathogen. Competent R. prowazekii were transformed with pRAM18dRGA, a 10.3 kb vector derived from pRAM18 of R. amblyommii. A plasmid-containing population of R. prowazekii was obtained following growth under antibiotic selection, and the rickettsial plasmid was maintained extrachromosomally throughout multiple passages. The transformant population exhibited a generation time comparable to that of the wild type strain with a copy number of approximately 1 plasmid per rickettsia. These results demonstrate for the first time that a plasmid can be maintained in R. prowazekii, providing an important genetic tool for the study of this obligate intracellular pathogen.  相似文献   
46.
Rickettsia peacockii, also known as the East Side Agent, is a non-pathogenic obligate intracellular bacterium found as an endosymbiont in Dermacentor andersoni ticks in the western USA and Canada. Its presence in ticks is correlated with reduced prevalence of Rickettsia rickettsii, the agent of Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever. It has been proposed that a virulent SFG rickettsia underwent changes to become the East Side Agent. We determined the genome sequence of R. peacockii and provide a comparison to a closely related virulent R. rickettsii. The presence of 42 chromosomal copies of the ISRpe1 transposon in the genome of R. peacockii is associated with a lack of synteny with the genome of R. rickettsii and numerous deletions via recombination between transposon copies. The plasmid contains a number of genes from distantly related organisms, such as part of the glycosylation island of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Genes deleted or mutated in R. peacockii which may relate to loss of virulence include those coding for an ankyrin repeat containing protein, DsbA, RickA, protease II, OmpA, ScaI, and a putative phosphoethanolamine transferase. The gene coding for the ankyrin repeat containing protein is especially implicated as it is mutated in R. rickettsii strain Iowa, which has attenuated virulence. Presence of numerous copies of the ISRpe1 transposon, likely acquired by lateral transfer from a Cardinium species, are associated with extensive genomic reorganization and deletions. The deletion and mutation of genes possibly involved in loss of virulence have been identified by this genomic comparison. It also illustrates that the introduction of a transposon into the genome can have varied effects; either correlating with an increase in pathogenicity as in Francisella tularensis or a loss of pathogenicity as in R. peacockii and the recombination enabled by multiple transposon copies can cause significant deletions in some genomes while not in others.  相似文献   
47.
Plasmids are mobile genetic elements of bacteria that can impart important adaptive traits, such as increased virulence or antibiotic resistance. We report the existence of plasmids in Rickettsia (Rickettsiales; Rickettsiaceae) species, including Rickettsia akari, “Candidatus Rickettsia amblyommii,” R. bellii, R. rhipicephali, and REIS, the rickettsial endosymbiont of Ixodes scapularis. All of the rickettsiae were isolated from humans or North and South American ticks. R. parkeri isolates from both continents did not possess plasmids. We have now demonstrated plasmids in nearly all Rickettsia species that we have surveyed from three continents, which represent three of the four major proposed phylogenetic groups associated with blood-feeding arthropods. Gel-based evidence consistent with the existence of multiple plasmids in some species was confirmed by cloning plasmids with very different sequences from each of two “Ca. Rickettsia amblyommii” isolates. Phylogenetic analysis of rickettsial ParA plasmid partitioning proteins indicated multiple parA gene origins and plasmid incompatibility groups, consistent with possible multiple plasmid origins. Phylogenetic analysis of potentially host-adaptive rickettsial small heat shock proteins showed that hsp2 genes were plasmid specific and that hsp1 genes, found only on plasmids of “Ca. Rickettsia amblyommii,” R. felis, R. monacensis, and R. peacockii, were probably acquired independently of the hsp2 genes. Plasmid copy numbers in seven Rickettsia species ranged from 2.4 to 9.2 per chromosomal equivalent, as determined by real-time quantitative PCR. Plasmids may be of significance in rickettsial evolution and epidemiology by conferring genetic plasticity and host-adaptive traits via horizontal gene transfer that counteracts the reductive genome evolution typical of obligate intracellular bacteria.The alphaproteobacteria of the genus Rickettsia (Rickettsiales; Rickettsiaceae) have undergone the reductive genome evolution typical of obligate intracellular bacteria, resulting in A/T-rich genomes (1.1 × 106 to 1.5 × 106 bp) with a high content of pseudogenes undergoing elimination (3, 10, 20, 26). Initial sequencing of rickettsial genomes focused on the important arthropod-borne pathogens Rickettsia prowazekii, Rickettsia conorii, and Rickettsia typhi and appeared to confirm the prevailing belief that plasmids were absent and transposons were rare among Rickettsia spp. (2, 28, 39, 44). As mobile genetic elements in bacteria, plasmids and transposons drive horizontal gene transfer (HGT) and the acquisition of virulence determinants and environmental adaptive traits (30, 43, 60, 70). Subsequent sequencing of the Rickettsia felis genome revealed the surprising presence of abundant transposase paralogs and the 63-kbp pRF plasmid, with 68 open reading frames (ORFs) encoding predicted proteins, as well as a 39-kbp deletion form, pRFδ (45). Although pRF was suggested to be conjugative, it was initially thought to be unique among the rickettsiae, a reasonable inference given that plasmids are uncommon among the reduced genomes of obligate intracellular bacteria and were previously unknown in the Rickettsiales (3, 4, 13). However, a phylogenetic analysis implied an origin for pRF in ancestral rickettsiae and the possible existence of other rickettsial plasmids (28), which was soon confirmed by the cloning of the 23.5-kbp pRM plasmid from Rickettsia monacensis (6). Some of the 23 ORFs on pRM had close pRF homologs, and both plasmids carried transposon genes and the molecular footprints of transposition events associated with HGT from other bacterial taxa.The discoveries of pRF and pRM made obsolete the long-held dogma that plasmids were not present in members of the genus Rickettsia and implied a source of unexpected genetic diversity in the reduced rickettsial genomes, particularly if potentially conjugative plasmids carrying transposon genes proved to be common among members of the genus. That hypothesis gained credence when pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) and Southern blot surveys (7) using plasmid gene-specific probes demonstrated plasmids in Rickettsia helvetica, “Candidatus Rickettsia hoogstraalii” (38), and Rickettsia massiliae and possible multiple plasmids in “Candidatus Rickettsia amblyommii” (71) isolates. The same study demonstrated the loss of a plasmid in the nonpathogenic species Rickettsia peacockii during long-term serial passage in cultured cells and the absence of a plasmid in Rickettsia montanensis M5/6, an isolate with a long laboratory passage history. Genome sequencing of R. massiliae and Rickettsia africae revealed the 15.3-kbp pRMA and 12.4-kbp pRAF sequences, with 12 and 11 ORFs, respectively, that were more similar to those of pRF than to those of pRM (11, 24).The absence of plasmids in R. montanensis and important Rickettsia pathogens maintained as laboratory isolates has left unresolved the question of the true extent of plasmid distribution among Rickettsia spp. Until recently, the genus was thought to consist of closely related species, known chiefly as typhus and spotted fever pathogens transmitted by lice, fleas, mites, and ticks (31). It is now apparent that many, and possibly most, Rickettsia spp. inhabit a diverse range of arthropods that do not feed on blood, as well as leeches, helminths, crustaceans, and protozoans, suggesting an ancient and complex evolutionary history (54). A multigene phylogenetic analysis of the Rickettsiales resulted in a “molecular clock” which indicated that the order arose from a presumably free-living ancestor and then adapted to intracellular growth during the appearance of metazoan phyla in the Cambrian explosion (76). A transition to a primary association with arthropods followed during the Ordovician and Silurian periods. The genus Rickettsia arose approximately 150 million years ago and evolved into several clades, including the early-diverging hydra and torix lineages associated with leeches and protozoans. A rapid radiation occurred about 50 million years ago in the arthropod-associated lineages (76).Whole-genome sequencing has led to a revision of phylogenetic relationships among Rickettsia spp. associated with blood-feeding arthropods (10, 26, 28). A newly defined ancestral group (AG) contains the earliest-diverging species, Rickettsia bellii and Rickettsia canadensis, while R. prowazekii and R. typhi, transmitted by lice and fleas, respectively, constitute the typhus group (TG). A proposed transitional group (TRG), consisting of the mite-borne Rickettsia akari, the flea-borne R. felis, and the tick-borne Rickettsia australis, bridges the genotypic and phenotypic differences between the TG and the much larger spotted fever group (SFG), consisting of tick-borne rickettsiae (28). However, some presumptive SFG rickettsiae remain poorly characterized and are of uncertain phylogenetic status, while the accumulation of genomic data from rickettsiae found in a diverse range of invertebrate hosts may have profound impacts on the currently understood phylogeny of rickettsiae associated with blood-feeding arthropods. For example, it appears that the above AG and TRG species have many close relatives in insects (76). Despite the recent phylogenomic advances, the genetic and host-adaptive mechanisms underlying the evolution of arthropod-transmitted pathogens of vertebrates from ancestral Rickettsia spp., including any possible role of plasmids, remain poorly understood.In this report, we have taken advantage of recent isolations of rickettsiae from North and South America to conclusively demonstrate that low-copy-number plasmids are indeed common in low-passage isolates of AG, TRG, and SFG rickettsiae. The only exceptions were multiple isolates of R. parkeri, obtained from ticks and human eschar biopsy specimens and newly recognized as a mildly pathogenic SFG rickettsia (49, 50, 52, 79), and the previously characterized species R. montanensis (7). We confirmed that some Rickettsia isolates harbor more than one plasmid by cloning and sequencing multiple plasmids from “Ca. Rickettsia amblyommii” isolates AaR/SC and Ac/Pa, and we obtained PCR- and gel-based evidence that supported genome sequence evidence for the existence of multiple plasmids in REIS, the rickettsial endosymbiont of Ixodes scapularis. Phylogenetic analysis provided strong evidence for multiple plasmid incompatibility groups and possible multiple origins of plasmid-carried parA genes in the genus Rickettsia. Other than genes encoding plasmid replication initiation and partitioning proteins, the newly sequenced “Ca. Rickettsia amblyommii” plasmids resembled the previously sequenced rickettsial plasmids in sharing limited similarities in coding capacity (6, 7, 22). However, we have previously drawn attention to the presence of hsp genes, encoding α-crystalline small heat shock proteins, as a conserved feature of most rickettsial plasmids that may play a role in host adaptation (7). Phylogenetic analysis indicated that the hsp2 genes were plasmid specific, while the hsp1 genes found on four rickettsial plasmids may have been acquired by a chromosome-to-plasmid transfer event in a TRG-like species.  相似文献   
48.
Babesia caballi caused pathological changes in the vector tick, Anocentor nitents. These included the loss of hemocytes, reddish-brown discoloration of the hemolymph, retardation in clotting, and reduction in egg production. Primary cultures were initiated from A. nitens embryos transovarially infected with B. caballi. Cell lines that were isolated were morphologically similar and composed of stellate, fusiform, and hemocyte-like cells, but none was visibly infected with B. caballi. Primary cultures from heavily infected ticks were not viable and did not develop into lines. Kinetes from hemolymph and organs of A. nitens were cocultivated with cell lines isolated from embryos of A. nitens, Rhipicephalus appendiculatus, and Rhipicephalus sanguineus. They attached to and actively penetrated the cells. Cells that were penetrated by or infected with B. caballi showed rounding off, degeneration, and lysis. In Giemsa-stained spreads prepared after 1 or 2 days in vitro, more kinetes were associated with R. appendiculatus cells when the medium contained A. nitens egg extract (TEE). Ninety percent of the B. caballi kinetes were always found within or in close contact with cells from A. nitens, cultured with or without TEE. The parasites were club shaped, amoeboid, or round. Intracellular Babesia were frequently lying adjacent to the host cell nucleus. In the cultures the parasites were detected by light microscopy for 3 to 5 days; they did not transform into other tick-associated stages and were not seen after 1 week. This is the first report of the cultivation of tick stages of B. caballi in tick cell cultures.  相似文献   
49.
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   
50.
Ticks (Acari: Ixodidae) are ubiquitous hosts of rickettsiae (Rickettsiaceae: Rickettsia), obligate intracellular bacteria that occur as a continuum from nonpathogenic arthropod endosymbionts to virulent pathogens of both arthropod vectors and vertebrates. Visualization of rickettsiae in hosts has traditionally been limited to techniques utilizing fixed tissues. We report epifluorescence microscopy observations of unfixed tick tissues infected with a spotted fever group endosymbiont, Rickettsia monacensis, transformed to express green fluorescent protein (GFP). Fluorescent rickettsiae were readily visualized in tick tissues. In adult female, but not male, Ixodes scapularis infected by capillary feeding, R. monacensis disseminated from the gut and infected the salivary glands that are crucial to the role of ticks as vectors. The rickettsiae infected the respiratory tracheal system, a potential dissemination pathway and possible infection reservoir during tick molting. R. monacensis disseminated from the gut of capillary fed I. scapularis nymphs and was transstadially transmitted to adults. Larvae, infected by immersion, transstadially transmitted the rickettsiae to nymphs. Infected female I. scapularis did not transovarially transmit R. monacensis to progeny and the rickettsiae were not horizontally transmitted to a rabbit or hamsters. Survival of infected nymphal and adult I. scapularis did not differ from that of uninfected control ticks. R. monacensis did not disseminate from the gut of capillary fed adult female Amblyomma americanum (L.), or adult Dermacentor variabilis (Say) ticks of either sex. Infection of I. scapularis with R. monacensis expressing GFP provides a model system allowing visualization and study of live rickettsiae in unfixed tissues of an arthropod host.  相似文献   
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