Genomic Analysis of an Attenuated Chlamydia abortusLive Vaccine Strain Reveals Defects in Central Metabolism and Surface Proteins

Autor: Burall, L. S., Rodolakis, A., Rekiki, A., Myers, G. S. A., Bavoil, P. M.
Zdroj: Infection and Immunity; September 2009, Vol. 77 Issue: 9 p4161-4167, 7p
Abstrakt: ABSTRACTComparative genomic analysis of a wild-type strain of the ovine pathogen Chlamydia abortusand its nitrosoguanidine-induced, temperature-sensitive, virulence-attenuated live vaccine derivative identified 22 single nucleotide polymorphisms unique to the mutant, including nine nonsynonymous mutations, one leading to a truncation of pmpG, which encodes a polymorphic membrane protein, and two intergenic mutations potentially affecting promoter sequences. Other nonsynonymous mutations mapped to a pmpGpseudogene and to predicted coding sequences encoding a putative lipoprotein, a sigma-54-dependent response regulator, a PhoH-like protein, a putative export protein, two tRNA synthetases, and a putative serine hydroxymethyltransferase. One of the intergenic mutations putatively affects transcription of two divergent genes encoding pyruvate kinase and a putative SOS response nuclease, respectively. These observations suggest that the temperature-sensitive phenotype and associated virulence attenuation of the vaccine strain result from disrupted metabolic activity due to altered pyruvate kinase expression and/or alteration in the function of one or more membrane proteins, most notably PmpG and a putative lipoprotein.
Databáze: Supplemental Index