Affiliation:
1. Graduate Group in Infectious Diseases and Immunity, School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Strains of
Chlamydia trachomatis
are classified into serovars based on nucleotide sequence differences in
ompA
, the gene that encodes the major outer membrane protein. Phylogenetic characterization of strains based on
ompA
, however, results in serovar groupings that are inconsistent with the distinguishing features of
C. trachomatis
pathobiology, e.g., tissue tropisms and disease presentation. We have compared nucleotide sequences at multiple sites distributed around the chlamydial genome from 18 strains representing 16 serovars; sampled regions included genes encoding housekeeping enzymes (totaling 2,073 bp), intergenic noncoding segments (1,612 bp), and a gene encoding a second outer membrane protein (
porB
; 1,023 bp), with the
ompA
sequence (1,194 bp) used for reference. These comparative analyses revealed substantial variation in nucleotide substitution patterns among the sampled regions, with average pairwise sequence differences ranging from 0.15% for the housekeeping genes to 12.1% for
ompA
. Phylogenetic characterization of the sampled genomic sequences yielded a strongly supported tree that divides the strains into groupings consistent with
C. trachomatis
biology and which has a topology quite distinct from the
ompA
tree. This phylogenetic incongruity can be accounted for by recombination of the
ompA
gene between different genomic backgrounds. We found, however, no evidence of recombination within or between any of the sampled regions around the
C. trachomatis
genome apart from
ompA
. Parallel analysis of published sequence data on four members of the
pmp
gene family are consistent with the phylogenetic analyses reported here.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
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