Affiliation:
1. Department of Molecular Genetics and Biochemistry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Clostridium perfringens
type D isolates are important in biodefense and also cause natural enterotoxemias in sheep, goats, and occasionally cattle. In these isolates, the gene (
etx
) encoding ε-toxin is thought to reside on poorly characterized large plasmids. Type D isolates sometimes also produce other potentially plasmid-encoded toxins, including
C. perfringens
enterotoxin and beta2 toxin, encoded by the
cpe
and
cbp2
genes, respectively. In the current study we demonstrated that the
etx
,
cpe
, and
cpb2
genes are carried on plasmids in type D isolates and characterized the toxin-encoding plasmids to obtain insight into their genetic organization, potential transferability, and diversity. Southern blotting of pulsed-field gels showed that the
etx
gene of type D isolates can be present on at least five different plasmids, whose sizes range from 48 to 110 kb. The
etx
plasmids also typically carried IS
1151
and
tcp
open reading frames (ORFs) known to mediate conjugative transfer of
C. perfringens
plasmid pCW3. PCR studies revealed that other than their
tcp
ORFs,
etx
plasmids of type D isolates do not carry substantial portions of the conserved or variable regions in the
cpe
plasmids of type A isolates. Southern blotting also demonstrated that in type D isolates the
cpe
and
cpb2
genes are sometimes present on the
etx
plasmid. Collectively, these findings confirmed that the virulence of type D isolates is heavily plasmid dependent and indicated that (i) a single type D isolate can carry multiple virulence plasmids, (ii) a single type D virulence plasmid can carry up to three different toxin genes, and (iii) many
etx
plasmids should be capable of conjugative transfer.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
63 articles.
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