Affiliation:
1. Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, University of California—Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California 93106-9610
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The
Bordetella
BvgAS signal transduction system controls the expression of at least three phenotypic phases, the Bvg
+
or virulent phase, the Bvg
−
or avirulent phase, and the Bvg
i
or Bvg intermediate phase, which has been hypothesized to be important for transmission.
bipA
, the first identified Bvg
i
-phase gene, encodes a protein with similarity to the well-characterized bacterial adhesins intimin and invasin. Proteins encoded by the
bipA
genes present in
Bordetella pertussis
Tohama I and
Bordetella bronchiseptica
RB50 differ in the number of 90-amino-acid repeats which they possess and in the sequence of the C-terminal domain. To investigate the possibility that
bipA
alleles segregate according to host specificity and to gain insight into the role of BipA and the Bvg
i
phase in the
Bordetella
infectious cycle, we compared
bipA
alleles across members of the
B. bronchiseptica
cluster, which includes both human-infective (
B. pertussis
and
B. parapertussis
hu
) and non-human-infective (
B. bronchiseptica
and
B. parapertussis
ov
) strains.
bipA
genes were present in most, but not all, strains. All
bipA
genes present in
B. bronchiseptica
strains were identical to
bipA
of RB50 (at least with regard to the DNA sequence of the 3′ C-terminal-domain-encoding region, the number of 90-amino-acid repeats encoded, and expression patterns). Although all
bipA
genes present in the other
Bordetella
strains were identical in the 3′ C-terminal-domain-encoding region to
bipA
of
B. pertussis
Tohama I, they varied in the number of 90-amino-acid repeats that they encoded and in expression level. Notably, the genes present in
B. parapertussis
hu
strains were pseudogenes, and the genes present in
B. parapertussis
ov
strains were expressed at significantly reduced levels compared with the levels in
B. pertussis
and
B. bronchiseptica
strains. Our results indicate that there is a correlation between specific
bipA
alleles and specific hosts. They also support the hypothesis that both horizontal gene transfer and fine-tuning of gene expression patterns contribute to the evolution of host adaptation in lineages of the
B. bronchiseptica
cluster.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
20 articles.
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