Affiliation:
1. Department of Laboratory Medicine1 and
2. Lehrstuhl für Mikrobiologie, Technische Universität München, 85350 Freising, Germany2; and
3. School of Fisheries,3 University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195;
4. Washington State Public Health Laboratory, Seattle, Washington 981554
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The recently proposed reorganization of the order
Chlamydiales
and description of new taxa are broadening our perception of this once narrowly defined taxon. We have recovered four strains of gram-negative cocci endosymbiotic in
Acanthamoeba
spp., representing 5% of the
Acanthamoeba
sp. isolates examined, which displayed developmental life cycles typical of members of the
Chlamydiales
. One of these endosymbiont strains was found stably infecting an amoebic isolate recovered from a case of amoebic keratitis in North America, with three others found in acanthamoebae recovered from environmental sources in North America (two isolates) and Europe (one isolate). Analyses of nearly full-length 16S rRNA gene sequences of these isolates by neighbor joining, parsimony, and distance matrix methods revealed their clustering with other members of the
Chlamydiales
but in a lineage separate from those of the genera
Chlamydia
,
Chlamydophila
,
Simkania
, and
Waddlia
(sequence similarities, <88%) and including the recently described species
Parachlamydia acanthamoebae
(sequence similarities, 91.2 to 93.1%). With sequence similarities to each other of 91.4 to 99.4%, these four isolates of intra-amoebal endosymbionts may represent three distinct species and, perhaps, new genera within the recently proposed family
Parachlamydiaceae
. Fluorescently labeled oligonucleotide probes targeted to 16S rRNA signature regions were able to readily differentiate two groups of intra-amoebal endosymbionts which corresponded to two phylogenetic lineages. These results reveal significant phylogenetic diversity occurring among the
Chlamydiales
in nontraditional host species and supports the existence of a large environmental reservoir of related species. Considering that all described species of
Chlamydiales
are known to be pathogenic, further investigation of intra-amoebal parachlamydiae as disease-producing agents is warranted.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
128 articles.
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