Affiliation:
1. Department of Veterinary Science
2. Microbiology Diagnostic Unit, The University of Melbourne, Parkville 3010, Victoria, Australia
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Although four of the five
Salmonella
pathogenicity islands (SPIs) have been characterized in detail for
Salmonella enterica
serovar Typhimurium, and the fifth has been characterized for
Salmonella enterica
serovar Dublin, there have been limited studies to examine them in detail in a range of pathogenic serovars of
S. enterica
. The aim of this study was to examine these regions, shown to be crucial in virulence, in pathogenic serovars to identify any major deletions or insertions that may explain variation in virulence and provide further understanding of the elements involved in the evolution of these regions. Multiple strains of each of the 13 serovars were compared by Southern blot hybridization using a series of probes that together encompassed the full length of all five SPIs. With the exception of serovar Typhimurium, all strains of the same serovar were identical in all five SPIs. Those serovars that differed from serovar Typhimurium in SPI-1 to SPI-4 and from serovar Dublin in SPI-5 were examined in more detail in the variant regions by PCR, and restriction endonuclease digestion and/or DNA sequencing. While most variation in hybridization patterns was attributable to loss or gain of single restriction endonuclease cleavage sites, three regions, in SPI-1, SPI-3, and SPI-5, had differences due to major insertions or deletions. In SPI-1 the
avrA
gene was replaced by a 200-base fragment in three serovars, as reported previously. In SPI-5, two serovars had acquired an insertion with similarity to the
pagJ
and
pagK
genes between
pipC
and
pipD.
In SPI-3 the genes
sugR
and
rhuM
were deleted in most serovars and in some were replaced by sequences that were very similar to either the
Escherichia coli
fimbrial operon, flanked by two distinct insertion sequence elements, or to the
E. coli
retron phage ΦR73. The distribution of these differences suggests that there have been a number of relatively recent horizontal transfers of genes into
S. enterica
and that in some cases the same event has occurred in multiple lineages of
S. enterica.
Thus, it seems that insertion sequences and retron phages are likely to be involved in continuing evolution of the pathogenicity islands of pathogenic
Salmonella
serovars.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
84 articles.
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