Comparative Phylogenomics and Evolution of the Brucellae Reveal a Path to Virulence

Author:

Wattam Alice R.1,Foster Jeffrey T.2,Mane Shrinivasrao P.1,Beckstrom-Sternberg Stephen M.23,Beckstrom-Sternberg James M.23,Dickerman Allan W.1,Keim Paul23,Pearson Talima2,Shukla Maulik1,Ward Doyle V.4,Williams Kelly P.1,Sobral Bruno W.1,Tsolis Renee M.5,Whatmore Adrian M.6,O'Callaghan David78

Affiliation:

1. Virginia Bioinformatics Institute, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia, USA

2. Center for Microbial Genetics & Genomics, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, Arizona, USA

3. Translational Genomics Research Institute, Pathogen Genomics Division, Phoenix, Arizona, USA

4. Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA

5. Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, School of Medicine, University of California, Davis, California, USA

6. Department of Bacteriology, Animal Health & Veterinary Laboratories Agency, Addlestone, United Kingdom

7. INSERM U1047, UFR Médecine, Nîmes, France

8. Université Montpellier 1, UFR Médecine, Nîmes, France

Abstract

ABSTRACT Brucella species include important zoonotic pathogens that have a substantial impact on both agriculture and human health throughout the world. Brucellae are thought of as “stealth pathogens” that escape recognition by the host innate immune response, modulate the acquired immune response, and evade intracellular destruction. We analyzed the genome sequences of members of the family Brucellaceae to assess its evolutionary history from likely free-living soil-based progenitors into highly successful intracellular pathogens. Phylogenetic analysis split the genus into two groups: recently identified and early-dividing “atypical” strains and a highly conserved “classical” core clade containing the major pathogenic species. Lateral gene transfer events brought unique genomic regions into Brucella that differentiated them from Ochrobactrum and allowed the stepwise acquisition of virulence factors that include a type IV secretion system, a perosamine-based O antigen, and systems for sequestering metal ions that are absent in progenitors. Subsequent radiation within the core Brucella resulted in lineages that appear to have evolved within their preferred mammalian hosts, restricting their virulence to become stealth pathogens capable of causing long-term chronic infections.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Molecular Biology,Microbiology

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