Affiliation:
1. Laboratoire de Microbiologie, INSERM U411, Faculté de Médecine Necker-Enfants Malades, 75015 Paris, France
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Neisseria meningitidis
and
Neisseria gonorrhoeae
give rise to dramatically different diseases. Their interactions with the host, however, do share common characteristics: they are both human pathogens which do not survive in the environment and which colonize and invade mucosa at their port of entry. It is therefore likely that they have common properties that might not be found in nonpathogenic bacteria belonging to the same genetically related group, such as
Neisseria lactamica
. Their common properties may be determined by chromosomal regions found only in the pathogenic
Neisseria
species. To address this issue, we used a previously described technique (C. R. Tinsley and X. Nassif, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 93:11109–11114, 1996) to identify sequences of DNA specific for pathogenic neisseriae and not found in
N. lactamica
. Sequences present in
N. lactamica
were physically subtracted from the
N. meningitidis
Z2491 sequence and also from the
N. gonorrhoeae
FA1090 sequence. The clones obtained from each subtraction were tested by Southern blotting for their reactivity with the three species, and only those which reacted with both
N. meningitidis
and
N. gonorrhoeae
(i.e., not specific to either one of the pathogens) were further investigated. In a first step, these clones were mapped onto the chromosomes of both
N. meningitidis
and
N. gonorrhoeae
. The majority of the clones were arranged in clusters extending up to 10 kb, suggesting the presence of chromosomal regions common to
N. meningitidis
and
N. gonorrhoeae
which distinguish these pathogens from the commensal
N. lactamica
. The sequences surrounding these clones were determined from the
N. meningitidis
genome-sequencing project. Several clones corresponded to previously described factors required for colonization and survival at the port of entry, such as immunoglobulin A protease and PilC. Others were homologous to virulence-associated proteins in other bacteria, demonstrating that the subtractive clones are capable of pinpointing chromosomal regions shared by
N. meningitidis
and
N. gonorrhoeae
which are involved in common aspects of the host interaction of both pathogens.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
44 articles.
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