Genomic, proteomic, and transcriptomic analysis of virulent and avirulent Rickettsia prowazekii reveals its adaptive mutation capabilities
- Yassina Bechah1,
- Khalid El Karkouri1,
- Oleg Mediannikov1,
- Quentin Leroy1,
- Nicolas Pelletier1,
- Catherine Robert1,
- Claudine Médigue2,
- Jean-Louis Mege1 and
- Didier Raoult1,3
- 1 Unit for Research on Emergent and Tropical Infectious Diseases (URMITE), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique–Institut de Recherche pour le Développement, Faculty of Medicine, University of the Mediterranean, 13005 Marseille, France;
- 2 Genoscope, Centre National de Séquençage, Laboratoire de Génomique Comparative, 91057 Evry cedex, France
Abstract
Rickettsia prowazekii, the agent of epidemic typhus, is an obligate intracellular bacterium that is transmitted to human beings by the body louse. Several strains that differ considerably in virulence are recognized, but the genetic basis for these variations has remained unknown since the initial description of the avirulent vaccine strain nearly 70 yr ago. We use a recently developed murine model of epidemic typhus and transcriptomic, proteomic, and genetic techniques to identify the factors associated with virulence. We identified four phenotypes of R. prowazekii that differed in virulence, associated with the up-regulation of antiapoptotic genes or the interferon I pathway in the host cells. Transcriptional and proteomic analyses of R. prowazekii surface protein expression and protein methylation varied with virulence. By sequencing a virulent strain and using comparative genomics, we found hotspots of mutations in homopolymeric tracts of poly(A) and poly(T) in eight genes in an avirulent strain that split and inactivated these genes. These included recO, putative methyltransferase, and exported protein. Passage of the avirulent Madrid E strain in cells or in experimental animals was associated with a cascade of gene reactivations, beginning with recO, that restored the virulent phenotype. An area of genomic plasticity appears to determine virulence in R. prowazekii and represents an example of adaptive mutation for this pathogen.
Footnotes
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↵3 Corresponding author.
E-mail didier.raoult{at}medecine.univ-mrs.fr; fax 33-4-91-38-77-72.
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[Supplemental material is available online at http://www.genome.org. The sequence data from this study have been submitted to GenBank (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Genbank) under accession no. CP001584. The microarray data from this study have been submitted to the NCBI Gene Expression Omnibus (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo) under accession nos. GSE16123 and GSE15630.]
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Article published online before print. Article and publication date are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.103564.109.
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- Received November 26, 2009.
- Accepted February 11, 2010.
- Copyright © 2010 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press











