Eppinger_2010_J.Bacteriol_192_1685

Reference

Title : Genome sequence of the deep-rooted Yersinia pestis strain Angola reveals new insights into the evolution and pangenome of the plague bacterium - Eppinger_2010_J.Bacteriol_192_1685
Author(s) : Eppinger M , Worsham PL , Nikolich MP , Riley DR , Sebastian Y , Mou S , Achtman M , Lindler LE , Ravel J
Ref : Journal of Bacteriology , 192 :1685 , 2010
Abstract :

To gain insights into the origin and genome evolution of the plague bacterium Yersinia pestis, we have sequenced the deep-rooted strain Angola, a virulent Pestoides isolate. Its ancient nature makes this atypical isolate of particular importance in understanding the evolution of plague pathogenicity. Its chromosome features a unique genetic make-up intermediate between modern Y. pestis isolates and its evolutionary ancestor, Y. pseudotuberculosis. Our genotypic and phenotypic analyses led us to conclude that Angola belongs to one of the most ancient Y. pestis lineages thus far sequenced. The mobilome carries the first reported chimeric plasmid combining the two species-specific virulence plasmids. Genomic findings were validated in virulence assays demonstrating that its pathogenic potential is distinct from modern Y. pestis isolates. Human infection with this particular isolate would not be diagnosed by the standard clinical tests, as Angola lacks the plasmid-borne capsule, and a possible emergence of this genotype raises major public health concerns. To assess the genomic plasticity in Y. pestis, we investigated the global gene reservoir and estimated the pangenome at 4,844 unique protein-coding genes. As shown by the genomic analysis of this evolutionary key isolate, we found that the genomic plasticity within Y. pestis clearly was not as limited as previously thought, which is strengthened by the detection of the largest number of isolate-specific single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) currently reported in the species. This study identified numerous novel genetic signatures, some of which seem to be intimately associated with plague virulence. These markers are valuable in the development of a robust typing system critical for forensic, diagnostic, and epidemiological studies.

PubMedSearch : Eppinger_2010_J.Bacteriol_192_1685
PubMedID: 20061468
Gene_locus related to this paper: yerpe-BIOH , yerpe-dlhh , yerpe-PIP , yerpe-PLDB , yerpe-PTRB , yerpe-Y0507 , yerpe-y1616 , yerpe-y3224 , yerpe-YPLA , yerpe-YPO0180 , yerpe-YPO0667 , yerpe-YPO0986 , yerpe-YPO1501 , yerpe-YPO1997 , yerpe-YPO2526 , yerpe-YPO2814

Related information

Gene_locus yerpe-BIOH    yerpe-dlhh    yerpe-PIP    yerpe-PLDB    yerpe-PTRB    yerpe-Y0507    yerpe-y1616    yerpe-y3224    yerpe-YPLA    yerpe-YPO0180    yerpe-YPO0667    yerpe-YPO0986    yerpe-YPO1501    yerpe-YPO1997    yerpe-YPO2526    yerpe-YPO2814

Citations formats

Eppinger M, Worsham PL, Nikolich MP, Riley DR, Sebastian Y, Mou S, Achtman M, Lindler LE, Ravel J (2010)
Genome sequence of the deep-rooted Yersinia pestis strain Angola reveals new insights into the evolution and pangenome of the plague bacterium
Journal of Bacteriology 192 :1685

Eppinger M, Worsham PL, Nikolich MP, Riley DR, Sebastian Y, Mou S, Achtman M, Lindler LE, Ravel J (2010)
Journal of Bacteriology 192 :1685