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Journal of Bacteriology, June 2004, p . 3922-3927, Vol . 186,
No . 12
Spreading Factors of Mycoplasma alligatoris, a Flesh-Eating Mycoplasma
D . R . Brown,1* L . A . Zacher,1
and W . G . Farmerie2
Department of Pathobiology, College of Veterinary Medicine,1
Genome Sequencing Services Laboratory, Interdisciplinary Center for
Biotechnology Research, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32611-08802
Received 9 January 2004/ Accepted 17 March 2004
Mycoplasma alligatoris causes lethal invasive disease of alligators
and caimans . A homolog of the nagH gene, encoding a hyaluronidase
secreted by Clostridium perfringens, and a C . perfringens
hyaluronidase nagI or nagK pseudogene were discovered
in the M . alligatoris genome . The nagH gene was
detected by PCR in the closest relative of M . alligatoris,
Mycoplasma crocodyli, but not in 40 other species representing
the Mycoplasma hominis, Mycoplasma pneumoniae, and
Spiroplasma phylogenetic clusters . The hyaluronidase activity in
the cellular fraction of M . alligatoris and M . crocodyli
SP4 broth cultures was equivalent to 10–16 U of Streptomyces
hyalurolyticus hyaluronidase CFU–1 . Negligible activity
was present in the cell-free supernatant fraction . No chondroitinase
activity was detected . There is also a novel homolog of the
nanI gene, which encodes a sialidase secreted by C . perfringens,
in the M . alligatoris genome . The signature YRIP and
SXDXGXTW motifs and catalytic residues of the clostridial sialidase
are conserved in the mycoplasmal gene, but the leader sequence
necessary for its secretion by C . perfringens is
absent . The gene was not detected by PCR in any other mycoplasma .
Potent cell-associated sialidase activity was present in M .
alligatoris colonies on agar but not in the cell-free
supernatants of broth cultures or in M . crocodyli . The
presence of hyaluronidase and sialidase in M . alligatoris
is consistent with the rapid invasiveness and necrotizing effects of
this organism, and the lack of sialidase in M . crocodyli
is consistent with its comparatively attenuated virulence . This
genetic and biochemical evidence suggests that the spreading factors
hyaluronidase and sialidase, a combination unprecedented in
mycoplasmas, are the basis of the virulence of M .
alligatoris .
Mycoplasma alligatoris causes a lethal invasive disease in adult
alligators (Alligator mississippiensis) and closely related
caimans (Caiman latirostris) . The pathology observed as early
as 1 week after infection by instillation via the glottis includes
necrotizing pneumonia, severe pericarditis, necrotizing myocarditis,
lymphocytic interstitial nephritis, lymphocytic periportal hepatitis,
splenic hyperplasia, pyogranulomatous meningitis, and necrotizing
synovitis (9, 10, 11,
13, 18, 33) . Hatchling
alligators also rapidly developed disseminated M .
alligatoris mycoplasmosis after intratracheal instillation, and
the lesions are similar to those of adults and include acute
multifocal brainstem hemorrhage (35) .
Mycoplasma crocodyli (23), the closest known relative
of M . alligatoris (98% 16S rRNA gene similarity [9]),
causes a similar necrotizing synovitis and occasionally subacute
pneumonia in Nile crocodiles (Crocodylus niloticus) (27,
28) . The severity of the lesions correlates with
the numbers of M . alligatoris cells in affected
tissues, suggesting that a spreading factor(s) contributes to the
virulence . The extracellular matrix (ECM)-degrading enzymes that act
as bacterial spreading factors include hyaluronidases, sialidases,
and mucinases (26) . In this report we describe the
use of comparative genomics to guide the discovery of a hyaluronidase
and a novel sialidase which are potential virulence factors of M.
alligatoris .
Genomics. A whole-genome shotgun library of third-passage M.
alligatoris A21JP2T (= ATCC 700619T) was
constructed by random shearing, selection of 2-kb inserts, blunt end
ligation into pUC18, and electroporation into Escherichia coli .
High-throughput sequencing with robotic workstations, the MegaBACE
capillary electrophoresis system (Pharmacia, New York, N.Y.), and the
Finch-Suite relational database management system (Geospiza, Inc.,
Seattle, Wash.) was performed by the University of Florida Genome
Sequencing Services Laboratory . More than 4x
of a genome equivalent of sequence was obtained, assembled by using
the PHRAP alignment engine, and used for BLASTX queries of GenBank .
Sequence analyses were performed by using the Wisconsin Package of
SeqWeb 2.1 (Accelrys, Inc., Burlington, Mass.) and PSORT (30)
software .
PCR and reverse transcriptase PCR (RT-PCR). PCR primers
nagH-F (5'-CGTTTGAACAATTCACCCATT-3') and nagH-R
(5'-TGAACCAACATCATCGGCTA-3') were developed by using Primer3 software
(Whitehead Institute, Cambridge, Mass . [www.broad.mit.edu/genome_software/other/primer3.html]) .
Purified M . alligatoris nucleic acid was obtained by cell
lysis with proteinase K followed by phenol-chloroform extraction .
The optimum MgCl2 concentration for the PCR was 3 mM, and the
50-µl PCR mixture contained each primer at a concentration of 1
µM, each deoxynucleoside triphosphate at a concentration of 200 µM,
and 0.5 U of Taq DNA polymerase (Promega, Madison, Wis.) . The program
consisted of 35 cycles of denaturation for 60 s at 94°C, primer
annealing for 60 s at 58°C, and extension for 30 s at 72°C . The
identity of the 153-bp amplification product was confirmed by
digestion with restriction endonuclease AluI, which was predicted to
generate 109- and 44-bp cleavage products . When PCR primers nanI-F
(5'-TGGAAGAACTTGATCAGAAGCA-3') and nanI-R
(5'-AATGGCATCAATCCAGATCC-3') were used, the reaction conditions were
35 cycles of denaturation for 60 s at 94°C, primer annealing for 60 s
at 55°C, and extension for 30 s at 72°C . The identity of the 159-bp
amplification product was confirmed by digestion with restriction
endonuclease RsaI, which was predicted to generate 87- and 72-bp
cleavage products . A crude cell lysate was used as the PCR template
for M . crocodyli MP145T (= ATCC 51981T)
and 40 other species that were representative of the Mycoplasma
hominis, Mycoplasma pneumoniae, and Spiroplasma
phylogenetic clusters . The following organisms were included in the
analysis: Mycoplasma adleri ATCC 27948, Mycoplasma agalactiae
PG2 (Mollicutes Reference Collection), Mycoplasma agassizii
ATCC 700616, Mycoplasma alkalescens ATCC 29103, Mycoplasma
alligatoris ATCC 700619, Mycoplasma arginini ATCC 25228,
Mycoplasma arthritidis ATCC 14124, Mycoplasma auris UIA
(Mollicutes Reference Collection), Mycoplasma bovigenitalium
(a gift from Mary B . Brown), Mycoplasma bovirhinis (a gift
from Mary B . Brown), Mycoplasma bovis ATCC 27368,
Mycoplasma buccae ATCC 23636, Mycoplasma californicum (a
gift from Mary B . Brown), Mycoplasma canadense (a gift from
Mary B . Brown), Mycoplasma capricolum ATCC 23205, Mycoplasma
crocodyli ATCC 51981, Mycoplasma dispar (a gift from Mary B .
Brown), Mycoplasma felifaucium ATCC 43428, Mycoplasma
feliminutum ATCC 25749, Mycoplasma felis ATCC 23391,
Mycoplasma fermentans ATCC 19989, Mycoplasma gallisepticum
ATCC 15306, Mycoplasma gatae ATCC 23392, Mycoplasma
genitalium ATCC 33530, Mycoplasma hominis (a gift from
Mary B . Brown), Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae J (Mollicutes
Reference Collection), Mycoplasma hyorhinis (a gift from Mary
B . Brown), Mycoplasma leocaptivus ATCC 49890, Mycoplasma
leopharyngis ATCC 49889, Mycoplasma microti ATCC 700935,
Mycoplasma mycoides subsp . capri PG3 (Mollicutes Reference
Collection), Mycoplasma mycoides subsp . mycoides LC strain
GM684-13 (Mollicutes Reference Collection), Mycoplasma orale
ATCC 23714, Mycoplasma pneumoniae PI1428 (Mollicutes Reference
Collection), Mycoplasma pulmonis X1048 (a gift from Maureen K .
Davidson), Mycoplasma putrifaciens ATCC 15718, Mycoplasma
salivarium ATCC 23064, Mycoplasma simbae ATCC 49888,
Mycoplasma synoviae WVU1853 (Mollicutes Reference Collection),
Mycoplasma testudineum ATCC 700618, Mycoplasma testudinis
ATCC 43263, and Mycoplasma yeatsii G1H (Mollicutes Reference
Collection).The absence of factors that might inhibit the PCR in the
crude lysates was confirmed by successful amplification of the 16S
rRNA gene of each species under conditions described previously (8) .
High-molecular-weight M . alligatoris RNA was purified from
pelleted cells in the early log phase of growth in ATCC medium 988
(SP4) (46) by lysis with guanidinium thiocyanate,
followed by selective RNA adsorption to glass fibers and treatment of
the final eluate with 6 U of DNase I for 60 min at 37°C (RNAqueous,
DNA-free; Ambion, Inc., Austin, Tex.) . For detection of mRNA
by RT-PCR, cDNA synthesis was initiated in a reaction by using 300 ng
of M . alligatoris total RNA, 5 U of avian
myeloblastosis virus (AMV) RT, 50 pmol of primer nagH-R2
(5'-ACAACCCCTTCAGAAACAGC-3') or nanI-R, each deoxynucleoside
triphosphate at a concentration of 200 µM, and the optimum MgSO4
concentration (3 mM) in a 50-µl mixture at 48°C for 45 min . This was
followed in a one-tube, two-enzyme system by second-strand cDNA
synthesis and 30 cycles of PCR performed with Tfl DNA polymerase,
which lacks RT activity (Access RT-PCR system; Promega), and primers
nagH-F3 (5'-GGTGCTCCAAGAAAAGGTGA-3') and nagH-R2 (the 509-bp
amplification product was confirmed by the presence of 271- and
238-bp AgeI cleavage products) or primers nanI-F and nanI-R . AMV RT
was omitted from the negative controls .
Mycoplasma culture. Third-passage M . alligatoris
that was previously frozen at –70°C in SP4 medium was cultured to the
early log phase, as detected by acidification of the medium, at 30°C
in ambient air by 1:10 dilution in SP4 broth containing 0.5% (wt/vol)
glucose supplemented with 10–5 U of penicillin G liter–1,
10–5 U of polymyxin B liter–1, 65 mg of cefoperazone
liter–1, and 20% (vol/vol) fetal bovine serum . Culture
densities were determined by colony counting by using serial
10-fold dilutions of aliquots in SP4 broth inoculated onto SP4 agar.
M . crocodyli was cultured and quantified similarly . M .
pulmonis ATCC 19612 was cultured in Frey's medium (46) .
To determine if glycosaminoglycanase activity was inducible with
exogenous substrate, M . alligatoris cells in SP4 broth
were harvested in the early log phase by centrifugation and washed
three times in minimal medium CMRL 1066 without glutamine (Gibco,
Carlsbad, Calif.) . The cells were resuspended in an equal volume of
minimal medium and incubated at 30°C in ambient air without
additional supplements . After 24 h of starvation in minimal medium, a
potential glycosaminoglycanase substrate (100 mg of autoclaved minced
alligator tracheal cartilage ml–1) was added, and the
preparation was incubated for another 72 h . Aliquots were withdrawn
every 24 h for enzyme activity analysis and for quantitative
subculturing in serial dilutions of SP4 broth and on SP4 agar to
monitor the culture density in the minimal medium .
Glycosaminoglycanase assay. Glycosaminoglycanase activity
was measured by using a quantitative substrate precipitation assay (19) .
The substrates tested individually included hyaluronic acid (sodium
salts) from rooster comb and from human umbilical cord, as well as
bovine chondroitin sulfate A and porcine chondroitin sulfate B
(sodium salts; Sigma) . A 2-mg ml–1 aqueous stock solution
of substrate was diluted to obtain a final concentration of 400 µg ml–1
in 1% (wt/vol) low-melting-temperature agarose (SeaPlaque; FMC,
Philadelphia, Pa.) melted in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS)
containing 1% (wt/vol) fatty acid-free bovine serum albumin . The
optimum pH was determined by comparing the results obtained with PBS
at pH 4, 6, 7.5, 8, and 10 . Each well of a 96-well flat-bottom plate
(no . 3072; Falcon, San Jose, Calif.), except the perimeter wells,
contained 80 µg of substrate in 200 µl of solidified agarose . A
specimen (100 µl) was added to each well and incubated at 30°C . After
72 h of incubation, the specimen was removed by aspiration, and 2 N
glacial acetic acid (100 µl well–1) was added to
precipitate any undigested substrate, which resulted in turbidity
which was inversely proportional to the glycosaminoglycanase
activity . The A405 of each well was measured after an
additional 4 h of incubation at 30°C (Thermomix microplate reader
with Softmax Pro, version 1.2.0, software; Molecular Devices,
Sunnyvale, Calif.) .
Glycosaminoglycanase activity was determined by using aliquots of
the initial SP4 cultures, cell-free SP4 culture supernatant fluid,
CMRL 1066 cultures after starvation and serially after subsequent
substrate addition, and the subcultures from CMRL 1066 tested for
viability with SP4 as described above . Cell-free supernatant fluid
was prepared by centrifugation of a broth culture in the early log
phase, and the absence of viable mycoplasmas from this fraction was
demonstrated by incubation of an aliquot of the fraction diluted in
fresh SP4 medium . The negative controls included PBS, sterile SP4
medium, M . pulmonis cultured to the log phase in Frey's
medium, and sterile Frey's medium . The positive controls included
Streptomyces hyalurolyticus hyaluronate lyase (Sigma) that was
serially diluted in PBS (pH 7.5) to obtain concentrations ranging
from 1 x 10–2 to 2
x 10–5 U 100 µl–1 and
Proteus vulgaris chondroitinase ABC (Sigma) that was serially
diluted in PBS (pH 7.5) to obtain concentrations ranging from 2
x 10–1 to 4
x 10–4 U 100 µl–1 .
Sialidase assay. Sialidase activity was assayed
qualitatively by using the fluorogenic substrate
2'-(4-methylumbelliferyl)- -D-N-acetylneuraminic
acid (MUAN) (Sigma) . Twenty-microliter aliquots of M .
alligatoris and M . crocodyli in the early log phase
in SP4 broth were spotted onto SP4 agar without phenol red in
six-well plates and incubated for 24 h until a lawn of colonies
became visible . Twenty-microliter aliquots of cell-free culture
supernatant liquid were prepared similarly, and then each well was
overlaid with 1 ml of top agar (2.5 g of NaCl liter–1, 10
g of tryptone liter–1, 7.5 g of Noble agar liter–1)
containing 200 µl of 0.35% (wt/vol) MUAN and 30 µl of 1 M sodium
acetate (pH 4) and incubated for 30 min at 25°C after the top agar
solidified . Cyan fluorescence under 254-nm UV light illumination
indicated a positive result (21) . The negative
controls were M . pulmonis colonies and cell-free
culture supernatant liquid prepared similarly, as well as PBS (pH
7.5) . The positive control was 0.25 U of type VI Clostridium
perfringens neuraminidase (Sigma) in 20 µl of PBS (pH 7.5) .
Genomics. A gene (GenBank accession number
AY515698) with unambiguous similarity (BLASTX E value, 1e–106)
to nagH, encoding a hyaluronate lyase (GenBank protein
accession number
NP_561107) secreted by C . perfringens (44),
was present in the M . alligatoris genome . The
1,628-amino-acid C . perfringens enzyme NagH consists of
a putative 30-amino-acid N-terminal signal sequence, an approximately
700-amino-acid N-terminal domain that includes the active site
binding cleft and catalytic residues, an approximately 90-amino-acid
linker domain, and a C-terminal domain containing three candidate
substrate-binding motifs (12) . A candidate ribosome binding
site (RBS) (5'-TAAAGGAGTTGA-3') was present at position –14
with respect to the putative start codon, but no transcription
promoter sequences were readily discernible . There were three
in-frame putative UAA stop codons upstream of the gene, but no BLAST
similarities were detected in the adjacent 5' sequence . A
32-amino-acid N-terminal signal sequence was predicted by PSORT
analysis (signal score, 0.38) . The predicted M . alligatoris
NagH homolog exhibited approximately 42% amino acid identity
and 59% amino acid similarity to C . perfringens NagH in the
N-terminal domain, 21% amino acid identity and 42% amino acid
similarity in the linker domain, and 31% amino acid identity and 51%
amino acid similarity in the C-terminal domain . The active site
binding cleft amino acid sequence, including the presence and spacing
of the catalytic N-171, H-228, and Y-236 residues, was the most
highly conserved region (25, 32) . The
gene was interspersed with at least 24 putative UGA W codons .
In addition to nagH, a pseudogene with similarities to the C .
perfringens hyaluronate lyase genes nagI (GenBank protein
accession number
NP_561797) and nagK (GenBank protein accession number
NP_562195) (BLASTX E values, 3e–24 and 2e–40,
respectively) was identified in the M . alligatoris
genome, but this sequence was interspersed with multiple putative UAA
and UAG stop codons in addition to at least seven putative UGA W
codons . No transcription promoter, RBS, or start codon sequences were
discerned by alignment of the pseudogene with the C .
perfringens sequences, but the remnants of the active site
binding cleft region, including the catalytic residues, remained
obvious .
A gene (GenBank accession number
AY515695) with unambiguous similarity (BLASTX E value, 5e–20)
to nanI, encoding the large exo- -sialidase
(GenBank protein accession number
NP_561641) secreted by C . perfringens (44),
was also present in the M . alligatoris genome . The
clostridial enzyme NanI is a 694-amino-acid polypeptide that includes
a 41-amino-acid hydrophobic N-terminal leader sequence . A candidate
RBS, 5'-GAAAGTGTTTAA-3', was present at position –13 with respect to
the putative start codon, but no transcription promoter sequences
were readily discernible . This RBS overlapped the stop codon of the
upstream open reading frame (ORF), which encoded a putative sugar
kinase . The predicted M . alligatoris NanI homolog was
511 amino acids long and exhibited 30% amino acid identity and 47%
amino acid similarity to C . perfringens NanI excluding
the C . perfringens leader sequence, which sequence
alignment and PSORT analyses showed was absent in M .
alligatoris (signal score, –4.29) . The signature YRIP motif and
four SXDXGXTW Asp box motifs, as well as the catalytic R-37, D-62,
D-100, and E-230 residues of C . perfringens NanI (26,
40), were conserved in M . alligatoris . The M.
alligatoris NanI homolog was interspersed with eight putative
UGA W codons but no other W codons . The nanI ORF overlapped
candidate transcription promoter sequences 5'-TTGA-3' and 5'-TATAA-3'
of the downstream ORF, which encoded a putative sodium-coupled
permease . The candidate RBS of this ORF, 5'-AGAAAGGATACAAT-3', was
located 2 bases 3' of the nanI stop codon .
Mycoplasma culture. M . alligatoris cultures in SP4
broth reached the remarkably high density of 4
x 1012 CFU ml–1 in the
early log phase . The density decreased to 9
x 107 CFU ml–1 after
24 h of incubation in minimal medium and then to 2.5
x 107 and 6
x 106 CFU ml–1 in the
subsequent 24 and 48 h, respectively, either with or without
cartilage supplementation . Supplementation with up to 1% (wt/vol)
fatty acid-free bovine serum albumin in factorial combinations with
up to 0.5% (vol/vol) polyoxyethylene sorbitan (Tween 80) did not
affect M . alligatoris survival in minimal medium .
PCR and RT-PCR. The PCR with primers nagH-F and nagH-R and
an M . alligatoris template generated a 153-bp product
which was cleaved by AluI as expected . The PCR with primers nanI-F
and nanI-R generated a 159-bp product which was cleaved by RsaI as
expected . The nagH gene was also detected by PCR in M.
crocodyli, the closest known relative of M .
alligatoris, but not in any of 40 other species of mollicutes
tested . The nanI gene was detected by PCR only in M .
alligatoris . Expression of nagH and nanI mRNA was
readily detected in M . alligatoris SP4 broth cultures by
RT-PCR (Fig . 1) . The primer nagH-F3—primer nagH-R2
combination, which amplified a 509-bp product that was cleaved by
AgeI as expected, had better specificity in the RT-PCR than the
primer nagH-F—primer nagH-R combination had . No change in nagH
mRNA expression following M . alligatoris passage in minimal
medium, either with or without cartilage, was detected by RT-PCR .
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FIG . 1 . Agarose gel electrophoresis of PCR and RT-PCR amplification
products of the M . alligatoris nagH gene and mRNA, showing that
the gene is expressed during culture in SP4 complex medium and after 48
h of starvation in CMRL 1066 minimal medium . Lane M, marker; lane 1, PCR
with DNA template; lane 2, RT-PCR with no template (negative control);
lane 3, RT-PCR of mRNA from SP4 culture; lane 4, RT-PCR of mRNA from SP4
culture with no AMV RT (negative control); lane 5, RT-PCR of mRNA from
CMRL 1066 culture.
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Glycosaminoglycanase assay. Hyaluronidase activity was found in
cell suspensions of M . alligatoris and M .
crocodyli in the early log phase in SP4 medium and in suspensions
of M . alligatoris following 24 h of starvation in
minimal medium, but not at any subsequent time in minimal medium
either with or without cartilage . However, hyaluronidase activity was
present in a cell suspension of M . alligatoris subcultured
in SP4 following up to 48 h of growth in minimal medium . The
activity in 100-µl aliquots of replicate suspensions in SP4 broth was
equivalent to 2 x 10–3 to 3
x 10–3 U of purified S .
hyalurolyticus hyaluronate lyase or approximately 10–16
U CFU–1 (Fig . 2) . The activities were approximately
equal over the pH range from 6 to 10, but the activity was 30%
lower at pH 4 (data not shown) . Negligible hyaluronidase activity was
detected in M . alligatoris and M . crocodyli
cell-free culture supernatants, and no chondroitinase activity was
detected . The activity was not inducible . No hyaluronidase or
chondroitinase activity was detected in either fraction of M.
pulmonis cultures, indicating that none of the putative
proteins encoded by the hypothetical genes of this organism is a
glycosaminoglycanase .
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FIG . 2 . Hyaluronidase standard curve and estimation of M . alligatoris
hyaluronidase activity . S . hyalurolyticus hyaluronate lyase
(Sigma) was serially diluted in PBS (pH 7.5) to obtain concentrations
ranging from 1 x 10–2 to
2 x 10–5 U 100 µl–1
(open circles) . The representative activity of a 100-µl aliquot of M.
alligatoris in the early log phase in SP4 broth was compared to
the activities of PBS and sterile SP4 negative controls (arrows).
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Sialidase assay. Potent sialidase activity was demonstrated by
intense cyan fluorescence of M . alligatoris colonies on
SP4 agar overlaid with top agar containing MUAN and illuminated with
short-wave UV light (Fig . 3) . No activity was
detected in the cell-free M . alligatoris culture
supernatant liquid or in either fraction of the M . crocodyli
cultures . No sialidase activity was detected in either fraction
of M . pulmonis cultures, indicating that none of the putative
proteins encoded by the hypothetical genes of this organism is
a sialidase .
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FIG . 3 . M . alligatoris cell-associated sialidase activity .
Colonies (upper center plate) and aliquots of cell-free culture
supernatant (lower center plate) were overlaid with top agar containing
the fluorogenic sialidase substrate MUAN (Sigma) and illuminated with
short-wave UV light for comparison to M . crocodyli (right plates)
and the negative control M . pulmonis (left plates) . The plates in
the foreground were positive (type VI C . perfringens
neuraminidase [Sigma]) (left plate) and negative (PBS) (right plate)
sialidase controls.
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Mycoplasmas probably evolved from clostridial ancestors about 400
million years ago by genome reduction that led to obligate
commensalism or parasitism of host cells (7, 47;
J . Maniloff, Abstr . 13th Int . Congr . Int . Org . Mycoplasmol., seminar
I-1, 2000) . The best-studied mycoplasmas of vertebrate hosts are
pathogens of humans and domesticated animals . These pathogens
are usually associated with subclinical or subtle, slowly progressive
or chronic diseases (3) . Pathogenicity in all hosts is poorly
understood beyond the generalization that host responses to
mycoplasmal cytadherence exacerbate disease, and variation in cell
surface antigens can occur with high frequency in some mycoplasmas (34) .
Many harmful effects on host cells have been associated with
mycoplasmosis, including ciliostasis, oxidative damage to membranes,
dysregulation and decreased abundance of membrane ion channels,
clastogenic and oncogenic effects, chromosomal abnormalities, and
cell cycle dysregulation (34, 45), but
specific mechanisms of mycoplasmal pathogenicity are not well
understood . Because the major mycoplasmal pathogens of humans and
domesticated animals lack endotoxin or classical exotoxins but are
cytadherent, current mycoplasmology studies are focused on the roles
of adhesin molecules and adherence-mediated modulation of colonized
hosts to explain mycoplasmal pathogenicity . Probably because it is
not a usual feature of the common mycoplasmoses of humans or
domesticated animals, the possibility that spreading factors like
sialidases, hyaluronidases, or mucinases, the opposites of adhesins,
may exist in mycoplasmas and be important contributors to virulence
in other mycoplasmoses seems to have been virtually ignored, even in
otherwise exhaustive reviews of mycoplasmal pathogenicity (34,
41, 45) .
Hyaluronan, a polymer of N-acetylglucosamine and glucuronic
acid disaccharide repeats found in many animal tissues and fluids, is
a major component of the vertebrate ECM . Hyaluronan degradation
increases the permeability of connective tissues and decreases the
viscosity of body fluids, facilitating the spread of bacteria and
their toxins, and it may promote direct contact between bacteria and
host cell surfaces (32) . In addition, depolymerization
disrupts the role of the ECM as a reservoir of cytokines and
enzymes involved in signal transduction (15) . These effects
are all consistent with the pathological results of M .
alligatoris and M . crocodyli infections . The
chemical composition of glycosaminoglycan polymers, such as
hyaluronan, chondroitin, dermatan, keratin, and heparin, is highly
variable even among tissues within a vertebrate species, including
heterogeneities such as isomerization, acetylation, phosphorylation,
and sulfation (15) . Some glycosaminoglycanases
have corresponding substrate specificities (44) that make
them valuable as therapeutic agents or targets in management of wound
healing (5, 6), tumor metastasis (14),
and infection (32) .
Bacterial hyaluronan lyases are endo-N-acetylhexosaminidases
whose unsaturated disaccharide products are potential bacterial
nutrients . As predicted from the presence of nagH, the M .
alligatoris genome also encodes a glucuronyl hydrolase (GenBank
accession number
AY515697) that has not been found in any other mycoplasma
characterized to date, which could catalyze the release of glucuronic
acid from the disaccharides cleaved from hyaluronan, liberating N-acetylglucosamine
for conversion to fructose-6-phosphate and entry into glycolysis by a
pathway found in other mycoplasmas . The fate of the glucuronate has
not been predicted . Therefore, both spreading and nutrient
acquisition capabilities are probably mediated by the M .
alligatoris hyaluronidase . The only other currently confirmed
mycoplasmal proteins as large as NagH, besides the nucleic acid
polymerases and helicases, are the adhesin P1 (1,628 amino acids) and
cytoskeletal protein HMW2 (1,819 amino acids) involved in
cytadherence and pathogenicity of M . pneumoniae (24,
45) .
In vertebrate animals, including reptiles (16), diverse
sialic acid derivatives protect against hydrolysis of the glycosidic
or peptide bonds of oligosaccharides, glycoproteins, glycolipids,
and gangliosides located on outer cell surfaces . They are involved
in recognition processes, connection with ECM components, and
intercellular interactions (1) . Most sialidases occur in
bacteria that live in close contact with vertebrate host cells as
commensals or facultative pathogens, which allows more direct
bacterial contact with the host cell surface (38,
39) . However, experimental treatment with
neuraminidase has been shown variously to promote, eliminate, or have
no effect on glycoprotein binding or cytadherence of different
species of mycoplasmas (2, 36,
42, 48) . Deprotected polymers
promote further enzymatic degradation of the ECM to release potential
bacterial nutrients (26, 38) . As predicted
from the presence of nanI, the M . alligatoris genome
also encodes a sialic acid lyase (nanA; GenBank accession
number
AY515696), which has not been found in any other mycoplasma
characterized to date, that could catalyze the release of pyruvate
from sialic acid, liberating N-acetylglucosamine for entry
into glycolysis as described above . Therefore, both spreading and
nutrient acquisition capabilities are probably also mediated by the
M . alligatoris sialidase . It has also been proposed
that bacterial desialylation of host glycoconjugates could expose or
form new host antigens and thus play a role in autoimmune
complications of infection (4, 22) .
Bacterial sialidases occur irregularly even among strains within a
species, and there is no correlation with the bacterial phylogenetic
relationships, which suggests that there has been gene distribution
via horizontal transfer (39) . For example, an extracellular
neuraminidase-like activity was present in an unidentified strain
of M . gallisepticum (37), and potent cell
surface sialidase activity of the TT strain of M .
gallisepticum was characterized in detail (29,
43), but neuraminidase activity was absent from
other pathogenic strains of M . gallisepticum tested (17,
22) and there is no corresponding confirmed gene
in the recently annotated genome of M . gallisepticum
strain Rlow (31) . The sialidase of M.
alligatoris is novel in that its length and amino acid
sequence, including the signature YRIP motif, are most similar to the
length and amino acid sequence of the large extracellular clostridial
sialidase NanI, but it also resembles the small (382-amino-acid)
intracellular clostridial sialidase NanH because it lacks a typical
hydrophobic leader sequence (40) . The absence of a
sialidase in M . crocodyli may in part explain the attenuated
virulence of this organism, in contrast to the virulence of
M . alligatoris; this hypothesis could be tested by gene knockout
and complementation experiments .
Since all mycoplasmas are thought to be descendants of clostridial
ancestors (47), the absence of nag homologs in the
other mycoplasmas examined to date suggests either that M .
alligatoris and M . crocodyli were derived from a
different ancestral lineage than other mycoplasmas, which contradicts
prior 16S rRNA gene comparisons (9), or that a
recent common ancestor acquired the gene by horizontal transfer (20),
which might reflect the effects of mycoplasma-host interactions and a
limited host range as isolating mechanisms that affect the evolution
of mycoplasmas . Evidence against a single horizontal cotransfer of
more than one spreading factor from C . perfringens to a
recent common ancestor of M . alligatoris and M.
crocodyli includes the long physical distance (>178 kb)
between the nagH, nagI, or nagK gene and the nanI
gene in the C . perfringens strain 13 genome (44),
the many putative UAA or UAG stop codons interspersed throughout the
nagI or nagK pseudogene, and the absence of nanI
from M . crocodyli . Also, any selective advantage based
on nutrient catabolism would require the glucuronyl hydrolase and/or
sialic acid lyase activities . Only 5 kb separates nanA from
nagH in the C . perfringens strain 13 genome, but
the BLASTX similarity E value for M . alligatoris nanA
was e7 closer to Pasteurella multocida than to C .
perfringens, and the M . alligatoris glucuronyl
hydrolase had no clostridial homolog . In summary, the genetic and
biochemical evidence described here suggests that hyaluronidase and
sialidase, a combination unprecedented in the mycoplasmas
characterized to date, are candidate virulence factors of M.
alligatoris .
This work was supported by Public Health Service grant 1R15HG02389-01A1
from the National Human Genome Research Institute .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Pathobiology, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Florida,
Gainesville, FL 32611-0880 . Phone: (352) 392-4700, ext . 3975 . Fax: (352)
392-9704 . E-mail:
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