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Journal of Bacteriology, January 2004, p . 104-109, Vol . 186,
No . 1
Genomic
Interrogation of the Dassie Bacillus Reveals It as a Unique RD1 Mutant within
the Mycobacterium tuberculosis Complex
Serge Mostowy,1 Debby Cousins,2 and Marcel A .
Behr1*
McGill University Health Centre, Montreal, Canada H3G 1A4,1
Australian Reference Laboratory for Bovine Tuberculosis, Department of
Agriculture, South Perth 6151, Australia2
Received 2 October 2003/ Accepted 6 October 2003
Despite their remarkable genetic homology, members of the Mycobacterium
tuberculosis complex express very different phenotypes, most
notably in their spectra of clinical presentation . For example,
M . tuberculosis is regarded as pathogenic to humans, whereas
members having deleted RD1, such as Mycobacterium microti and
Mycobacterium bovis BCG, are not . The dassie bacillus, an infrequent
variant of the M . tuberculosis complex characterized as being
most similar to M . microti, is the causative agent of tuberculosis
(TB) in the dassie (Procavia capensis) . Intriguingly, the dassie
bacillus is not pathogenic to rabbits or guinea pigs and has
never been documented to infect humans . Although it was identified
more than a half-century ago, the reasons behind its attenuation are
unknown . Because large sequence polymorphisms have presented
themselves as the most obvious genomic distinction among members of
the M . tuberculosis complex, the DNA content of the dassie
bacillus was interrogated by Affymetrix GeneChip to identify regions
that are absent from it but present in M . tuberculosis H37Rv .
Comparison has led to the identification of nine regions of
difference (RD), five of which are shared with M . microti (RDs
3, 7, 8, 9, and 10) . Although the dassie bacillus does not share the
other documented deletions in M . microti (RD1mic,
RD5mic, MID1, MID2, and MID3), it has endured unique deletions
in the regions of RD1, RD5, N-RD25, and Rv3081-Rv3082c (virS) .
RD1das, affecting only Rv3874-Rv3877, is the smallest natural
deletion of the RD1 region uncovered and points to genes within
this region that are likely implicated in virulence . Newfound
deletions from the dassie bacillus are discussed in relation to their
evolutionary and biological significance .
The Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex is classically defined
by the closely related species M . tuberculosis, Mycobacterium
africanum, Mycobacterium microti, and Mycobacterium bovis .
Significantly, coding sequences of M . tuberculosis complex
members share more than 99.9% DNA identity, with single-nucleotide
polymorphisms thought to occur only once every several thousand base
pairs (19, 20,
43) . Sequencing efforts involving species of the M .
tuberculosis complex (M . tuberculosis, M . microti, and M .
bovis) (5, 8,
16, 19) have all highlighted the significance of large
sequence polymorphisms (LSPs) deleted from M . tuberculosis as
a primary source of genomic variability within the complex (6,
31) . Despite their genetic homology, members differ in
a number of phenotypes, including their host ranges . Generally
speaking, M . tuberculosis causes tuberculosis (TB) in humans
and rarely causes disease in other animals . M . bovis
characteristically infects cattle but appears to have a much broader
host range, including nonbovine reservoirs (34) .
Strains not conforming to the above-mentioned species have been
isolated from other mammals, such as "Mycobacterium caprae"
from goats (2, 3), Mycobacterium
pinnipedii from seal lions and fur seals (11,
14), and the dassie bacillus from small mammals
commonly found in South Africa and the Middle East called the hyrax
or dassie (Procavia capensis) (12) .
First reported in the late 1950s as the causative agent of TB in
the dassie (49), the morphology and growth requirements of
the dassie bacillus are classified as being very similar to
those of M . microti (42), the causative agent of TB in
voles (Microtus agrestis) . The history and laboratory
phenotypes are described elsewhere (12,
13) . Certain laboratory characteristics of the
dassie bacillus concur with those of M . microti, such as
results of most biochemical tests and susceptibility to thiophen-2-carboxylic
acid hydrazide . Notably, a number of in vitro characteristics
distinguish the dassie bacillus from M . microti, including different
growth preferences and bacillary morphology under microscropy .
Never documented to have infected humans, the dassie bacillus should
have been discriminated from M . tuberculosis if it was
isolated from humans in the past, since it is more difficult to grow
and generally requires longer times than does M . tuberculosis
(12, 49) . Furthermore, if the isolate was
previously cultured from humans and tested, spacer oligonucleotide
typing (spoligotyping) databases should have identified the
discrepancy, as has been the case for human isolations of M .
microti (48) . In tests for pathogenicity, the
dassie bacillus was reported to have a very low level of virulence in
rabbits and guinea pigs (12) and was originally
described as an attenuated strain of M . microti (49) .
Virulence studies performed in the labs of Wagner and Cousins
demonstrate reduced virulence compared to M . tuberculosis, M .
bovis, and M . microti (12, 49) .
In brief, rabbits and guinea pigs inoculated with a suspension of the
dassie bacillus remained well, and when sacrificed, no lesions were
detected in any of the tissues, and no Mycobacterium species
were isolated after culture of the injection site, lung, or liver .
The reasons for the attenuated phenotype of the dassie bacillus have
not previously been explored, but genomic studies of other attenuated
strains of the M . tuberculosis complex have suggested the role
of LSPs such as RD1, whose deletion has been linked to the attenuated
phenotype of BCG vaccines and M . microti (5,
29, 36) .
In an earlier study employing deletions distinguishing M . tuberculosis
from M . bovis, the dassie bacillus was revealed to lack the
regions RD7, RD8, RD9, and RD10, phylogenetically clustering
together with M . microti, M . pinnipedii, and isolates of M .
africanum (31) . Subsequently, the genomic content
of M . microti OV254 has been compared to that of M .
tuberculosis H37Rv via construction of bacterial artificial
chromosome libraries to reveal deletions specific to M . microti
(5) . Because LSPs have presented themselves as the
most obvious genomic distinction among members of the M .
tuberculosis complex, the DNA content of the dassie bacillus was
interrogated by Affymetrix GeneChip to identify regions that are
absent from it but present in M . tuberculosis H37Rv . Because
the dassie bacillus has already been categorized as an organism
similar to M . microti, this investigation focused on
establishing a genomic identity for the dassie bacillus by
contrasting its genomic content with the genomic content of M .
microti .
Bacterial isolates. Seven DNA samples representing members of
the M . tuberculosis complex were provided from the lab of D .
Cousins . Based on classical tests of the M . tuberculosis
complex (21) and the host from which they were
isolated, isolates were classified as M . microti (n =
3) or dassie bacillus (n = 4) (Table 1) . Supporting
citations (12, 13) describe the
origin of dassie isolates . All of these samples have been genotyped
by restriction fragment length polymorphism (10,
12, 13) using the molecular epidemiologic
markers IS6110 (46), polymorphic GC-rich
sequences (PGRS) (38), direct repeat (DR) (22),
and spoligotyping (1, 25) . Samples
classified as dassie bacillus represented a total of three different
IS6110 genotypes, two different PGRS genotypes, two different
DR genotypes, and two different spoligotypes . Cousins et al . (12)
previously reported IS6110 restriction length fragment
polymorphism with PvuII, BclI, and BstEII and
PGRS (referred to as ptBN12) using AluI digests . Spoligotype
patterns for the dassie bacillus have been published by Mostowy et
al . (31) . Of note, the origins of the SP70
isolates are diverse, one having been taken from a dassie in South
Africa in 1959 and the other from a suricat in a Swedish zoo (which
presumably originated in South Africa) in 1993 . There are two spacer
differences between SP70 and SP71 . M . microti isolates studied
had three different IS6110 genotypes, a single PGRS genotype,
at least two different DR genotypes, and a single spoligotype . None
of the epidemiological markers typed the dassie bacillus together
with M . microti.
| TABLE 1 . Characteristics of bacterial isolatesa
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GeneChip analysis. Bacillus originally isolated from a
3.5-year-old male dassie from the Perth Zoo was selected for GeneChip
analysis . DNA was extracted after approximately 3 weeks of stationary
growth using a procedure involving lysozyme and proteinase K (47) .
Eight micrograms of dassie bacillus DNA was prepared and hybridized
to the GeneChip as previously described (39) .
Fluorescence intensities were recorded by a scanner, and data were
analyzed manually to suggest candidate deleted regions . Because of
the remarkable genetic homology within the M . tuberculosis
complex, results could be analyzed via manual inspection of the data
file to potentially suggest candidate deleted regions .
PCR amplification and sequencing across deletions. In silico
deletion calls made by GeneChip analysis were pursued with primers
targeting the flanking region, designed to amplify regions harboring
the putative deletion and M . tuberculosis H37Rv . Because their
genomic content has already been analyzed via GeneChip, M .
tuberculosis H37Ra (26) and BCG Pasteur (39)
were used as DNA controls for each experiment . PCR amplicons
were run on a 2% agarose gel with the expectation that any ambiguity
in amplicon size may be indicative of variable genomic sequence .
Amplicons that did not represent the expected base-pair size of H37Rv
were sequenced by dideoxy terminal sequencing at the McGill
University and Genome Quebec Innovation Center . Sequence results were
compared by BLAST analysis with sequence of M . tuberculosis
H37Rv using Tuberculist (http://genolist.pasteur.fr/Tuberculist/index.html)
to verify whether the amplified dassie bacillus DNA aligned to
wild-type sequence or revealed a deleted segment of DNA .
Analysis of deletions. To search for the presence or absence
of the deleted regions, we subjected each of our seven isolates to a
three-primer PCR as described by Talbot and colleagues (44) .
For each deleted region, we designed one pair of PCR primers beyond
the region (forward and reverse) that would amplify only if the
bordered genomic region is absent . A third primer (reverse) was
designed within the putative deleted region . Amplification resulting
from this primer and the forward primer would result in a PCR
product of a different size, indicating that the genomic region was
present . The list of these primers used to amplify deletions from the
dassie bacillus is provided in Table 2 . Importantly,
any amplicon suggesting the absence of a specific region was
sequence confirmed for every isolate to make sure that the exact same
genomic event was being identified for all isolates (31) .
Subsequently, deletion events could be allotted to the previously
assigned bacterial isolates . To determine the distribution of
described deletions from M . microti in the dassie bacillus,
primers designed to detect deletions from M . microti (MID1,
MID2, and MID3) were also tested across all isolates (5) . Open
reading frames (ORFs) affected by deletion events and their
assigned gene function were determined using Tuberculist .
| TABLE 2 . Sequence of the primers used to detect deleted regions in the
dassie bacillus relative to M . tuberculosis H37Rva
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Application of dassie bacillus genomic DNA to the Affymetrix GeneChip
demonstrated strong hybridization signals for the great majority of
probes . As expected, for regions of M . tuberculosis known as
being deleted from the dassie bacillus (RDs 7, 8, 9, and 10), there
was a weak hybridization signal, called "absent" by the Affymetrix
Microarray Suite . Furthermore, a previously described phage, phiRv1
or RD3 (30), was also observed as missing . These
results provide internal validation of the analytical tools . Apart
from these five deleted regions, the dassie bacillus did not reveal
any deleted regions with junctions matching those previously
described (4, 5, 6,
17, 33, 39) . Analysis
by GeneChip revealed another four LSPs in the dassie bacillus, which
we call RD5das, RDVirsdas, N-RD25das,
and RD1das (Table 3) . Each newfound
region of deletion follows the nomenclature of the region upon which
it overlaps .
| TABLE 3 . Description of deletions from the dassie bacillusa
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|
RD5das deletes 9,852 bp, affecting Rv2349c to Rv2355, and has
inverted IS6110 insertion sequence in its place . RD5das
is larger than RD5 deleted from M . bovis/BCG isolates, which
truncates Rv2346c to Rv2353c (4, 17),
and RD5mic, which affects Rv2349c to Rv2353c in vole
isolates of M . microti (5) . This apparent
deletion hotspot reinforces the proposed IS6110-mediated deletion
of RD5 (5, 23) .
RDVirsdas deletes 1,185 bp, truncating Rv3081 and deleting Rv3082c
in its entirety . The deletion of Rv3082c (virS), annotated as
a virulence-regulating transcriptional regulator, is attractive
in light of the observation that the dassie bacillus has been
characterized as more attenuated than M . microti (49) .
N-RD25das deletes 1,941 bp, disrupting Rv3737 and deleting the
entire Rv3738c . N-RD25das is different from N-RD25, known to
be deleted from M . caprae, M . bovis and BCG, which affects
Rv3738c to Rv3740c (31, 39) .
Although never implicated in virulence, the deletion of the N-RD25
region is observed as missing from isolates only having deleted RD5,
suggesting interplay among these regions .
Finally, the dassie bacillus is also missing part of the RD1
region, revealing itself as another RD1 mutant within the M .
tuberculosis complex . RD1das deletes 4,132 bp, affecting only
Rv3874 to Rv3877, and therefore represents the smallest natural
deletion of the RD1 region uncovered to date . In comparison, RD1
deleted from all BCG strains affects Rv3871 to Rv3879c (4,
17, 30), and RD1mic
deletes Rv3864 to Rv3876 (5) . Together, the shared
region of deletion among these three attenuated RD1 mutants includes
only three ORFs, Rv3874 (cfp10), Rv3875 (esat6), and
Rv3876 (Fig . 1) .
|
FIG . 1 . Comparing the RD1 regions . The deletions of RD1 from BCG (RD1bcg)
(B), M . microti (RD1mic) (C), and the dassie bacillus
(RD1das) (D) are presented relative to M . tuberculosis
H37Rv/H37Ra (A) . Panel E depicts the shared genes among all RD1
deletions.
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To assess whether these newfound deletions are specific to the dassie
bacillus, the deletions were tested for across a panel of isolates
(Table 4) . These four new deletions are not observed
in isolates of M . microti, reinforcing the notion that these
deletions and their junction points are unique to the dassie
bacillus . Although a variant of RD5das is deleted from all dassie
isolates tested, its downstream junction could be sequence confirmed
in only two of four isolates . We have been able to confirm the
presence of genes flanking RD5das at either end (Rv2348c and
Rv2356) . Primers designed to amplify unique sequence upstream
of RD5das with IS6110 sequence produced the same amplicon for
all four isolates . However, primers designed to amplify IS6110
sequence with unique sequence downstream of RD5das failed to
amplify for two isolates . Furthermore, long-range PCR, designed
to amplify kilobase pairs of DNA (40), also failed to bridge
the deletion in these same isolates using primers known to amplify
in the isolates upstream or downstream of RD5das . The fact that
all four isolates share a common upstream junction (position
2,627,067 of the H37Rv genome) suggests that certain dassie bacillus
strains have endured a genomic event(s) aside from the deletion of
RD5das, potentially IS-mediated recombination events .
Finally, regions corresponding to deletions specific to M . microti
(MID1, MID2, and MID3) were called "present" in the dassie bacillus
via the Affymetrix Microarray Suite, and their junction regions were
PCR confirmed only for isolates of M . microti .
| TABLE 4 . Large sequence polymorphisms among isolates of the dassie
bacillus and M . microtia
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In summary, nine deleted regions were found in the dassie bacillus
via GeneChip analysis, involving 48,915 bp and affecting 58 ORFs
(Table 3) . Of these deletions, five are identical to deletions
from M . microti (RDs 3, 7, 8, 9, and 10) and four are unique
to the dassie bacillus . Two of the deletions specific for the
dassie bacillus overlap with regions deleted from both M . microti
and M . bovis BCG (RD1 and RD5) .
Using the genomic sequence of M . tuberculosis H37Rv as a reference,
comparative genomic tools have revealed a number of regions
present in H37Rv but absent from isolates of M . bovis/BCG (4,
17, 39) . This information has been
used to propose a phylogeny for the entire M . tuberculosis
complex (6, 31) and to demonstrate
the evolution of BCG vaccines after their first introduction (4,
33) . Applying the same methodology, all major deletions
within the dassie bacillus relative to H37Rv sequence have likely
been catalogued . M . africanum and M . pinnipedii, other M .
tuberculosis complex subspecies genetically clustered together
with the dassie bacillus in previous analyses (31),
have also been subjected to GeneChip interrogation . Although these
analyses have revealed subspecies-specific deletions beyond RD7, RD8,
RD9, and RD10 in these strains, they do not present the other
deletions specific to M . microti nor those specific to the
dassie bacillus (data not shown) . Furthermore, PCR-based
interrogation of RD5das, RDVirS, NRD25das, and
RD1das, among M . tuberculosis complex isolates
including M . africanum and M . pinnipedii, were amplified
as intact according to the aforementioned criteria (data not
shown) . These deletions confirm that the dassie bacillus is
genomically distinct from M . microti and unique within the M .
tuberculosis complex and that a third independent RD1 mutant
has been revealed among members of the M . tuberculosis complex .
The genomic deletion of RD1 is, at least in part, responsible for
the attenuated phenotypes of BCG (29, 36)
and M . microti (36) . In the dassie
bacillus, there are two attractive candidates for the attenuated
phenotype . virS (Rv3082c) has close similarity with proteins
that regulate various functions required for establishment of disease
by several bacterial pathogens, including Shigella (45),
Yersinia (9), and enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli
(7, 27, 41) .
Absent from other mycobacterial species, its deletion putatively
affects the expression of genes required by M . tuberculosis
complex subspecies for processes linked to surviving and multiplying
in the host (18) . The other deletion likely contributing to
its avirulence is RD1das . Since RD1 is the only genomic region
consistently absent from all BCG vaccines (4,
17, 30), knockout and
complementation studies have recently been performed for this entire
region, demonstrating that this deletion, or parts thereof,
contributed to the attenuation of BCG (29, 36,
50) . The concordance of RD1das with
other RD1 deletions suggests three candidate genes that are likely
important for this loss of virulence: cfp10, esat6, and
Rv3876 (Fig . 1) . Notably, esat6 and cfp10
encode well-described antigenic proteins whose neighboring genes have
recently been characterized to encode a secretion apparatus dedicated
to their export (37) . Together these observations
suggest that any disruption of the genes encoding these antigenic
proteins or their export system may result in the same attenuated
phenotype .
Newfound deletions from the dassie bacillus are instructive both
for the phylogenetic lessons about LSPs in general and for the
specific genes that have been lost from these isolates . Although
evolutionary study employing LSPs has been attractive for describing
the unidirectional flow of genomic decay within the M .
tuberculosis complex (6, 31), the
independent deletion of overlapping regions, as is observed here for
RD5, N-RD25, and RD1, highlights the importance of sequence
confirming all genomic events for their use as phylogenetic markers (31) .
For instance, the absence of mtp40 (Rv2351c) had previously
been proposed as a marker for M . bovis (15) .
Since this gene is located in the highly variable RD5 region, it is
now apparent that absence of this gene may occur due to a number of
different genomic deletions, and thus, isolates other than M .
bovis may lack this gene . Regarding the specific genes contained
within deletions, the RD1 region is most intriguing because of the
association of this region with virulence and vaccine efficacy (29,
30, 36, 37) .
The loss of RD1 from laboratory-adapted BCG strains can be explained
by reasoning that the production of antigenic proteins is
metabolically expensive . Since antigens are unlikely to provide
benefit for in vitro growth, mutants having eliminated RD1 genes
would have had a selective advantage for in vitro survival (32,
33) . However, the loss of RD1 genes from isolates
circulating among mammalian hosts appears paradoxical, given recent
findings that implicate this region in the pathogenesis of TB in
humans and laboratory models . Because M . microti and the
dassie bacillus are capable of causing and transmitting disease in
their specific hosts, the absence of RD1 genes apparently does not
prevent disease from occurring in these hosts . If this is true, then
the same forces of selection for the loss of RD1 from BCG in vitro
are at play, and specifically, the production of these genes is
unnecessary for the bacteria to spread, and given the metabolic
expense associated with their production, mutants not making these
genes have gained a survival advantage .
M . tuberculosis complex organisms are currently identified to
the species level based on morphological and phenotypic characteristics,
but there has been debate as to whether they should be retained
as distinct species or reclassified as variants of M . tuberculosis
(24) . Previous work has demonstrated that TB bacteria
in classical hosts are seemingly specified by the deletions they
harbor (6, 31, 35) .
However, deletion data further imply that M . tuberculosis
complex members extend beyond the classical species of M . tuberculosis,
M . africanum, M . microti, and M . bovis and that
isolates from other animals may ultimately reveal their own unique
deletion profiles . Given that phenotypic descriptions of these
variants are likely to result in indeterminate assignments, genomic
deletions may prove an invaluable tool for deriving the taxonomy and
nomenclature in this increasingly complex scenario . It is expected
that a more accurate representation of total genomic polymorphism
between the dassie bacillus and M . microti, and also among the
entire M . tuberculosis complex, will likely reveal itself from
the sequencing of M . microti OV254, also in progress (www.sanger.ac.uk) .
With this information will follow the capacity to specifically
detect the dassie bacillus and other variants in humans and other
hosts (28, 35) .
Thanks to David Roquis, Carol Dore, Daniel Vincent, Yannick Fortin,
Arek Siwoski, and Pierre LePage at the McGill University and Genome
Quebec Innovation Center for helping with DNA sequencing and GeneChip
experimentation . We thank Goran Bolske, who supplied the suricat
isolate, and Tony Jenkins, who supplied a dassie isolate and M .
microti from vole to D.C .
This work was supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health
Research (CIHR) grant number MOP 36054 . M.A.B . is a New Investigator
of the CIHR .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Division of Infectious
Diseases and Medical Microbiology, A5-156, Montreal General Hospital, 1650 Cedar
Ave., Montreal, QC H3G 1A4, Canada . Phone: (514) 934-1934, ext . 42815 . Fax:
(514) 934-8423 . E-mail:
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