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Pathogenomics Using bioinformatics to focus studies of bacterial pathogenicity Explosion of data 23 of the 34 publicly available microbial genome sequences are for bacterial pathogens Approximately 21,000 pathogen genes with no known function! >95 bacterial pathogen genome projects in progress … Pathogenomics Opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa - Genome analysis and membrane protein bioinformatics UBC Pathogenomics Project - Identifying eukaryote:pathogen gene homologs - Detecting pathogenicity islands Pseudomonas aeruginosa • Found in soil, water, plants, animals • Common cause of hospital acquired infection: ICU patients, Burn victims, cancer patients • Almost all cystic fibrosis (CF) patients infected by age 10 • Intrinsically resistant to many antibiotics • No vaccine P. aeruginosa Genome Sequence Analysis: Outer Membrane Proteins (OMPs) Approximately 150 OMPs predicted including three large paralogous families: OprM homology (3 previously known, now 18 predicted) OprD homology (2 previously known, now 19) TonB-dependent domain (8 previously known, now 34) OprM OpmJ OpmA OprM Family (Multidrug Efflux?) OprJ OpmB OpmG OpmI OpmE OprN OpmD OpmQ AprF OpmM Protein Secretion? OpmN OpmL OpmH TolC OpmK OpmF Gram Negative Cell Envelope LPS PORE PORIN + + Mg Outer membrane Peptidoglycan Periplasm Cytoplasmic membrane P. aeruginosa OprM structural model based on E. coli TolC Outer membrane Periplasm Residues implicated in blocking channel formation in OmpA are not conserved in OprF Planar Lipid Bilayer Apparatus Voltage Source Current Amplifier Protein Bathing Solution Planar Bilayer Membrane The N-terminus of OprF forms channels in a lipid bilayer membrane 40 30 25 20 15 10 5 Single channel conductance (nS) 3 2. 8 2. 6 2. 4 2. 2 2 1. 8 1. 6 1. 4 1. 2 1 0. 8 0. 6 0. 4 0 0. 2 No. of events 35 Current and Future Research Improve computational prediction of… - membrane and secreted proteins - surface exposed regions of membrane proteins Current and Future Research Omp85 membrane protein family studies - Antigenic, conserved, vaccine candidate - Two copies in most pathogenic bacteria genomes – why? - Structure unknown, may have conformational epitopes Pathogenomics Opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa - Genome analysis and membrane protein bioinformatics UBC Pathogenomics Project - Identifying eukaryote:pathogen gene homologs - Detecting pathogenicity islands Genome data for… Anthrax Cat scratch disease Chancroid Chlamydia Cholera Dental caries Diarrhea (E. coli etc.) Diphtheria Epidemic typhus Mediterranean fever Gastroenteritis Gonorrhea Legionnaires' disease Leprosy Leptospirosis Listeriosis Lyme disease Meliodosis Meningitis Necrotizing fasciitis Paratyphoid/enteric fever Peptic ulcers and gastritis Periodontal disease Plague Pneumonia Salmonellosis Scarlet fever Shigellosis Strep throat Syphilis Toxic shock syndrome Tuberculosis Tularemia Typhoid fever Urethritis Urinary Tract Infections Whooping cough +Hospital-acquired infections Bacterial Pathogenicity Processes of microbial pathogenicity at the molecular level are still minimally understood Pathogen proteins identified that manipulate host cells by interacting with, or mimicking, host proteins Yersinia Type III secretion system Approach Idea: Could we identify novel virulence factors by identifying pathogen genes more similar to host genes than you would expect based on phylogeny? Approach Search pathogen genes against databases. Identify those with eukaryotic similarity. Rank candidates - evolutionary analysis. Modify screening method /algorithm Prioritize for biological study Collaborations with others Study function in model host (C. elegans) Study function in bacterium Infection of mutant in model host DATABASE World Research Community C. elegans Interdisciplinary group Informatics/Bioinformatics Evolutionary Theory • BC Genome Sequence Centre • Centre for Molecular Medicine and Therapeutics • Dept of Zoology • Dept of Botany • Canadian Institute for Advanced Research Coordinator Pathogen Functions Host Functions • • • • • Dept. Medical Genetics • C. elegans Reverse Genetics Facility • Dept. Biological Sciences SFU Dept. Microbiology Biotechnology Laboratory Dept. Medicine BC Centre for Disease Control Bacterium Eukaryote Horizontal Transfer Bacillus subtilis Escherichia coli Salmonella typhimurium Staphylococcua aureus Clostridium perfringens Clostridium difficile Trichomonas vaginalis Haemophilus influenzae N-acetylneuraminate lyase (NanA) of the protozoan Trichomonas vaginalis is 92-95% similar to NanA of Pasteurellaceae bacteria. Acinetobacillus actinomycetemcomitans 0.1 Pasteurella multocida N-acetylneuraminate lyase – role in pathogenicity? Pasteurellaceae •Mucosal pathogens of the respiratory tract T. vaginalis •Mucosal pathogen, causative agent of the STD Trichomonas N-acetylneuraminate lyase (sialic acid lyase, NanA) Hydrolysis of glycosidic linkages of terminal sialic residues in glycoproteins, glycolipids Sialidase Free sialic acid Transporter Free sialic acid NanA N-acetyl-D-mannosamine + pyruvate Involved in sialic acid metabolism Role in Bacteria: Proposed to parasitize the mucous membranes of animals for nutritional purposes Role in Trichomonas: ? Sensor Histidine Kinase for 2-component Regulation System Signal Transduction Histidine kinases common in bacteria Ser/Thr/Tyr kinases common in eukaryotes Candida However, a histidine kinase was recently identified in fungi, including pathogens Fusarium solani and Candida albicans How did it get there? A Histidine Kinase in Streptomyces. The Missing Link? Neurospora crassa NIK-1 Streptomyces coelicolor SC7C7 Fusarium solani FIK Candida albicans CHIK1 Erwinia carotovora EXPS Escherichia coli BARA Pseudomonas aeruginosa LEMA Pseudomonas syringae LEMA Pseudomonas viridiflava LEMA Pseudomonas tolaasii RTPA 0.1 Universal role of this Histidine Kinase in pathogenicity? Pathogenic Fungi •Senses change in osmolarity of the environment •Proposed role in pathogenicity Pseudomonas species plant pathogens •Role in excretion of secondary metabolites that are virulence factors or antimicrobials Virulence factor for human opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa? Reduced virulence of a Pseudomonas aeruginosa transposon mutant disrupted in the histidine kinase lemA Cells challenged per mouse 0.74x 106 Neutropenic mice challenged per group 7 0.74x 105 % Mortality Wildtype LemA- 100 100 7 100 85.7 0.74x 104 7 100 50 0.74x 103 8 75 50 0.74x 102 8 62.5 50 0.74x 101 8 37.5 25 Trends in the Current Analysis • Identifies the strongest cases of lateral gene transfer between bacteria and eukaryotes • Most common “cross-kingdom” horizontal transfers: Bacteria Unicellular Eukaryote • A control: Method identifies all previously reported Chlamydia trachomatis eukaryotic-like genes. Horizontal Gene Transfer and Bacterial Pathogenicity Transposons: ST enterotoxin genes in E. coli Prophages: Shiga-like toxins in EHEC Diptheria toxin gene, Cholera toxin Botulinum toxins Plasmids: Shigella, Salmonella, Yersinia Horizontal Gene Transfer and Bacterial Pathogenicity Pathogenicity Islands: Uropathogenic and Enteropathogenic E. coli Salmonella typhimurium Yersinia spp. Helicobacter pylori Vibrio cholerae Pathogenicity Islands Associated with – – – – Atypical %G+C tRNA sequences Transposases, Integrases and other mobility genes Flanking repeats IslandPath: Identifying Pathogenicity Islands Yellow circle = high %G+C Pink circle = low %G+C tRNA gene lies between the two dots rRNA gene lies between the two dots Both tRNA and rRNA lie between the two dots Dot is named a transposase Dot is named an integrase Neisseria meningitidis serogroup B strain MC58 Mean %G+C: 51.37 STD DEV: 7.57 %G+C 39.95 51.96 39.13 40.00 42.86 34.74 43.96 40.83 42.34 47.99 45.32 37.14 31.67 37.57 20.38 45.69 51.35 SD -1 -1 -1 -1 -2 -1 -1 -1 -2 -1 -2 Location Strand Product 1834676..1835113 + virulence associated pro. homolog 1835110..1835211 cryptic plasmid A-related 1835357..1835701 + hypothetical 1836009..1836203 + hypothetical 1836558..1836788 + hypothetical 1837037..1837249 + hypothetical 1837432..1838796 + conserved hypothetical 1839157..1839663 + conserved hypothetical 1839826..1841079 + conserved hypothetical 1841404..1843191 put. hemolysin activ. HecB 1843246..1843704 put. toxin-activating 1843870..1844184 hypothetical 1844196..1844495 hypothetical 1844476..1845489 hypothetical 1845558..1845974 hypothetical 1845978..1853522 hemagglutinin/hemolysin-rel. 1854101..1855066 + transposase, IS30 family Variance of the Mean %G+C for all Genes in a Genome: Correlation with bacteria’s clonal nature Variance of the Mean %G+C for all Genes in a Genome Is this a measure of clonality of a bacterium? Are intracellular bacteria more clonal because they are ecologically isolated from other bacteria? Pathogenomics Project: Future Developments • Identify eukaryotic motifs and domains in pathogen genes • Identify further motifs associated with • Pathogenicity islands • Virulence determinants • Functional tests for new predicted virulence factors Acknowledgements • Pseudomonas Genome Project: PathoGenesis Corp. (Ken Stover) and University of Washington (Maynard Olsen) • Membrane proteins: Manjeet Bains, Kendy Wong, Canadian Cystic Fibrosis Foundation • Animal infection studies: Hong Yan • Pathogenomics group – Ann M. Rose, Yossef Av-Gay, David L. Baillie, Fiona S. L. Brinkman, Robert Brunham, Stefanie Butland, Rachel C. Fernandez, B. Brett Finlay, Hans Greberg, Robert E.W. Hancock, Steven J. Jones, Patrick Keeling, Audrey de Koning, Don G. Moerman, Sarah P. Otto, B. Francis Ouellette, Ivan Wan. Peter Wall Foundation www.pathogenomics.bc.ca