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Pathogenomics in Israel Eliora Z. Ron <[email protected]> • Metagenomics • LGT = lateral gene transfer • Typing of bacterial strains and drug resistance • Identification of virulence factors • Whole genome analysis Facilities for pathogenomic studies • Good facilities for genomics, transcriptomics and proteomics in several universities and research institutes • High level bioinformatics • All facilities are also available as service Metagenomics • Metagenomics of culturable and non-culturable microorganism populations present in biofilms of Acute Otitis Media (AOM, Middle Ear Infection) – This infection involves a variety of bacterial species, found in the form of biofilms, which are inherently resistant to antibiotic treatment – Detection of microbial biodiversity of AOM biofilm is limited due to current cultivation methods – The group of Fauzi Silbaq (ArabQual) and Racheli Kreisberg-Zakarin (IBEX) [email protected] in involved in a study the biodiversity of AOM using a metagenomics approach, including microbiology, functional genomics and bioinformatics methodologies Metagenomics • Metagenomics of intestinal microflora in health and disease and the effect of the TLR mutations – Toll-Like Receptors (TLRs) recognize pathogen specific patterns of microorganisms. Mutations in TLRs are associated with inflammatory bowel diseases (Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis). Patients with those diseases have altered intestinal microflora • Uri Gophna, currently with Ford Doolitle in Halifax [email protected] performs cultureindependent profiling of intestinal microflora of TLR knockout mice under normal conditions and after a challenge which models inflammatory bowel disease LGT – lateral gene transfer in relation to pathogenesis • Uri Gophna [email protected] studies the role of lateral gene transfer (LGT) in the evolution of pathogens • Uses bioinformatics for the identification of laterally acquired genes and pathways in pathogens LGT – lateral gene transfer in relation to pathogenesis • Yair Aharonowitz, Ilya Borovok and Gerald Cohen from Tel Aviv University study gluthathione synthesis [email protected] • Identified GshF orthologs, consisting of a γglutamylcysteine ligase (GshA) domain fused to an ATP-grasp domain, in 20 gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria. • Remarkably, 95% of these bacteria are mammalian pathogens. Presumably, this fusion gene, once formed, spread between mammalian hosts most likely by horizontal gene transfer Distribution of fused glutathione biosynthetic genes mapped onto a universal tree of bacterial 16S rRNA (Minimum Evolution, ME) Chlamydia trachomatis Anabaena cylindrica Lactobacillus delbrueckii Lactobacillus plantarum Clostridium acetobutylicum Staphylococcus aureus Bacillus subtilis Clostridium perfringens Enterococcus faecium Listeria monocytogenes Enterococcus faecalis Listeria innocua Streptococcus uberus Streptococcus pyogenes Streptococcus agalactiae Streptococcus suis Streptococcus gordonii Streptococcus pneumoniae Streptococcus sobrinus Streptococcus mutans Rhodospirillum rubrum Pseudomonas aeruginosa Actinobacillus pleuropneumonia Lactococcus lactis Haemophilus somnus Actinobacillus actinomycetemco Haemophilus influenzae Pasteurella multocida Vibrio cholerae Salmonella typhimurium Escherichia coli Streptomyces coelicolor Corinebacterium glutamicum Mycoplasma pneumoniae Mycobacterium tuberculosis Leptospira interrogans Borrelia japonica Thermotoga maritima Thermus aqaticus Chloroflexus aurantiacus 0.05 Typing of bacterial strains and drug resistance • The group of Chezi Kashi in the Technion [email protected] • uses novel methods for molecular typing ofVibrio cholera in order to study emerging new pathogenic strains • The group of Sima Yaron (Technion) is involved in typing the serovars of Salmonella enterica in respect to drug resistance and virulence [email protected] Identification of bacterial virulence factors • The group of Sima Yaron has developed a rapid, simple screen for real-time quantification of promoter - activity in S. enterica using a library of plasmids with GFP as a reporter • The group of Gil Segal (Tel Aviv U.) [email protected] is involved in the study of hyper variable genes are found in the Legionella icm/dot pathogenesis region. They have demonstrated the role of these genes in virulence Identification of fungal virulence factors • The group of Nir Asherov (Tel Aviv U.) [email protected] studies Aspergillus fumigatus, which causes serious disease (around 60% mortality) in immunocompromised people. They concentrate on studying novel cell wall proteins and identified 68 such cwp’s. They are studying these CWPs in vitro and in infected animals by the use of deletion mutants. • They are currently in the process of preparing a Cwp-specific microarrays to study Cwp gene expression patterns Whole genome analysis • Two genomes of bacterial pathogens are being sequenced and analyzed in Israel – Bacillus anthracis (Shaefferman et al, Biological Institute, Nes Ziona) [email protected] – Septicemic Escherichia coli – strain of serotype O78 (Ron, Tel Aviv U.) [email protected] Virulent E. coli strains • Most of the E. coli strains are commensal, but a small number are pathogenic • Pathogenic E. coli strains are divided into two groups: – Intestinal strains. These produce enterotoxins and constitute a major problem, especially in young children and travellers (Montesumu’s revenge) – Extraintestinal strains – ExPEC (Extraintestinal Pathogenic E. coli) Extraintestinal diseases caused by E. coli • Urinary tract infections (UTI) (pyeolonephritis, kidney failure, productivity loss) • UTIs are responsible for > seven million patient visits and one million hospital admissions (due to complications) per year in the United States only. 80 90% of the cases are caused by E. coli • Neonatal meningitis: bacterial meningitis •0.25 per 1000 live births in industrialized countries (2.66 per 1000 in developing countries). ~30% caused by E. coli , ~10% mortality •Intra-abdominal infections, Respiratory tract infections, Wound and surgical infections •Septicemia Septicemia (colibacillosis) • Colisepticemia is the major causes of mortality from community and hospitalacquired infections (more than 80%) • Main cause of mortality in immunosupressed patients (HIV, chemotherapy, old age) • Colisepticemia is an emerging disease – 83% increase 1980 – 1992, over 40% of the bacteremia cases in community acquired infections Goals: • Define virulence-essential ExPEC-specific genes • Profile strains involved in UTI, NBM and sepsis using these ExPEC-specific genes • Use the data to define potential targets for development of vaccines and/or antibacterial drugs. Welch et al. 2002, PNAS Identification of virulence related sequences in septicemic strains • Whole genome sequencing • Subtractive hybridization Subtractive hybridization • Obtain pathogen specific sequences, absent from non-pathogenic K12 strain • Excellent chance of “hitting” pathogenicity islands which are pathogen specific and very large • Faster (and much cheaper) than whole genome sequencing Subtractive hybridization A way to study comparative genomics with organisms which have not been sequenced Pathogen NonPathogen Pathogen Specific Library of pathogen specific genes Search for unique “septicemic” sequences • Using suppression subtractive hybridization (SSH) we identified sequences unique to strain O78-9 and absent from the non-pathogenic strain K-12 • Oover 80 O78-specific open reading frames were found (91 to 1473 bp in length) • The same experiment was repeated with another septicemic strain O2-1772 • 117 unique O2 sequences were identified Comparison of unique sequences of O2 and O78 • Although the two strains cause the same disease, there is a high diversity between the SSH libraries of O2 and O78 strains, with only a few shared genes coding for virulence factors. • Is this diversity serotype specific? To determine this we profiled additional septicemic strains of the same serotypes the presence of each of the unique sequences % of O78 strains with sequence 120 100 O78 * * * 80 60 40 20 2D Graph 2 0 % of O2 strains with sequence 120 100 O2 * * 80 60 40 20 0 Sequence * Comparison of unique sequences of two septicemic strains - O2 and O78 • high level of genome plasticity • there is a high diversity between the septicemic strainsunexpected for strains causing the same disease • Septicemic strains of serogroups O2 and O78 contain a large pool of virulence genes which are used in a “mix and match” fashion Current-future research • Molecular-physiological studies of the newly-identified virulence genes • Bioinformatic studies to determine the evolution of these virulence genes (many in PAIs with evidence of LGT) • Whole genome sequencing – joint project with Prof. Joerg Hacker and Prof. Gerhard Gottschalk Thank you!! • TAU group – – – – Uri Gophna Diana Ideses Daphna Mokady Dr. Dvora Biran • Collaborations – Wuerzburg University (Prof. Joerg Hacker) – Greifswald University (Prof. Michael Hecker) – Goetingen University (Prof. Gerhard Gottschalk) Metagenomics • Uri Gophna, currently with Ford Doolitle in Halifax studies the effect of TLR mutations on micrflora in health and disease by culture- independent profiling of intestinal microflora of TLR knockout mice under normal conditions and after a challenge which models inflammatory bowel disease MLST of O78 strains • Multi Locus Sequence Typing • 450 – 500 bp of 7 “housekeeping” genes • Criteria for chosing genes: – 97-98% homology to E. coli K-12 (from blast data) – appear in pathogenic and non pathogenic strains – map at considerable distance from each other – several allels in the population • There is a positive correlation between virulence, invasiveness and clonal origin • Clonal division in E. coli O78 strains is host independent - closely related clones reside in different hosts • The MLST results are compatible with the results from subtractive hybridization and sequencing • The profile of virulence factors in ExPEC strains is independent of the host and independent of the serotype • There is a high diversity of virulence genes in the various E. coli septicemic strains and each strain has its own profile of virulence genes O78-9 sequences known functions putative virulence-associated putative and known virulence factors unknown functions phage related mobility-related 80 sequences specific to the pathogenic strain and absent from the driver strain K-12. O2-1772 sequences unknown functions known functions putative virulence-associated putative and known virulence factors phage associated mobility-related 117 sequences specific to the pathogenic strain and absent from the driver strain K-12. • Both libraries contain many sequences associated with genomic plasticity evolution by horizontal gene transfer • Many sequences of O2 and O78 are homologous to virulence related sequences of human ExPEC strains Distribution of fused GshFs based of the C-terminal domain sequences and mapped onto a tree of bacterial GSHB and ATP-Grasp proteins (ME analysis) Streptococcus agalactiae Streptococcus mutans Enterococcus faecalis Streptococcus suis Enterococcus faecium Leptospira interrogans Actinobacillus pleuropneumonia Haemophilus somnus Clostridium perfringens Pasteurella multocida Desulfotalea psychrophila Mannheimia succiniciproducens Listeria monocytogenes Listeria innocua Bordetella parapertussis MurC Ralstonia eutropha MurC Clostridium acetobutylicum Acinetobacter sp. MurC Gloeobacter violaceus CphA Anabaena variabilis CphA Bordetella pertussis Anabaena variabilis DdlA Neisseria meningitidis Nitrosomonas europaea Listeria monocytogenes DdlA Acinetobacter sp. Bacillus subtilis DdlA Pseudomonas syringae Escherichia coli Vibrio cholerae Buchnera aphidicola Escherichia coli DdlA 0.1 GshFs ATP-grasp GshBs