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Infection and Immunity, December 2003, p. 7202-7207, Vol. 71, No. 12
0019-9567/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.71.12.7202-7207.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Atlanta Veterans Affairs Medical Center and Department of Medicine, Emory University School of Medicine, Decatur, Georgia 30033
Received 19 June 2003/ Returned for modification 18 July 2003/ Accepted 3 September 2003
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Prior to routine immunization of infants with conjugate H. influenzae serotype b (Hib) vaccine, Hib was the most common H. influenzae serotype causing invasive disease (>90%), and H. influenzae serotype f (Hif), although rare, was the second most common (44). With the postvaccine reduction in Hib disease, the proportion of invasive H. influenzae disease caused by Hif rose from 1% in 1989 to 17% in 1994 (40). Invasive Hif disease now contributes to a substantial proportion of all invasive H. influenzae disease (39, 43) and has been associated with infections such as bacteremia, endocarditis, and a mycotic aneurysm (1, 8, 35). Recently, Hif was isolated from a case of rapidly fatal sepsis in an otherwise healthy child (45).
Strong homology of the genes involved in capsule biosynthesis from a number of gram-negative bacteria suggests a common molecular origin. Although the genetic elements of H. influenzae capsule biosynthesis have been most extensively characterized in Hib (13, 14, 19, 34), the H. influenzae cap locus for all six serotypes contains the same three functionally unique regions, I, II, and III (18, 20). Regions I and III are common to all six capsular types and contain genes involved in the exportation and processing of the capsular material. Region I genes (bexDCBA) code for an ATP-driven capsule export apparatus (16). Region II contains serotype-specific biosynthesis genes that appear to be unique to each of the six capsule types (34, 41). Region III genes, hcsA and hcsB, recently identified in Hib, appear to be involved in postpolymerization steps (10, 25, 34). In order to further understand the role of the Hif capsule, we identified and characterized the genetic locus for the capsule biosynthetic genes of H. influenzae serotype f.
Cosmid sequencing and assembly of the Hif cap locus. A cosmid library of the American Type Culture Collection (Manassas, Va.) H. influenzae serotype f strain 700222 (40) Sau3A-partially digested chromosomal DNA was constructed in Escherichia coli XL1-Blue MR cells using the GigaPack III XL packaging system (Stratagene, La Jolla, Calif.) as described by the manufacturer. Cosmids pTS66 and pTS67 were found to contain DNA specific to region II of the Hif cap locus by PCR for the presence of Hif cap-specific region II DNA using oligonucleotide primers f1 and f2 as previously described (5) (Table 1). pTS66 and pTS67 were further characterized by Southern hybridization analysis (33) using a Hif cap-specific region II probe (f1 to f2) as well as with probes generated by PCR from the Hib cap locus in conserved regions I (Hi-1 to Hi-2) (5) and III (ORF6 [24] to Reg3b; 5'-GCAATGGCACATCATGCAC-3').
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Sequencing and computer assembly using the Phred-Phrap package (CodonCode Corporation, Dedham, Mass.) and LaserGene version 5.03 (DNASTAR, Inc., Madison, Wis.) of pTS66 and pTS67 resulted in a contiguous region of 19,576 bp from the Hif chromosome. Nucleotide and amino acid homology comparisons using GenBank DNA and protein sequence databases of the National Center for Biotechnology Information BLAST network server (3) and TBLASTX analysis (3) identified a total of 15 open reading frames (ORFs), 9 of which appear to be specifically associated with the Hif cap locus (Fig. 1).
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Sequence analysis of Hif cap locus regions I and III. Region I contains four ORFs with homology to Hib, bexA, bexB, bexC, and bexD (Fig. 1), as well as other region I capsule genes from E. coli, Neisseria meningitidis, Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae, and Mannheimia haemolytica (34). Because the encoded polypeptides from each of these four genes were nearly identical (89 to 94% identity) to the region I gene products from Hib, they were named bexDCBA. The BexD protein in Hif appeared to be slightly less conserved than BexA, BexB, and BexC, with only 89% identity to the Hib counterpart.
The nucleotide sequence in region III contained two genes, hcsA and hcsB (for Haemophilus capsule synthesis), recently sequenced from the Hib capsule locus (34). HcsA and HcsB are highly conserved between the Hib and Hif capsule loci at 97 and 91% similarity, respectively (Fig. 1).
Sequence analysis of Hif cap locus region II. Region II, the central, serotype-specific region of the Hif cap locus, included three ORFs. The G+C content of the DNA in region II was 26%, significantly lower than the 38 and 39.7% G+C content of regions I and III and the overall G+C content of H. influenzae DNA. This may indicate that region II DNA was more recently acquired by the bacterium. The three ORFs had no homology with Hib Bcs1 to Bsc4 and were designated Fcs1, Fcs2, and Fcs3 for f capsule-specific gene products (Fig. 1).
The deduced amino acid sequence of Fcs1 was compared to those of other known sequences using BLAST (2), and homology with other capsule polysaccharide genes was detected. Fcs1 is 68% similar to Cps1A, capsular polysaccharide synthesis A from A. pleuropneumoniae (GenBank accession no. AAM69355), 67% similar to LcbA, a putative N. meningitidis serogroup L region D capsule protein (GenBank accession no. AAF21950), and 54% similar to the N. meningitidis serogroup X strain M7575 putative capsule biosynthesis protein XcbA (39a). Less similarity (49%) was seen between Fcs1 and the C-terminal half of SacB, an N. meningitidis serogroup A capsule biosynthesis gene (GenBank accession no. AAC38286) (36).
Sequence homology search with Fcs2 for known proteins detected two putative conserved domains. The N-terminal amino acids 8 to 178 of Fcs2 were 98.8% identical to the consensus sequence from the conserved domain database (26, 27) protein family glycosyltransferase 2, Pfam00535. This is a highly diverse family of proteins with the capacity to transfer sugar from UDP-glucose, UDP-N-acetylgalactosamine, GDP-mannose, and CDP-abequose to a range of substrates that includes cellulose, dolichol phosphate, and teichoic acids. C-terminal amino acids 516 to 887 were 94.1% identical to the consensus sequence from COG1887, a cluster of orthologous groups (COG) (37, 38) of putative glycosl-glycerophosphate transferases involved in teichoic acid biosynthesis.
CDART (conserved domain architecture retrieval tool) (11) identified six proteins with similar domain architecture. Fcs2 is 54% similar to Cps1B and 45% similar to Cps1C, capsular polysaccharide synthesis-B and -C from A. pleuropneumoniae (GenBank accession no. AAM69356 and AAM69358, respectively). Fcs2 is 46% similar to EpsJ, a Lactococcus lactis subsp. cremoris glycosyltransferase involved in synthesis of the polysaccharide backbone (GenBank accession no. NP_053024) (42), 48% similar to GgaB, a Bacillus subtilis minor teichoic acids biosynthesis protein (GenBank accession no. P46918) (21), and 40% similar to LcbB, a putative bifunctional polymerase from N. meningitidis serogroup L (GenBank accession no. AAF21951). Fcs2 is also 41% similar to a hypothetical protein (Acs3), the third of four ORFs found in region II of H. influenzae serotype a strain RM107 (GenBank accession no. S49240). Finally, no sequence homology was found for the third ORF, Fcs3, with known proteins as detected by BLAST (2). Functional characterization of Fcs1, Fcs2, and Fcs3 remains to be established.
Region II fcs1, fcs2, and fcs3 transcription. To determine whether fcs1, fcs2, and fcs3 were transcribed and organized as an operon, we performed reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) experiments with whole-cell RNA obtained from exponential broth cultures of Hif 700222 with RNeasy (Qiagen, Valencia, Calif.) and SuperScript II reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, Calif.) and PCR reagents from Applied Biosystems at an annealing temperature of 55°C. Transcription of fcs1 (Fig. 2, lane 2), fcs2 (Fig. 2, lane 5), and fcs3 (Fig. 2, lane 8) was confirmed by RT-PCR using primers designed from their coding sequences (Table 1). An RT-PCR product of 323 bp was amplified between fcs1 and fcs2 using a primer in the coding sequence of fcs2 (Fcs1-2-b) and a second primer in fcs1 (Fcs1-2-a) during the amplification of the cDNA (Fig. 2, lane 11). An RT-PCR product of 417 bp was amplified between fcs2 and fcs3 using a primer in the coding sequence of fcs3 (Fcs2-3-b) and a second in fcs2 (Fcs2-3-a) during the amplification of the cDNA (Fig. 2, lane 14). These results indicate that the three region II genes, fcs1, fcs2, and fcs3, are cotranscribed on the same mRNA.
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Unlike the DNA flanking the Hib cap locus, which is contiguous in the H. influenzae Rd genome, the DNA outside of the Hif cap locus is found in two widely separated sections of the Rd genome. dmsA (HI1047), HI1048, and merT (HI1049) are found in section 100 of the Rd genome, while HI1637 and sapA (HI1638) are in sections 151 and 152, respectively (sodC is not present in the Rd genome). Sections 100 and 151 to 152 are separated by 589,419 bp in Rd (GenBank accession no. NC_000907) (6). This finding was not necessarily unexpected. Rd, formerly an encapsulated H. influenzae serotype d strain, is a division I H. influenzae strain, and all H. influenzae serotype f strains belong to division II. Divisions I and II have been demonstrated to be widely separated phylogenetic divisions (30). Furthermore, sodC is present only in division II and not present in division I strains with the exception of serotype e, which shares features of both divisions I and II (15, 22).
To determine if the layout of the Hif cap locus and flanking sequences found on the cosmid clones was identical in the type f chromosome, PCR analysis of the end junctions of the Hif cap locus was performed using primers specific to region I, sodC, merT, region III, and HI1637 (Table 1) and chromosomal DNA from Hif strain 700222. The same layout of genes was observed in Hif strain 700222 and the sequenced cosmid pTS66 (data not shown).
We looked further at a collection of 69 Hif strains isolated from patients with invasive H. influenzae disease. Isolates were confirmed to be H. influenzae serotype f strains by serologic and molecular methods (5). All 69 Hif isolates were examined by one-colony PCR (32) using primer pairs as described above and were found to have the Hif cap locus in the identical location as that of Hif 700222 and associated with the same flanking genes (data not shown). This suggests that the chromosomal location of the Hif cap locus is highly conserved and is as presented in Fig. 1.
It has been suggested that all division I H. influenzae strains have the same chromosomal cap locus location, between direct repeats of IS1016 (34). It is possible that all cap loci in H. influenzae division II strains are located between sodC and HI1637. Previously, we noted that H. influenzae serotype a strain ATCC 9006 and H. influenzae serotype e strain 8142 did not have the same cap locus chromosomal location shared by most division I H. influenzae strains (34). Although most Hia belong to division I, some have been classified as division II. Hie, while classified as division I, has the greatest genetic distance from all other division I H. influenzae (29) and is the only division I H. influenzae reported to have sodC (22). We also examined the end junctions of Hia strain 9006 and Hie strain 8142 using primers specific to region I, sodC, merT, region III, and HI1637 (Table 1). Both the Hia and the Hie strains had the same PCR profile as the Hif strains, suggesting the identical chromosomal location of the cap loci in these strains (Fig. 3). Further studies will be necessary to determine whether the cap locus location is uniformly conserved among all H. influenzae division II strains (all Hif, and a minority of Hia and Hib) and division I Hie strains.
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The possession of a polysaccharide capsule greatly enhances the virulence of H. influenzae and its ability to cause invasive disease. Although the Hib conjugate vaccine has been highly successful in dramatically reducing Hib invasive disease, occurrence of invasive disease due to other capsule serotypes as well as nontypeable H. influenzae has persisted and may be increasing in some populations. The apparent increase of Hif disease in the post-Hib vaccine era suggests the need for further characterization of H. influenzae serotype f. We report the genetic analysis of the Hif cap locus and its surrounding DNA. Future studies to better understand the functional activities of the capsule-specific genes fcs1, fcs2, and fcs3 are warranted.
Nucleotide sequence accession number. The nucleotide sequence reported in this paper has been deposited in GenBank under the accession no. AF549211.
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