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Infection and Immunity, January 2005, p. 652-656, Vol. 73, No. 1
0019-9567/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.73.1.652-656.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Veterinary Science and Microbiology, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona
Received 25 August 2004/ Accepted 3 September 2004
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cpb2 encodes beta2-toxin, which was toxic to cultured epithelial cells and lethal to mice when it was administered intravenously (4). cpb2-positive C. perfringens strains are associated with the occurrence of enteric disease in domestic animals, notably pigs (2, 3, 6, 13), horses (1, 5), and dogs (12). There was an especially strong correlation between the prevalence of cpb2 in isolates from piglets with enteritis and the absence of cpb2 in isolates from healthy piglets (2, 3). However, apart from this epidemiologic association, there is little experimental evidence to support the role of beta2-toxin in pathogenesis. Immunohistochemistry identified beta2-toxin in 35 to 48% of small and large intestines of horses with typhlocolitis caused by C. perfringens (1). Furthermore, Manteca et al. demonstrated that a cpb2-positive isolate of C. perfringens produced more pronounced necrotic intestinal lesions than an isolate lacking cpb2. However, this study did not use isogenic strains, and factors other than beta2-toxin may have contributed to the severity of the lesions (8).
Recently, we determined that beta2-toxin may be differentially expressed in C. perfringens strains isolated from different host species. There was a strong correlation between beta2-toxin phenotype and genotype only in type A and C isolates obtained from diseased pigs (2). For isolates of nonporcine origin, the correlation of phenotype and genotype was only 50% (2). This study aims to determine the basis for the absence of beta2-toxin expression.
The majority of the C. perfringens isolates used in this study were received through the Clostridial Enteric Disease Unit (CEDU), University of Arizona, and were from clinical cases where C. perfringens disease was suspected. All isolates were typed by a multiplex PCR assay which amplifies cpa, cpb, cpb2, cpe, etx, and ibp genes (3).
PCR product, amplified with primers CPB2F and CPB2R (Table 1) from a bovine type E isolate, C. perfringens NCIB 10784, was sequenced and found to diverge significantly from cpb2 from a porcine type C isolate (GenBank accession number L77965). Due to the sequence divergence, primers designed to the sequence surrounding the previously described cpb2 gene (GenBank accession number L77965), which we will refer to as the consensus cpb2 gene, did not amplify this gene region from strain NCIB 10784. Therefore, primers upstream and downstream of the atypical cpb2 gene were designed from preliminary nucleotide sequence from a bovine type E isolate, C. perfringens 853, provided by The Institute for Genomic Research, Rockville, Md. The nucleotide sequence of the entire NCIB 10784 cpb2 gene was determined from PCR products amplified with primers EEBF2 and CPB2R and primers CPB2F and EEB2R (Table 1). The cpb2 gene from strain NCIB 10784 displayed only 70.7% DNA identity with the consensus cpb2 gene. Furthermore, deletion of a base at position 178 in the atypical cpb2 gene resulted in a frameshift such that a protein of only 73 amino acids could be produced, explaining the absence of beta2-toxin expression in this isolate.
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TABLE 1. Oligonucleotide primers used in this study
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TABLE 2. Prevalence of atypical and consensus cpb2 genes in cpb2-positive C. perfringens types isolated from various animal species
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Compared individually to the consensus cpb2 gene, the atypical cpb2 genes displayed 70.2 to 70.7% DNA identity. When the atypical cpb2 genes were compared as a group, all the atypical genes displayed 93.0% DNA identity. Two bovine type A isolates carried identical 13-bp deletions at positions 73 to 85, and one avian type A isolate carried a mutation at position 606 resulting in premature termination of translation. The remaining type A, B, and C atypical cpb2 genes displayed 99.0% DNA identity with each other and could potentially produce full-length atypical beta2-toxin protein. Five of the six type E cpb2 genes, including the one from strain NCIB 10784, were identical and carried the frameshift mutation at position 178. In the other type E isolate, 853, the sequence was identical to that of nonporcine type A and C isolates. The type D genes were identical and most similar to type E cpb2, although the cpb2 genes from type D isolates did not carry the frameshift mutations.
Nucleotide sequence upstream of the consensus cpb2 gene or the atypical cpb2 genes was similar, with 79.4% DNA identity over the 97 bp immediately upstream of cpb2. However, the consensus and atypical cpb2 sequences were significantly more divergent 5' of this point. Primer extension analysis had identified a
70-type promoter (TTTTAA-N17-TATAAT), which is present 35 bp upstream of the start of the consensus cpb2 gene in C. perfringens strain 13 (9), and the identical sequence is present in the consensus cpb2 gene from C. perfringens strain CWC245 (GenBank accession number L777965). Similar, but not identical, sequences are present upstream of atypical cpb2 genes from type A, type B, nonporcine type C and type D (TTTAAA-N17-TA[T/A]AAT), and type E (TTAAAA-N17-TATAAT) isolates.
When compared with sequences in GenBank, atypical cpb2 displayed similarity with only consensus cpb2 at either the nucleotide or amino acid level (data not shown). Most of the nucleotide changes occurring between atypical cpb2 genes from type A, B, and C isolates conferred either no change or conservative substitutions. Figure 1 shows an amino acid alignment between a consensus beta2-toxin protein, and representatives of types A, B, and C, type D and type E atypical beta2-toxin sequences. Atypical beta2-toxin proteins were 96.2 to 98.9% identical and 97.7 to 99.2% similar to each other, whereas atypical beta2-toxin proteins displayed only 62.3% identity and 80.4% similarity to the previously described beta2-toxin protein (4).
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FIG. 1. Amino acid alignment of C. perfringens beta2-toxin proteins expressed from consensus (GenBank accession number L77695) or atypical cpb2 genes. The type A sequence shown is the sequence of C. perfringens JGS4147 (bovine type A) and is representative of atypical type A, B, and C beta2-toxin sequences. The type D and E sequences are the sequences from C. perfringens JGS4152 (ovine type D) and NCIB 10784, respectively. The position of the frameshift mutation is indicated by the dash at position 59 in the type E sequence, and the remaining amino acid sequence shown is that which would occur in the absence of the mutation. Two or more identical amino acids in the sequences are shown on a black background, while conservative substitutions are shown on a gray or shaded background. The predicted signal sequence cleavage sites are indicated by the arrow. Amino acid numbers for each protein are indicated to the right of the sequences.
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HIS-atypical beta2-toxin was purified from Escherichia coli DH5
(pJGS659) to >95% homogeneity using TALON resin (2). In Western blots, monoclonal antibody (MAb) 9E10B, raised against purified HIS-beta2-toxin (2), reacted with preparations of purified HIS-atypical beta2-toxin (data not shown).
C. perfringens isolates were grown in anaerobic brain heart infusion broth (Difco) supplemented with 0.5% yeast extract and 0.05% cysteine at 37°C for 48 h. The culture supernatant fluid (CSF) was harvested by centrifugation and passage through a 0.45-µm-pore-size filter. The CSF was concentrated 40-fold by ultrafiltration through a 10,000-molecular-weight cutoff filter (Amicon), and beta2-toxin was detected by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and Western blotting with MAb 9E10B. A positive-control lane loaded with purified HIS-atypical beta2-toxin was always included, and a representative blot is shown in Fig. 2. Thirty-three isolates carrying atypical cpb2 genes were selected from all five C. perfringens types and a variety of host sources and tested for beta2-toxin expression by Western blotting. As expected, beta2-toxin expression was not detected in any of the type A and E isolates that carry frameshift mutations (Table 3 and Fig. 2). However, beta2-toxin was also not detected in the 25 isolates that carried full-length atypical cpb2 genes. Beta2-toxin expression was not detected in control isolates of C. perfringens that did not carry cpb2 (n = 3) (Fig. 2).
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FIG. 2. Expression of beta2-toxin or atypical beta2-toxins in concentrated CSF from C. perfringens isolates. One microgram of HIS-atypical beta2-toxin (lane 1) or concentrated CSF from C. perfringens strains (lanes 2 to 9) was subjected to electrophoresis on SDS-10% polyacrylamide gels. CSF from C. perfringens strain 690D (porcine type A) (lane 2), strain 13 (lane 3), JGS4142 (lane 4), JGS1604 (canine type A) (lane 5), JGS1984 (unknown type origin B) (lane 6), JGS1880 (lane 7), JGS4152 (lane 8), and cpb2-negative, porcine type A (negative control) (lane 9) were used. The separated proteins were transferred to nitrocellulose by Western blotting and immunostained with a 1/20 dilution of MAb 9E10B. The positions of molecular mass standards (in kilodaltons) are shown to the left of the gel. The presence of consensus (C) or atypical (A) cpb2 genes or the absence of cpb2 () in that strain is indicated below the gel. The positions of HIS-atypical beta2-toxins (arrow) and beta2-toxins (arrowhead) are indicated to the right of the gel.
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TABLE 3. Correlation of the presence of the cpb2 allele with beta2-toxin expression in C. perfringens types isolated from various animal species
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With one exception, strain JGS1475, all strains of porcine origin carrying cpb2 expressed beta2-toxin (n = 4) (Table 3 and Fig. 2). In addition, we previously demonstrated that 96.9% of consensus cpb2-carrying porcine isolates expressed beta2-toxin protein (n = 32) (2). The nucleotide sequence of cpb2 from strain JGS1475 was determined, but it was identical to the cpb2 sequence from strain CWC245 (GenBank accession number L777965) (data not shown), so it is not known why this isolate does not express beta2-toxin. Regardless, it is clear that in general, consensus genes from porcine isolates are expressed, yet atypical genes from nonporcine C. perfringens isolates are not expressed. Furthermore, consensus genes from nonporcine C. perfringens isolates are expressed at different levels.
Given that the sequences upstream of consensus and atypical cpb2 genes were similar, but not identical, the defect in expression of atypical genes could occur at the transcriptional level. Reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) was used to identify cpb2 transcripts in C. perfringens isolates carrying atypical genes. Tri Reagent (Medical Research Center) was used to extract total RNA from mid-log-phase cultures, as transcript from a consensus cpb2 gene is abundant at this phase of the cell cycle (9). RNA was reverse transcribed into total cDNA using the Advantage RT-for-PCR kit (Clontech) and was used as a template in the multiplex PCR (3) to identify the presence of any cpb2 transcript. cpa transcript was detected in all C. perfringens isolates tested and served as an internal positive control. Transcripts for the cpb, cpe, etx, and ibp genes, encoding other toxins, were also detected in the multiplex PCR assay, depending on the C. perfringens type. Reaction mixtures with no Moloney murine leukemia virus (MMLV) reverse transcriptase added were used as negative controls to determine whether contaminating bacterial DNA was present. RNA was prepared from C. perfringens strains JGS1880 (bovine type C), JGS1906 (bovine type A), JGS4142, NCIB 10784, and 13 and subjected to RT-PCR.
RNA from all C. perfringens isolates contained approximately equivalent amounts of cpa transcript (Fig. 3). As reported previously, strain 13 RNA contained cpb2-specific transcript (9). By PCR, strains JGS1880, JGS1906, and JGS4142 did not contain cpb2-specific product, indicating that very little or no transcription occurred in these isolates carrying atypical cpb2 genes (Fig. 3). The absence of atypical cpb2 gene expression in these strains probably occurs at the transcriptional level, at least in broth culture. Unexpectedly, however, RNA from strain NCIB 10784 contained cpb2-specific transcript (Fig. 3), but expression of beta2-toxin was not detected in this isolate due to a frameshift mutation in the cpb2 gene. The putative 35 promoter sequence in type E atypical cpb2 genes varies slightly from the 35 promoter sequence found in type A, B, C, and D atypical genes, and these 35 promoter sequences are slightly different from those found for consensus genes (TTAAAA, TTTAAA, and TTTTAA, respectively). The absence of transcription in the type A and C isolates examined may be a result of this divergent 35 sequence, whereas the type E cpb2 35 sequence may still be able to promote transcription. However, these studies were performed with bacteria grown in vitro, and there may be signals involved in up-regulation of atypical cpb2 gene expression that are present only in the host, or possibly the type A and C isolates may lack any required activators of cpb2 transcription. Further experiments will be necessary to confirm these hypotheses.
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FIG. 3. Transcriptional analysis of atypical cpb2 genes. Total cDNA, prepared by reverse transcription from RNA, was subjected to multiplex PCR analysis (3), and the amplicons were visualized after electrophoresis in a 1.5% agarose gel. Lanes: 1, 100-bp ladder; 2 and 3, strain 13 cDNA; 4 and 5, JGS1906 cDNA; 6 and 7, JGS4142 cDNA; 8 and 9, JGS1880 cDNA; 10 and 11, NCIB 10784 cDNA; 12, JGS1984 DNA; 13, strain 294 DNA (bovine type E); 14, strain 13 DNA; 15, JGS4142 DNA; 16, no-template control. MMLV reverse transcriptase was added (+) or not added () to the reaction mixtures in lanes 2 to 11. The positions of the 655-bp etx, 567-bp cpb2, 446-bp ibp, 324-bp cpa, 233-bp cpe and 196-bp cpb gene products are indicated to the right of the gel.
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The findings presented here strengthen the possible role of beta2-toxin in the pathogenesis of enteritis in neonatal pigs. However, the presence of apparently nonexpressed, atypical cpb2 genes in C. perfringens strains isolated from nonporcine hosts raises the question of whether this protein plays the same role in enteritis in other animal species. Answering these questions will require the development of appropriate animal models of C. perfringens enteritis.
Nucleotide sequence accession number. The atypical cpb2 sequence data were submitted to the DDBJ/EMBL/GenBank databases under accession numbers AY609161 to AY609183.
Sequencing of the C. perfringens 853 nucleotide sequence was part of a genome sequencing project funded by NIAID grant 1 U01 AI49921-01.
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