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EXTENDED REPORT |
1 Department of Immunology and Microbiology, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit MI 48201, USA
2 Department of Medicine, Division of Rheumatology, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine and Medical Research Department Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Philadelphia PA 19104, USA
3 Medical Research, Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Detroit MI 48201, USA
Correspondence to:
Correspondence to:
Dr A P Hudson
Department of Immunology and Microbiology, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Gordon H Scott Hall, 540 East Canfield Avenue, Detroit MI 48201 USA; ahudson{at}med.wayne.edu
Accepted 21 September 2005
| ABSTRACT |
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Objective: To investigate whether the pattern of gene expression underlying chlamydial persistence is similar to that underlying mycobacterial persistence.
Methods: 194 genes in M tuberculosis that are transcriptionally up regulated to support in vivo growth and persistence of that organism have previously been identified. Each of those genes was compared with the C trachomatis genome to identify orthologues. Expression of selected chlamydial orthologues so identified was assessed by real time RT-PCR in an in vitro model of chlamydial persistence and synovial tissues from patients who were PCR positive for C trachomatis at that site.
Results: 67 C trachomatis genes were identified as being orthologous to mycobacterial persistence related genes, representing 35% of the genes tested. The chlamydial orthologues fell into similar metabolic and other categories as those in M tuberculosis. Expression of a majority of selected chlamydial orthologues was strongly up regulated in an in vitro model of chlamydial persistence and in synovial tissues of relevant patients, compared with their expression during active infection.
Conclusions: These observations provide new insight into the molecular genetic basis underlying chlamydial persistence, and indicate that this information can be obtained, in some instances, by extrapolating observations made in other biological systems and/or organisms.
Keywords: pathogenesis; persistent infection; gene expression; reactive arthritis; Chlamydia trachomatis
An obligate intracellular pathogen, Chlamydia trachomatis, is the most prevalent sexually transmitted bacterium in America and other developed countries.1 An often severe acute inflammatory arthritis develops in some subjects with a prior urogenital infection with this organism, and about half of all patients who develop acute arthritis progress to chronic disease (reviewed by Villareal et al2 and Gérard et al3). The reason(s) that only a limited number of patients with a genital chlamydial infection develop acute arthritis is/are poorly understood. We also do not understand why only a portion of subjects with acute disease progress to chronicity, although both issues relate to our lack of detailed understanding of host-pathogen interaction during synovial chlamydial infection.
C trachomatis undergoes a biphasic developmental cycle at its sites of primary infection, the urethral or cervical epithelium (reviewed by Hatch4). This organism can disseminate widely from those primary infection sites, and when it does so the vehicle of its dissemination is the monocytic cell, the cell type which is the primary synovial host in both acute and chronic Chlamydia-induced arthritis.4,5 In contrast with the normal progression through the developmental cycle undergone during active infection of epithelial cells, however, C trachomatis residing within monocytic cells in the joint pass rapidly into an unusual biological state designated "persistence".3 In this state, the organisms are morphologically aberrant, non-culturable by standard laboratory methods, resistant to antibiotics, and they display an unusual transcript profile.6,7,8,9,10,11,12C pneumoniae, a human respiratory pathogen related to C trachomatis, has also been implicated in eliciting inflammatory arthritis, and this organism too has been shown to cause persistent infection under some circumstances.13,14
It seems clear that synovial pathogenesis in Chlamydia-induced arthritis is a function of persistent, rather than normal active, infection. However, details relating to the mechanism(s) by which chlamydiae enter, and thereafter maintain, the persistent infection state in vivo, as well as details about the means by which persistent chlamydiae elicit disease, remain to be elucidated. As mentioned, persistent chlamydiae display an unusual transcript profile compared with that of active infection. For example, expression of omp1, the gene encoding the major outer membrane protein, is severely attenuated in persistence.7 Genes encoding products required for DNA replication (for example, dnaA, polA, and others) are transcribed in persistently infecting C trachomatis cells as they are during active infection, but expression of genes specifying products required for cytokinesis is severely down regulated during persistence (for example, ftsK, ftsW8). Several other chlamydial genes of known function are also differentially expressed in persistent v active infection.3,9,10 Full understanding of the genetic programme underlying entry into and maintenance of chlamydial persistence will be a difficult task, because many coding sequences on the C trachomatis and C pneumoniae genomes specify products of unknown function.15,16 To complicate matters further, no system for genetic manipulation of either pathogen exists to date.
Bacterial pathogens other than C trachomatis and C pneumoniae take part in persistent infection, and in some cases the mechanisms by which those organisms establish persistence have been studied extensively. Mycobacterium tuberculosis, in which genetic manipulation is possible and for which the full genome sequence is available, is one such organism.17,18. Studies from several laboratories have defined many critical aspects underlying mycobacterial persistence.1921 For example, one recent investigation of genes required for in vivo growth and persistence of M tuberculosis in an animal model of disease identified 194 coding sequences required for those processes.22 Virtually all of the genes identified in that study as being required for establishment of persistence were not expressed, or were expressed at only low level, during axenic growth of the organism.
Because genetic manipulation of Chlamydia is not available, identification of chlamydial genes orthologous to those shown to function in persistence in other organisms may be of value. We undertook a study to determine whether none, some, or all of the 194 genes shown to be transcriptionally up regulated in support of growth and persistence in vivo for M tuberculosis have orthologues in C trachomatis. We report that 35% of the coding sequences identified in the mycobacterial study have related genes in C trachomatis. We further show that a selected set of those chlamydial orthologues spanning several metabolic and other categories show up regulation of expression during persistence, as in M tuberculosis, in both an in vitro model of that infection state and in samples from patients with arthritis who are polymerase chain reaction (PCR) positive for the organism in synovial tissue.
| PATIENTS AND METHODS |
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Preparation and analysis of RNA/cDNA
Total nucleic acid preparations were made from Chlamydia infected HEp-2 and human monocyte cell pellets, and from synovial tissue samples, as described previously.8,9 Pure RNA was prepared from aliquots of each preparation by treatment with DNaseI (RQ1 DNase; Promega Biotech, Madison WI, USA), followed by extraction in phenol:chloroform, and collection by ethanol precipitation. Reverse transcription of total RNA preparations to cDNA was done using the MuLV enzyme and random hexamers as primers (Invitrogen, Carlsbad CA, USA), as described.10,14
cDNA preparations were subjected to quantitative real time RT-PCR analyses for 16 targeted C trachomatis genes, using the SYBR green method.10,14 Table 2
shows the coding sequences of interest and the primer systems used in the analyses. Each real time RT-PCR assay for each targeted gene was run in triplicate independently. Data were normalised to chlamydial 16S rRNA, as described8,10,14; data for specific transcripts in all monocyte and patient derived assays were indexed to the level of that transcript in C trachomatis actively growing for 12 hours in HEp-2 cells. Assays were done using a PE Biosystems (Foster City, CA, USA) model 7700 sequence detector; data were analysed using version 1.9 sequence analysis software from PE Biosystems.
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| RESULTS |
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Expression of selected C trachomatis orthologues during persistent infection in vitro
To confirm that the Chlamydia genes identified are not only expressed during persistent infection but also up regulated over their level of expression during active infection, we selected 16 chlamydial orthologues from various functional categories and assessed their relative expression level by real time RT-PCR during both infection states; the genes subjected to this analysis are indicated in bold in table 3
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In previous studies of chlamydial persistence, we have employed an in vitro model system using normal human monocytic cells infected with C trachomatis serovar K; in this system, chlamydiae transit from a more or less normal infection state to the persistent state by 3 days after infection.7,8,9,10 We analysed RNA from infected monocytes at day 5 after infection and compared transcript levels from each of the 16 targeted genes with the level of their expression at 12 hours after infection during active infection of HEp-2 cells. Previous microarray based studies have shown that all coding sequences on the C trachomatis chromosome and plasmid are expressed at some time during the normal developmental cycle.24,25 Consistent with those data, each of the 16 genes assessed here was being transcribed at 12 hours after infection in HEp-2 cells (data not shown).
Figure 1
provides a summary of the transcript level at day 5 after infection in the in vitro monocyte model system for each of the 16 chlamydial genes targeted relative to their expression level during active HEp-2 cell infection. Interestingly, all but four of the chlamydial genes assayed showed relatively strong up regulation during persistence in comparison with expression during active infection. The four genes showing no/minimal transcriptional up regulation during persistence were Ct762 (murC/murF, an apparent fusion protein with MUR-NAc-L-alanine and D-alanine-D-alanine ligase activity), Ct701 (secA, preprotein translocase subunit A protein), Ct624 (mviN, a putative virulence factor), and Ct868 (hypothetical protein, possibly a membrane thiol protease). Four other chlamydial orthologue genes showed powerful up regulation of expression during persistence, consistent with data from the mycobacterial study. These were Ct820 (ftsY, component of signal recognition particle), Ct727 (zntA/cadA, cation-transporting ATPase), Ct393 (proS, prolyl-tRNA synthetase), and Ct052 (hemN, oxygen independent coproporphyrinogen III oxidase). All other chlamydial genes assessed showed moderate to fairly strong transcriptional up regulation in persistent C trachomatis compared with that shown in actively infecting organisms.
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To determine whether in vivo and in vitro expression differed for any of the 16 tested chlamydial persistence orthologue genes, we repeated the real time RT-PCR assays using RNA/cDNA prepared from synovial biopsy specimens of three patients with arthritis known to be PCR positive for C trachomatis in that tissue. Figure 2
presents the results of those assays. The Ct820, Ct727, Ct393, and Ct052 genes all showed expression in these patient samples, as they did in the monocyte model of chlamydial persistence. However, the genes that displayed essentially no up regulation of expression in the monocyte system (Ct762, Ct701, Ct624, Ct868) all showed some level of increased expression in the patient samples, consistent with data from the mycobacterial study.
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| DISCUSSION |
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The genome of M tuberculosis is about 4.4 mbp in length and encodes about 4000 genes.26 Most of the 194 genes identified in the persistence study of this organism are expressed at only low level or not at all during axenic growth in culture,22 suggesting that persistence for M tuberculosis may depend on expression of a particular set of genes devoted largely or exclusively to establishment of that state. In contrast, the C trachomatis genome specifies just over 900 coding sequences, and all of them are expressed at one time or another during active growth of the organism.15,16,24,25 This suggests that, unlike M tuberculosis, C trachomatis does not possess a gene or gene set whose sole function is the genesis and/or maintenance of the persistent infection state. Thus, while M tuberculosis persistence may derive largely from expression of a specific set of genes, in C trachomatis development of that state must be a function of readjustment of transcript levels from genes already being expressed. The challenge will be to understand whether, and if so by what means, that readjustment results from input from the host monocytic cell in the joint, and how that readjustment of gene expression alters chlamydial biochemistry and physiology.
It is difficult to deduce from the results presented here, and from those in the mycobacterial study, whether and if so how, metabolic processes are similarly modified overall between the actively growing and persistent infection states of these two bacterial pathogens. Although many of the M tuberculosis genes up regulated during in vivo growth and persistence have known functions, the majority of genes (107/194 (55%)) so identified encode proteins of unknown function.22 Nine of the C trachomatis orthologues of mycobacterial genes found in our BLAST search also were coding sequences specifying proteins of unknown function, but importantly, most of the unknown M tuberculosis genes in the persistence study were shown to be unique to that organism. As pointed out in the Sassetti and Rubin study, these observations indicate that mycobacteriae appear to have evolved mechanisms for in vivo survival and persistence that are uniquethat is, not shared by other obligate or facultative intracellular pathogens. Similarly, most coding sequences specifying products of unknown function in the C trachomatis genome are either Chlamydia- (genus-) specific or specific to that organism, probably indicating that the genetic underpinnings of chlamydial persistence are essentially unique to this group as well. Indeed, we suspect that many critical molecular genetic and other details differ between these two organisms in their metabolic and other characteristics of persistence. None the less, while caution must be exercised in extrapolating the genetic mechanisms underlying persistence in one organism to those performing a similar function in another, circumspect exercise of such extrapolations can be useful.
The panel of M tuberculosis genes underlying in vivo growth and persistence, and the group of C trachomatis genes identified as orthologous to them, fall into the same general functional categories, with the exception that the former panel included more genes encoding lipid metabolism related products than did the latter. As mentioned, given the limited panel of chlamydial genes identified as being orthologous to mycobacterial persistence related genes, it is difficult to form a detailed picture of the overall transcript pattern underlying chlamydial persistence in monocytic cells, and the overall metabolic characteristics of persistence for the organisms that result from that gene expression pattern. One study provided a transcriptome analysis of chlamydial gene expression in an in vitro model of persistence which was different from the monocyte system used here.27 Collaborative studies between this laboratory and another have shown, however, that the profiles of gene expression differ importantly among the several currently employed in vitro model systems of persistence studied in various laboratories (Klos A, HCG, APH, unpublished observations). In the case of the monocyte model of chlamydial persistence, which we consider to be the most relevant for studies of pathogenesis in Chlamydia associated arthritis, understanding the transcriptional and metabolic modifications underlying persistence must derive from full transcriptome analyses of that system. We are now performing those analyses.
| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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-mediated persistence and reactivation. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 2000;100:159716.This article has been cited by other articles:
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C. H. Roux, O. Brocq, V. Breuil, C. Albert, and L. Euller-Ziegler Pregnancy in rheumatology patients exposed to anti-tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-{alpha} therapy Rheumatology, April 1, 2007; 46(4): 695 - 698. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M Rihl, L Kohler, A Klos, and H Zeidler Persistent infection of Chlamydia in reactive arthritis Ann Rheum Dis, March 1, 2006; 65(3): 281 - 284. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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