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Journal of Bacteriology, April 2002, p. 1873-1879, Vol. 184, No. 7
0021-9193/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.184.7.1873-1879.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Nicole T. Perna,3 Timothy J. Barrett,4 Frederick M. Ausubel,5,6 Frederick R. Blattner,2 and Stephen B. Calderwood1,7*
Division of Infectious Diseases,1 Department of Molecular Biology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts 02114,5 Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics,2 Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115,6 Laboratory of Genetics,7 Department of Animal Health and Biomedical Sciences, University of WisconsinMadison, Madison, Wisconsin 53706,3 Foodborne and Diarrheal Diseases Branch, Centers for Disease Control, Atlanta, Georgia 303334
Received 17 September 2001/ Accepted 31 December 2001
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Design of primer pairs amplifying O157 XbaI sites. Genomic DNAs from O157 strains 86-24 and EDL933 were initially fragmented using Sau3AI (strain 86-24) or NlaIII (strain EDL933), followed by self-ligation (Fig. 1). The circularized DNA was digested with XbaI to linearize only fragments containing an internal XbaI site. These fragments were cloned into pBluescribe (Stratagene, La Jolla, Calif.) and sequenced, and the 22 distinct insert sequences were used to design primer pairs (prefixed IK) flanking different XbaI restriction sites in these two reference strains. Direct examination of the O157 strain EDL933 genome sequence revealed an additional 18 XbaI sites that had not been recovered as described above, and chromosomal sequences around these sites were used to design an additional 18 primer pairs with the prefix IKB, yielding a total of 40 primer pairs for the study.
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FIG. 1. Protocol for the design of primer pairs. Genomic DNA fragments derived from O157 strains 86-24 and EDL933, containing an XbaI restriction site, were selectively cloned into pBluescribe. DNA was initially fragmented using Sau3AI (strain 86-24) or NlaIII (strain EDL933) and self-ligated. The circularized DNA was then digested with XbaI to linearize only fragments containing an internal XbaI site. Cloning of these fragments resulted in plasmids of various sizes that were prefixed pIK. The insert sequences were determined and used to design primer pairs, shown as divergent shaded arrows, which flank XbaI restriction sites in the bacterial genome. MCS, multiple cloning site.
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Evaluation of amplicons. Amplicons obtained by PCR were purified using the Qiaquick PCR purification kit and digested with XbaI to confirm the presence of an XbaI site within the amplicon. Undigested and digested DNA fragments were resolved on a 4% agarose gel prepared with a combination of 3% Nusieve GTG agarose (FMC BioProducts, Rockland, Maine) and 1% agarose (Shelton Scientific Inc., Shelton, Conn.) and stained with ethidium bromide. Sequencing of purified amplicons was done at the DNA Sequencing Core Facility, Department of Molecular Biology, Massachusetts General Hospital.
Southern blotting. DNA was fractionated by agarose gel electrophoresis, transferred to Hybond-N+ membranes (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Inc., Piscataway, N.J.), UV cross-linked to the membrane using a Stratalinker (Stratagene), and hybridized with the appropriate probe, labeled using the ECL direct nucleic acid labeling and detection system (Amersham Pharmacia). Hybridization at 42°C and posthybridization washing of the blots was done in accordance with the ECL kit manual. Autoradiographs were prepared by exposure of processed blots to Scientific Imaging X-OMAT AR film (Eastman Kodak Company, Rochester, N.Y.).
Data analysis. Statistical analysis was performed using the EpiInfo6 (CDC) software. The significance of differences in proportions was calculated with Fisher's exact test. DNA G+C content was determined using the Wisconsin Package version 10.0 (Genetics Computer Group, Madison, Wis).
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Analysis of 44 isolates of O157 for genomic differences. We then used these 40 primer pairs to analyze 44 O157 isolates, 2 isolates each from 22 different outbreaks, collected by the CDC. Thirty-two of the 40 primer pairs produced identical results in all 44 isolates, generating amplified products of identical sizes and containing an internal XbaI site. None of the 40 primer pairs generated an amplified product that lacked an XbaI site from any strain, which might have suggested a single-nucleotide polymorphism in the restriction site itself. Eight primer pairs produced polymorphic results across the isolate set, amplifying identically sized products with an XbaI site in some isolates but failing to amplify any product in others. In these cases, the presence or absence of an amplicon by PCR correlated with the presence or absence of a hybridizing fragment by Southern blot analysis, using the control PCR amplicon to probe digested genomic DNA (not shown). A single exception was observed with one amplicon (IK8) as a probe. This fragment hybridized to genomic DNA from all strains by Southern blotting, irrespective of the PCR results. Further evaluation revealed partial overlap of this amplicon with the IS629 tnp gene, which is widely distributed over the O157 genome (see below).
The DNA sequences amplified by the 40 primer pairs were analyzed using the GenBank database (BLAST search program; National Center for Biotechnology Information) and the O157 strain EDL933 genome sequence database (University of Wisconsin [http://www.genome.wisc.edu]). Of the 40 O157 XbaI-containing genome sequences amplified by the primer pairs, 18 were homologous to E. coli strain K-12 genome sequences (referred to as backbone sequences) (15) and 22 were in regions of the O157 chromosome not shared with K-12 (referred to as O islands) (15). All 8 of the polymorphic regions (present in some but not in other O157 isolates) were localized to O islands, while only 14 of the 32 regions conserved across all isolates tested were in O islands (P < 0.01). This difference suggests that the major genomic differences between O157 strains occur in these O island sequences.
Molecular analysis of genomic differences between strains. We analyzed three of the eight polymorphic regions in more detail to gain insight into the mechanisms underlying strain differences. Additional primers were designed from either EDL933 or 86-24 genomic sequences to amplify and sequence regions upstream or downstream from or across the polymorphic regions being evaluated. Our analysis confirmed that all three regions examined, defined by primer pairs IK8A and -B, IKB3A and -B, and IK118A and -B, were polymorphic in different O157 isolates because of discrete insertions or deletions in the genome that contained XbaI sites rather than because of single-nucleotide polymorphisms in the XbaI sites themselves.
(i) Polymorphism attributable to an insertion in the virulence plasmid. Polymorphism between isolates for the XbaI-containing fragment amplified by IK8A and -B, for example, was a consequence of a small insertion in the virulence plasmid. Using the primer pair IK8A and -B, an amplicon referred to as IK8 was obtained from O157 strain 86-24 but not from strain EDL933. This amplicon was mapped to the virulence plasmid pO157 in strain 86-24. The IK8 sequence extended from a region of unknown function into a transposase gene (IS629 tnp) on the plasmid (Fig. 2a). The region of unknown function occurred as a 635-bp insertion in the DNA between the resolvase (redF) and IS629 tnp genes in strain 86-24 compared to the sequence of the same region in pO157 from O157 strain EDL933 (Fig. 2a; GenBank accession no. AF074613) (3). The insertion in strain 86-24 contains an XbaI site and is identical to a similarly situated insertion in the virulence plasmid of the O157 strain isolated from the outbreak in Sakai, Japan (GenBank accession no. AB011549) (11).
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FIG. 2. XbaI restriction site polymorphism in O157 strains attributable to an insertion in the virulence plasmid. (a) Comparison of pO157 DNAs from strain EDL933 (933); isolates G5320, G5327, G5303, and G5323; and strain 86-24. The arrows indicate the directions of transcription of the designated genes. Identical regions are shown as solid, and the inserts that differ among the strains are shown as open. The insertions in isolates G5303 and G5323 are identical but differ from that in strain 86-24. The insertion in strain 86-24 contains an XbaI site. Fragment IK8 (shaded), amplified by primer pair IK8A and -B, maps to a 635-bp insertion in an intergenic region in pO157 DNA from strain 86-24. The insertions in isolates G5303 and G5323 occur at positions in the intergenic region identical to that in strain 86-24. (b) Original primers (shown in boldface) and additional primers used for further analysis of the polymorphisms between strains. The primers are in direct alignment with the regions in pO157 DNA from strain 86-24 used to design them. (c) Agarose gel electrophoresis pattern of amplicons derived using these primer pairs. The results confirm the polymorphisms between strains 86-24 and EDL933 diagrammed in panel a. M, molecular size marker (100-bp DNA ladder; New England Biolabs, Inc., Beverly, Mass.); +, presence of amplicon; -, absence of amplicon.
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The same primer pairs were used to analyze additional isolates of O157 (G5320, G5327, G5303, and G5323), chosen randomly from the CDC isolates that did not yield an amplicon with primer pair IK8A and -B. Amplicons derived from isolates G5320 and G5327, using primer pair IK8C and -F, were the same size as that from strain EDL933 (613 bp), indicating the absence of an insertion (Fig. 2a). Amplicons from isolates G5303 and G5323 using these primers were 1.3 kbp in size, but these amplicons did not contain an internal XbaI site (Fig. 2a). Failure to obtain amplicons from isolates G5303 and G5323 with primer pairs IK8A and -B and IK8G and -H showed that isolates G5303 and G5323 contained an insertion different from that in 86-24. The sequences flanking the point of insertion were, however, identical for all isolates tested, including 86-24, G5303, and G5323 (Fig. 2a). BLAST search analysis revealed that the insert in isolates G5303 and G5323 had 99% homology to three open reading frames (ORFs), L0013, L0014, and L0015, in the locus for enterocyte effacement pathogenicity island of O157 strain EDL933 (14). These three ORFs comprise IS Ec8 in strain EDL933, an insertion element similar to IS Rm14 present in Rhizobium and Agrobacterium plasmids (19); however, the homologous insert in isolates G5303 and G5323 contained only part of the L0015 ORF and not the complete insertion sequence element. The G+C content for the sequences shared among all isolates (Fig. 2a) was 51%, while that for the inserted sequence in strain 86-24 was 33% and that for the inserted sequence in strains G5303 and G5323 was 55%. The lower G+C content of the insert in strain 86-24 suggests it is possibly of heterologous origin (1, 2). These observations suggested that polymorphisms between different strains of O157 can reflect the acquisition or loss of discrete segments of DNA in the genome, at least some of which may be of heterologous origin.
(ii) Polymorphism attributable to a substitution-insertion in a lysogenic bacteriophage. Similar analysis of the XbaI-containing fragment amplified by IKB3A and -B linked the polymorphism in this region to a substitution-insertion in a lysogenic bacteriophage. Using the primer pair IKB3A and -B, an amplicon was obtained from O157 strain EDL933 but not from strain 86-24. This amplicon, referred to as IKB3, was mapped to the lysogenic bacteriophage 933W in strain EDL933 (GenBank accession no. AF125520) (16). The IKB3 sequence overlapped a 2,091-bp insertion, containing an internal XbaI site, which was present between the antiterminator protein (N) and repressor protein (cI) genes in phage 933W (Fig. 3a). This insertion replaced a 1,439-bp sequence, located at exactly the same site on a similar bacteriophage in O157 strain 86-24 but which lacked an XbaI site (Fig. 3a). Four additional isolates, G5290, G5325, G5296, and G5301, chosen randomly from the CDC isolates that did not yield an amplicon with primer pair IKB3A and -B, were analyzed using a primer pair, IKB3E and -J, that would amplify the entire length of this substitution-insertion (Fig. 3a). No amplicons were obtained from isolates G5325, G5296, and G5301, indicating that this region in these isolates is even more divergent than the region in 86-24 is from the region in EDL933. This was confirmed by additional PCRs using primer pairs designed to amplify various segments of the region between IKB3E and IKB3J, which also failed to yield amplicons from the three isolates. In contrast, the primer pair IKB3E and -J yielded an amplicon from isolate G5290 that was identical in size to that from strain 86-24 and lacked an XbaI site. Thus, this region has at least three variants in the O157 population studied.
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FIG. 3. Diagrammatic representation of other XbaI restriction site polymorphisms identified in O157 strains. (a) Polymorphism attributable to a substitution-insertion in a lysogenic bacteriophage. Lysogenic phage DNAs from O157 strain 86-24 and strain EDL933 are compared. Identical regions are shown as solid, and regions that differ between the two strains are shown as open. Strain EDL933 contains a 2,091-bp substitution-insertion, containing an XbaI restriction site, between the N and cI genes in place of a 1,439-bp fragment without an XbaI site at an identical position in strain 86-24. Fragment IKB3 (shaded), amplified by the primer pair IKB3A and -B, maps to the substituted region within phage 933W from strain EDL933. The sequences flanking the substitution-insertion are identical between the two strains. Original primers (shown in boldface) and additional primers used for further analysis of this polymorphism between the strains are depicted. The primers are in direct alignment with the regions in phage 933W used to design them. (b) Polymorphism attributable to a chromosomal deletion. Chromosomal DNA segments from O157 isolates G5295 and G5296 and strain EDL933 are compared. Identical regions are shown as solid, and regions that differ between the strains are shown as open. Fragment IK118 (shaded), amplified by primer pair IK118A and -B, maps to a chromosomal region at an O island-backbone junction in strain EDL933 and contains an XbaI restriction site in the O island sequence. Isolates G5295 and G5296 have a deletion in this region, resulting in the loss of the sequence containing the XbaI restriction site. Original primers (shown in boldface) and additional primers used for further analysis of this polymorphism between the strains are depicted. The primers are in direct alignment with the regions in the DNA from strain EDL933 used to design them.
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TABLE 1. Description of regions polymorphic among E. coli O157:H7 isolates and associated with O islands in the strain EDL933 genome
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In this study, we observed that the presence or absence of polymorphic XbaI sites in the genomes of O157 strains that differed by PFGE reflected the presence or absence of discrete XbaI-containing segments of DNA in the individual genomes rather than point mutations in the XbaI sites themselves. The inserted sequences containing the polymorphic XbaI sites were often small and usually neither encoded a functional ORF nor disrupted a preexisting ORF. One exception was the chromosomal deletion observed in isolates G5295 and G5296, which resulted in the loss of 732 bp in the 3' end of ypjA. However, this deletion apparently did not affect either the viability or pathogenicity of these isolates, as they were recovered from human infections. The inserted sequences analyzed did not resemble known, intact insertion sequences, transposons, or bacteriophages. However, several of the inserted sequences were found within O islands that contained nearby cryptic prophage genes, suggesting that phage-mediated events may underlie their acquisition or loss. Sequences that characterize mutational hot spots or other composition variations (20) were not observed in the sequences flanking the insertion points, although each of a set of insertions occurred at exactly the same nucleotide position between strains. The 44 O157 isolates could be differentiated solely by the presence or absence of the eight regions of DNA containing the polymorphic XbaI sites. This method of classifying O157 strains should, in principle, be similar to strain-typing methods that employ PFGE analysis of XbaI-digested genomic DNA.
I.T.K. is the recipient of a training grant from the National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (T32 AI07061). P.S.E. was supported by the Centers for Disease Control/APHL Emerging Infectious Diseases Fellowship Program.
Present address: Institute of Human Virology, Baltimore, MD 21201. ![]()
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