Mycobacterium ulcerans (MU), an emerging human pathogen harbored by aquatic insects, is the causative agent of Buruli ulcer, a devastating skin disease rife throughout Central and West Africa. Mycolactone, an unusual macrolide with cytotoxic and immunosuppressive properties, is responsible for the massive s.c. tissue destruction seen in Buruli ulcer. Here, we show that MU contains a 174-kb plasmid, pMUM001, bearing a cluster of genes encoding giant polyketide synthases (PKSs), and polyketide-modifying enzymes, and demonstrate that these are necessary and sufficient for mycolactone synthesis. This is a previously uncharacterized example of plasmid-mediated virulence in a Mycobacterium, and the emergence of MU as a pathogen most likely reflects the acquisition of pMUM001 by horizontal transfer. The 12-membered core of mycolactone is produced by two giant, modular PKSs, MLSA1 (1.8 MDa) and MLSA2 (0.26 MDa), whereas its side chain is synthesized by MLSB (1.2 MDa), a third modular PKS highly related to MLSA1. There is an extreme level of sequence identity within the different domains of the MLS cluster (>97% amino acid identity), so much so that the 16 ketosynthase domains seem functionally identical. This is a finding of significant consequence for our understanding of polyketide biochemistry. Such detailed knowledge of mycolactone will further the investigation of its mode of action and the development of urgently needed therapeutic strategies to combat Buruli ulcer.A single Buruli ulcer, which can cover Ͼ15% of a person's skin surface, contains huge numbers of extracellular bacteria. Despite their abundance and extensive tissue damage, there is a remarkable absence of an acute inflammatory response to the bacteria, and the lesions are often painless (1). This unique pathology is attributed to mycolactone, a macrolide toxin consisting of a polyketide side chain attached to a 12-membered core that seems to have cytotoxic, analgesic, and immunosuppressive activities. Its mode of action is unclear, but, in a guinea pig model of the disease, purified mycolactone injected s.c. reproduces the natural pathology, and mycolactone negative variants are avirulent, implying a key role for the toxin in pathogenesis (2).Mycobacterium ulcerans (MU) and Mycobacterium marinum (MM) share over 98% DNA sequence identity, they occupy aquatic environments, and both cause cutaneous infections (3). However, MM produces a granulomatous intracellular lesion, typical for pathogenic mycobacteria and totally distinct from Buruli ulcer in which MU are mainly found extracellularly. The fact that MM does not produce mycolactone suggested that it might be possible to identify genes for mycolactone synthesis by performing genomic subtraction experiments between MU and MM. Fragments of MU-specific polyketide synthase (PKS) genes were identified from these experiments (4). The subsequent investigation of these sequences led to the discovery of the MU virulence plasmid pMUM001 and the extraordinary PKS locus it encodes. Plasmid Sequence Determination....
SummaryMycobacterium ulcerans produces an extracellular cutaneous infection (Buruli ulcer) characterized by immunosuppression. This is in stark contrast to all other pathogenic Mycobacteria species that cause intracellular, granulomatous infections. The unique mycobacterial pathology of M. ulcerans infection is attributed to a plasmid-encoded immunomodulatory macrolide toxin, mycolactone. In this article we explore the role of mycolactone in the virulence of M. ulcerans using mycolactone and genetically defined mycolactone negative mutants. In a guinea pig infection model wild-type (WT) M. ulcerans produces an extracellular infection whereas mycolactone negative mutants produce an intracellular inflammatory infection similar to that of Mycobacterium marinum . Although mycolactone negative mutants are avirulent, they persist for at least 6 weeks. Chemical complementation of M. ulcerans mutants with mycolactone restores WT M. ulcerans pathology. Mycolactone negative mutants are capable of growth within macrophages in vitro whereas macrophages are killed by WT M. ulcerans . The ability of mycolactone to caused delayed cell death via apoptosis has been reported. However, mycolactone also causes cell death via necrosis. In vitro mycolactone has antiphagocytic properties. Neither WT M. ulcerans nor mycolactone negative strains are strong neutrophil attractants. These results suggest that mycolactone is largely responsible for the unique pathology produced by M. ulcerans .
Traditionally, vaccines directly target a pathogen or microbial toxin. Lyme disease, caused by Borrelia burgdorferi, is a tick-borne illness for which a human vaccine is not currently available. B. burgdorferi binds a tick salivary protein, Salp15, during transmission from the vector, and this interaction facilitates infection of mice. We now show that Salp15-antiserum significantly protected mice from B. burgdorferi infection. Salp15-antiserum also markedly enhanced the protective capacity of antibodies against B. burgdorferi antigens, such as OspA or OspC. Mice actively immunized with Salp15 were also significantly protected from tick-borne Borrelia. In vitro assays showed that Salp15-antiserum increased the clearance of Salp15-coated B. burgdorferi by phagocytes, suggesting a mechanism of action. Vaccination with a vector molecule that a microbe requires for infection of the mammalian host suggests a new strategy for the prevention of Lyme disease, and this paradigm may be applicable to numerous arthropod-borne pathogens of medical importance.
Mycobacterium ulcerans and Mycobacterium marinum are closely related pathogens which share an aquatic environment. The pathogenesis of these organisms in humans is limited by their inability to grow above 35°C. M. marinum causes systemic disease in fish but produces localized skin infections in humans. M. ulcerans causes Buruli ulcer, a severe human skin lesion. At the molecular level, M. ulcerans is distinguished from M. marinum by the presence of a virulence plasmid which encodes a macrolide toxin, mycolactone, as well as by hundreds of insertion sequences, particularly IS2404. There has been a global increase in reports of fish mycobacteriosis. An unusual clade of M. marinum has been reported from fish in the Red and Mediterranean Seas and a new mycobacterial species, Mycobacterium pseudoshottsii, has been cultured from fish in the Chesapeake Bay, United States. We have discovered that both groups of fish pathogens produce a unique mycolactone toxin, mycolactone F. Mycolactone F is the smallest mycolactone (molecular weight, 700) yet identified. The core lactone structure of mycolactone F is identical to that of M. ulcerans mycolactones, but a unique side chain structure is present. Mycolactone F produces apoptosis and necrosis on cultured cells but is less potent than M. ulcerans mycolactones. Both groups of fish pathogens contain IS2404. In contrast to M. ulcerans and conventional M. marinum, mycolactone F-producing mycobacteria are incapable of growth at above 30°C. This fact is likely to limit their virulence for humans. However, such isolates may provide a reservoir for horizontal transfer of the mycolactone plasmid in aquatic environments.Mycobacterium marinum is a globally distributed pathogen of marine and freshwater fish which also causes skin infections in humans (7, 9). M. marinum is phenotypically distinguished from other mycobacteria by its low optimal growth temperature, light-induced carotenoid production, and relatively rapid growth rate compared to other slow-growing Mycobacterium species. There is considerable heterogeneity among M. marinum isolates, and several subgroups have been described (28,(33)(34)(35).Mycobacteriosis was first diagnosed in fish from the Red Sea in 1990 (5). The infection was initially found in cultured sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax) in Eilat and has since been found in over 20 different fish species and a hawksbill sea turtle. The Red Sea isolates differed phenotypically from other M. marinum strains by being scotochromogenic (having constitutive pigment production). Whereas most M. marinum strains form colonies on mycobacterial media within 8 days, initial growth was not obtained from these isolates for at least 2 weeks. Similar isolates have also been found in the Mediterranean Sea in Greece and Italy. Molecular characterization of the Israeli isolates from fish confirmed their identity as M. marinum, but analysis of the 16S rRNA gene showed that the isolates formed clades within the species (33, 34). Molecular comparison of the fish isolates with human isolates of...
The pathogenicity of Mycobacterium ulcerans, the agent of Buruli ulcer, depends on the cytotoxic exotoxin mycolactone. Little is known about the immune response to this pathogen. Following the demonstration of an intracellular growth phase in the life cycle of M. ulcerans, we investigated the production of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) induced by intramacrophage bacilli of diverse toxigenesis/virulence, as well as the biological relevance of TNF during M. ulcerans experimental infections. Our data show that murine bone marrow-derived macrophages infected with mycolactone-negative strains of M. ulcerans (nonvirulent) produce high amounts of TNF, while macrophages infected with mycolactone-positive strains of intermediate or high virulence produce intermediate or low amounts of TNF, respectively. These results are in accordance with the finding that TNF receptor P55-deficient (TNF-P55 KO) mice are not more susceptible than wild-type mice to infection by the highly virulent strains but are more susceptible to nonvirulent and intermediately virulent strains, demonstrating that TNF is required to control the proliferation of these strains in animals experimentally infected by M. ulcerans. We also show that mycolactone produced by intramacrophage M. ulcerans bacilli inhibits, in a dose-dependent manner, but does not abrogate, the production of macrophage inflammatory protein 2, which is consistent with the persistent inflammatory responses observed in experimentally infected mice.
Borrelia burgdorferi, the causative agent of Lyme disease, is transmitted to humans by bite of Ixodes scapularis ticks. The mechanisms by which the bacterium is transmitted from vector to host are poorly understood. In this study, we show that the F(ab)2 fragments of BBE31, a B.burgdorferi outer-surface lipoprotein, interfere with the migration of the spirochete from tick gut into the hemolymph during tick feeding. The decreased hemolymph infection results in lower salivary glands infection, and consequently attenuates mouse infection by tick-transmitted B. burgdorferi. Using a yeast surface display approach, a tick gut protein named TRE31 was identified to interact with BBE31. Silencing tre31 also decreased the B. burgdorferi burden in the tick hemolymph. Delineating the specific spirochete and arthropod ligands required for B. burgdorferi movement in the tick may lead to new strategies to interrupt the life cycle of the Lyme disease agent.
[structure: see text] By total synthesis, mycolactone C has been established as an approximately 1:1 mixture of Z-Delta4'5'- and E-Delta4'5'-geometric isomers of C12'-deoxymycolactones A and B.
BackgroundBuruli ulcer, caused by Mycobacterium ulcerans, is a localized skin lesion that can progress to extensive ulceration and necrosis if left untreated. Unpublished studies of hydrated clays for therapeutic, topical treatment of Buruli ulcer suggest that specific clay mineral products may have beneficial effects on wound healing. In this study, we evaluated the in vitro antibacterial activity of a panel of clay mixtures and their derivative leachates against M. ulcerans and assessed the in vivo efficacy of topically-applied, hydrated clays on Buruli ulcer progression in mice infected with M. ulcerans. Methods M. ulcerans 1615 was incubated with 10 % suspensions of CB07, CB08, CB09, CB10, and BY07 clay mixtures, and survival was determined over 28 days. For animal experiments, we examined the effect of topical hydrated clay therapy on Buruli ulcer progression in vivo in mouse tails subcutaneously infected with M. ulcerans 1615. ResultsThe CB07, CB08, and CB09 clays exhibited bactericidal activity against M. ulcerans after 7, 14, 21, and 28 days of incubation. In contrast, clay leachates exhibited inhibitory, bacteriostatic effects on M. ulcerans growth in vitro. After establishing an ulcerative M. ulcerans infection for three months, ulcerated regions of the tails were treated once daily (five consecutive days per week) for 22 days with hydrated CB09 clay poultices. Mice in the clay treatment group exhibited healing as assessed by gross morphological changes and a reduction in M. ulcerans present in the wounds.ConclusionsThese data reveal that specific clays exhibit in vitro bactericidal activity against M. ulcerans and that hydrated clay poultices may offer a complementary and integrative strategy for topically treating Buruli ulcer disease.
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