Abstract

Climate change brings new risks of emergence of especially dangerous diseases. The paper reports the possibility of assessing the pathogenic potential of bacteria as demonstrated by studying the allelic polymorphism of anthrax bacterium pathogenicity factor genes, which is a prerequisite for assessing the associated microbiological risks. The allelic polymorphism of the capBCADE operon (capB, capC, capA, capD, and capE genes) encoding the capsule biosynthesis proteins of Bacillus anthracis, and the acpA and acpB genes encoding the expression regulators of this operon have been studied for the first time. A number of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were described in the strains of the studied sample, including 5 SNPs in the capB gene, 3 in capC, 4 in capA, 14 in capD, 2 in capE, and 15 in acpB, as well as 7 SNPs and one insertion in the acpA gene. As a result, the sample has been divided into sequence types for each gene and 17 genotypes, which are combinations of the identified sequence types. In silico translation of the detected alleles of the studied genes revealed three isoforms of the CapB and CapA proteins, two isoforms of the CapC and CapE proteins, six isoforms of the CapD protein, five isoforms of the AcpA protein, and four isoforms in the AcpB protein. It has been demonstrated that the SNP in the 351A → G position of capC is a marker of A.Br.Aust94 group strains. Based on the results, A.Br.Vollum group strains were divided into two subgroups. The strains in the evolutionary lines B and C differed from the line A strains by the presence of an 853G → A SNP in the acpA gene. In addition, a previously unknown variable number tandem repeat (VNTR), has been found in the acpA gene and the possibility of using it for differentiating and genotyping of B. anthracis strains has been demonstrated.

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