Abstract

Clinical persistence of Chlamydia trachomatis (Ct) sexually transmitted infections (STIs) is a major public health concern. In vitro persistence is known to develop through interferon gamma (IFN-γ) induction of indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO), which catabolizes tryptophan, an essential amino acid for Ct replication. The organism can recover from persistence by synthesizing tryptophan from indole, a substrate for the enzyme tryptophan synthase. The majority of Ct strains, except for reference strain B/TW-5/OT, contain an operon comprised of α and β subunits that encode TrpA and TrpB, respectively, and form a functional αββα tetramer. However, trpA mutations in ocular Ct strains, which are responsible for the blinding eye disease known as trachoma, abrogate tryptophan synthesis from indole. We examined serial urogenital samples from a woman who had recurrent Ct infections over 4 years despite antibiotic treatment. The Ct isolates from each infection episode were genome sequenced and analyzed for phenotypic, structural, and functional characteristics. All isolates contained identical mutations in trpA and developed aberrant bodies within intracellular inclusions, visualized by transmission electron microscopy, even when supplemented with indole following IFN-γ treatment. Each isolate displayed an altered αββα structure, could not synthesize tryptophan from indole, and had significantly lower trpBA expression but higher intracellular tryptophan levels compared with those of reference Ct strain F/IC-Cal3. Our data indicate that emergent mutations in the tryptophan operon, which were previously thought to be restricted only to ocular Ct strains, likely resulted in in vivo persistence in the described patient and represents a novel host-pathogen adaptive strategy for survival.IMPORTANCEChlamydia trachomatis (Ct) is the most common sexually transmitted bacterium with more than 131 million cases occurring annually worldwide. Ct infections are often asymptomatic, persisting for many years despite treatment. In vitro recovery from persistence occurs when indole is utilized by the organism's tryptophan synthase to synthesize tryptophan, an essential amino acid for replication. Ocular but not urogenital Ct strains contain mutations in the synthase that abrogate tryptophan synthesis. Here, we discovered that the genomes of serial isolates from a woman with recurrent, treated Ct STIs over many years were identical with a novel synthase mutation. This likely allowed long-term in vivo persistence where active infection resumed only when tryptophan became available. Our findings indicate an emerging adaptive host-pathogen evolutionary strategy for survival in the urogenital tract that will prompt the field to further explore chlamydial persistence, evaluate the genetics of mutant Ct strains and fitness within the host, and their implications for disease pathogenesis.

Highlights

  • Clinical persistence of Chlamydia trachomatis (Ct) sexually transmitted infections (STIs) is a major public health concern

  • SRA051574.1 [29]), suggesting persistent infection with the same strain. ompA, a standard gene used for Ct genotyping, differed by a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) from reference strain F/IC-Cal3, encoding a synonymous aa mutation. trpR and trpB sequences were identical to those of the reference strain (Fig. 1A and B); trpA sequences contained a deletion at nucleotide 758, compared with F/IC-Cal3, causing a nonsynonymous aa mutation, G253D, and elongation of TrpA by two aas (254N 255L) (Fig. 1C)

  • The low prevalence or lack of indole-producing bacteria in the conjunctiva [35, 36] may have contributed to this loss. Some indole producers such as Propionibacterium acnes and Escherichia coli have routinely been found in the microbiota of healthy conjunctiva [37]

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Summary

Introduction

Clinical persistence of Chlamydia trachomatis (Ct) sexually transmitted infections (STIs) is a major public health concern. We discovered that the genomes of serial isolates from a woman with recurrent, treated Ct STIs over many years were identical with a novel synthase mutation. This likely allowed long-term in vivo persistence where active infection resumed only when tryptophan became available. Transmitted Chlamydia trachomatis (Ct) infections are highly prevalent with estimates of more than 131 million global cases occurring annually [1] They represent a major public health concern due to increasing rates worldwide and severe complications of the female reproductive tract that include tubal factor infertility, ectopic pregnancy, and chronic pelvic pain [2,3,4]. This may be one explanation for the recent decrease in the clinical efficacy of azithromycin [18,19,20]

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