Abstract

BackgroundThe genus Ehrlichia consists of tick-borne obligatory intracellular bacteria that can cause deadly diseases of medical and agricultural importance. Ehrlichia sp. HF, isolated from Ixodes ovatus ticks in Japan [also referred to as I. ovatus Ehrlichia (IOE) agent], causes acute fatal infection in laboratory mice that resembles acute fatal human monocytic ehrlichiosis caused by Ehrlichia chaffeensis. As there is no small laboratory animal model to study fatal human ehrlichiosis, Ehrlichia sp. HF provides a needed disease model. However, the inability to culture Ehrlichia sp. HF and the lack of genomic information have been a barrier to advance this animal model. In addition, Ehrlichia sp. HF has several designations in the literature as it lacks a taxonomically recognized name.ResultsWe stably cultured Ehrlichia sp. HF in canine histiocytic leukemia DH82 cells from the HF strain-infected mice, and determined its complete genome sequence. Ehrlichia sp. HF has a single double-stranded circular chromosome of 1,148,904 bp, which encodes 866 proteins with a similar metabolic potential as E. chaffeensis. Ehrlichia sp. HF encodes homologs of all virulence factors identified in E. chaffeensis, including 23 paralogs of P28/OMP-1 family outer membrane proteins, type IV secretion system apparatus and effector proteins, two-component systems, ankyrin-repeat proteins, and tandem repeat proteins. Ehrlichia sp. HF is a novel species in the genus Ehrlichia, as demonstrated through whole genome comparisons with six representative Ehrlichia species, subspecies, and strains, using average nucleotide identity, digital DNA-DNA hybridization, and core genome alignment sequence identity.ConclusionsThe genome of Ehrlichia sp. HF encodes all known virulence factors found in E. chaffeensis, substantiating it as a model Ehrlichia species to study fatal human ehrlichiosis. Comparisons between Ehrlichia sp. HF and E. chaffeensis will enable identification of in vivo virulence factors that are related to host specificity, disease severity, and host inflammatory responses. We propose to name Ehrlichia sp. HF as Ehrlichia japonica sp. nov. (type strain HF), to denote the geographic region where this bacterium was initially isolated.

Highlights

  • The genus Ehrlichia consists of tick-borne obligatory intracellular bacteria that can cause deadly diseases of medical and agricultural importance

  • According to International Code of Nomenclature of Prokaryotes and International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology [46], and following the reorganization of genera in the family Anaplasmataceae based on molecular phylogenetic analysis [47], the genus Ehrlichia currently consists of six taxonomically classified species with validly published names, including E. chaffeensis, E. ewingii, E. canis, E. muris, E. ruminantium, and a recently culture-isolated E. minasensis that is closely related to E. canis (Table 1) [19, 37]

  • HF cultured in DH82 cells infects and kills mice at 7 – 10 days post intraperitoneal inoculation, similar to those inoculated with the infected mouse spleen homogenate, demonstrating that Ehrlichia sp

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Summary

Introduction

The genus Ehrlichia consists of tick-borne obligatory intracellular bacteria that can cause deadly diseases of medical and agricultural importance. According to International Code of Nomenclature of Prokaryotes and International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology [46], and following the reorganization of genera in the family Anaplasmataceae based on molecular phylogenetic analysis [47], the genus Ehrlichia currently consists of six taxonomically classified species with validly published names, including E. chaffeensis, E. ewingii, E. canis, E. muris, E. ruminantium, and a recently culture-isolated E. minasensis that is closely related to E. canis (Table 1) [19, 37]. Accidental transmission and infection of domestic animals and humans can cause potentially severe to fatal diseases, and four species (E. chaffeensis, E. ewingii, E. canis, and E. muris) are known to infect humans and cause emerging tick-borne zoonoses [11, 19,20,21, 34, 48, 49]. Regardless of the Ehrlichia species, clinical signs of human ehrlichiosis include fever, headache, myalgia, thrombocytopenia, leukopenia, and elevated serum liver enzyme levels [20, 21, 34, 48,49,50]

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