Abstract

We have assembled the first genome draft of Anaplasma platys, an obligate intracellular rickettsia, and the only known bacterial pathogen infecting canine platelets. A. platys is a not-yet-cultivated bacterium that causes infectious cyclic canine thrombocytopenia, a potentially fatal disease in dogs. Despite its global distribution and veterinary relevance, no genome sequence has been published so far for this pathogen. Here, we used a strategy based on metagenome assembly to generate a draft of the A. platys genome using the blood of an infected dog. The assembled draft is similar to other Anaplasma genomes in size, gene content, and synteny. Notable differences are the apparent absence of rbfA, a gene encoding a 30S ribosome-binding factor acting as a cold-shock protein, as well as two genes involved in biotin metabolism. We also observed differences associated with expanded gene families, including those encoding outer membrane proteins, a type IV secretion system, ankyrin repeat-containing proteins, and proteins with predicted intrinsically disordered regions. Several of these families have members highly divergent in sequence, likely to be associated with survival and interactions within the host and the vector. The sequence of the A. platys genome can benefit future studies regarding invasion, survival, and pathogenesis of Anaplasma species, while paving the way for the better design of treatment and prevention strategies against these neglected intracellular pathogens.

Highlights

  • Members of the genus Anaplasma are classified in the Anaplasmataceae family within the orderRickettsiales of class Alphaproteobacteria

  • A. platys infection was further confirmed by polymerase chain reaction (PCR)

  • The results showed a relatively lower percentage of completeness for all the the rickettsial genomes when compared to those of E. coli O157:H7 or N. menigitidis (Figure 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Members of the genus Anaplasma are classified in the Anaplasmataceae family within the orderRickettsiales of class Alphaproteobacteria. The family Anaplasmataceae encompasses several species of obligate intracellular bacterial pathogens of human and animal health significance, listed in the Anaplasma, Ehrlichia, Wolbachia, and Neorickettsia genera. They are small, pleomorphic, coccoid to ellipsoidal cells, 0.3–0.4 μm in diameter, found in cytoplasmic vacuoles of mammalian host cells as inclusion bodies (morulae). Relevant members of the Anaplasma genus include A. marginale, A. centrale, A. ovis, A. phagocytophilum, and A. platys. They are transmitted by multiple species of hematophagous ticks and, in the infected vertebrate hosts, they effectively colonize leukocytes or other bone marrow-derived cells, potentially leading to diverse clinical presentations collectively known as anaplasmosis

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