Abstract

Moraxella catarrhalis is a human-adapted, opportunistic bacterial pathogen of the respiratory mucosa. Although asymptomatic colonization of the nasopharynx is common, M. catarrhalis can ascend into the middle ear, where it is a prevalent causative agent of otitis media in children, or enter the lower respiratory tract, where it is associated with acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in adults. Phase variation is the high frequency, random, reversible switching of gene expression that allows bacteria to adapt to different host microenvironments and evade host defences, and is most commonly mediated by simple DNA sequence repeats. Bioinformatic analysis of five closed M. catarrhalis genomes identified 17 unique simple DNA sequence repeat tracts that were variable between strains, indicating the potential to mediate phase variable expression of the associated genes. Assays designed to assess simple sequence repeat variation under conditions mimicking host infection demonstrated that phase variation of uspA1 (ubiquitous surface protein A1) from high to low expression occurs over 72 hours of biofilm passage, while phase variation of uspA2 (ubiquitous surface protein A2) to high expression variants occurs during repeated exposure to human serum, as measured by mRNA levels. We also identify and confirm the variable expression of two novel phase variable genes encoding a Type III DNA methyltransferase (modO), and a conserved hypothetical permease (MC25239_RS00020). These data reveal the repertoire of phase variable genes mediated by simple sequence repeats in M. catarrhalis and demonstrate that modulation of expression under conditions mimicking human infection is attributed to changes in simple sequence repeat length.

Highlights

  • Moraxella catarrhalis is a Gram negative, human-adapted, opportunistic bacterial pathogen of the respiratory tract

  • The dataset was further curated by review of repeat sequences to ensure tracts from different genomes were grouped under common designations

  • Repeat tracts were removed from the analysis if all five genomes contained the same number of repeats in the same relative position, as this indicated that the repeats are not phase variable

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Summary

Introduction

Moraxella catarrhalis is a Gram negative, human-adapted, opportunistic bacterial pathogen of the respiratory tract. COPD is the fourth most common cause of death worldwide [8] and repeated exacerbations due to bacterial infections lead to progressive loss of lung function and dramatically increase the risk of mortality [9]. The development of a vaccine against M. catarrhalis has been hindered by the lack of a suitable animal model, identification of correlates of protection, and identification of vaccine candidates that are immunogenic, conserved, and stably expressed [12]. It is this last feature that this study primarily addresses, as a number of respiratory pathogens possess a highly mutable genome, which contributes to their virulence and complicates selection of stably expressed vaccine candidates

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