Abstract

BackgroundSerovars of the human pathogen Chlamydia trachomatis occupy one of three specific tissue niches. Genomic analyses indicate that the serovars have a phylogeny congruent with their pathobiology and have an average substitution rate of less than one nucleotide per kilobase. In contrast, the gene that determines serovar specificity, ompA, has a phylogenetic association that is not congruent with tissue tropism and has a degree of nucleotide variability much higher than other genomic loci. The ompA gene encodes the major surface-exposed antigenic determinant, and the observed nucleotide diversity at the ompA locus is thought to be due to recombination and host immune selection pressure. The possible contribution of a localized increase in mutation rate, however, has not been investigated.ResultsNucleotide diversity and phylogenetic relationships of the five constant and four variable domains of the ompA gene, as well as several loci surrounding ompA, were examined for each serovar. The loci flanking the ompA gene demonstrated that nucleotide diversity increased monotonically as ompA is approached and that their gene trees are not congruent with either ompA or tissue tropism. The variable domains of the ompA gene had a very high level of non-synonymous change, which is expected as these regions encode the surface-exposed epitopes and are under positive selection. However, the synonymous changes are clustered in the variable regions compared to the constant domains; if hitchhiking were to account for the increase in synonymous changes, these substitutions should be more evenly distributed across the gene. Recombination also cannot entirely account for this increase as the phylogenetic relationships of the constant and variable domains are congruent with each other.ConclusionsThe high number of synonymous substitutions observed within the variable domains of ompA appears to be due to an increased mutation rate within this region of the genome, whereas the increase in nucleotide substitution rate and the lack of phylogenetic congruence in the regions flanking ompA are characteristic motifs of gene conversion. Together, the increased mutation rate in the ompA gene, in conjunction with gene conversion and positive selection, results in a high degree of variability that promotes host immune evasion.

Highlights

  • Serovars of the human pathogen Chlamydia trachomatis occupy one of three specific tissue niches

  • In order to establish if there are additional factors involved in the generation of ompA diversity, we examined the nucleotide and phylogenetic associations of the five constant and four variable domains of the ompA gene, as these regions are under different immune and functional constraints

  • These results demonstrate that the synonymous nucleotide diversity generated in the ompA gene cannot be explained by recombination and positive selection alone, and indicate that this region is prone to increased mutations compared to other regions in the genome

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Summary

Introduction

Serovars of the human pathogen Chlamydia trachomatis occupy one of three specific tissue niches. The gene that determines serovar specificity, ompA, has a phylogenetic association that is not congruent with tissue tropism and has a degree of nucleotide variability much higher than other genomic loci. In contrast to the low level of nucleotide variation observed in most of the genome, the ompA gene that encodes MOMP is characterized by a very high level of variability as nearly 30% of the coding sequence exhibits polymorphisms [11]. Phylogenetic characterization of the ompA gene exhibits a pattern of strongly supported groupings that differ markedly from the tissue tropism [11,14]: serovars A, C, H, I, J, K, and L3 comprise one group; F and G a second; D, E, and L1 a third; and B and L2 a fourth (see Figure 1A)

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