Abstract
The genus Brucella comprises various species of both veterinary and human medical importance. All species are genetically highly related to each other, sharing intra-species average nucleotide identities (ANI) of > 99%. Infections occur among various warm-blooded animal species, marine mammals, and humans. Until recently, amphibians had not been recognized as a host for Brucella. In this study, however, we show that novel Brucella species are distributed among exotic frogs worldwide. Comparative recA gene analysis of 36 frog isolates from various continents and different frog species revealed an unexpected high genetic diversity, not observed among classical Brucella species. In phylogenetic reconstructions the isolates consequently formed various clusters and grouped together with atypical more distantly related brucellae, like B. inopinata, strain BO2, and Australian isolates from rodents, some of which were isolated as human pathogens. Of one frog isolate (10RB9215) the genome sequence was determined. Comparative genome analysis of this isolate and the classical Brucella species revealed additional genetic material, absent from classical Brucella species but present in Ochrobactrum, the closest genetic neighbor of Brucella, and in other soil associated genera of the Alphaproteobacteria. The presence of gene clusters encoding for additional metabolic functions, flanked by tRNAs and mobile genetic elements, as well as by bacteriophages is suggestive for a different ecology compared to classical Brucella species. Furthermore it suggests that amphibian isolates may represent a link between free living soil saprophytes and the pathogenic Brucella with a preferred intracellular habitat. We therefore assume that brucellae from frogs have a reservoir in soil and, in contrast to classical brucellae, undergo extensive horizontal gene transfer.
Highlights
Brucellosis, caused by Brucella spp., is a zoonosis and a disease of both veterinary and public health significance worldwide
Human infections are mainly caused by classical Brucella species, in particular B. melitensis, which contributes to 98% of all human brucellosis cases
Thirty-six Brucella isolates collected from seven different exotic frog species were investigated by recA gene analysis to obtain a better understanding of their genetic diversity and their phylogenetic relationships to classical Brucella species infecting humans
Summary
Brucellosis, caused by Brucella spp., is a zoonosis and a disease of both veterinary and public health significance worldwide. The genus comprises several important highly pathogenic species and can be divided into the classical brucellae (B. melitensis, B. abortus, B. suis, B. canis, B. ovis, B. neotomae), brucellae infecting marine mammals (B. ceti and B. pinnipedialis), and the more recently identified species (B. microti, B. inopinata, B. papionis, and B. vulpis). Human infections are mainly caused by classical Brucella species, in particular B. melitensis, which contributes to 98% of all human brucellosis cases. Within the ‘atypical’ brucellae, only B. inopinata and the non-classified Brucella strain BO2 were isolated from human infections [1, 2]. Despite a pronounced natural host preference, Brucella species can infect various warmblooded animal species. Brucella ceti and B. pinnipedialis are known to infect marine mammals but human infections caused by these two species are very rare [3]. The natural hosts of B. inopinata and strain BO2 are still unknown
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