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Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology Efficient Discrimination within a Corynebacterium diphtheriae Epidemic Clonal Group by a Novel Macroarray-Based Method Laboratory of Molecular Microbiology, St. Petersburg Pasteur Institute, St. Petersburg, Russia *Corresponding author. Mailing address: Pasteur Institute, 14, Mira St., St. Petersburg 197101, Russia. Phone: 7 812 233 21 49. Fax: 7 812 232 92 17. E-mail for Igor Mokrousov: imokrousov/at/mail.ru. *Corresponding author. Mailing address: Pasteur Institute, 14, Mira St., St. Petersburg 197101, Russia. Phone: 7 812 233 21 49. Fax: 7 812 232 92 17. E-mail for Olga Narvskaya: onarvskaya/at/yahoo.com. Received August 26, 2004; Revised November 5, 2004; Accepted November 30, 2004. This article has been corrected. See J Clin Microbiol. 2005 July; 43(7): 3590. This article has been cited by other articles in PMC.Abstract A large diphtheria epidemic in the 1990s in Russia and neighboring countries was caused by a clonal group of closely related Corynebacterium diphtheriae strains (ribotypes Sankt-Peterburg and Rossija). In the recently published complete genome sequence of C. diphtheriae strain NCTC13129, representative of the epidemic clone (A. M. Cerdeño-Tarraga et al., Nucleic Acids Res. 31:6516-6523, 2003), we identified in silico two direct repeat (DR) loci 39 kb downstream and 180 kb upstream of the oriC region, consisting of minisatellite (27- to 36-bp) alternating DRs and variable spacers. We designated these loci DRA and DRB, respectively. A reverse-hybridization macroarray-based method has been developed to study polymorphism (the presence or absence of 21 different spacers) in the larger DRB locus. We name it spoligotyping (spacer oligonucleotide typing), analogously to a similar method of Mycobacterium tuberculosis genotyping. The method was evaluated with 154 clinical strains of the C. diphtheriae epidemic clone from the St. Petersburg area in Russia from 1997 to 2002. By comparison with the international ribotype database (Institut Pasteur, Paris, France), these strains were previously identified as belonging to ribotypes Sankt-Peterburg (n = 79) and Rossija (n = 75). The 154 strains were subdivided into 34 spoligotypes: 14 unique strains and 20 types shared by 2 to 46 strains; the Hunter Gaston discriminatory index (HGDI) was 0.85. DRB locus-based spoligotyping allows fast and efficient discrimination within the C. diphtheriae epidemic clonal group and is applicable to both epidemiological investigations and phylogenetic reconstruction. The results are easy to interpret and can be presented and stored in a user-friendly digital database (Excel file), allowing rapid type determination of new strains. The diphtheria epidemic in Russia and neighboring countries in the 1990s (140,000 cases, 4,000 deaths in 1991 to 1996 [39]) stimulated research activities on Corynebacterium diphtheriae, a causative agent of the disease. A number of the typing methods available at that time (multilocus enzyme electrophoresis [MLE], pulsed-field gel electrophoresis [PFGE], ribotyping, and randomly amplified polymorphic DNA [RAPD] analysis) and newer methods (amplified fragment length polymorphism analysis) were applied for interstrain differentiation of the pathogen (6, 7, 8, 20, 22, 23, 28, 29, 33, 36, 40). These methods allowed the identification of a clonal group of closely related strains responsible for the epidemic in Russia and all other countries of the former Soviet Union and to trace strains exported into other countries (6, 22, 23, 32, 33). These strains were indistinguishable by PFGE, RAPD analysis, and amplified fragment length polymorphism analysis and very similar by ribotyping (there were two principal profiles, “Rossija” and “Sankt-Peterburg,” which differed by one band [6, 14, 33]). Minor rare variants were identified by RAPD and ribotyping techniques (22), and a total of 27 types similar by >80% were identified by MLE typing of all strains of this clonal group studied to date (32, 33). However, MLE, PFGE, and ribotyping are time-consuming and rather cumbersome methods, while RAPD analysis lacks interlaboratory reproducibility and hence exchangeability of results. To identify and rapidly monitor subtle changes in the genome structure at an infraclonal level during and between epidemics, fast, simple, portable, and discriminatory molecular typing methods of C. diphtheriae are still needed. Repetitive genome sequences present important sources of intraspecies variation. A new family of such loci (clustered, regularly interspaced, short palindromic repeats [CRISPR]) has recently been identified by in silico analysis of many bacterial species (19). This family is characterized by direct repeats (DR) varying in size from 21 to 37 bp, interspaced by similarly sized nonrepetitive sequences (variable spacers). DR and adjacent variable spacers form direct variant repeats (DVR) (20). The DNA reverse-hybridization method was developed to study variation in the Mycobacterium tuberculosis DR locus (the presence or absence of 43 different spacers) by using the macroarray format; this method was named “spoligotyping” (spacer oligonucleotide typing [20]) and has been widely used for epidemiological and phylogenetic purposes (12, 20, 35). In 2003, a complete genome sequence of the C. diphtheriae epidemic strain of biotype gravis ribotype Sankt-Peterburg was published (4). This publication made possible a more thorough, precise, and comprehensive search of candidate polymorphic loci for the development of new typing methods for this pathogen. In the present study, we identified in silico a large DR region in the genome of C. diphtheriae and developed a reverse-hybridization macroarray-based method to study its polymorphism. Using this method, we evaluated clinical strains of the C. diphtheriae epidemic clone isolated in 1997 to 2002 in the St. Petersburg area in Russia. MATERIALS AND METHODS Bacterial strains. C. diphtheriae strains were recovered from diphtheria patients and carriers in the St. Petersburg area in Russia, 1997 to 2002; they were found to be unlinked by standard epidemiological investigation. Strain identification, biotyping, and toxigenicity determination were performed by standard microbiologic methods (9, 25). DNA was extracted as described previously (34). Ribotyping. Ribotyping was done as described previously (34). Briefly, bacterial DNA was digested with BstEII, vacuum transferred onto positively charged nylon membranes (Hybond N+; Amersham Biosciences, Buckinghamshire, United Kingdom) and hybridized with a digoxigenin-labeled OligoMix5 (34) rRNA gene-derived hybridization probe. The hybridization profiles were visualized as banding patterns on a membrane with an alkaline phosphatase (Roche Applied Science)-catalyzed colorimetric reaction (Fig. (Fig.1).1
Identification of the direct repeat loci. A genome search for repeated sequences in the complete genome sequence of C. diphtheriae strain NCTC13129 (GenBank accession number NC_002935) was done using Tandem Repeats Finder software (2). Settings used were as follows: alignment parameters (match, mismatch, and indel), +2, −3, and −5, respectively; maximum period size, 100; minimum alignment score, 30. The obtained hits were manually searched for the presence of multiple, short (50- to 80-bp unit size), nonexact (homology, 50 to 80%) repeats. This process identified the location and structure of two regions that corresponded to the definition of the DR and CRISPR loci (19). They are situated downstream and upstream of the origin of replication (oriC), and we designated them the DRA and DRB loci, respectively. The DR sequences of these two loci are shown in Fig. Fig.2.2
The BLAST nucleotide search engine (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/BLAST) and GeneDoc software (www.psc.edu/biomed/genedoc) were used for sequence searching in GenBank and for sequence alignment, respectively. Reverse-hybridization spoligotyping assay. Analogously to the spoligotyping method used for M. tuberculosis analysis (20), we suggest using the same name for the developed macroarray assay for C. diphtheriae subtyping. The specific oligonucleotides (5′-amino labeled) were designed on the basis of the 22 different spacers sequences found in the DRB region in C. diphtheriae strain NCTC13129 (Fig. (Fig.3a)3a
All spacers of the DRB region were amplified with a single primer pair, the reverse primer being 5′-biotin labeled (Fig. (Fig.3a).3a
Different concentrations of the probes (10, 30, 80, and 150 pmol per slot) and hybridization and washing temperatures (58, 60, or 62°C) were initially tested on a set of 16 strains of the C. diphtheriae epidemic clone. These variations did not affect the specificity of hybridization signals (invariably these were either present or absent in particular profiles) (Fig. (Fig.3b).3b Statistical analysis. The Hunter Gaston discriminatory index (HGDI) was used to evaluate the discriminatory power of the typing method. The HGDI is a probability that two strains consecutively taken from a given population would be placed into different types by the typing method; the lower the index value, the less discriminative the typing method. The HGDI was calculated as described previously (18). Odds ratios were calculated using EpiCalc 2000 version 1.02 software (13) with a 95% confidence interval. RESULTS An in silico search of the complete genome sequence of the C. diphtheriae biotype gravis epidemic strain NCTC13129 (4) identified the location and structure of two DR (CRISPR) loci. For neither of the two repeat motifs (Fig. (Fig.2)2 Further detailed analysis of Russian strains of the C. diphtheriae epidemic clone was done on a larger and presumably more polymorphic DR locus (DRB) consisting of 27 spacers. Since some spacers are duplicated and spacer 22 produced permanently weak signal (see above), the final number of the unique different spacers targeted in the assay was 21. Design and optimization of the reverse hybridization macroarray-based spoligotyping method is given in Materials and Methods. A total of 512 C. diphtheriae strains from the St. Petersburg area in Russia isolated from 1997 to 2002 have been analyzed by ribotyping in our laboratory (5, 30; O. Narvskaya et al., unpublished data). Comparison with an international ribotype database established at the Institut Pasteur in Paris (14) identified 257 strains as belonging to the epidemic clone (ribotype Sankt-Peterburg, 142 strains, and ribotype Rossija, 115 strains) (Fig. (Fig.1).1 A comparison of genotyping and toxigenicity data showed that, in general, most strains were toxin positive (116 of 154). However, the distribution of the toxin-negative strains varies significantly among two ribotypes and different spoligotypes (Table 2): from only 11.4% of Sankt-Peterburg strains to 38.9% of Rossija strains. Furthermore, toxin-negative ribotype Rossija strains were found mainly within the ST4 type (50%) and ST4 lineage (related types ST4, ST5, ST6, and ST15, 52.1%), unlike other Rossija strains (14.8%). DISCUSSION The DR regions consisting of alternating minisatellite repeats and nonrepeats are intriguing loci in bacterial genomes. Their evolutionary history and, especially, biological function remain unclear. Although DR sequences are very dissimilar among different species, a recent in silico analysis identified such loci in many bacterial lineages (19). Previously, van Embden (38) hypothesized that such a locus in M. tuberculosis might have initially presented a region consisting of hundreds of short (36-bp) tandem repeats. Variable spacers emerged and accumulated further during evolution, and subsequent changes in the DR locus in M. tuberculosis have occurred and are still occurring via consecutive deletions of either single units or contiguous blocks, occasionally including insertion sequence-mediated disruption and recombination (1, 11, 27). Such a scenario reasonably excludes the possibility of a common ancestry for all DR in bacterial evolution and rather suggests their independent emergence in different species and hence a biological function, albeit obscure. The first hypothesis about the role that such loci may play—replicon partitioning—was made on the model of Haloferax, Archaea (26). Later, based on the analysis of the adjacent genes, Jansen et al. (19) proposed their putative role in DNA metabolism. Generally, the order of single DVR in the M. tuberculosis DR locus is strictly conserved (with a possibility of rare duplications [38]), and its changes (deletions of spacers) appear evolutionarily neutral. A large number of variable characters (i.e., particular spacers that may be present or absent in the locus) provide sufficient variation to differentiate clinical strains (12, 20, 38). The robustness of the spoligotyping (DR locus)-based M. tuberculosis phylogeny was confirmed by other independent molecular markers (35). To date, DR-based strain typing (spoligotyping) has been used only for M. tuberculosis (12, 20); in one instance, interstrain variation in a similar locus was shown for group A Streptococcus strains (17). Here, we identified a large DR locus in another important human pathogen, C. diphtheriae, and evaluated its variation for epidemiological subtyping of the C. diphtheriae clonal group that caused a severe epidemic in the 1990s in the former Soviet Union countries. Although only one, if any, DR locus per genome is usually found in different species (19), two such loci are present in the genome of C. diphtheriae. Equal spacer sizes within particular loci (32 to 33 bp in the DRB locus and 27 to 28 bp in the DRA locus) suggest that their extensions (the nucleotide accumulations between DRs) occurred at the same pace. Consequently, the longer the spacers are, the earlier their generation started, and hence the DRB locus might have had a longer history. Intriguingly, both loci are situated in the general vicinity of oriC, specifically, 39 kb downstream (DRA) and 180 kb upstream (DRB). The sequence alignment of the DRA and DRB sequences (Fig. (Fig.2)2 The target population of our study included toxigenic and nontoxigenic C. diphtheriae strains of the biotype gravis epidemic clone (ribotypes Sankt-Peterburg and Rossija). During the diphtheria epidemic from 1990 to 1996 these closely related toxigenic strains were isolated in high proportions (70 to 90%) of patients in all former Soviet Union countries, including Russia (6, 23, 30, 33), Belarus (37), Central Asian countries (32), Georgia (36), and Moldova (5); few strains were identified in other European countries as imported cases (32). Kombarova et al. (23) reported that ribotype Rossija was first identified in their laboratory in a strain isolated in 1987 in the Vladimir Province in central Russia, where the main source of infection was soldiers who had arrived from Soviet Central Asia. Further, a riboprofile very similar to those of the epidemic clone was identified in Pakistan in 1994 (14). On the other hand, strains of ribotypes Sankt-Peterburg and Rossija were identified in 15 to 22% (33) to 28% (23) of Russian C. diphtheriae strains before the epidemic (1985 to 1990) and are still circulating in this country (23, 30). It has been suggested that persistent foci of diphtheria in Russia could be a possible source of the epidemic strains since Russia was never totally free of reported cases of diphtheria (39). Reports of persistent endemic foci in the United States (24, 31) and Canada (24) suggest that the circulation of toxigenic strains of C. diphtheriae can occur for prolonged periods even in the absence of recognized clinical cases, at least in certain communities. Finally, we suggest that such permanent isolation of C. diphtheriae strains of ribotypes Sankt-Peterburg and Rossija in Russia reflects a stable endemicity of this clonal group within this geographic area. A hypothesis about the Central Asian origin of this clone and its importation to Russia by returning military units from Afghanistan between 1979 and 1990 (23) is intriguing but requires experimental confirmation by analysis of representative strain samples from diverse geographic locations, including possible source areas. The DRB locus polymorphism and spoligotype distribution within two ribotypes of the C. diphtheriae epidemic clone allow us to speculate about its evolutionary history. Genetically, these strains were described in many studies as homogeneous and indistinguishable by different DNA-based methods targeting different genome regions. Strikingly, although 34 types were identified in our study by the spoligotyping method, only one primordial and apparently ancestral type, ST1, was shared by strains of both ribotypes (Table 2). Other types, derived from ST1 by successive single- or multiple-deletion events, are confined to one ribotype, not to both (Table 2). This and the above findings taken together confirm the monophyletic origin of the epidemic clone and, at the same time, demonstrate the clear divergence between ribotypes Sankt-Peterburg and Rossija in the survey area. If we assume that the ST1 type is ancestral and that the evolution of the DRB locus is neutral and occurs mainly via successive deletions of either single spacers or contiguous blocks, then profiles with a single disruption (e.g., types ST2, ST3, and ST25) (Table 2) rank at the same evolutionary level and next to the ancestral type, ST1. We define them as one-step types (with ST1 being considered the zero type). Other types with two disruptions (e.g., ST19 and ST21) are defined as two-step types and have probably emerged more recently. Consequently, ribotype Sankt-Peterburg has 16 one-step types and 5 two-step types compared to the 8 one-step types and 4 two-step types of ribotype Rossija (Table 2). It is noteworthy that the sample sizes were almost the same for the two ribotypes in our study (79 versus 75). However, under DRB spoligotyping analysis, compared to ribotype Rossija, ribotype Sankt-Peterburg is characterized by a higher HGDI value, a larger number of types (allelic variants), and a larger number of “older” one-step types. Assuming that more diversity is generated due to a longer evolutionary history, the Sankt-Peterburg ribotype appears to be evolutionarily older than and ancestral to ribotype Rossija, which may have originated from one particular subpopulation (ancestral ST1 type) of presumably already heterogeneous ribotype Sankt-Peterburg strains, followed by subsequent independent evolution of the DRB locus in both ribotype lineages. Comparison with toxin production data reveals an additional line of divergence between ST4 cluster strains (ST4, ST5, ST6, and ST15) and all other spoligotypes. This ST4 cluster includes 48 of 75 Rossija strains and is marked with a significantly higher proportion of toxin-negative strains than other Rossija spoligotypes (52.1% versus 14.8%; 95% confidence interval, 6.25 [1.88 to 20.82]; P < 10−3) and Sankt-Peterburg spoligotypes (52.1% versus 11.4%; 95% confidence interval, 8.45 [3.45 to 20.71]; P < 10−6). This finding looks unexpected, since DR locus evolution is apparently neutral, unlike that of biologically meaningful toxin production. However, it has recently been shown that the DtxR protein not only regulates the expression of the diphtheria toxin but also binds in an iron-dependent way to operators of many genes scattered throughout the C. diphtheriae chromosome (3, 4). Therefore, we feel that further studies of both tox and dtxR genes and DRB locus-adjacent regions are needed to elucidate their possible functional and evolutionary links. To sum up, the developed reverse-hybridization macroarray-based method targeting the polymorphic DRB region in the genome of C. diphtheriae allows rapid and efficient discrimination of the closely related strains of the epidemic clone and is applicable for both epidemiological investigations and phylogenetic reconstruction. Technically, the method is fast, reproducible, and portable; it is not demanding, since consumables and equipment are relatively inexpensive even in low-income countries, and many strains may be analyzed at a time. Because of the inherently discrete unit composition of the DR locus, the spoligotyping results are easy to interpret and can be presented and stored in a straightforward and user-friendly digital format. The database may be maintained as an Excel file, allowing easy type determination of a new strain by automatic sorting. Acknowledgments We thank E. V. Timofeeva, E. V. Loseva, N. A. Avsyukevich, N. M. Abakumova, V. G. Zhavoronkov, L. A. Lipatova, T. E. Demakova, A. S. Kvetnaya, and D. Bicenko for providing clinical isolates and microbiological data. We acknowledge partial support from Institut Pasteur, Paris, France. REFERENCES 1. Beggs, M. L., K. D. Eisenach, and M. D. Cave. 2000. Mapping of IS6110 insertion sites in two epidemic strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. J. Clin. Microbiol. 38:2923-2928. [PubMed] 2. Benson, G. 1999. Tandem repeats finder: a program to analyze DNA sequences. Nucleic Acids Res. 27:573-580. [PubMed] 3. Canchaya, C., G. Fournous, and H. Brüssow. 2004. The impact of prophages on bacterial chromosomes. Mol. Microbiol. 53:9-18. [PubMed] 4. Cerdeño-Tarraga, A. M., A. Efstratiou, L. G. Dover, M. T. G. Holden, M. Pallen, S. D. Bentley, G. S. Besra, C. Churcher, K. D. James, A. De Zoysa, T. Chillingworth, A. Cronin, L. Dows, T. Feltwell, N. Hamlin, S. Holroyd, K. Jagels, S. Moule, M. A. Quail, E. Rabbinowitsch, K. M. Rutherford, N. R. Thomson, L. Unwin, S. Whitehead, B. G. Barrel, and J. Parkhill. 2003. 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