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Particular genomic and virulence traits associated with preterm infant-derived toxigenic Clostridium perfringens strains

Authors :
Raymond Kiu
Alexander G. Shaw
Kathleen Sim
Antia Acuna-Gonzalez
Christopher A. Price
Harley Bedwell
Sally A. Dreger
Wesley J. Fowler
Emma Cornwell
Derek Pickard
Gusztav Belteki
Jennifer Malsom
Sarah Phillips
Gregory R. Young
Zoe Schofield
Cristina Alcon-Giner
Janet E. Berrington
Christopher J. Stewart
Gordon Dougan
Paul Clarke
Gillian Douce
Stephen D. Robinson
J. Simon Kroll
Lindsay J. Hall
Kiu, Raymond [0000-0002-4483-1215]
Acuna-Gonzalez, Antia [0000-0002-8062-925X]
Price, Christopher A [0000-0003-3161-1704]
Dreger, Sally A [0000-0001-7104-6776]
Young, Gregory R [0000-0001-5342-1421]
Stewart, Christopher J [0000-0002-6033-338X]
Clarke, Paul [0000-0001-6203-7632]
Douce, Gillian [0000-0002-6654-7346]
Robinson, Stephen D [0000-0002-6606-7588]
Hall, Lindsay J [0000-0001-8938-5709]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2023.

Abstract

Clostridium perfringens is an anaerobic toxin-producing bacterium associated with intestinal diseases, particularly in neonatal humans and animals. Infant gut microbiome studies have recently indicated a link between C. perfringens and the preterm infant disease necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC), with specific NEC cases associated with overabundant C. perfringens termed C. perfringens-associated NEC (CPA-NEC). In the present study, we carried out whole-genome sequencing of 272 C. perfringens isolates from 70 infants across 5 hospitals in the United Kingdom. In this retrospective analysis, we performed in-depth genomic analyses (virulence profiling, strain tracking and plasmid analysis) and experimentally characterized pathogenic traits of 31 strains, including 4 from CPA-NEC patients. We found that the gene encoding toxin perfringolysin O, pfoA, was largely deficient in a human-derived hypovirulent lineage, as well as certain colonization factors, in contrast to typical pfoA-encoding virulent lineages. We determined that infant-associated pfoA+ strains caused significantly more cellular damage than pfoA− strains in vitro, and further confirmed this virulence trait in vivo using an oral-challenge C57BL/6 murine model. These findings suggest both the importance of pfoA+C. perfringens as a gut pathogen in preterm infants and areas for further investigation, including potential intervention and therapeutic strategies.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c99cb2b07e2fd2a5bdf9eb9e6d97321b