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Phylogenetic and genomic analysis reveals high genomic openness and genetic diversity of Clostridium perfringens

Authors :
Shiguang Gao
Yuqing Feng
Xinyue Yang
Jiabo Ding
Yongfei Hu
Xuezheng Fan
Yuming Guo
Dan Liu
Jin Xiaolu
Yan Liu
Liangquan Zhu
Source :
Microbial Genomics
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Microbiology Society, 2020.

Abstract

Clostridium perfringens is associated with a variety of diseases in both humans and animals. Recent advances in genomic sequencing make it timely to re-visit this important pathogen. Although the genome sequence of C. perfringens was first determined in 2002, large-scale comparative genomics with isolates of different origins is still lacking. In this study, we used whole-genome sequencing of 45 C . perfringens isolates with isolation time spanning an 80‐year period and performed comparative analysis of 173 genomes from worldwide strains. We also conducted phylogenetic lineage analysis and introduced an openness index (OI) to evaluate the openness of bacterial genomes. We classified all these genomes into five lineages and hypothesized that the origin of C. perfringens dates back to ~80 000 years ago. We showed that the pangenome of the 173 C . perfringens strains contained a total of 26 954 genes, while the core genome comprised 1020 genes, accounting for about a third of the genome of each isolate. We demonstrated that C. perfringens had the highest OI compared with 51 other bacterial species. Intact prophage sequences were found in nearly 70.0 % of C. perfringens genomes, while CRISPR sequences were found only in ~40.0 %. Plasmids were prevalent in C. perfringens isolates, and half of the virulence genes and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) identified in all the isolates could be found in plasmids. ARG-sharing network analysis showed that C. perfringens shared its 11 ARGs with 55 different bacterial species, and a high frequency of ARG transfer may have occurred between C. perfringens and species in the genera Streptococcus and Staphylococcus . Correlation analysis showed that the ARG number in C. perfringens strains increased with time, while the virulence gene number was relative stable. Our results, taken together with previous studies, revealed the high genome openness and genetic diversity of C. perfringens and provide a comprehensive view of the phylogeny, genomic features, virulence gene and ARG profiles of worldwide strains.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20575858
Volume :
6
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Microbial Genomics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a9420024760e9a5c43b01f7dc0472cb3