Comparative genomics of Brucella abortus and Brucella melitensis unravels the gene sharing, virulence factors and SNP diversity among the standard, vaccine and field strains
Brucella abortus and Brucella melitensis are the primary etiological agents of brucellosis in large and small ruminants, respectively. There are limited comparative genomic studies involving Brucella strains that explore the relatedness among both species. In this study, we involved strains ( n =44)...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International microbiology 2024-02, Vol.27 (1), p.101-111 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Brucella abortus
and
Brucella melitensis
are the primary etiological agents of brucellosis in large and small ruminants, respectively. There are limited comparative genomic studies involving
Brucella
strains that explore the relatedness among both species. In this study, we involved strains (
n
=44) representing standard, vaccine and Indian field origin for pangenome, single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) and phylogenetic analysis. Both species shared a common gene pool representing 2884 genes out of a total 3244 genes. SNP-based phylogenetic analysis indicated higher SNP diversity among
B. melitensis
(3824) strains in comparison to
B. abortus
(540) strains, and a clear demarcation was identified between standard/vaccine and field strains. The analysis for virulence genes revealed that
virB3
,
virB7
,
ricA
,
virB5
,
ipx5
,
wbkC, wbkB
, and
acpXL
genes were highly conserved in most of the
Brucella
strains. Interestingly,
virB10
gene was found to have high variability among the
B. abortus
strains. The cgMLST analysis revealed distinct sequence types for the standard/vaccine and field strains.
B. abortus
strains from north-eastern India fall within similar sequence type differing from other strains. In conclusion, the analysis revealed a highly shared core genome among two
Brucella
species. SNP analysis revealed
B. melitensis
strains exhibit high diversity as compared to
B. abortus
strains. Strains with absence or high polymorphism of virulence genes can be exploited for the development of novel vaccine candidates effective against both
B. abortus
and
B. melitensis. |
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ISSN: | 1618-1905 1139-6709 1618-1905 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10123-023-00374-w |