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. 2018 Dec 17;13(12):e0209113.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0209113. eCollection 2018.

Whole genome sequencing of Moraxella bovoculi reveals high genetic diversity and evidence for interspecies recombination at multiple loci

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Whole genome sequencing of Moraxella bovoculi reveals high genetic diversity and evidence for interspecies recombination at multiple loci

Aaron M Dickey et al. PLoS One. .

Abstract

Moraxella bovoculi is frequently cultured from the ocular secretions and conjunctiva of cattle with Infectious Bovine Keratoconjunctivitis (IBK). Previous work has shown that single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) diversity in this species is quite high with 81,284 SNPs identified in eight genomes representing two distinct genotypes isolated from IBK affected eyes (genotype 1) and the nasopharynx of cattle without clinical IBK signs (genotype 2), respectively. The goals of this study were to identify SNPs from a collection of geographically diverse and epidemiologically unlinked M. bovoculi strains from the eyes of IBK positive cattle (n = 183) and another from the eyes of cattle (most from a single population at a single time-point) without signs of IBK (n = 63) and to characterize the genetic diversity. Strains of both genotypes were identified from the eyes of cattle without IBK signs. Only genotype 1 strains were identified from IBK affected eyes, however, these strains were isolated before the discovery of genotype 2, and the protocol for their isolation would have preferentially selected genotype 1 M. bovoculi. The core genome comprised ~74% of the whole and contained >127,000 filtered SNPs. More than 80% of these characterize diversity within genotype 1 while 23,611 SNPs (~18%) delimit the two major genotypes. Genotype 2 strains lacked a repeats-in-toxin (RTX) putative pathogenesis factor and any of ten putative antibiotic resistance genes carried within a genomic island. Within genotype 1, prevalence of these elements was 0.85 and 0.12 respectively in strains from eyes that were IBK positive. Recombination appears to be an important source of genetic diversity for genotype 1 and undermines the utility of ribosomal-locus-based species identification. The extremely high genetic diversity in genotype 1 presents a challenge to the development of an efficacious vaccine directed against them, however, several low-diversity pilin-like genes were identified. Finally, the genotype-defining SNPs described in this study are a resource that can facilitate the development of more accurate M. bovoculi diagnostic tests.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Figures

Fig 1
Fig 1. Approximate maximum likelihood unrooted tree of 246 M. bovoculi whole genome single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) profiles with Phi Pack identified recombination SNPs removed to increase node support within genotype 1.
Four well supported subtypes of genotype 1(a-d) are color coded.
Fig 2
Fig 2. Neighbor-net tree of single nucleotide polymorphism genotypes from 220 M. bovoculi genotype 1 strains.
Letters, ellipsoids and colors denote subtypes from Fig 1.
Fig 3
Fig 3
Partial Moraxella bovoculi single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) alignments of A) a rRNA locus and B) the RTX locus with constituent genes appearing as orange bars above alignments. Multi-colored SNP blocks (circled) are highly divergent from the grey consensus sequence and hypothesized to be interspecies mosaics. Confirmed recombinants via BLAST are listed in Table 2.

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