Oral Presentation The 2nd Prato Conference on the Pathogenesis of Bacterial Diseases of Animals 2012

Phylogeny of Clostridium perfringens isolates associated with avian necrotic enteritis based on microarray comparative genomic hybridization (#8)

D Lepp 1 2 , V Parreira 1 , J Songer 3 , A Kropinski 4 , P Boerlin 1 4 , J Gong 2 , John Prescott 1
  1. University of Guelph , Guelph, ONT, Canada
  2. Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada , Guelph, Ontario, Canada
  3. Lowa State University, Ames, Iowa, United States
  4. Public Health Agency of Canada, Guelph, Ontario, Canada

Clostridium perfringens type A causes poultry necrotic enteritis (NE), an enteric disease of considerable economic importance. A novel toxin, NetB, is critical to NE pathogenesis and closely associated with virulent strains. We recently demonstrated that netB resides on a large, conjugative plasmid within a 42 kb pathogenicity locus (NELoc-1) that, in conjunction with two other loci (NELoc-2 and 3), is highly conserved in virulent strains. Though plasmid-encoded genes are clearly important to NE pathogenesis, it is not known whether a specific chromosomal background is associated with virulent strains.
To study further the genomic signature of NE-associated strains, we used a C. perfringens microarray based on two NE-producing strains to analyse the gene content of a set of 54 C. perfringens isolates, 25 from birds with NE and 29 from asymptomatic birds. Pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) demonstrated that the isolates are genetically distinct. A total of 128 genes significantly associated with netB were identified, including genes related to iron-acquisition and carbohydrate utilization.
Phylogenetic analysis of CGH data placed 90% of the poultry isolates into three major clusters (I-III). Group I (n=17) consisted entirely of netB-negative isolates while Groups II (n=18) and III (n=15) were comprised of 61% and 67% netB-positive isolates, respectively. Several chromosomal loci were identified that differentiate Groups II and III, including genes for dTDP-L-rhamnose biosynthesis, D-glucuronate catabolism and capsular polysaccharide.
These findings suggest that a specific chromosomal background is predominantly associated with netB-positive strains, consisting of supplementary fitness-related genes that likely enhance virulence. Furthermore, this chromosomal background can be further divided into two main lineages that are predicted to differ in terms of carbon utilization and serotype.