4.5 Article

Pathogenomic analyses of Mycobacterium microti, an ESX-1-deleted member of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex causing disease in various hosts

Journal

MICROBIAL GENOMICS
Volume 7, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MICROBIOLOGY SOC
DOI: 10.1099/mgen.0.000505

Keywords

mouse and guinea pig models; Mycobacterium microti; protective efficacy; virulence evaluation; whole-genome sequencing

Funding

  1. European Commission (TBVAC2020) [260872]
  2. Agence Nationale de la Recherche [ANR-16-CE35-0009, ANR-10 LABX-62IBEID]
  3. Fondation pour la Recherche Medicale [SPF20160936136]
  4. Institut Pasteur (Pasteur -Roux-Cantarini postdoctoral fellowship program) [ANR-10INBS-09-09]
  5. IBISA
  6. France Genomique [ANR-10INBS-09-09]

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The study revealed genomic and phenotypic variabilities among Mycobacterium microti isolates, with clinical isolates clustering separately from vole isolates and lacking the RD1(mic) region. Clinical isolates showed higher virulence compared to vole isolates but lower virulence than M. tuberculosis H37Rv. Furthermore, the vole isolate ATCC 35872 demonstrated potential as a vaccine candidate in immunocompromised individuals.
Mycobacterium microti is an animaladapted member of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTBC), which was originally isolated from voles, but has more recently also been isolated from other selected mammalian hosts, including occasionally from humans. Here, we have generated and analysed the complete genome sequences of five representative vole and clinical M. microti isolates using PacBioand Illumina- based technologies, and have tested their virulence and vaccine potential in SCID (severe combined immune deficient) mouse and/or guinea pig infection models. We show that the clinical isolates studied here cluster separately in the phylogenetic tree from vole isolates and other clades from publicly available M. microti genome sequences. These data also confirm that the vole and clinical M. microti isolates were all lacking the specific RD1(mic) region, which in other tubercle bacilli encodes the ESX-1 type VII secretion system. Biochemical analysis further revealed marked phenotypic differences between isolates in type VIImediated secretion of selected PE and PPE proteins, which in part were attributed to specific genetic polymorphisms. Infection experiments in the highly susceptible SCID mouse model showed that the clinical isolates were significantly more virulent than the tested vole isolates, but still much less virulent than the M. tuberculosis H37Rv control strain. The strong attenuation of the ATCC 35872 vole isolate in immunocompromised mice, even compared to the attenuated BCG (bacillus Calmette-Guerin) vaccine, and its historic use in human vaccine trials encouraged us to test this strain's vaccine potential in a guinea pig model, where it demonstrated similar protective efficacy as a BCG control, making it a strong candidate for vaccination of immunocompromised individuals in whom BCG vaccination is contraindicated. Overall, we provide new insights into the genomic and phenotypic variabilities and particularities of members of an understudied clade of the MTBC, which all share a recent common ancestor that is characterized by the deletion of the RD1(mic) region.

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