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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, December 2005, p. 6048-6053, Vol. 43, No. 12
0095-1137/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.43.12.6048-6053.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Distribution of Insertion- and Deletion-Associated Genetic Polymorphisms among Four Mycobacterium tuberculosis Phospholipase C Genes and Associations with Extrathoracic Tuberculosis: a Population-Based Study
Y. Kong,1
M. D. Cave,2,3
D. Yang,1
L. Zhang,1
C. F. Marrs,1
B. Foxman,1
J. H. Bates,4,5
F. Wilson,4,5
L. N. Mukasa,4,5 and
Z. H. Yang1*
Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan,1
Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare Center,2
Department of Neurobiology and Developmental Sciences, College of Medicine,3
Department of Epidemiology, College of Public Health, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences,4
Arkansas Department of Health, Little Rock, Arkansas5
Received 28 June 2005/
Returned for modification 25 July 2005/
Accepted 29 September 2005

ABSTRACT
The
Mycobacterium tuberculosis genome contains four phospholipase
C (PLC)-encoding genes, designated
plcA,
plcB,
plcC, and
plcD,
respectively. Each of the four genes contributes to the overall
PLC activity of
M. tuberculosis. PLC is hypothesized to contribute
to
M. tuberculosis virulence. Infection of
M. tuberculosis strains
carrying a truncated
plcD gene is associated with the occurrence
of extrathoracic tuberculosis. However, whether the other three
plc genes are also associated with extrathoracic tuberculosis
remains to be assessed. We investigated the insertion- and deletion-associated
genetic diversity in all four
plc genes among 682 epidemiologically
and clinically well-characterized
M. tuberculosis clinical isolates
using PCR, DNA sequencing, and Southern hybridization. Two hundred
sixty-six (39%) of the 682 isolates had an interruption in at
least one of the four
plc genes, most often associated with
an IS
6110 insertion. The
plcD gene interruption was the most
common: it was observed in 233 (34%) of the isolates, compared
to 4.7%, 4.1%, and 5.9% for
plcA,
plcB, and
plcC gene interruption,
respectively. The association between the
plc gene genotypes
and disease presentation was adjusted for clustering using generalized
estimating equations for both bivariate and multivariate analyses.
After controlling for the genotypes of the
plcABC genes and
the host-related risk factors, interruption in the
plcD gene
remained significantly associated with extrathoracic tuberculosis
(odds ratio, 3.27; 95% confidence interval, 1.32 to 8.14). The
data suggest that the
plcD gene might play a more important
role in the pathogenesis of thoracic TB than it does in the
pathogenesis of extrathoracic TB.

INTRODUCTION
Phospholipase C (PLC) is involved in the pathogenesis of several
bacterial infections (
11,
16,
19,
20). For
Mycobacterium leprae,
Mycobacterium microti, and
Mycobacterium avium, high phospholipase
activity was observed among bacilli harvested from host tissues
(
28,
29), suggesting that phospholipase might be involved in
the virulence of mycobacteria. However, the precise role of
PLC in tuberculosis (TB) pathogenesis is unknown. Genome sequencing
of
Mycobacterium tuberculosis laboratory strain H37Rv (
5) and
clinical strain CDC1551 (
http://www.tigr.org) revealed four
genes encoding PLC enzymes. Three of these genes,
plcA,
plcB,
and
plcC, are organized in tandem (locus
plcABC). The fourth
gene,
plcD, is located in a separate region. A recent functional
study of
M. tuberculosis demonstrated that all four genes encode
functional PLC in
M. tuberculosis, and each gene contributes
to overall PLC activity (
13). Furthermore, in mice, when the
virulence of a
plcABCD quadruple mutant was compared to a
plcABC triple mutant, both showed the same level of attenuation, suggesting
that either
plcD does not contribute to virulence or it acts
in association with other phospholipase-encoding genes.
Several previous studies using small, selected samples of M. tuberculosis clinical isolates have found insertions or deletions in the plcA, plcB, plcC, and plcD genes (9, 18, 21, 23-25). Recently, we reported the association between insertion-and deletion-associated mutations in the plcD genotype and extrathoracic TB (31); however, the potential association of mutations in the other three plc genes remains to be investigated. In order to gain a better understanding of the relative contribution of the four plc genes to the pathogenesis of human TB, we investigated the genetic polymorphisms of all four plc genes and compared the distribution of their genotypes among study subjects with different clinical presentations using a case control study design.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Study sample and bacterial isolates.
We included 682 culture-confirmed
M. tuberculosis isolates from
TB patients diagnosed in Arkansas between 1 January 1996 and
31 December 2000. During the study period, a total of 973 TB
cases were diagnosed in Arkansas; 719 cases were culture confirmed.
Of these 719 cases, 682 (95%) isolates were available for the
current study. This set included 355 unique and 327 clustered
isolates belonging to 92 clusters defined by a combination of
IS
6110 restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) and pTBN12
fingerprinting (
4,
22).
Patient data, including demographics, social behaviors, and clinical characteristics, were obtained from the surveillance records of Arkansas Department of Health. Of the 682 study patients, 604 had TB disease confined within the thorax, 46 had TB outside of the thorax, and 32 had concurrent thoracic and extrathoracic involvement. Among the 32 patients that had both thoracic and extrathoracic TB, five isolates were cultured from the thoracic sites, and the remaining 27 isolates were from the various extrathoracic sites. Of the 636 patients who had thoracic involvement, 584 had a chest radiograph report available for review, and 586 had a report of a stained sputum smear. Based on chest radiograph, 216 (36.99%) had cavitation in the lungs, and the remaining 368 (63.01%) did not. Of the 586 cases with sputum smear results, 251 (42.83%) were smear positive.
Genomic DNA of the patients' isolates was extracted from Lowenstein-Jensen slant cultures using standard procedures (12). The study protocols and procedures for the protection of human subjects were approved by the Health Sciences Institutional Review Boards of the University of Michigan and the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences.
PCR assays of the plc genes.
DNA polymorphisms in the four plc gene regions were investigated first by PCR assays using primers shown in Fig. 1. The plcD gene region was investigated with three PCR assays designated plcD-PCR1, plcD-PCR2, and plcD-PCR3, respectively. The plcA, plcB, and plcC gene regions were examined by PCR assays designated plcA-PCR, plcB-PCR, and plcC-PCR, respectively. The BD Advantage 2 PCR kit (BD-Biosciences Clontech, Palo Alto, CA) was used in all the PCRs except for plcD-PCR1 and plcD-PCR2. In plcD-PCR1, the BD Advantage GC-2 kit was used, while in plcD-PCR2, the MasterAmp Extra-Long PCR kit (Epicentre Biotechnologies, Madison, WI) was used to obtain a large PCR product for the positive reference strain (19.8 kb) and the wild-type isolates. The 16S rRNA gene PCR was performed to confirm the quantity and quality of the DNA templates (3). The plcA-PCR, plcB-PCR, plcC-PCR, and plcD-PCR1 used the same thermocycling parameters, i.e., 1 cycle at 94°C for 1 min followed by 26 cycles of 94°C for 30 s, 68°C for 30 s, and 72°C for 2.5 min and a final cycle at 72°C for 10 min. The thermocycling parameters for plcD-PCR2 were as follows: 1 cycle at 94°C for 3 min followed by 31 cycles of 94°C for 1 min, 68°C for 1 min, and 72°C for 14.5 min and a final cycle at 72°C for 10 min. For plcD-PCR3, the thermocycling parameters were as follows: 1 cycle at 94°C for 1 min followed by 28 cycles of 94°C for 30 s, 68°C for 30 s, and 72°C for 3 min and 10 s and a final cycle at 72°C for 10 min.
For the
plcA,
plcB, and
plcC genes,
M. tuberculosis clinical
strain CDC1551 was used as a positive control in the PCR assays,
and the BCG Australian strain was used as a negative control
(
1). For the
plcD gene, genomic DNA from clinical strain CDC1551
was used as a positive control, and H37Rv was used as a negative
control, because the
plcD gene region is truncated in strain
H37Rv (
5) and is intact in strain CDC1551 (
http://www.tigr.org).
Southern blot and hybridization.
For isolates that had consistently negative PCR results, Southern blot hybridization was conducted to confirm the potential partial or complete absence of the plc genes. The restriction endonuclease PvuII was used to digest the chromosomal DNA. Because the plcA, plcB, plcC, and plcD genes share about 70% sequence homology, the purified plcD-PCR1 product of CDC1551, named probe 1, was used as a probe to detect the presence or absence of all four plc genes. For plcD detection, two additional probes, named probes 2a and 2b, complement to the flanking regions of the plcD gene, were used after probe 1 to confirm the presence or absence of the 3.9-kb and 4.6-kb restriction fragments of plcD (Fig. 1). One microgram of DNA of each isolate was digested using PvuII and subjected to electrophoresis in 1% (wt/vol) agarose gel in 1x Tris-borate-EDTA (pH 8.0) buffer. The DNA was blotted onto nylon membranes (Hybond-N+; Amersham Biosciences, Piscataway, NJ) by using a Vacuum Blotter (model 785; Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, CA) and hybridized with probes that were covalently labeled with chemiluminescence and then detected using the Gene Images AlkPhos Direct Labeling and Detection system (Amersham Biosciences, Piscataway, NJ) according to the manufacturer's instructions, except that the stringency temperature was changed from the recommended 55°C to 60°C.
DNA sequencing.
For the isolates, the PCR products of which showed an altered size compared with that of the positive control, automated DNA sequencing was performed at the Sequencing Core at the University of Michigan to confirm the insertion and deletion events in the genes examined using the PCR products purified with a QIAquick PCR purification kit (QIAGEN, Valencia, CA). Primers used for the PCR assays were used for DNA sequencing. Sequence comparisons were performed using Edit Seq 5.02 and MegAlign 5.01 software (DNAStar Inc., Madison, WI).
Definitions.
For this study, a mutant type was defined only when an isolate had a large sequence variation consisting of an IS6110 insertion and/or deletion in one of the plc gene regions; isolates that generated a PCR product of the same size as that of the positive control strain were classified as the wild type. Isolates that had a partial plcD gene deletion and deletion of adjacent genes were classified separately as plcD and adjacent gene mutant group and were treated as a separate group in the data analyses. Since plcA, plcB, and plcC are not cotranscribed (8, 13) as a polycistron even though they are organized as a cluster in the genome of M. tuberculosis, the plcA, plcB, and plcC mutant types were defined solely based on the interruption of the individual genes.
To study the association between the insertion- and deletion-associated interruption in the plc genes and clinical TB phenotypes, we classified the study patients into thoracic TB and extrathoracic TB groups. Patients whose disease sites were confined to lungs, pleura, and intrathoracic lymph nodes were classified into the thoracic TB group; patients who had extrathoracic involvement with or without concurrent diseases within the thorax were considered to have extrathoracic involvement. For those who had thoracic involvement, we grouped them into cavitary and noncavitary TB groups and sputum smear-positive and -negative groups.
Statistical analysis.
We assessed the associations between the four plc gene genotypes and the clinical characteristics of the disease, including extrathoracic TB involvement, cavitation in the lungs, and positive sputum smear. The genotypes of the plcD gene and plcABC genes were treated as two individual variables in the analysis. The functional effect of a mutation in the plcA, plcB, or plcC gene was considered to be the same as that previously shown by Raynaud et al. (13). Considering the likelihood that mutations observed among cases in a cluster defined by IS6110 RFLP and the pTBN12 pattern (4, 22) would not be independent, we used generalized estimating equations (GEE) to control for intracluster dependence (10, 32) in both bivariate and multivariate analyses. The magnitude of the associations was estimated using the odds ratio (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (95% CI). Multivariate analyses using the logistic regression GEE model were conducted to control for potential confounding by the genotypes of plcABC and host-related factors. All the statistical analyses were done using SAS version 8.0 (SAS Institute, Cary, NC).

RESULTS
Polymorphisms of plc genes.
We observed an interruption in at least one of the four
plc genes in 266 (39%) out of 682
M. tuberculosis isolates investigated.
Among the 266 isolates with a mutation, 228 (33.43%) had a mutation
in only one of the four
plc genes, 19 (2.78%) had a mutation
in two of the
plc genes, 9 (1.32%) had a mutation in three
plc genes, and 10 (1.47%) had mutations in all four
plc genes. Most
of the mutations occurred in the
plcD gene region (233/266 [88%]).
Among the 32, 28, and 40 isolates that had a mutation in
plcA,
plcB, and
plcC, respectively, 26 (81.25%), 16 (57.14%), and
18 (45%) isolates also had a mutation in
plcD. Of the 233
plcD mutants, 10 (4.29%) also had a mutation in the
plcA gene, 16
(6.87%) had a mutation in the
plcB gene, and 18 (7.72%) had
a mutation in the
plcC gene. The profiles of
plc gene genotypes,
in terms of the frequency distribution of different combinations
of mutations, are shown in Fig.
2.
IS6110 insertion.
When PCR products showed a different size in comparison with
the positive control, the PCR products were sequenced; 13, 9,
27, and 144 products were sequenced for
plcA,
plcB,
plcC, and
plcD, respectively. Twelve of the 13 isolates sequenced for
plcA had an IS
6110 insertion within the gene in the same orientation
as that of
plcA transcription; the remaining isolate had an
IS
6110 in the reverse direction. Of the nine isolates sequenced
for
plcB, seven had an IS
6110 insertion within the gene in the
direction of gene transcription, while the other two isolates
had an IS
6110 insertion within the gene in the reverse direction.
Of the 27 isolates sequenced for the
plcC mutation, 16 had an
IS
6110 insertion within the gene in the direction of
plcC gene
transcription, 10 had an IS
6110 insertion within the gene in
the reverse direction, and 1 isolate had a 115-bp deletion in
plcC without an IS
6110 insertion. Of the 144 isolates sequenced
for
plcD, 17 had an IS
6110 insertion in the direction of
plcD gene transcription, 14 had an IS
6110 insertion in the reverse
direction, 7 isolates had an IS
6110 insertion in the reverse
direction followed by a partial
plcD deletion, and 106 isolates
had an IS
6110 insertion and a deletion of partial
plcD and adjacent
genes. Of these 106 isolates, 70 had an IS
6110 insertion within
the gene in the same direction as the orientation of gene transcription,
and 36 had an IS
6110 insertion within the gene in the reverse
direction.
The numbers of IS6110 insertion sites found in the plcA, plcB, plcC, and plcD genes were 6, 5, 16, and 27, respectively. The most common sites of IS6110 insertion in plcA, plcB, plcC, and plcD are shown in Table 1. When IS6110 was inserted without a partial deletion of plc genes and the adjacent region, a 3- to 4-bp sequence duplication at the site of the insertion was observed; otherwise, this 3- to 4-bp duplication was not seen.
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
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TABLE 1. Numbers and most common locations of IS6110 insertion sites found in four plc genes of M. tuberculosis clinical strains collected from Arkansas between 1 January 1996 and 31 December 2000
|
Association of plc gene polymorphism with clinical presentation.
The associations between the
plc gene polymorphisms and three
clinical characteristics of the disease, including extrathoracic
TB involvement, cavitation in the lungs, and positive sputum
smear, were explored using GEE. In bivariate analysis using
GEE, we did not find any statistically significant association
between any of the
plc gene genotype profiles and cavitation
in the lungs or a positive sputum smear. There was, however,
a statistically significant association between
plcD gene mutation
and extrathoracic TB involvement (Table
2). After controlling
for mutations in the
plcABC genes in a GEE logistic regression
model, the association between
plcD gene mutation and extrathoracic
TB involvement remained almost the same (OR of 2.87 and 95%
CI of 1.33 and 6.16 after adjustment versus OR of 2.86 and 95%
CI of 1.32 and 6.19 prior to adjustment). When the three previously
identified host-related risk factors for extrathoracic TB (human
immunodeficiency virus [HIV] seropositive, black ethnicity,
and female) (
30) along with the genotypes of
plcABC genes were
included in the GEE logistic regression model, interruption
in the
plcD gene remained significantly associated with extrathoracic
TB (Table
3).
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[in a new window]
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TABLE 3. Multivariate analysis of the association between plcD interruption and extrathoracic TB after adjusting for the genotypes of plcABC genes and the three host-related risk factors using GEEa
|

DISCUSSION
To gain a better understanding of the potential contribution
of the
plc genes of
M. tuberculosis to human TB, we extended
our previous population-based study of
plc gene genetic diversity
and its clinical association from focusing only on the
plcD gene (
31) to focusing on all four
plc genes and increasing the
number of isolates/cases from 496 to 682. The present study
confirmed our previous finding of a significant association
between the
plcD gene mutation and the occurrence of extrathoracic
TB after controlling for host-related risk factors and the genotypes
of the
plcABC genes. It has provided a more complete assessment
of the relative contribution of all four
M. tuberculosis plc genes to the pathogenesis of human TB. The data suggest that
the
plcD gene might play a more important role in the pathogenesis
of thoracic TB than it does in the pathogenesis of extrathoracic
TB; in contrast, the other three
plc genes may have an equally
important role in the pathogenesis of both thoracic and extrathoracic
TB.
M. tuberculosis clinical strains with major polymorphisms in all four plc genes and impaired plc gene expression have been reported previously by others (25). Raynaud et al. recently demonstrated that plcABC triple mutants and plcABCD quadruple mutants were attenuated for growth in the lungs and spleens of mice, and the expression of the different plc genes was important for virulence at different time points of the infection (13). In our study, 10 isolates from 10 patients with only thoracic TB had a plcABCD quadruple mutant. These 10 isolates were defined as eight different strains by IS6110 and pTBN12 fingerprinting. Among these 10 patients, 3 had cavities in the lung, and 5 were sputum smear positive. All 10 patients were HIV seronegative. Thus, it is unclear whether or not the PLC function is necessary for the bacilli to cause thoracic TB in all hosts. This also suggests that PLC may not be the only enzyme that is needed by M. tuberculosis to establish pathology in the lung.
PLC expressed within host cells might serve several functions related to virulence. First, these enzymes might provide the bacterium with nutrients by releasing fatty acids from host phospholipids, which might be a major energy source for M. tuberculosis in chronically infected lung tissue (15, 27). A second possible role for PLC would be to degrade the phagosome/endosome membrane to change its permeability or to interrupt its function (28, 29). Finally, PLC can hydrolyze membrane phosphatidylinositol of macrophages to release free arachidonic acid. Arachidonic acid metabolites can mediate inflammation by stimulating macrophage aggregation and granulocytic chemotaxis, thus activating the host immune responses (11, 20). Given these possible functions, we hypothesize that an alteration of the plcD gene will decrease PLC activity and impair the ability of tubercle bacilli to degrade the phagosome/endosome membrane, causing persistence of M. tuberculosis within the macrophage and allowing the microbe to travel to distant organs via hematogenous spread. An alternative hypothesis is that interruption of the plcD gene reduces the release of arachidonic acid from the macrophage membrane, thereby reducing the migration of monocyte-derived macrophages and T and B cells to the initial lung infection, thus increasing the chance of the bacillary spread to other organs. To explore the role of plc genes in the pathogenesis of extrathoracic TB, studies could be conducted by infecting animals with M. tuberculosis strains having different profiles of plc gene genotypes to compare the risk and extent of extrathoracic TB among animals infected with various genotypes.
Previous investigations of the genetic diversity of M. tuberculosis plc genes used either convenience samples or selected samples (7, 18, 21, 25). In our population-based sample, we observed that the plcD mutation accounted for 88% (233/266) of the mutations found in the plc genes; this is consistent with the previous findings of Talarico and colleagues, who used a convenience sample collected from Turkey (18). In the current study, almost all the deletion and insertion events in the plc genes were IS6110 related. The existence of numerous preferential insertion sites of IS6110 has been demonstrated previously (2, 6, 14, 26), and phospholipase C genes of M. tuberculosis have been reported to be preferential loci for IS6110 transposition (23). Our results suggest that within the plc genes, some sites for IS6110 insertion are much more common than others.
There is no statistically significant association between simultaneous mutation in plcD and adjacent genes and extrathoracic TB involvement. Some of the isolates in our study were classified as having simultaneous mutations in the plcD gene and adjacent genes by Southern hybridization, but the mutations in the adjacent genes were not accurately characterized. The potential effect of mutations of the adjacent genes on the plcD gene mutation that favors development of extrathoracic TB remains to be assessed after the genetic profiles of the genes adjacent to plcD are better characterized in future studies.
One limitation of this study is that the method we used is restricted in its capacity to identify small sequence variations, such as single-nucleotide polymorphisms, and such small variations might also have an influence on gene expression or gene function. Thus, it is possible that some isolates with point mutations or small deletions were misclassified as wild-type isolates. However, this type of nondifferential misclassification would tend to bias the result toward that of no association between the plc gene genotypes and extrathoracic TB (17). If the point mutation or small insertions or deletions in the plc genes were counted in defining the mutation in plc genes, the observed associations would have been enhanced.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We are indebted to Annadell H. Fowler, Bill Starrett, and Deborah
Witonski for their valuable efforts that contributed to patient
data and
M. tuberculosis isolate collection during the study.
We acknowledge Kashef Ijaz's contribution to the establishment
of the Arkansas Department of Health's surveillance database
that was used for the study and Sarah E. Talarico and Peter
J Boldenow for help with the
plcABC genotype data collection.
We also thank Jack T. Crawford and Laura S. Cowan at the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Ga., for providing
the DNA preparation of CDC1551.
Financial support was provided by the National Institutes of Health (grant number NIH-R01-AI151975).

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Epidemiology Department, School of Public Health, University of Michigan, 109 S. Observatory Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2029. Phone: (734) 763-4296. Fax: (734) 764-3192. E-mail:
zhenhua{at}umich.edu.


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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, December 2005, p. 6048-6053, Vol. 43, No. 12
0095-1137/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.43.12.6048-6053.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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