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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, August 2005, p. 3657-3661, Vol. 43, No. 8
0095-1137/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.43.8.3657-3661.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Microbiology, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Minas Gerais, Brazil,1 Medical Technology Program, Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan,2 Instituto Lauro De Souza Lima, Bauru, São Paulo, Brazil3
Received 2 March 2005/ Returned for modification 11 March 2005/ Accepted 13 April 2005
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Lacazia loboi develops abundant branched chains of thick-walled yeast-like cells 5 to 10 µm in diameter characteristically connected by short tubules in the tissues of the infected hosts. All attempts to isolate this pathogen in culture have failed, a fact that has contributed to the many colloquial names under which this pathogen has been known (5, 21, 26). Despite several decades of traditional taxonomic investigation, the relationship of L. loboi to other organisms remained elusive. This ambiguity ended when Herr et al. (11), using universal primers, amplified the 18S small-subunit rRNA gene and the 600-bp chitin synthase 2 gene of L. loboi. Those investigators reported that this unique pathogen was the phylogenetic sister taxon to the dimorphic onygenal pathogen Paracoccidioides brasiliensis, which is also restricted to Latin America, a result later confirmed by others (17).
These early studies suggested that a molecular approach might be a good strategy for the study of this uncultivated fungal pathogen. Its limitation, however, was the use of universal primers that amplify only well-known sequences. The uniqueness of our study is that we took advantage of the phylogenetic relationship of P. brasiliensis to L. loboi to design primers from their conserved regions and target homologous genes in L. loboi. This is a new approach to the study of L. loboi, and it can be used to study any homologous gene of P. brasiliensis in L. loboi, a feature not anticipated following previous protocols. This study deals with the development of a molecular model for the partial characterization of the immunodominant homologous antigen gp43 (1-3-ß-glucanase, cellulase) of P. brasiliensis in L. loboi. This study showed that a molecular approach to the study of the genes encoding proteins in L. loboi is possible.
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Molecular procedure for investigating the gene encoding the gp43 homologous protein of P. brasiliensis in L. loboi. The strategy behind the selection of the antigenic protein gp43 for this study was the finding that the sera from patients with lacaziosis cross-reacted in serological assays with the purified gp43 protein obtained from isolates of P. brasiliensis (22). The fact that the gp43 of P. brasiliensis has been well characterized, the fact that its nucleotide sequences have been deposited in GenBank, and the finding that L. loboi is the sister taxon to P. brasiliensis (11) suggested that the gp43 from this pathogen may have several features in common with its homolog in L. loboi. Thus, this immunodominant antigen was considered the ideal target for the development and testing of a molecular model for L. loboi. The strategy was to obtain and align the gp43 amino acid sequence of P. brasiliensis with other homologous fungal sequences by Clustal analysis. The GenBank accession numbers of the amino acid sequences used in the Clustal analysis were as follows: Aspergillus oryzae, CAD97460; Blumeria graminis, AAL26905; Cochliobolus carbonum, AAF65310; and P. brasiliensis, AAG36681. Four sets of primers were designed from three of the highly conserved regions found within these sequences, as follows: primer NL1 (5'-TGCTGGAGCCATGGATC-3'), primer NL2 (5'-AACGGCTTCGACAACAGC-3'), primer NL3 (5'-GCTGTTGTCGAAGCCGTT-3'), and primer NL4 (5'-TAGATACATGGCGCAGTC-3') (Fig. 1).
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FIG. 1. Clustal alignment of Paracoccidioides brasiliensis (Para_bra) gp43 amino acid sequence (GenBank accession no. AAG36681) and three homologous fungal amino acid sequences (Aspergillus oryzae [Asper_or], GenBank accession no.CAD97460; Blumeria graminis [Blum_gra], GenBank accession no. AAL26905; and Cochliobolus carbonum[Coch_car], GenBank accession no. AAF65310). The highly conserved motifs are shown in boldface and underlining. The regions were the primers NL1, NL2, NL3, and NL4 were originally designed (arrows) are shown above the selected sequences. The conserved gp43-like and the gp43 amino acid sequences of Lacazia loboi (Laca_lob) and P. brasiliensis, respectively, are shown in boldface. Note that the L. loboi gp43-like fragment lacks the amino acid threonine (inclined arrow).
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The PCR amplicons were then cloned into a pCR 2.1-TOPO plasmid (Invitrogen, Calsbad, CA) and purified by using a SNAP miniprep kit protocol (Invitrogen), and sequencing of both strands was done by using BigDye terminator chemistry in an ABI Prism 310 genetic analyzer apparatus (Perkin-Elmer, Norwalk, CT). Ten different clones bearing the selected amplicons were edited and aligned by using Sequence Analysis and Sequencing Navigator software (Applied Biosystems/Perkin-Elmer).
Phylogenetic analysis. The deduced amino acid sequence of the L. loboi gp43-like fragment was translated by using the standard eukaryotic codons and aligned by using Clustal analysis with 12 gp43 amino acid sequences of P. brasiliensis and 7 homologous sequences from other fungi, and their aligned sequences were visually inspected. To confirm the identities of the sequenced fragments, phylogenetic and evolutionary analyses were conducted with the computer software programs PAUP (Phylogenetic Analysis Using Parsimony, version 3.1; D. L. Swofford, Illinois Natural History Survey, Champaign), and MEGA, version 2.1 (Sudhir Kumar, Koichiro Tamura, Ingrid B. Jakobsen, and Masatoshi Nei, MEGA2: Molecular Evolutionary Genetics Analysis software, Arizona State University, Tempe). Neighbor-joining and parsimony analyses (heuristic) of the deduced amino acid sequences with maximum-likelihood multiple-hit correction and 1,000 bootstrap-resampled data set were used to assess branch support.
Nucleotide sequence accession number. The edited gp43-like sequence of L. loboi was deposited in GenBank under accession number AY697436.
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FIG. 2. (A) Typical parakeloidal lesions on an experimental mouse injected with the yeast-like cells of Lacazia loboi; (B) chains of yeast-like cells of L. loboi connected by slender tubes obtained from the experimentally infected mouse. Gomori methenamine silver. Magnification, x100.
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Phylogenetic analysis of L. loboi gp43-like sequence. Sequence analysis showed that the 483-bp DNA fragments obtained from two different L. loboi isolates possessed identical sequences in this particular region of the gene. The edited 483-bp fragment from one of the L. loboi isolates was broadly compared in a BLAST (Basic Local Alignment Search Tool) search of GenBank and show that the closest matches were all the gp43 sequences of P. brasiliensis. The 483-bp DNA fragment encoded an open reading frame of 161 amino acids. The identity between the 483-bp nucleotide sequence of L. loboi and the gp43 sequences of P. brasiliensis was 85%, with several mismatches and three gaps, whereas the deduced amino acid sequence showed 75% identity with one gap. The three nucleotides encoding the amino acid threonine of P. brasiliensis at position 122 were missing from the gp43-like gene of L. loboi (Fig. 1).
Phylogenetic analysis by the neighbor-joining and parsimony methods with the deduced amino acid sequence of the L. loboi gp43-like fragment and 12 other gp43 sequences of P. brasiliensis plus seven homologous fungal sequences showed very similar phylogenetic trees (Fig. 3). In these trees, the deduced amino acid sequence of the L. loboi 483-bp fragment was the sister group to all 12 gp43 sequences of P. brasiliensis used in this analysis. The position of the sister group was strongly supported (100%) with bootstrap searches by both parsimony and distance analyses. In addition, the 12 P. brasiliensis sequences clustered according to their geographical origins, but this distribution was not well supported. The gp43-like gene of L. loboi was also linked to the seven other homologous fungal sequences used in the study. These homologous fungal sequences clustered according to their phylogenetic preferences; the ascomycetes and the basidiomycetes both formed two poorly supported sister groups.
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FIG. 3. Phylogenetic analysis by neighbor joining in PAUP of 12 aligned gp43 amino acid sequences of Paracoccidioides brasiliensis, the Lacazia loboi gp43-like deduced amino acid sequence (GenBank accession no. AY697436), and seven other homologous fungal sequences (1-3-ß-glucanases, cellulases). Multiple-hit-correction and 1,000 bootstrap-resampled data sets were used to assess branch support. In this tree the deduced amino acid sequence of the L. loboi gp43-like gene is the sister group (100% supported) to all P. brasiliensis gp43 sequences. The GenBank accession numbers for the gp43 sequences of P. brasiliensis used in this study are 2208385A, AAG36671, AAG36673, AAG36674, AAG36682, AAG36683, AAG36691, AAG36692, AAG36694, AAG36695, AAG36696, and AAG36697. The GenBank accession numbers of the homologous fungal sequences are as follows: Agaricus bisporus, CAA63536; Aspergillus oryzae, CAD97460; Blumeria graminis, AAL26905; Candida albicans, A47702; Cochliobolus carbonum, AAF65310; Cryptococcus neoformans, CAD31110; and Saccharomyces kluyveri, AAO32563. The scale bar represents the evolutionary distance, in substitutions per nucleotide.
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The primer sets NL1-NL4 and NL1-NL3 were not able to amplify the predicted amplicons. This was more likely due to nucleotide mismatches in the designed primer NL1 with the nucleotide sequences of L. loboi. No introns were found in the fragment amplified from L. loboi, a feature also in common, in this particular region, with the homologous gene of P. brasiliensis. Our phylogenetic analysis confirmed that the continuous open reading frame of 161 amino acids of L. loboi was homologous to the gp43 of P. brasiliensis. However, this finding needs to be verified by mRNA analysis, an extraction protocol so far unsuccessful with this pathogen. This new approach can be used to study any homologous gene of P. brasiliensis in L. loboi. Thus, the main contribution of this study is not the amplification of the gp43-like DNA fragment of L. loboi but the molecular model that we have introduced for the study of this uncultivated fungus and that is based on the similarities between P. brasiliensis and L. loboi at the molecular level.
The L. loboi gp43-like sequence showed striking similarities with the gp43 of P. brasiliensis. For instance, the presence of numerous motifs with 100% identity between the gp43 of P. brasiliensis and the amplified fragment of L. loboi were evident. These data could explain why the P. brasiliensis gp43 antigen strongly reacted when it was tested in serological assays with sera from patients with lacaziosis (12, 15, 22). Because the gp43 antigen of P. brasiliensis has recently been linked to a protective vaccine that has successfully been used to prevent paracoccidioidomycosis in experimental animals (20, 25), we strongly believe that the gp43-like molecule of L. loboi might possess similar characteristics. This finding is of paramount importance because it predicts that this L. loboi gp43-like molecule could be used to develop strategies for the treatment and/or prevention of lacaziosis in South America. In addition, our phylogenetic analysis with the L. loboi gp43-like partial gene strongly supports previous molecular studies with the CHS2 partial gene, the 18S small-subunit rRNA gene, and the internal transcribed spacer sequences of this anomalous pathogen (11, 16, 17).
Among the organisms studied in medical mycology, L. loboi was the last of the taxonomic mysteries to be unveiled (11, 16). The recent discovery of an animal host was instrumental to maintaining in the laboratory several isolates of L. loboi for DNA extraction (14, 19). We took advantage of this to maintain a permanent supply of L. loboi genomic DNA. This study showed that the use of primers constructed from highly conserved regions of P. brasiliensis immunodominant antigens can be successful in the characterization of important homologous proteins of L. loboi. This initial step is of fundamental importance, since other P. brasiliensis immunological proteins showed cross-reactivity with sera from patients with lacaziosis as well (4, 12, 15, 22), and thus, these antigenic molecules could also be investigated by this methodology.
During this study, the name lacaziosis has been introduced to identify the diseases caused by Lacazia loboi in humans and dolphins. This designation is based on the genus name of the etiologic agent, a common practice in medical mycology. We hope that this new term ends decades of disagreement on terminology, such as lobomycosis, now considered synonymous with lacaziosis.
We thank Cristiane N. Pereira for her help with some of the molecular procedures. During this study our friend and colleague, Diltor Vladimir Araújo Opromolla, passed away. Without his support and collaboration, the studies on the molecular aspects of Lacazia loboi would not be possible.
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