Mycoplasma iowae is a well-established avian pathogen that can infect and damage many sites throughout the body. One potential mediator of cellular damage by mycoplasmas is the production of H2O2 via a glycerol catabolic pathway whose genes are widespread amongst many mycoplasma species. Previous sequencing of M. iowae serovar I strain 695 revealed the presence of not only genes for H2O2 production through glycerol catabolism but also the first documented mycoplasma gene for catalase, which degrades H2O2. To test the activity of M. iowae catalase in degrading H2O2, we studied catalase activity and H2O2 accumulation by both M. iowae serovar K strain DK-CPA, whose genome we sequenced, and strains of the H2O2-producing species Mycoplasma gallisepticum engineered to produce M. iowae catalase by transformation with the M. iowae putative catalase gene, katE. H2O2-mediated virulence by M. iowae serovar K and catalase-producing M. gallisepticum transformants were also analyzed using a Caenorhabditis elegans toxicity assay, which has never previously been used in conjunction with mycoplasmas. We found that M. iowae katE encodes an active catalase that, when expressed in M. gallisepticum, reduces both the amount of H2O2 produced and the amount of damage to C. elegans in the presence of glycerol. Therefore, the correlation between the presence of glycerol catabolism genes and the use of H2O2 as a virulence factor by mycoplasmas might not be absolute.
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PLoS One
December 2015
Department of Microbiology, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, United States of America.
Mycoplasma iowae is a well-established avian pathogen that can infect and damage many sites throughout the body. One potential mediator of cellular damage by mycoplasmas is the production of H2O2 via a glycerol catabolic pathway whose genes are widespread amongst many mycoplasma species. Previous sequencing of M.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Bacteriol
June 2012
Department of Microbiology, Miami University, Oxford, OH, USA.
Within the genus Mycoplasma are species whose cells have terminal organelles, polarized structures associated with cytadherence and gliding motility. Mycoplasma penetrans, found mostly in HIV-infected patients, and Mycoplasma iowae, an economically significant poultry pathogen, are members of the Mycoplasma muris phylogenetic cluster. Both species have terminal organelles that interact with host cells, yet the structures in these species, or any in the M.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVet Microbiol
August 2008
Department of Animal Science, University of Ljubljana, Biotechnical Faculty, Groblje 3, Domzale, Slovenia.
Among 23 currently recognized avian Mycoplasma (AM) species only Mycoplasma gallisepticum, Mycoplasma synoviae, Mycoplasma meleagridis and Mycoplasma iowae cause disease and loss of production in chickens and/or turkeys. Because neuraminidases are considered virulence factors in many pathogenic microorganisms the aim of our study was to determine which AM species possess neuraminidase enzymatic activity (NEAC). Small samples of AM cells were assayed for NEAC using the chromogenic substrate 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-alpha-d-N-acetylneuraminic acid.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe six reference strains of Mycoplasma iowae (I, J, K, N, Q and R) and 12 field strains, most of them isolated from turkeys, were studied with a growth-inhibition test and a dot immunobinding test with rabbit antisera to the different serovars of M iowae, 16S rDNA gene amplification by polymerase chain reaction, and pathogenicity for chicken or turkey embryos. Antigenic tests tended to be strain specific and showed that most field strains were closely related to serovars K or N. The two pairs of primers chosen in 16S rDNA guided the amplification of 332 base pairs (bp) or 892 bp fragments from all the M iowae strains tested.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAvian Pathol
October 1989
Department of Veterinary Pathology, University of Liverpool, Neston, Wirral, Cheshire, England.
The minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of Baytril, Tylosin and Tiamulin for strains of Mycoplasma gallisepticum (MG) M. synoviae (MS), M. meleagridis (MM) and M.
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