AI Article Synopsis

  • Neisseria meningitidis, typically a rare cause of urethritis, has shown a rise in cases linked to a new nonencapsulated clade from the hyperinvasive lineage 11.2 in the U.S. and beyond.
  • This emerging clade has undergone genetic changes, acquiring genes from Neisseria gonorrhoeae that influence its respiration and capabilities in low-oxygen environments.
  • Research indicates that these changes lead to improved growth in microaerobic conditions, reduced nitric oxide accumulation, and better adaptation to urogenital environments, enhancing its survival.

Article Abstract

Neisseria meningitidis historically has been an infrequent and sporadic cause of urethritis and other urogenital infections. However, a nonencapsulated meningococcal clade belonging to the hyperinvasive clonal complex 11.2 lineage has recently emerged and caused clusters of urethritis cases in the United States and other countries. One of the genetic signatures of the emerging N. meningitidis urethritis clade (UC) is a chromosomal gene conversion event resulting in the acquisition of the Neisseria gonorrhoeae denitrification apparatus-the N. gonorrhoeae alleles encoding the nitrite reductase AniA, the nitric oxide (NO) reductase NorB, and the intergenic promoter region. The biological importance of the N. gonorrhoeae AniA-NorB for adaptation of the UC to a new environmental niche is investigated herein. We found that oxygen consumption, nitrite utilization, and NO production were significantly altered by the conversion event, resulting in different denitrifying aerobic and microaerobic growth of the clade. Further, transcription of and in UC isolates differed from canonical N. meningitidis, and important polymorphisms within the intergenic region, which influenced promoter activity of the UC, were identified. The contributions of three known meningococcal regulators (NsrR, FNR, and NarQP) in controlling the denitrification pathway and endogenous NO metabolism were distinct. Overall, transcription of was dampened relative to canonical N. meningitidis, and this correlated with the lower NO accumulation in the clade. Denitrification and microaerobic respiration were bolstered, and protection against host-derived NO was likely enhanced. The acquisition of the N. gonorrhoeae denitrification pathway by the UC supports the clade's adaptation and survival in a microaerobic urogenital environment.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10187123PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/iai.00079-23DOI Listing

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