AI Article Synopsis

  • Obligate intracellular bacteria like Ot, which cause diseases such as scrub typhus, have limited chance for genetic exchange with other microbes due to their growth within host cells.
  • A study of eight Ot strains revealed that, despite a high number of degraded mobile genetic elements, two strains contained at least one intact copy, indicating potential for genetic transfer within their populations.
  • These findings suggest that the genetic makeup of Ot is more dynamic than previously thought, highlighting implications for understanding microbial evolution and challenges in developing diagnostic and treatment strategies for scrub typhus.

Article Abstract

Obligate intracellular bacteria, or those only capable of growth inside other living cells, have limited opportunities for horizontal gene transfer with other microbes due to their isolated replicative niche. The human pathogen Ot, an obligate intracellular bacterium causing scrub typhus, encodes an unusually high copy number of a ~40 gene mobile genetic element that typically facilitates genetic transfer across microbes. This proliferated element is heavily degraded in Ot and previously assumed to be inactive. Here, we conducted a detailed analysis of this element in eight Ot strains and discovered two strains with at least one intact copy. This implies that the element is still capable of moving across Ot populations and suggests that the genome of this bacterium may be even more dynamic than previously appreciated. Our work raises questions about intracellular microbial evolution and sounds an alarm for gene-based efforts focused on diagnosing and combatting scrub typhus.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10732058PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/msphere.00268-23DOI Listing

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