Plasmid-Encoded Pgp5 Is a Significant Contributor to Chlamydia muridarum Induction of Hydrosalpinx
Author(s) -
Yumeng Huang,
Qi Zhang,
Zhangsheng Yang,
Turner Conrad,
Yuanjun Liu,
Guangming Zhong
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0124840
Subject(s) - hydrosalpinx , plasmid , virulence , biology , oviduct , chlamydia , microbiology and biotechnology , virology , gene , immunology , genetics , infertility , pregnancy , endocrinology
We have previously shown that the plasmid-encoded Pgp3 is a major virulence factor for C . muridarum induction of hydrosalpinx. We now report that Pgp5 also plays a significant role in the development of hydrosalpinx following C . muridarum induction. Pgp5 deficiency was introduced via either in-frame deletion (CM-Δpgp5) or premature stop codon installation (CM-pgp5S). Mice infected with either CM-Δpgp5 or CM-pgp5S developed hydrosalpinges at significantly reduced levels with an incidence rate of <40% and a mean severity score of 2 or less. In contrast, 80% or more mice developed hydrosalpinx with a severity score of >3 when mice were infected with Pgp5-sufficient C . muridarum (plasmid-competent wild type or plasmid-free C . muridarum transformed with a full plasmid or depleted of pgp7 gene). The attenuated pathogenicity of the Pgp5-deficient C . muridarum correlated with a significantly reduced level of ascending infection in the oviduct tissue despite the similar overall shedding courses between mice infected with Pgp5-deficeint versus sufficient C . muridarum . Furthermore, in the oviducts of mice infected with Pgp5-deficient C . muridarum , significantly lower levels of inflammatory cell infiltration and cytokine production were detected. Thus, Pgp5 is a significant plasmid-encoded virulence factor for C . muridarum pathogenicity in the upper genital tract.
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