Evolution of Listeria monocytogenes During a Persistent Human Prosthetic Hip Joint Infection

Listeria monocytogenes associated prosthetic joint infections (PJI) are a rare but increasing clinical problem of listeriosis. We characterized two isolates of the same L. monocytogenes strain isolated within five years of each other from a recurrent human prosthetic joint infection. The two isolates although clonally identical were phenotypically distinct confirming that the original infection strain had evolved within the human host PJI environment giving rise to a phenotypically distinct variant. The recurrent PJI isolate displayed various phenotypic differences compared to the parental original PJI isolate including diminished growth and carbon source metabolism, as well as altered morphology and increased stress sensitivity. The PJI isolates were both diminished in virulence due to an identical truncation mutation in the major virulence regulator PrfA. Genome wide sequence comparison provided conclusive evidence that the two isolates were identical clonal descendants of the same L. monocytogenes strain that had evolved through acquisition of various single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) as well as insertion and deletion events (InDels) during a persistent human PJI. Acquired genetic changes included a specific mutation causing premature stop codon (PMSC) and truncation of RNAse J1 protein. Based on analysis of this naturally truncated as well as other complete RNAse J1 deletion mutants we show that the long-term survival of this specific L. monocytogenes strain within t...
Source: Frontiers in Microbiology - Category: Microbiology Source Type: research