Litcius/Paper detail

Virulence and genomic diversity among clinical isolates of ST1 (BI/NAP1/027) Clostridioides difficile

Qiwen Dong, Huaiying Lin, Marie-Maude Allen, Julian R. Garneau, Jonathan K. Sia, Rita C. Smith, Fidel Haro, Tracy McMillen, Rosemary L. Pope, Carolyn Metcalfe, Victoria Burgo, Che Woodson, Nicholas P. Dylla, Claire E. Kohout, Anitha Sundararajan, Evan S. Snitkin, Vincent B. Young, Louis‐Charles Fortier, Mini Kamboj, Eric G. Pamer

2023Cell Reports24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Clostridioides difficile produces toxins that damage the colonic epithelium, causing colitis. Variation in disease severity is poorly understood and has been attributed to host factors and virulence differences between C. difficile strains. We test 23 epidemic ST1 C. difficile clinical isolates for their virulence in mice. All isolates encode a complete Tcd pathogenicity locus and achieve similar colonization densities. However, disease severity varies from lethal to avirulent infections. Genomic analysis of avirulent isolates reveals a 69-bp deletion in the cdtR gene, which encodes a response regulator for binary toxin expression. Deleting the 69-bp sequence in virulent R20291 strain renders it avirulent in mice with reduced toxin gene transcription. Our study demonstrates that a natural deletion within cdtR attenuates virulence in the epidemic ST1 C. difficile isolates without reducing colonization and persistence. Distinguishing strains on the basis of cdtR may enhance the specificity of diagnostic tests for C. difficile colitis.

Topics & Concepts

VirulenceBiologyMicrobiologyClostridium difficile toxin BClostridium difficileClostridium difficile toxin AGeneClostridioidesLocus (genetics)Pathogenicity islandToxinVirologyGeneticsAntibioticsClostridium difficile and Clostridium perfringens researchHelicobacter pylori-related gastroenterology studiesViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiology