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Chlamydia trachomatis Plasmid Gene Protein 3 Is Essential for the Establishment of Persistent Infection and Associated Immunopathology

Chunfu Yang, Laszlo Kari, Lei Lei, John H. Carlson, Li Ma, Claire E. Couch, William M. Whitmire, Kevin W. Bock, Ian N. Moore, Christine Bonner, Grant McClarty, Harlan D. Caldwell

2020mBio23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Chlamydia trachomatis can cause persistent infection that drives damaging inflammatory responses resulting in infertility and blindness. Little is known about chlamydial genes that cause persistence or factors that drive damaging pathology. In this work, we show that the C. trachomatis plasmid protein gene 3 (Pgp3) is the essential virulence factor for establishing persistent female genital tract infection and provide supportive evidence that Pgp3 functions similarly in a nonhuman primate trachoma model. We further show that persistent Ppg3-dependent infection drives damaging immunopathology. These results are important advances in understanding the pathophysiology of chlamydial persistence.

Topics & Concepts

Chlamydia trachomatisTrachomaImmunologyTubal factor infertilityChlamydiaVirulencePlasmidBiologyInfertilityGeneImmunopathologyChlamydiaceaeMedicineVirologyGeneticsPathologyPregnancyReproductive tract infections researchReproductive System and PregnancyCervical Cancer and HPV Research