Litcius/Paper detail

Subtyping analysis reveals new variants and accelerated evolution of Clostridioides difficile toxin B

Enhui Shen, Kangli Zhu, Danyang Li, Zhenrui Pan, Yun Luo, Qiao Bian, Liuqing He, Xiaojun Song, Ying Zhen, Dazhi Jin, Liang Tao

2020Communications Biology84 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Clostridioides difficile toxins (TcdA and TcdB) are major exotoxins responsible for C. difficile infection (CDI) associated diseases. The previously reported TcdB variants showed distinct biological features, immunoactivities, and potential pathogenicity in disease progression. Here, we performed global comparisons of amino acid sequences of both TcdA and TcdB from 3,269 C. difficile genomes and clustered them according to the evolutionary relatedness. We found that TcdB was much diverse and could be divided into eight subtypes, of which four were first described. Further analysis indicates that the tcdB gene undergoes accelerated evolution to maximize diversity. By tracing TcdB subtypes back to their original isolates, we found that the distribution of TcdB subtypes was not completely aligned with the phylogeny of C. difficile. These findings suggest that the tcdB genes not only frequently mutate, but also continuously transfer and exchange among C. difficile strains.

Topics & Concepts

SubtypingClostridium difficile toxin AClostridium difficile toxin BBiologyPathogenicityGenePhylogeneticsClostridioidesGeneticsClostridium difficileComputational biologyVirologyMicrobiologyComputer scienceAntibioticsProgramming languageClostridium difficile and Clostridium perfringens researchGut microbiota and healthHelicobacter pylori-related gastroenterology studies