Stepwise assembly of virulence-associated traits in the intracellular pathogen Coxiella burnetii

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Stepwise assembly of virulence-associated traits in the intracellular pathogen Coxiella burnetii

Authors

Brenner, A. E.; Raghavan, R.

Abstract

Coxiella burnetii is the only member of the order Legionellales known to primarily infect vertebrates. The Q fever pathogen is also unusual in that it replicates within an acidified phagolysosome-like vacuole. The evolutionary origins of the virulence determinants underlying this lifestyle remain unclear. More broadly, little is known about how virulence-related traits arise in specialized intracellular lineages, where access to foreign-origin DNA may be more episodic. To address this question, we used Legionellales-wide comparative phylogenomics to reconstruct the gain and loss of traits affecting host interaction, immune evasion, intracellular survival, and metabolism. We found that many virulence-associated traits in C. burnetii predate the modern pathogen and were assembled stepwise in ancestors that likely occupied niches distinct from the acidified vacuolar niche of modern C. burnetii. The common ancestor shared with soft-tick Coxiella endosymbionts likely encoded most C. burnetii type IVB secretion system effectors, indicating that much of the host-manipulation repertoire in C. burnetii was already present before the emergence of the modern pathogen. Distinctive lipopolysaccharide features associated with immune evasion also appear to have accumulated progressively within the Coxiella lineage, including genes implicated in synthesis of virenose, a unique O-antigen sugar critical for C. burnetii virulence. Traits likely to support replication in the acidic Coxiella-containing vacuole likewise accumulated gradually, with generalized stress-tolerance functions predating acquisition of an Mrp cation/proton antiporter that may have further supported pH homeostasis. Additional changes in sugar transport and catabolism, glycolytic control, and respiratory metabolism may have enhanced metabolic flexibility and access to diverse substrates in this nutrient-rich niche. Together, these findings support a model in which vertebrate pathogenicity in C. burnetii emerged through stepwise remodeling of an ancestral host-associated lineage and provide a framework for understanding how virulence-related traits evolve in specialized intracellular pathogens.

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