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Dive into the research topics where Pär Larsson is active.

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Featured researches published by Pär Larsson.


Nature Genetics | 2005

The complete genome sequence of Francisella tularensis, the causative agent of tularemia.

Pär Larsson; Petra C. F. Oyston; Patrick Chain; May C. Chu; Melanie Duffield; Hans-Henrik Fuxelius; Emilio Garcia; Greger Hälltorp; Daniel Johansson; Karen E. Isherwood; Peter D. Karp; Eva Larsson; Ying Liu; Stephen L. Michell; Joann L. Prior; Richard G. Prior; Stephanie Malfatti; Anders Sjöstedt; Kerstin Svensson; Nick Thompson; Lisa M. Vergez; Jonathan Wagg; Brendan W. Wren; Luther E. Lindler; Siv G. E. Andersson; Mats Forsman; Richard W. Titball

Francisella tularensis is one of the most infectious human pathogens known. In the past, both the former Soviet Union and the US had programs to develop weapons containing the bacterium. We report the complete genome sequence of a highly virulent isolate of F. tularensis (1,892,819 bp). The sequence uncovers previously uncharacterized genes encoding type IV pili, a surface polysaccharide and iron-acquisition systems. Several virulence-associated genes were located in a putative pathogenicity island, which was duplicated in the genome. More than 10% of the putative coding sequences contained insertion-deletion or substitution mutations and seemed to be deteriorating. The genome is rich in IS elements, including IS630 Tc-1 mariner family transposons, which are not expected in a prokaryote. We used a computational method for predicting metabolic pathways and found an unexpectedly high proportion of disrupted pathways, explaining the fastidious nutritional requirements of the bacterium. The loss of biosynthetic pathways indicates that F. tularensis is an obligate host-dependent bacterium in its natural life cycle. Our results have implications for our understanding of how highly virulent human pathogens evolve and will expedite strategies to combat them.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2004

Worldwide genetic relationships among Francisella tularensis isolates determined by multiple-locus variable-number tandem repeat analysis.

Anders Johansson; Jason Farlow; Pär Larsson; Meghan Dukerich; Elias Chambers; Mona Byström; James Fox; May Chu; Mats Forsman; Anders Sjöstedt; Paul Keim

The intracellular bacterium Francisella tularensis is the causative agent of tularemia and poses a serious threat as an agent of bioterrorism. We have developed a highly effective molecular subtyping system from 25 variable-number tandem repeat (VNTR) loci. In our study, multiple-locus VNTR analysis (MLVA) was used to analyze genetic relationships and potential population structure within a global collection of 192 F. tularensis isolates, including representatives from each of the four subspecies. The VNTR loci displayed between 2 and 31 alleles with Neis diversity values between 0.05 and 0.95. Neighbor-joining cluster analysis of VNTR data revealed 120 genotypes among the 192 F. tularensis isolates, including accurate subspecies identification. F. tularensis subsp. tularensis (type A) isolates showed great diversity at VNTR loci, while F. tularensis subsp. holarctica (type B) isolates showed much lower levels despite a much broader geographical prevalence. The resolution of two distinct clades within F. tularensis subsp. tularensis (designated A.I and A.II) revealed a previously unrecognized genetic division within this highly virulent subspecies. F. tularensis subsp. holarctica appears to have recently spread globally across continents from a single origin, while F. tularensis subsp. tularensis has a long and complex evolutionary history almost exclusively in North America. The sole non-North American type A isolates (Slovakian) were closely related to the SCHU S4 strain. Significant linkage disequilibrium was detected among VNTR loci of F. tularensis consistent with a clonal population structure. Overall, this work greatly augments the study of tularemia ecology and epidemiology, while providing a framework for future forensic analysis of F. tularensis isolates.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2003

Genome-wide DNA microarray analysis of Francisella tularensis strains demonstrates extensive genetic conservation within the species but identifies regions that are unique to the highly virulent F. tularensis subsp. tularensis

Martien Broekhuijsen; Pär Larsson; Anders Johansson; Mona Byström; Ulla Eriksson; Eva Larsson; Richard G. Prior; Anders Sjöstedt; Richard W. Titball; Mats Forsman

ABSTRACT Francisella tularensis is a potent pathogen and a possible bioterrorism agent. Little is known, however, to explain the molecular basis for its virulence and the distinct differences in virulence found between the four recognized subspecies, F. tularensis subsp. tularensis, F. tularensis subsp. mediasiatica, F. tularensis subsp. holarctica, and F. tularensis subsp. novicida. We developed a DNA microarray based on 1,832 clones from a shotgun library used for sequencing of the highly virulent strain F. tularensis subsp. tularensis Schu S4. This allowed a genome-wide analysis of 27 strains representing all four subspecies. Overall, the microarray analysis confirmed a limited genetic variation within the species F. tularensis, and when the strains were compared, at most 3.7% of the probes showed differential hybridization. Cluster analysis of the hybridization data revealed that the causative agents of type A and type B tularemia, i.e., F. tularensis subsp. tularensis and F. tularensis subsp. holarctica, respectively, formed distinct clusters. Despite marked differences in their virulence and geographical origin, a high degree of genomic similarity between strains of F. tularensis subsp. tularensis and F. tularensis subsp. mediasiatica was apparent. Strains from Japan clustered separately, as did strains of F. tularensis subsp. novicida. Eight regions of difference (RD) 0.6 to 11.5 kb in size, altogether comprising 21 open reading frames, were identified that distinguished strains of the moderately virulent subspecies F. tularensis subsp. holarctica and the highly virulent subspecies F. tularensis subsp. tularensis. One of these regions, RD1, allowed for the first time the development of an F. tularensis-specific PCR assay that discriminates each of the four subspecies.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2005

Evolution of Subspecies of Francisella tularensis

Kerstin Svensson; Pär Larsson; Daniel Johansson; Mona Byström; Mats Forsman; Anders Johansson

Analysis of unidirectional genomic deletion events and single nucleotide variations suggested that the four subspecies of Francisella tularensis have evolved by vertical descent. The analysis indicated an evolutionary scenario where the highly virulent F. tularensis subsp. tularensis (type A) appeared before the less virulent F. tularensis subsp. holarctica (type B). Compared to their virulent progenitors, attenuated strains of F. tularensis exhibited specific unidirectional gene losses.


PLOS Pathogens | 2009

Molecular evolutionary consequences of niche restriction in Francisella tularensis, a facultative intracellular pathogen

Pär Larsson; Daniel Elfsmark; Kerstin Svensson; Per Wikström; Mats Forsman; Thomas Brettin; Paul Keim; Anders Johansson

Francisella tularensis is a potent mammalian pathogen well adapted to intracellular habitats, whereas F. novicida and F. philomiragia are less virulent in mammals and appear to have less specialized lifecycles. We explored adaptations within the genus that may be linked to increased host association, as follows. First, we determined the genome sequence of F. tularensis subsp. mediasiatica, the only subspecies that had not been previously sequenced. This genome, and those of 12 other F. tularensis isolates, were then compared to the genomes of F. novicida (three isolates) and F. philomiragia (one isolate). Signs of homologous recombination were found in ∼19.2% of F. novicida and F. philomiragia genes, but none among F. tularensis genomes. In addition, random insertions of insertion sequence elements appear to have provided raw materials for secondary adaptive mutations in F. tularensis, e.g. for duplication of the Francisella Pathogenicity Island and multiplication of a putative glycosyl transferase gene. Further, the five major genetic branches of F. tularensis seem to have converged along independent routes towards a common gene set via independent losses of gene functions. Our observations suggest that despite an average nucleotide identity of >97%, F. tularensis and F. novicida have evolved as two distinct population lineages, the former characterized by clonal structure with weak purifying selection, the latter by more frequent recombination and strong purifying selection. F. tularensis and F. novicida could be considered the same bacterial species, given their high similarity, but based on the evolutionary analyses described in this work we propose retaining separate species names.


Proteomics | 2002

Mapping of immunoreactive antigens of Francisella tularensis live vaccine strain

Jana Havlasová; Lenka Hernychová; Petr Halada; Věra Pellantová; Jan Krejsek; Jiří Stulík; Aleš Macela; Peter R. Jungblut; Pär Larsson; Mats Forsman

Francisella tularensis subsp. holarctica is the common causal agent of tularemia in Europe. Besides clinical signs, the diagnosis of the disease mostly depends on serological tests. To date, there is a lack of information about the F. tularensis antigens that induce antibody response. Therefore, we have started comprehensive mapping of immunoreactive antigens using the attenuated live vaccine strain of F. tularensis LVS originating from the European virulent strain. For this purpose, the immunoreactivity of sera collected from patients suffering from tularemia, together with the control sera of patients with Lyme disease and healthy blood donors, were examined by means of one‐dimensional and two‐dimensional immunoblotting. Furthermore, whole cell bacterial lysates, isolated integral membrane proteins and basic proteins were exploited as antigens. By this approach more than 80 different immunorelevant antigens were detected. Most of them came from whole cell bacterial lysate and integral membrane proteins. Conversely, only a negligible reaction was found in the case of basic proteins. Forty‐five spots were further selected for mass spectrometric analyses and 22 of them were annotated. Among the spots that provided characteristic reactions with sera from patients with tularemia, 60 kDa and 10 kDa chaperonins that occurred in several charge and mass variants, predominated.


BMC Genomics | 2012

Genome characterisation of the genus Francisella reveals insight into similar evolutionary paths in pathogens of mammals and fish

Andreas Sjödin; Kerstin Svensson; Caroline Öhrman; Jon Ahlinder; Petter Lindgren; Samuel Duodu; Anders Johansson; Duncan J. Colquhoun; Pär Larsson; Mats Forsman

BackgroundPrior to this study, relatively few strains of Francisella had been genome-sequenced. Previously published Francisella genome sequences were largely restricted to the zoonotic agent F. tularensis. Only limited data were available for other members of the Francisella genus, including F. philomiragia, an opportunistic pathogen of humans, F. noatunensis, a serious pathogen of farmed fish, and other less well described endosymbiotic species.ResultsWe determined the phylogenetic relationships of all known Francisella species, including some for which the phylogenetic positions were previously uncertain. The genus Francisella could be divided into two main genetic clades: one included F. tularensis, F. novicida, F. hispaniensis and Wolbachia persica, and another included F. philomiragia and F. noatunensis.Some Francisella species were found to have significant recombination frequencies. However, the fish pathogen F. noatunensis subsp. noatunensis was an exception due to it exhibiting a highly clonal population structure similar to the human pathogen F. tularensis.ConclusionsThe genus Francisella can be divided into two main genetic clades occupying both terrestrial and marine habitats. However, our analyses suggest that the ancestral Francisella species originated in a marine habitat. The observed genome to genome variation in gene content and IS elements of different species supports the view that similar evolutionary paths of host adaptation developed independently in F. tularensis (infecting mammals) and F. noatunensis subsp. noatunensis (infecting fish).


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2009

Landscape Epidemiology of Tularemia Outbreaks in Sweden

Kerstin Svensson; Erik Bäck; Henrik Eliasson; Lennart Berglund; Malin Granberg; Linda Karlsson; Pär Larsson; Mats Forsman; Anders Johansson

Transmission sites of specific Francisella tularensis genotypes were highly localized during natural outbreaks of human tularemia.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2001

Extensive Allelic Variation among Francisella tularensis Strains in a Short-Sequence Tandem Repeat Region

Anders Johansson; Ingela Göransson; Pär Larsson; Anders Sjöstedt

ABSTRACT Members of the genus Francisella and the speciesF. tularensis appear to be genetically very similar despite pronounced differences in virulence and geographic localization, and currently used typing methods do not allow discrimination of individual strains. Here we show that a number of short-sequence tandem repeat (SSTR) loci are present in F. tularensis genomes and that two of these loci, SSTR9 and SSTR16, are together highly discriminatory. Labeled PCR amplification products from the loci were identified by an automated DNA sequencer for size determination, and each allelic variant was sequenced. Simpsons index of diversity was 0.97 based on an analysis of 39 nonrelated F. tularensisisolates. The locus showing the highest discrimination, SSTR9, gave an index of diversity of 0.95. Thirty-two strains isolated from humans during five outbreaks of tularemia showed much less variation. For example, 11 of 12 strains isolated in the Ljusdal area, Sweden in 1995 and 1998 had identical allelic variants. Phenotypic variants of strains and extensively cultured replicates within strains did not differ, and, for example, the same allelic combination was present in 55 isolates of the live-vaccine strain of F. tularensis and another one was present in all 13 isolates of a strain passaged in animals. The analysis of short-sequence repeats of F. tularensis strains appears to be a powerful tool for discrimination of individual strains and may be useful for a detailed analysis of the epidemiology of this potent pathogen.


PLOS ONE | 2012

DotU and VgrG, Core Components of Type VI Secretion Systems, Are Essential for Francisella LVS Pathogenicity

Jeanette E. Bröms; Lena Meyer; Moa Lavander; Pär Larsson; Anders Sjöstedt

The Gram-negative bacterium Francisella tularensis causes tularemia, a disease which requires bacterial escape from phagosomes of infected macrophages. Once in the cytosol, the bacterium rapidly multiplies, inhibits activation of the inflammasome and ultimately causes death of the host cell. Of importance for these processes is a 33-kb gene cluster, the Francisella pathogenicity island (FPI), which is believed to encode a type VI secretion system (T6SS). In this study, we analyzed the role of the FPI-encoded proteins VgrG and DotU, which are conserved components of type VI secretion (T6S) clusters. We demonstrate that in F. tularensis LVS, VgrG was shown to form multimers, consistent with its suggested role as a trimeric membrane puncturing device in T6SSs, while the inner membrane protein DotU was shown to stabilize PdpB/IcmF, another T6SS core component. Upon infection of J774 cells, both ΔvgrG and ΔdotU mutants did not escape from phagosomes, and subsequently, did not multiply or cause cytopathogenicity. They also showed impaired activation of the inflammasome and marked attenuation in the mouse model. Moreover, all of the DotU-dependent functions investigated here required the presence of three residues that are essentially conserved among all DotU homologues. Thus, in agreement with a core function in T6S clusters, VgrG and DotU play key roles for modulation of the intracellular host response as well as for the virulence of F. tularensis.

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Mats Forsman

Swedish Defence Research Agency

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Andreas Sjödin

Swedish Defence Research Agency

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Kerstin Svensson

Swedish Defence Research Agency

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Caroline Öhrman

Swedish Defence Research Agency

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Kerstin Myrtennäs

Swedish Defence Research Agency

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Mona Byström

Swedish Defence Research Agency

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Duncan J. Colquhoun

National Veterinary Institute

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