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Featured researches published by Siomar de Castro Soares.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2012

Pangenomic Study of Corynebacterium diphtheriae That Provides Insights into the Genomic Diversity of Pathogenic Isolates from Cases of Classical Diphtheria, Endocarditis, and Pneumonia

Eva Trost; Jochen Blom; Siomar de Castro Soares; I-Hsiu Huang; Arwa Al-Dilaimi; Jasmin Schröder; Sebastian Jaenicke; Fernanda Alves Dorella; Flávia Souza Rocha; Anderson Miyoshi; Vasco Azevedo; Maria Paula Cruz Schneider; Artur Silva; Thereza Cristina Ferreira Camello; Priscila Soares Sabbadini; Cíntia Silva Santos; Louisy Sanches dos Santos; Raphael Hirata; Ana Luiza Mattos-Guaraldi; Androulla Efstratiou; Michael P. Schmitt; Hung Ton-That; Andreas Tauch

Corynebacterium diphtheriae is one of the most prominent human pathogens and the causative agent of the communicable disease diphtheria. The genomes of 12 strains isolated from patients with classical diphtheria, endocarditis, and pneumonia were completely sequenced and annotated. Including the genome of C. diphtheriae NCTC 13129, we herewith present a comprehensive comparative analysis of 13 strains and the first characterization of the pangenome of the species C. diphtheriae. Comparative genomics showed extensive synteny and revealed a core genome consisting of 1,632 conserved genes. The pangenome currently comprises 4,786 protein-coding regions and increases at an average of 65 unique genes per newly sequenced strain. Analysis of prophages carrying the diphtheria toxin gene tox revealed that the toxoid vaccine producer C. diphtheriae Park-Williams no. 8 has been lysogenized by two copies of the ω(tox)(+) phage, whereas C. diphtheriae 31A harbors a hitherto-unknown tox(+) corynephage. DNA binding sites of the tox-controlling regulator DtxR were detected by genome-wide motif searches. Comparative content analysis showed that the DtxR regulons exhibit marked differences due to gene gain, gene loss, partial gene deletion, and DtxR binding site depletion. Most predicted pathogenicity islands of C. diphtheriae revealed characteristics of horizontal gene transfer. The majority of these islands encode subunits of adhesive pili, which can play important roles in adhesion of C. diphtheriae to different host tissues. All sequenced isolates contain at least two pilus gene clusters. It appears that variation in the distributed genome is a common strategy of C. diphtheriae to establish differences in host-pathogen interactions.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Evidence for Reductive Genome Evolution and Lateral Acquisition of Virulence Functions in Two Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis Strains

Jeronimo C. Ruiz; Vívian D'Afonseca; Artur Silva; Amjad Ali; Anne Cybelle Pinto; Anderson Rodrigues dos Santos; Aryanne A. M. C. Rocha; Débora O. Lopes; Fernanda Alves Dorella; Luis G. C. Pacheco; Marcília Pinheiro da Costa; Meritxell Zurita Turk; Núbia Seyffert; Pablo M. R. O. Moraes; Siomar de Castro Soares; Sintia Almeida; Thiago Luiz de Paula Castro; Vinicius Augusto Carvalho de Abreu; Eva Trost; Jan Baumbach; Andreas Tauch; Maria Paula Cruz Schneider; John Anthony McCulloch; Louise Teixeira Cerdeira; Rommel Thiago Jucá Ramos; Adhemar Zerlotini; Anderson J. Dominitini; Daniela M. Resende; Elisângela Monteiro Coser; Luciana Márcia Oliveira

Background Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis, a Gram-positive, facultative intracellular pathogen, is the etiologic agent of the disease known as caseous lymphadenitis (CL). CL mainly affects small ruminants, such as goats and sheep; it also causes infections in humans, though rarely. This species is distributed worldwide, but it has the most serious economic impact in Oceania, Africa and South America. Although C. pseudotuberculosis causes major health and productivity problems for livestock, little is known about the molecular basis of its pathogenicity. Methodology and Findings We characterized two C. pseudotuberculosis genomes (Cp1002, isolated from goats; and CpC231, isolated from sheep). Analysis of the predicted genomes showed high similarity in genomic architecture, gene content and genetic order. When C. pseudotuberculosis was compared with other Corynebacterium species, it became evident that this pathogenic species has lost numerous genes, resulting in one of the smallest genomes in the genus. Other differences that could be part of the adaptation to pathogenicity include a lower GC content, of about 52%, and a reduced gene repertoire. The C. pseudotuberculosis genome also includes seven putative pathogenicity islands, which contain several classical virulence factors, including genes for fimbrial subunits, adhesion factors, iron uptake and secreted toxins. Additionally, all of the virulence factors in the islands have characteristics that indicate horizontal transfer. Conclusions These particular genome characteristics of C. pseudotuberculosis, as well as its acquired virulence factors in pathogenicity islands, provide evidence of its lifestyle and of the pathogenicity pathways used by this pathogen in the infection process. All genomes cited in this study are available in the NCBI Genbank database (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genbank/) under accession numbers CP001809 and CP001829.


BMC Genomics | 2011

Comparative analysis of two complete Corynebacterium ulcerans genomes and detection of candidate virulence factors.

Eva Trost; Arwa Al-Dilaimi; Panagiotis Papavasiliou; Jessica Schneider; Andreas Burkovski; Siomar de Castro Soares; Sintia Almeida; Fernanda Alves Dorella; Anderson Miyoshi; Vasco Azevedo; Maria Paula Cruz Schneider; Artur Silva; Cíntia Silva Santos; Louisy Sanches dos Santos; Priscila Soares Sabbadini; Alexandre A.S.O. Dias; Raphael Hirata; Ana Luiza Mattos-Guaraldi; Andreas Tauch

BackgroundCorynebacterium ulcerans has been detected as a commensal in domestic and wild animals that may serve as reservoirs for zoonotic infections. During the last decade, the frequency and severity of human infections associated with C. ulcerans appear to be increasing in various countries. As the knowledge of genes contributing to the virulence of this bacterium was very limited, the complete genome sequences of two C. ulcerans strains detected in the metropolitan area of Rio de Janeiro were determined and characterized by comparative genomics: C. ulcerans 809 was initially isolated from an elderly woman with fatal pulmonary infection and C. ulcerans BR-AD22 was recovered from a nasal sample of an asymptomatic dog.ResultsThe circular chromosome of C. ulcerans 809 has a total size of 2,502,095 bp and encodes 2,182 predicted proteins, whereas the genome of C. ulcerans BR-AD22 is 104,279 bp larger and comprises 2,338 protein-coding regions. The minor difference in size of the two genomes is mainly caused by additional prophage-like elements in the C. ulcerans BR-AD22 chromosome. Both genomes show a highly similar order of orthologous coding regions; and both strains share a common set of 2,076 genes, demonstrating their very close relationship. A screening for prominent virulence factors revealed the presence of phospholipase D (Pld), neuraminidase H (NanH), endoglycosidase E (EndoE), and subunits of adhesive pili of the SpaDEF type that are encoded in both C. ulcerans genomes. The rbp gene coding for a putative ribosome-binding protein with striking structural similarity to Shiga-like toxins was additionally detected in the genome of the human isolate C. ulcerans 809.ConclusionsThe molecular data deduced from the complete genome sequences provides considerable knowledge of virulence factors in C. ulcerans that is increasingly recognized as an emerging pathogen. This bacterium is apparently equipped with a broad and varying set of virulence factors, including a novel type of a ribosome-binding protein. Whether the respective protein contributes to the severity of human infections (and a fatal outcome) remains to be elucidated by genetic experiments with defined bacterial mutants and host model systems.


BMC Genomics | 2010

The complete genome sequence of Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis FRC41 isolated from a 12-year-old girl with necrotizing lymphadenitis reveals insights into gene-regulatory networks contributing to virulence

Eva Trost; Lisa Ott; Jessica Schneider; Jasmin Schröder; Sebastian Jaenicke; Alexander Goesmann; Peter Husemann; Jens Stoye; Fernanda Alves Dorella; Flávia Souza Rocha; Siomar de Castro Soares; Vívian D'Afonseca; Anderson Miyoshi; Jerónimo Saiz Ruiz; Artur Silva; Vasco Azevedo; Andreas Burkovski; Nicole Guiso; Olivier Join‐Lambert; Samer Kayal; Andreas Tauch

BackgroundCorynebacterium pseudotuberculosis is generally regarded as an important animal pathogen that rarely infects humans. Clinical strains are occasionally recovered from human cases of lymphadenitis, such as C. pseudotuberculosis FRC41 that was isolated from the inguinal lymph node of a 12-year-old girl with necrotizing lymphadenitis. To detect potential virulence factors and corresponding gene-regulatory networks in this human isolate, the genome sequence of C. pseudotuberculosis FCR41 was determined by pyrosequencing and functionally annotated.ResultsSequencing and assembly of the C. pseudotuberculosis FRC41 genome yielded a circular chromosome with a size of 2,337,913 bp and a mean G+C content of 52.2%. Specific gene sets associated with iron and zinc homeostasis were detected among the 2,110 predicted protein-coding regions and integrated into a gene-regulatory network that is linked with both the central metabolism and the oxidative stress response of FRC41. Two gene clusters encode proteins involved in the sortase-mediated polymerization of adhesive pili that can probably mediate the adherence to host tissue to facilitate additional ligand-receptor interactions and the delivery of virulence factors. The prominent virulence factors phospholipase D (Pld) and corynebacterial protease CP40 are encoded in the genome of this human isolate. The genome annotation revealed additional serine proteases, neuraminidase H, nitric oxide reductase, an invasion-associated protein, and acyl-CoA carboxylase subunits involved in mycolic acid biosynthesis as potential virulence factors. The cAMP-sensing transcription regulator GlxR plays a key role in controlling the expression of several genes contributing to virulence.ConclusionThe functional data deduced from the genome sequencing and the extended knowledge of virulence factors indicate that the human isolate C. pseudotuberculosis FRC41 is equipped with a distinct gene set promoting its survival under unfavorable environmental conditions encountered in the mammalian host.


PLOS ONE | 2013

The pan-genome of the animal pathogen Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis reveals differences in genome plasticity between the biovar ovis and equi strains.

Siomar de Castro Soares; Artur Silva; Eva Trost; Jochen Blom; Rommel Thiago Jucá Ramos; Adriana Ribeiro Carneiro; Amjad Ali; Anderson Rodrigues dos Santos; Anne Cybelle Pinto; Carlos R. Diniz; Eudes Guilherme Vieria Barbosa; Fernanda Alves Dorella; Flávia Aburjaile; Flávia Souza Rocha; Karina K F Nascimento; Luis Carlos Guimarães; Sintia Almeida; Syed Shah Hassan; Syeda Marriam Bakhtiar; Ulisses de Pádua Pereira; Vinicius Augusto Carvalho de Abreu; Maria Paula Cruz Schneider; Anderson Miyoshi; Andreas Tauch; Vasco Azevedo

Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis is a facultative intracellular pathogen and the causative agent of several infectious and contagious chronic diseases, including caseous lymphadenitis, ulcerative lymphangitis, mastitis, and edematous skin disease, in a broad spectrum of hosts. In addition, Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis infections pose a rising worldwide economic problem in ruminants. The complete genome sequences of 15 C. pseudotuberculosis strains isolated from different hosts and countries were comparatively analyzed using a pan-genomic strategy. Phylogenomic, pan-genomic, core genomic, and singleton analyses revealed close relationships among pathogenic corynebacteria, the clonal-like behavior of C. pseudotuberculosis and slow increases in the sizes of pan-genomes. According to extrapolations based on the pan-genomes, core genomes and singletons, the C. pseudotuberculosis biovar ovis shows a more clonal-like behavior than the C. pseudotuberculosis biovar equi. Most of the variable genes of the biovar ovis strains were acquired in a block through horizontal gene transfer and are highly conserved, whereas the biovar equi strains contain great variability, both intra- and inter-biovar, in the 16 detected pathogenicity islands (PAIs). With respect to the gene content of the PAIs, the most interesting finding is the high similarity of the pilus genes in the biovar ovis strains compared with the great variability of these genes in the biovar equi strains. Concluding, the polymerization of complete pilus structures in biovar ovis could be responsible for a remarkable ability of these strains to spread throughout host tissues and penetrate cells to live intracellularly, in contrast with the biovar equi, which rarely attacks visceral organs. Intracellularly, the biovar ovis strains are expected to have less contact with other organisms than the biovar equi strains, thereby explaining the significant clonal-like behavior of the biovar ovis strains.


PLOS ONE | 2012

PIPS: Pathogenicity Island Prediction Software

Siomar de Castro Soares; Vinicius Augusto Carvalho de Abreu; Rommel Thiago Jucá Ramos; Louise Teixeira Cerdeira; Artur Silva; Jan Baumbach; Eva Trost; Andreas Tauch; Raphael Hirata; Ana Luiza Mattos-Guaraldi; Anderson Miyoshi; Vasco Azevedo

The adaptability of pathogenic bacteria to hosts is influenced by the genomic plasticity of the bacteria, which can be increased by such mechanisms as horizontal gene transfer. Pathogenicity islands play a major role in this type of gene transfer because they are large, horizontally acquired regions that harbor clusters of virulence genes that mediate the adhesion, colonization, invasion, immune system evasion, and toxigenic properties of the acceptor organism. Currently, pathogenicity islands are mainly identified in silico based on various characteristic features: (1) deviations in codon usage, G+C content or dinucleotide frequency and (2) insertion sequences and/or tRNA genetic flanking regions together with transposase coding genes. Several computational techniques for identifying pathogenicity islands exist. However, most of these techniques are only directed at the detection of horizontally transferred genes and/or the absence of certain genomic regions of the pathogenic bacterium in closely related non-pathogenic species. Here, we present a novel software suite designed for the prediction of pathogenicity islands (pathogenicity island prediction software, or PIPS). In contrast to other existing tools, our approach is capable of utilizing multiple features for pathogenicity island detection in an integrative manner. We show that PIPS provides better accuracy than other available software packages. As an example, we used PIPS to study the veterinary pathogen Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis, in which we identified seven putative pathogenicity islands.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2011

Complete Genome Sequence of Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis I19, a Strain Isolated from a Cow in Israel with Bovine Mastitis

Artur Silva; Maria Paula Cruz Schneider; Louise Teixeira Cerdeira; Maria Silvanira Barbosa; Rommel Thiago Jucá Ramos; Adriana Ribeiro Carneiro; Rodrigo Santos; Marília Lima; Vívian D'Afonseca; Sintia Almeida; Anderson Rodrigues dos Santos; Siomar de Castro Soares; Anne Cybelle Pinto; Amjad Ali; Fernanda Alves Dorella; Flávia Souza Rocha; Vinicius Augusto Carvalho de Abreu; Eva Trost; Andreas Tauch; Nahum Y. Shpigel; Anderson Miyoshi; Vasco Azevedo

This work reports the completion and annotation of the genome sequence of Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis I19, isolated from an Israeli dairy cow with severe clinical mastitis. To present the whole-genome sequence, a de novo assembly approach using 33 million short (25-bp) mate-paired SOLiD reads only was applied. Furthermore, the automatic, functional, and manual annotations were attained with the use of several algorithms in a multistep process.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2012

Genome Sequence of Exiguobacterium antarcticum B7, Isolated from a Biofilm in Ginger Lake, King George Island, Antarctica

Adriana Ribeiro Carneiro; Rommel Thiago Jucá Ramos; Hivana Dall'Agnol; Anne Cybelle Pinto; Siomar de Castro Soares; Anderson Rodrigues dos Santos; Luis Carlos Guimarães; Sintia Almeida; Rafael A. Baraúna; Diego Assis das Graças; Luciano Chaves Franco; Amjad Ali; Syed Shah Hassan; Catarina Nunes; Maria Silvanira Barbosa; Karina Fiaux; Flávia Aburjaile; Eudes Barbosa; Syeda Marriam Bakhtiar; Daniella Vilela; Felipe Nóbrega; Adriana Lopes dos Santos; Marta Sofia P. Carepo; Vasco Azevedo; Maria Paula Cruz Schneider; Vivian H. Pellizari; Artur Silva

Exiguobacterium antarcticum is a psychotropic bacterium isolated for the first time from microbial mats of Lake Fryxell in Antarctica. Many organisms of the genus Exiguobacterium are extremophiles and have properties of biotechnological interest, e.g., the capacity to adapt to cold, which make this genus a target for discovering new enzymes, such as lipases and proteases, in addition to improving our understanding of the mechanisms of adaptation and survival at low temperatures. This study presents the genome of E. antarcticum B7, isolated from a biofilm sample of Ginger Lake on King George Island, Antarctic peninsula.


Journal of Biotechnology | 2013

Genome sequence of Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis biovar equi strain 258 and prediction of antigenic targets to improve biotechnological vaccine production.

Siomar de Castro Soares; Eva Trost; Rommel Thiago Jucá Ramos; Adriana Ribeiro Carneiro; Anderson Rodrigues dos Santos; Anne Cybelle Pinto; Eudes Barbosa; Flávia Aburjaile; Amjad Ali; Carlos Augusto Almeida Diniz; Syed Shah Hassan; Karina Fiaux; Luis Carlos Guimarães; Syeda Marriam Bakhtiar; Ulisses de Pádua Pereira; Sintia Almeida; Vinicius Augusto Carvalho de Abreu; Flávia Souza Rocha; Fernanda Alves Dorella; Anderson Miyoshi; Artur Silva; Vasco Azevedo; Andreas Tauch

Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis is the causative agent of several veterinary diseases in a broad range of economically important hosts, which can vary from caseous lymphadenitis in sheep and goats (biovar ovis) to ulcerative lymphangitis in cattle and horses (biovar equi). Existing vaccines against C. pseudotuberculosis are mainly intended for small ruminants and, even in these hosts, they still present remarkable limitations. In this study, we present the complete genome sequence of C. pseudotuberculosis biovar equi strain 258, isolated from a horse with ulcerative lymphangitis. The genome has a total size of 2,314,404 bp and contains 2088 predicted protein-coding regions. Using in silico analysis, eleven pathogenicity islands were detected in the genome sequence of C. pseudotuberculosis 258. The application of a reverse vaccinology strategy identified 49 putative antigenic proteins, which can be used as candidate vaccine targets in future works.


BMC Genomics | 2012

The Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis in silico predicted pan-exoproteome

Anderson Rodrigues dos Santos; Adriana Ribeiro Carneiro; Alfonso Gala-Garcia; Anne Cybelle Pinto; Debmalya Barh; Eudes Guilherme Vieria Barbosa; Flávia Aburjaile; Fernanda Alves Dorella; Flávia Souza Rocha; Luis Carlos Guimarães; Meritxell Zurita-Turk; Rommel Thiago Jucá Ramos; Sintia Almeida; Siomar de Castro Soares; Ulisses de Pádua Pereira; Vinicius Augusto Carvalho de Abreu; Artur Silva; Anderson Miyoshi; Vasco Azevedo

BackgroundPan-genomic studies aim, for instance, at defining the core, dispensable and unique genes within a species. A pan-genomics study for vaccine design tries to assess the best candidates for a vaccine against a specific pathogen. In this context, rather than studying genes predicted to be exported in a single genome, with pan-genomics it is possible to study genes present in different strains within the same species, such as virulence factors. The target organism of this pan-genomic work here presented is Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis, the etiologic agent of caseous lymphadenitis (CLA) in goat and sheep, which causes significant economic losses in those herds around the world. Currently, only a few antigens against CLA are known as being the basis of commercial and still ineffective vaccines. In this regard, the here presented work analyses, in silico, five C. pseudotuberculosis genomes and gathers data to predict common exported proteins in all five genomes. These candidates were also compared to two recent C. pseudotuberculosis in vitro exoproteome results.ResultsThe complete genome of five C. pseudotuberculosis strains (1002, C231, I19, FRC41 and PAT10) were submitted to pan-genomics analysis, yielding 306, 59 and 12 gene sets, respectively, representing the core, dispensable and unique in silico predicted exported pan-genomes. These sets bear 150 genes classified as secreted (SEC) and 227 as potentially surface exposed (PSE). Our findings suggest that the main C. pseudotuberculosis in vitro exoproteome could be greater, appended by a fraction of the 35 proteins formerly predicted as making part of the variant in vitro exoproteome. These genomes were manually curated for correct methionine initiation and redeposited with a total of 1885 homogenized genes.ConclusionsThe in silico prediction of exported proteins has allowed to define a list of putative vaccine candidate genes present in all five complete C. pseudotuberculosis genomes. Moreover, it has also been possible to define the in silico predicted dispensable and unique C. pseudotuberculosis exported proteins. These results provide in silico evidence to further guide experiments in the areas of vaccines, diagnosis and drugs. The work here presented is the first whole C. pseudotuberculosis in silico predicted pan-exoproteome completed till today.

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Artur Silva

Federal University of Maranhão

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Anderson Miyoshi

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Fernanda Alves Dorella

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Sintia Almeida

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Anderson Rodrigues dos Santos

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Anne Cybelle Pinto

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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