Journal article

Buruli ulcer: Reductive evolution enhances pathogenicity of Mycobacterium ulcerans

C Demangel, TP Stinear, ST Cole

Nature Reviews Microbiology | Published : 2009

Abstract

Buruli ulcer is an emerging human disease caused by infection with a slow-growing pathogen, Mycobacterium ulcerans, that produces mycolactone, a cytotoxin with immunomodulatory properties. The disease is associated with wetlands in certain tropical countries, and evidence for a role of insects in transmission of this pathogen is growing. Comparative genomic analysis has revealed that M. ulcerans arose from Mycobacterium marinum, a ubiquitous fast-growing aquatic species, by horizontal transfer of a virulence plasmid that carries a cluster of genes for mycolactone production, followed by reductive evolution. Here, the ecology, microbiology, evolutionary genomics and immunopathology of Buruli ..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

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Funding Acknowledgements

We thank the past and present members of our teams for their contributions. This work was supported in part by the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia (to T.P.S.), the Agence Nationale pour la Recherche (to C.D.) and the Fondation Raoul Follereau (to S.T.C.).