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Authors
Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
The Chlamydiaceae are a family of obligate intracellular bacteria characterized by a unique biphasic
developmental cycle. It encompasses the single genus Chlamydia, which involves nine species that affect
a wide range of vertebral hosts, causing infections with serious impact on human health (mainly due to
Chlamydia trachomatis infections) and on farming and veterinary industries. It is believed that Chlamydiales
originated 700 mya, whereas C. trachomatis likely split from the other Chlamydiaceae during the last
6 mya. This corresponds to the emergence of modern human lineages, with the first descriptions of chlamydial
infections as ancient as four millennia. Chlamydiaceae have undergone a massive genome reduction,
on behalf of the deletional bias ‘‘use it or lose it’’, stabilizing at 1–1.2 Mb and keeping a striking
genome synteny. Their phylogeny reveals species segregation according to biological properties, with
huge differences in terms of host range, tissue tropism, and disease outcomes. Genome differences rely
on the occurrence of mutations in the >700 orthologous genes, as well as on events of recombination,
gene loss, inversion, and paralogous expansion, affecting both a hypervariable region named the plasticity
zone, and genes essentially encoding polymorphic and transmembrane head membrane proteins, type
III secretion effectors and some metabolic pathways. Procedures for molecular typing are still not consensual
but have allowed the knowledge of molecular epidemiology patterns for some species as well as the
identification of outbreaks and emergence of successful clones for C. trachomatis. This manuscript intends
to provide a comprehensive review on the evolution, phylogeny, and molecular epidemiology of
Chlamydia.
Description
Keywords
Chlamydia Trachomatis Taxonomy Evolution Taxonomy Molecular Epidemiology Infecções Sexualmente Transmissíveis
Pedagogical Context
Citation
Infect Genet Evol. 2014 Apr;23:49-64. doi: 10.1016/j.meegid.2014.01.029. Epub 2014 Feb 5. Review
Publisher
Elsevier
