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. 2021 Jan 14;10(2):e01268-20. doi: 10.1128/MRA.01268-20

Complete Genome Sequence of Neonatal Clinical Group B Streptococcal Isolate CJB111

Brady L Spencer a, Anushila Chatterjee a, Breck A Duerkop a, Carol J Baker b,c, Kelly S Doran a,
Editor: Julie C Dunning Hotoppd
PMCID: PMC7849706  PMID: 33446593

Group B Streptococcus (GBS) is an asymptomatic colonizer of the female reproductive tract but can cause maternal and neonatal infections and adverse pregnancy outcomes. Here, we closed the genome sequence of strain CJB111, a neonatal GBS clinical isolate from a case of late-onset bacteremia without focus (Houston, TX; 1990).

ABSTRACT

Group B Streptococcus (GBS) is an asymptomatic colonizer of the female reproductive tract but can cause maternal and neonatal infections and adverse pregnancy outcomes. Here, we closed the genome sequence of strain CJB111, a neonatal GBS clinical isolate from a case of late-onset bacteremia without focus (Houston, TX; 1990).

ANNOUNCEMENT

The Gram-positive beta-hemolytic bacterium Streptococcus agalactiae (group B Streptococcus [GBS]) asymptomatically colonizes the gastrointestinal and female genital tracts of healthy adults but can cause neonatal infections (pneumonia, bacteremia, meningitis [1]) and adverse pregnancy outcomes (2). Serotype V GBS isolates are emerging among adults and infants (36), and serotype V isolate CJB111 exhibits hypervirulence and vaginal persistence in murine models of GBS infection and colonization (7, 8).

CJB111 (ATCC BAA23) was isolated by Carol J. Baker from the blood of a female infant with late-onset sepsis on 18 July 1990, grown in Todd Hewitt broth (THB), and stored in glycerol at –90°C. The patient received intravenous ampicillin and gentamicin 1 day post onset of illness. Upon GBS isolation, therapy was switched on day 3 to intravenous penicillin (10-day treatment total). Following clean cerebrospinal fluid tests, she was diagnosed with bacteremia without focus at age 55 days and discharged without apparent sequelae. While CJB111’s sequence is currently available in 155 contigs (GenBank accession no. AAJQ01000000), a closed genome sequence may ease future genomic analyses.

CJB111 was grown statically overnight at 37°C in THB, genomic DNA was purified (Gentra PureGene Yeast/Bact kit), and concentration and quality were confirmed by NanoDrop spectroscopy. The Microbial Genome Sequencing Center (MiGS; Pittsburgh, PA) performed short- and long-read sequencing (Illumina and Oxford Nanopore technologies [ONT], respectively) and de novo assembly. Default parameters were used except where otherwise noted. Short reads were obtained using the Illumina Nextera kit and NextSeq 550 platform (9). For ONT sequencing, libraries were prepared using kit SQK-LSK109 to the manufacturer’s specifications (no DNA size selection/shearing), sequencing was performed on a MinION R9 flow cell, and base calling was performed using Guppy v4.2.2 (GPU mode) (10). Illumina paired-end reads (2 × 150 bp) and ONT long reads were provided as fastq files (Illumina: 7,410,044 reads, 989,364,400 bases, 472× coverage; ONT: 175,394 reads, 650,701,562 bases, 310× coverage, N50 value of 4,577 bp). bcl2fastq v2.20.0.422 was used for demultiplexing, quality control, and trimming of the Illumina reads (11) and Porechop v0.2.4 for quality trimming and removing adapters for ONT sequencing (12). Hybrid assembly via Unicycler v0.4.8 with a verbosity value of 2 (13) yielded six contigs, which were further assembled into three nonoverlapping contigs upon mapping to CJB111 contigs (AAJQ01000000) in Geneious v11.1.5 (14). The genome sequence was closed via PCR using primers flanking the nonoverlapping contigs (Table 1) and Phusion high-fidelity polymerase/buffer (New England Biolabs) under the following cycling conditions on a Bio-Rad T100 thermal cycler: 98°C, 2-min hot start; 34 cycles (98°C, 10seconds; Tm °C, 20seconds; 72°C, 30- second extension/kb); and 72°C, 10-min extension. Purified PCR amplicons (Qiagen) were Sanger sequenced using Applied Biosystems 3730/3500xl genetic analyzers, yielding 2× sequencing in both directions. Contigs were assembled de novo, overlapping ends were trimmed, and the genome sequence was rotated manually in Geneious v11.1.5 to start with dnaA.

TABLE 1.

Primers used in this study

PCRs flanking nonoverlapping contigs Primer namea Sequence (5′–3′) PCR Tm (°C) PCR product length (bp) PCR extension time (min:s)
PCR 1 5121 TATCAATAACGATAGTATGCCCAGCG 65 4,712 2:21
3121 TTCCAATAGGTCTTGATAGTGAGGTG
PCR 2 5122 GTTTGTTGCAGTCGTCGTTATCTC 63 3,392 1:42
3122 CGTCGGAATTAAATCTTGGAATACC
PCR 3 5123 GGCATCAGGAATGATCTGATTTACAC 65 2,064 1:02
3123 TGCCTCCCATTGGATTACTGTATAC
PCR 4 5124 GACTCGATAGGGTATATGGTGCC 65 5,126 2:34
3124 GGTTCGATTGCGTTACTGCG
Sequencing primers
    PCR 1 5131 GTGACATAGATTGGAATAGGGTTAGC
5132 TATTCTCAGTGTCTGTGTACTACTGC
5133 AAATCTTGGCAGACAGTGGTTATC
5134 CAACAGGAGGAACCTGTAGAAGTTC
5135 TACAATCCATCTCTGGAATTCAC
3131 GTGACATAGATTGGAATAGGGTTAGC
3132 ATAATAAGGTGTCAGACAAACTCGC
3133 GGTTCGTCATTTATGAATGGTGTAC
3134 TTGACTATGGTTATGCTTTCAGG
3135 TTCTCAACCTTGATTCTCTCTTTGG
3136 GTGCCGTTTCAAAGGTCGCT
3137 CCGGGCTCGCTCCATATAGATAAG
    PCR 2 5136 TATGCTCTCATAGGTAACACCACC
5137 AACGATCACCTAAATTAGTACCTGC
5138 TCTATCTTGTTCCTGTTTCCTTG
5139 TTTAGGTTAGAAAGGAGATACTGCC
5140 TACTTCAAATGGTATGCAAGCTATGG
3138 GCTGAACAAGCTGCTGTTATTGC
3139 TTTAGTTGAGGATGCTTATCGAG
3140 AGTTATCTGTCTATAAGGAATGTCG
3141 AAGCTATGGTTGAAGCTGTTG
    PCR 3 5141 TTAAATTAACTCCTGAAGTACTCCG
3142 AGGTAATTTCCATTTCTCACCTGAAG
3143 TTTCGGCGACAATTCATTGAACTGAG
    PCR 4 5125 GTAACTAGTTATCTCTAGCCTGTAGC
5126 CACGAAAGCAACTTAATCCGTCG
5127 CCCTTGACTACATAAGTACTAACCC
5128 CTGTTAATAAATCAGCTCCATGAGC
5129 TTTCCCTTGCATTTCCCATAGACC
5130 GCCTATCCAATTATTCGTTTGGAG
3125 TTTACCTCTGTTGCATCCACAATC
3126 GCAAAGCAATTGTATTCCGTCTT
3127 AAAGTGTCGTTACCAACTCTGAAG
3128 AAATTATGAATCAGGCATGCTCCTGG
3129 AATAAAGCCTGAAACCAGTTCAGAG
3130 CATCACTCTGGCCTCTATTATTT
a

Primer names beginning with 5 indicate forward primers. Primer names beginning with 3 indicate reverse primers.

The CJB111 sequence was deposited at GenBank as one circular contig (2,093,987 bp; GC content, 35.52%). BUSCO_v1 and CheckM v1.0.18 confirmed the genome completeness (15, 16). GenBank annotated the CJB111 genome sequence using PGAP v4.13 (17).

Data availability.

The CJB111 sequence is available in GenBank under accession no. CP063198. The raw sequence reads are accessible under Sequence Read Archive accession no. SRX9273111, SRX9273112, and SRX9273113; BioProject accession no. PRJNA663970; and BioSample accession no. SAMN16191206.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This work was funded by NIH/NIAID F32 AI143203 to B.L.S., NIH/NINDS R01 NS116716 to K.S.D., and NIH/NIAID R01 AI141479 to B.A.D.

We acknowledge Dan Snyder and the Microbial Genome Sequencing Center (Pittsburgh, PA) for Illumina and Nanopore sequencing and Mark Farrell and the Barbara Davis Center Molecular Biology Core at University of Colorado-Anschutz Medical Campus (Aurora, CO) for Sanger sequencing.

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Associated Data

This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.

Data Availability Statement

The CJB111 sequence is available in GenBank under accession no. CP063198. The raw sequence reads are accessible under Sequence Read Archive accession no. SRX9273111, SRX9273112, and SRX9273113; BioProject accession no. PRJNA663970; and BioSample accession no. SAMN16191206.


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