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Chlamydia (bacterium)
Genus of bacteria
Genus of bacteria
homotypic
- "Chlamydozoon" Moshkovskiy 1945 non Prowazek 1907 heterotypic
- Chlamydophila Everett, Bush & Andersen 1999 (type is C. psittaci, not full overlap, see § Chlamydophila)
- "Bedsonia" Meyer 1953 ex Levaditi, Roger & Destombes 1964
- "Microbacterium" Levinthal 1930 non Orla-Jensen 1919
- "Miyagawanella" ?
Chlamydia is a genus of pathogenic Gram-negative bacteria that are obligate intracellular parasites. Chlamydia infections are the most common bacterial sexually transmitted diseases in humans and are the leading cause of infectious blindness worldwide.
Humans mainly contract C. trachomatis, C. pneumoniae, C. abortus, and C. psittaci.
Classification
Because of Chlamydias unique developmental cycle, it was taxonomically classified in a separate order. Chlamydia is part of the order Chlamydiales, family Chlamydiaceae.
''Chlamydophila'' (1999–2009)
Earlier criteria for differentiation of chlamydial species did not always work well. For example, at that time C. psittaci was distinguished from C. trachomatis by sulfadiazine resistance, although not all strains identified as C. psittaci at the time were resistant, and C. pneumoniae was classified by its appearance under electron microscopy (EM) and its ability to infect humans, although the EM appearance may differ from one research group to the next, and many of these species infected humans.
A major re-description of the Chlamydiales order in 1999, using the then-new techniques of DNA analysis split three of the species from the genus Chlamydia and reclassified them in the then newly created genus Chlamydophila (Cp. hereafter). Five new species were added by splitting from existing species:
:{| class=wikitable |+ Summary of 1999 classification change ! Old name !! Host !! New name
| - |
|---|
| Mammals |
| - |
| Cats |
| - |
| Guinea pig |
| - |
| C. pecorum |
| - |
| C. pneumoniae |
| - |
| - |
| Swine |
| - |
| Mice and hamsters |
| } |
According to the authors of the 1999 study, the mean DNA–DNA reassociation difference distinguishing Chlamydophila from Chlamydia is 10.1%, an accepted value for genus separation. Although the 16S ribosomal RNA gene sequences of the two are close to 95% identical, unlike the other previously established genera, the authors considered a less than 95% similarity only a guideline for establishing new genera in chlamydial families. In the study, the authors used the similarity of the locations of coding for protein and ribosomal RNA genes in the genome (gene clusters) to help distinguish Chlamydophila from Chlamydia. Also, the full-length genes of the species of the two genera were less than 95% identical. glycogen staining, host association, and EM morphology were also employed, depending on applicability and availability.
:{| class=wikitable style="text-align:center;" |+ Some molecular criteria distinguishing Chlamydiaceae genera |- style="vertical-align:bottom;" ! Genus !! Approximate genome size (Mega base pairs) !! Detectable glycogen !! Number of rDNA operons |- ! Chlamydophila | 1.2 || No || 1 |- ! Chlamydia | 1.0 || Yes || 2 |}
In 2001 many bacteriologists strongly objected to the reclassification.
In 2009 the validity of Chlamydophila was challenged by newer DNA analysis techniques (using 100 concatenated proteins instead of 16S rRNA), leading to a proposal to "reunite the Chlamydiaceae into a single genus, Chlamydia". The authors pointed to the poor bootstrap support of the which demonstrated a split in only 68% of the sampled trees, and argued that the 2006 study did not provide sufficiently strong support for the separation. This reversion appears to have been accepted by the community and was formally validated in 2015, bringing the number of (valid) Chlamydia species up to 9 as of 2017. The merger of the genus Chlamydophila back into the genus Chlamydia is, by 2018, generally accepted.
However, the much newer analyses of Genome Taxonomy Database using 120 concatenated proteins again show a split of those two genera to be valid (see below), and has led to the resurrection of the genus in the GTDB and GBIF taxonomies. Joseph et al. 2015, which proposed new species from strains formerly known as C. psittaci, also recovered a coherent Chlamydophila clade in their whole-genome tree, but with an unusual topology showing Chlamydophila to be sister to C. muridarum.
Species additions
Many probable species were subsequently isolated, but no one bothered to name them. Many new species fall into the Chlamydophilia clade and were originally classified as aberrant strains of C. psittaci. Complicating the picture is the fact that this clade shows signs of interspecies recombination.
- In 2013 a 10th species was added, C. ibidis, known only from feral sacred ibis in France.
- Two more species were added in 2014 (but validated 2015): C. avium which infects pigeons and parrots, and C. gallinacea infecting chickens, guinea fowl and turkeys.
- Two of the species proposed for Chlamydophila in 1999 (C. abortus, C. felis) were formally merged in 2015.
- C. poikilotherma was validated in 2022, as a correction of the 2019 "Chlamydia poikilothermis".
- C. buteonis was validated in 2023.
- C. crocodili was validated in 2023.
There is one invalidly published Chlamydophilia species that has not been transferred back to Chlamydia as of 2025: "Chlamydophila parapsittaci", representative of an intermediate stage between C. abortus and C. psittaci. See for a discussion of it.
Evolution
Phylogeny
| 16S rRNA based LTP_10_2024 | 120 marker proteins based GTDB 10-RS226 |
|---|---|
| 1={{clade |
Unassigned species:
- "Chlamydia major" Shaw, Christiansen & Birkelund 1999
- "Ca. Chlamydia testudinis" Laroucau et al. 2020
- Chlamydia vaughanii Marquis et al. 2025
- "Chlamydophila parapsittaci" Vafin et al. 2007
Genomes
Chlamydia species have genomes around 1.0–1.3 megabases in length. Most encode ≈900~1050 proteins. Some species also contain a DNA plasmids or phage genomes (see Table 1, below). The elementary body contains an RNA polymerase responsible for the transcription of the DNA genome after entry into the host cell cytoplasm and the initiation of the growth cycle. Ribosomes and ribosomal subunits are found in these bodies.
:{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;" |+ Table 1. Genome features of selected Chlamydia species and strains |- style="vertical-align:bottom;" ! ! C. muridarum MoPn ! C. trachomatis D ! C. pneumoniae AR39 ! C. pneumoniae CWL029 |- | Size (nt) | 1,069,412 | 1,042,519 | 1,229,853
| 1,230,230 |
|---|
| ORFs |
| 924 |
| 894 |
| 1052 |
| 1052 |
| - |
| tRNAs |
| 37 |
| 37 |
| 38 |
| 38 |
| - |
| plasmids |
| 1 (7,501 nt) |
| 1 (7,493 nt) |
| | none |} MoPn is a mouse pathogen while is a human pathogen. About 80% of the genes in C. trachomatis and C. pneumoniae are orthologs. Adapted after Read et al. 2000,
Developmental cycle
Chlamydia may be found in the form of an elementary body and a reticulate body. The elementary body is the nonreplicating infectious particle that is released when infected cells rupture. It is responsible for the bacteria's ability to spread from person to person and is analogous to a spore. The elementary body may be 0.25 to 0.30 μm in diameter. This form is covered by a rigid cell wall (hence the combining form chlamyd- in the genus name). The elementary body induces its own endocytosis upon exposure to target cells. One phagolysosome usually produces an estimated 100–1000 elementary bodies.
Chlamydia may also take the form of a reticulate body, which is in fact an intracytoplasmic form, highly involved in the process of replication and growth of these bacteria. The reticulate body is slightly larger than the elementary body and may reach up to 0.6 μm in diameter with a minimum of 0.5 μm. It does not have a cell wall. When stained with iodine, reticulate bodies appear as inclusions in the cell. The DNA genome, proteins, and ribosomes are retained in the reticulate body. This occurs as a result of the development cycle of the bacteria. The reticular body is basically the structure in which the chlamydial genome is transcribed into RNA, proteins are synthesized, and the DNA is replicated. The reticulate body divides by binary fission to form particles which, after synthesis of the outer cell wall, develop into new infectious elementary body progeny. The fusion lasts about three hours and the incubation period may be up to 21 days. After division, the reticulate body transforms back to the elementary form and is released by the cell by exocytosis.
Studies on the growth cycle of C. trachomatis and C. psittaci in cell cultures in vitro reveal that the infectious elementary body (EB) develops into a noninfectious reticulate body (RB) within a cytoplasmic vacuole in the infected cell. After the elementary body enters the infected cell, an eclipse phase of 20 hours occurs while the infectious particle develops into a reticulate body. The yield of chlamydial elementary bodies is maximal 36 to 50 hours after infection.
A histone like protein HctA and HctB play role in controlling the differentiation between the two cell types. The expression of HctA is tightly regulated and repressed by small non-coding RNA, IhtA until the late RB to EB re-differentiation. The IhtA RNA is conserved across Chlamydia species.
Pathology
Most chlamydial infections do not cause symptoms. Symptomatic infections often include a burning sensation when urinating and abdominal or genital pain and discomfort. All people who have engaged in sexual activity with potentially infected individuals may be offered one of several tests to diagnose the condition. Nucleic acid amplification tests (NAAT), which include polymerase chain reaction (PCR), transcription-mediated amplification (TMA), ligase chain reaction (LCR), and strand displacement amplification (SDA), are the most widely used diagnostic test for Chlamydia.
References
References
- {{lpsn3. genus/chlamydia. Chlamydia
- Schoch CL. "Chlamydia". [[National Center for Biotechnology Information]] (NCBI) taxonomy database.
- {{lpsn3. genus/chlamydophila. Chlamydophila
- (1 January 1968). "Proposal for the recognition of two species in the genus Chlamydia Jones, Rake, and Stearns, 1945". International Journal of Systematic Bacteriology.
- Drew. (2004). "Sherris Medical Microbiology". McGraw Hill.
- Joseph, SJ. (2015). "Chlamydiaceae genomics reveals interspecies admixture and the recent evolution of Chlamydia abortus infecting lower mammalian species and humans". Genome Biol Evol.
- "Chlamydia trachomatis".
- (April 1999). "Emended description of the order Chlamydiales, proposal of Parachlamydiaceae fam. nov. and Simkaniaceae fam. nov., each containing one monotypic genus, revised taxonomy of the family Chlamydiaceae, including a new genus and five new species, and standards for the identification of organisms". Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol..
- "Taxonomy diagram".
- (January 2001). "Molecular evolution of the Chlamydiaceae". [[International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology]].
- (2006). "BLAST screening of chlamydial genomes to identify signature proteins that are unique for the Chlamydiales, Chlamydiaceae, Chlamydophila, and Chlamydia groups of species". [[BMC Genomics]].
- (March 2009). "Divergence without difference: Phylogenetics and taxonomy of Chlamydia resolved". FEMS Immunol. Med. Microbiol..
- Greub, Gilbert. (November 2010). "International Committee on Systematics of Prokaryotes Subcommittee on the taxonomy of the Chlamydiae Minutes of the inaugural closed meeting, 21 March 2009, Little Rock, AR, USA". [[International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology]].
- (March 2015). "Emendation of the family Chlamydiaceae: Proposal of a single genus, Chlamydia, to include all currently recognized species". [[Systematic and Applied Microbiology]].
- (July 2015). "Notification of changes in taxonomic opinion previously published outside the IJSEM". [[International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology]].
- (September 2017). "Compendium of measures to control Chlamydia psittaci infection among humans (psittacosis) and pet birds (avian chlamydiosis), 2017". [[Journal of Avian Medicine and Surgery]].
- (March 2013). "In Chlamydia veritas". [[Pathogens and Disease]].
- (August 2014). "Chlamydia genomics: Providing novel insights into chlamydial biology". [[Trends in Microbiology]].
- (March 2015). "Emendation of the family Chlamydiaceae: Proposal of a single genus, Chlamydia, to include all currently recognized species". [[Systematic and Applied Microbiology]].
- (May 2018). "A review on Chlamydial diseases in animals: Still a challenge for pathologists?". [[Veterinary Pathology]].
- "g__Chlamydophila".
- "Chlamydophila {{small".
- (September 2015). "A phylogenomic and molecular markers based analysis of the phylum Chlamydiae: Proposal to divide the class Chlamydiia into two orders, Chlamydiales and Parachlamydiales ''ord. nov.'', and emended description of the class Chlamydiia". [[Antonie van Leeuwenhoek (journal)]].
- (20 September 2013). "Isolation of a New ''Chlamydia'' species from the Feral Sacred Ibis (''Threskiornis aethiopicus'')- ''Chlamydia ibidis''". PLOS ONE.
- "Species: Chlamydophila parapsittaci".
- (December 2007). "On the nomenclature and classification of chlamydiae". Molecular Genetics, Microbiology and Virology.
- "The LTP".
- "LTP_all tree in newick format".
- "LTP_10_2024 Release Notes".
- "GTDB release 10-RS226".
- "bac120_r226.sp_label".
- "Taxon History".
- "EMBL bacterial genomes".
- (2000-03-15). "Genome sequences of Chlamydia trachomatis MoPn and Chlamydia pneumoniae AR39". [[Nucleic Acids Research]].
- Becker, Yechiel. (1996). "Medical Microbiology". University of Texas Medical Branch.
- (June 2008). "The Chlamydia trachomatis Plasmid Is a Transcriptional Regulator of Chromosomal Genes and a Virulence Factor". [[Infection and Immunity]].
- (2006). "A small RNA inhibits translation of the histone-like protein Hc1 in Chlamydia trachomatis.". Mol. Microbiol..
- (2012). "Translation inhibition of the developmental cycle protein HctA by the small RNA IhtA is conserved across Chlamydia.". PLOS ONE.
- "Chlamydia protection".
- (17 July 2023). "Chlamydia".
- (27 July 2010). "Facts about chlamydia".
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