Dictionary Definition
mycoplasma n : the smallest self-reproducing
prokaryote; lacks a cell wall and can survive without oxygen; can
cause pneumonia and urinary tract infection
Extensive Definition
Mycoplasma is a genus of bacteria that lack a cell wall.
Because they lack a cell wall, they are unaffected by some antibiotics such as penicillin or other
beta-lactam antibiotics that target cell wall synthesis. They can
be parasitic or
saprotrophic.
Several species are pathogenic in humans, including
M.
pneumoniae, which is an important cause of atypical
pneumonia and other respiratory disorders, and M.
genitalium, which is believed to be involved in pelvic
inflammatory diseases. They may cause or contribute to some
cancers.
The genus Mycoplasma is one of several genera
within the class Mollicutes.
Mollicutes are bacteria
which have small genomes, lack a cell wall and have a low GC-content
(18-40 mol%). There
are over 100 recognized species of the genus Mycoplasma. Their
genome size ranges from
0.58 - 1.38 megabase-pairs. Mollicutes are parasites or commensals of humans, animals
(including insects), and plants; the genus Mycoplasma is by
definition restricted to vertebrate hosts. Cholesterol is
required for the growth of species of the genus Mycoplasma as well
as certain other genera of mollicutes. Their optimum growth
temperature is often the temperature of their host if warmbodied
(e.g. 37 degrees Celsius in humans) or ambient temperature if the
host is unable to regulate its own internal temperature. Analysis
of 16S ribosomal
RNA sequences as well as gene content strongly suggest that
the mollicutes, including the mycoplasmas, are closely related to
either the Lactobacillus or the Clostridium branch of the
phylogenetic tree (Firmicutes sensu
stricto).
Mycoplasmas are often found in research
laboratories as contaminants in cell
culture. Mycoplasmal cell culture contamination occurs due to
contamination from individuals or contaminated cell culture medium
ingredients. The Mycoplasma cell is usually smaller than 1 µm and
they are therefore difficult to detect with a conventional microscope. Mycoplasmas may
induce cellular changes, including chromosome aberrations,
changes in metabolism
and cell growth. Severe mycoplasma infections may destroy a cell
line. Detection techniques include PCR,
plating on sensitive agar
and staining with a DNA stain including
DAPI or
Hoechst.
History and general characteristics
The bacteria of the genus Mycoplasma (trivial name: mycoplasmas) and their close relatives are largely characterized by lack of a cell wall. Despite this, the shapes of these cells often conform to one of several possibilities with varying degrees of intricacy. For example, the members of the genus Spiroplasma assume an elongated helical shape without the aid of a rigid structural cell envelope. These cell shapes presumably contribute to the ability of mycoplasmas to thrive in their respective environments. M. pneumoniae cells possess an extension, the so-called 'tip-structure', protruding from the coccoid cell body. This structure is involved in adhesion to host cells, in movement along solid surfaces (gliding motility), and in cell division. M. pneumoniae cells are of small size and pleomorphic, but with a rough shape in longitudinal cross-section resembling that of a round-bottomed flask.Mycoplasmas are unusual among bacteria in that
most require sterols for
the stability of their cytoplasmic
membrane. Sterols are acquired from the environment, usually as
cholesterol from the
animal host. Mycoplasmas also generally possess a relatively small
genome of 0.58-1.38
megabases, which results in drastically reduced biosynthetic
capabilities and explains their dependence on a host. Additionally
they use an alternate genetic code
where the codon UGA is
encoding for the amino acid tryptophan instead of the
usual opal stop
codon.
In 1898 Nocard and Roux reported the cultivation
of the causative agent of
contagious bovine pleuropneumonia (CBPP), which was at that
time a grave and widespread disease in cattle herds. Today the
disease is still endemic in Africa and Southern Europe. The disease
is caused by M.
mycoides subsp. mycoides SC (small-colony type), and the work
of Nocard and Roux represented the first isolation of a mycoplasma
species. Cultiviation was, and still is difficult because of the
complex growth requirements. These researchers succeeded by
inoculating a semi-permeable pouch of sterile medium with pulmonary
fluid from an infected animal and depositing this pouch
intraperitoneally into a live rabbit. After fifteen to twenty days,
the fluid inside of the recovered pouch was opaque, indicating the
growth of a microorganism. Opacitiy of the fluid was not seen in
the control. This turbid broth could then be used to inoculate a
second and third round and subsequently introduced into a healthy
animal, causing disease. However, this did not work if the material
was heated, indicating a biological agent at work. Uninoculated
media in the pouch, after removal from the rabbit, could be used to
grow the organism in vitro, demonstrating the possibility of
cell-free cultivation and ruling out viral causes, although this
was not fully appreciated at the time (Nocard and Roux, 1890). The
name Mycoplasma, from the Greek mykes (fungus) and plasma (formed),
was proposed in the 1950’s, replacing the term
pleuropneumonia-like organisms (PPLO) referring to organisms
similar to the causative agent of CBPP (Edward and Freundt, 1956).
It was later found that the fungus-like growth pattern of M.
mycoides is unique to that species.
This confusion about mycoplasmas and virus would
surface again 50 years later when Eaton and colleagues cultured the
causative agent of human primary
atypical pneumonia (PAP) or 'walking
pneumonia.' This agent could be grown in chicken embryos and
passed through a filter that excluded normal bacteria. However, it
could not be observed by high magnification light microscopy, and
it caused a pneumonia that could not be treated with the antimicrobials sulphonamides and penicillin (Eaton, et al.,
1945a). Eaton did consider the possibility that the disease was
caused by a mycoplasma, but the agent did not grow on the standard
PPLO media of the time. These observations led to the conclusion
that the causative agent of PAP is a virus. Researchers at that
time showed that the cultured agent could induce disease in
experimentally infected cotton rats and hamsters. In spite of
controversy whether the researchers had truly isolated the
causative agent of PAP (based largely on the unusual immunological
response of patients with PAP), in retrospect their evidence along
with that of colleagues and competitors appears to have been quite
conclusive (Marmion, 1990). In the early 1960's, there were reports
linking Eaton's Agent to the PPLOs or mycoplasmas, well known then
as parasites of cattle and rodents, due to sensitivity to
antimicrobial compounds (i.e. organic gold salt) (Marmion and
Goodburn, 1961). The ability to grow Eaton's Agent, now known as
Mycoplasma pneumoniae, in cell free media allowed an explosion of
research into what had overnight become the most medically
important mycoplasma and what was to become the most studied
mycoplasma.
Recent advances in molecular
biology and genomics have brought the
genetically simple mycoplasmas, particularly M. pneumoniae and its
close relative M.
genitalium, to a larger audience. The second published complete
bacterial genome sequence was that of M. genitalium, which has one
of the smallest genomes of free-living organisms (Fraser, et al.,
1995). The M. pneumoniae genome sequence was published soon
afterwards and was the first genome sequence determined by primer
walking of a cosmid
library instead of the whole-genome
shotgun method (Himmelerich, et al., 1996). Mycoplasma genomics
and proteomics
continue in efforts to understand the so-called minimal cell
(Hutchison and Montague, 2002), catalog the entire protein content
of a cell (Regula, et al., 2000), and generally continue to take
advantage of the small genome of these organisms to understand
broad biological concepts.
Scientists have also been exploring an
association between mycoplasma and cancer. Despite a number of
interesting studies, this cancer
bacteria association hasn't been clearly established, and has
yet to be fully elucidated (Ning and Shou, 2004), (Tsai, et al.,
1995).
Taxonomy and phylogeny
The medical and agricultural importance of members of the genus Mycoplasma and related genera has led to the extensive cataloging of many of these organisms by culture, serology, and small subunit rRNA gene and whole genome sequencing. A recent focus in the sub-discipline of molecular phylogenetics has both clarified and confused certain aspects of the organization of the class Mollicutes, and while a truce of sorts has been reached, the area is still somewhat of a moving target (Johansson and Pettersson, 2002).The name mollicutes is derived from
the Latin mollis (soft) and cutes (skin), and all of these bacteria
do lack a cell wall and the genetic capability to synthesize
peptidoglycan.
While the trivial name 'mycoplasmas' has commonly denoted all
members of this class, this usage is somewhat imprecise and will
not be used as such here. Despite the lack of a cell wall,
Mycoplasma and relatives have been classified in the phylum
Firmicutes
consisting of low G+C Gram-positive
bacteria such as Clostridium,
Lactobacillus,
and Streptococcus
based on 16S
rRNA gene analysis. The cultured members of Mollicutes are
currently arranged into four orders: Acholeplasmatales,
Anaeroplasmatales,
Entomoplasmatales,
and Mycoplasmatales.
The order Mycoplasmatales contains a single family, Mycoplasmataceae,
which contains two genera: Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma.
Historically, the description of a bacterium lacking a cell wall
was sufficient to classify it to the genus Mycoplasma and as such
it is the oldest and largest genus of the class with about half of
the class' species (107 validly described) each usually limited to
a specific host and with many hosts harboring more than one
species, some pathogenic and some commensal. In later studies, many
of these species were found to be phylogenetically distributed
among at least three separate orders. A limiting criterion for
inclusion within the genus Mycoplasma is that the organism have a
vertebrate host. In fact, the type species, M.
mycoides , along with other significant mycoplasma species like
M. capricolum, is evolutionarily more closely related to the genus
Spiroplasma in
the order Entomoplasmatales than to the other members of the
Mycoplasma genus. This and other discrepancies will likely remain
unresolved because of the extreme confusion that change could
engender among the medical and agricultural communities. The
remaining species in the genus Mycoplasma are divided into two
non-taxonomic groups, hominis and pneumoniae, based on 16S rRNA
gene sequences. The hominis group contains the phylogenetic
clusters of M.
bovis, M.
pulmonis, and M.
hominis, among others. The pneumoniae group contains the
clusters of M.
muris, M.
fastidiosum, U.
urealyticum, the currently unculturable haemotrophic
mollicutes, informally referred to as haemoplasmas (recently
transferred from the genera Haemobartonella and Eperythrozoon), and
the M. pneumoniae cluster. This cluster contains the species (and
the usual or likely host) M. alvi
(bovine), M.
amphoriforme (human), M.
gallisepticum (avian), M.
genitalium (human), M.
imitans (avian), M. pirum
(uncertain/human), M.
testudinis (tortoises), and M.
pneumoniae (human). Most if not all of these species share some
otherwise unique characteristics including an attachment organelle,
homologs of the M. pneumoniae cytadherence-accessory proteins, and
specialized modifications of the cell-division apparatus.
A detailed analysis of the 16S rRNA genes from
the order Mollicutes by Maniloff has given rise to a view of the
evolution of these bacteria that includes an estimate of the
time-scale for the emergence of some groups or features (Maniloff,
2002). This analysis suggests that about 600 million years ago
(MYA), late in the Proterozoic
era, Mollicutes branched away from the low G+C Gram-positive
ancestor of the streptococci, losing their
cell wall. At this time on Earth, molecular oxygen was present in
the atmosphere at 1%, and the fossil record shows that
multicellular marine animals had recently spread in the Cambrian
explosion. One hundred million years later the requirement for
sterols in the
cytoplasmic membrane evolved along with the change to the alternate
genetic code. Also, the ancestor of the genera Spiroplasma and
Entomoplasma (primarily plant and insect pathogens) and Mycoplasma
emerged at this time and would itself diverge into the
Spiroplasma-Entomoplasma and Mycoplasma lineages approximately 100
million years after that. This diversity coincided with the origin
of land plants 500 MYA. It appears that the calculated rate of
evolution for the Mycoplasma group increased several fold about 190
MYA, soon after the appearance of vertebrates, while the
Spiroplasma-Entomoplasma ancestor continued to evolve at the
previously shared slower rate until about 100 MYA, when angiosperms and their
associated pollinating insects appeared. Then the evolution rate of
these bacteria appears to have also increased significantly. This
is an attractive hypothesis, but while it tracks the emergence of
several of the unusual characteristics of Mycoplasma and related
organisms, it does not address the selective pressures driving
their evolution, except perhaps the widespread close association of
a parasite with a specific host. The advantages of a reduced
genome, cell wall-less structure, and alternate genetic code remain
murky.
References
- Eaton, M. D., G. Meiklejohn, W. van Herick, and M. Corey. 1945. Studies on the etiology of primary atypical pneumoniae. II. Properties of the virus isolated and propagated in chick embryos. J Exp Med 82:329-342.
- Edward, D. G., and E. A. Freundt. 1956. The classification and nomenclature of organisms of the pleuropneumonia group. J Gen Microbiol 14:197-207.
- Fraser, C. M., J. D. Gocayne, O. White, M. D. Adams, R. A. Clayton, R. D. Fleischmann, C. J. Bult, A. R. Kerlavage, G. Sutton, J. M. Kelley, and a. et. 1995. The minimal gene complement of Mycoplasma genitalium. Science 270:397-403.
- Himmelreich, R., H. Hilbert, H. Plagens, E. Pirkl, B. C. Li, and R. Herrmann. 1996. Complete sequence analysis of the genome of the bacterium Mycoplasma pneumoniae. Nucleic Acids Res 24:4420-4449.
- Hutchison, C. A. III, and M. G. Montague. 2002. Mycoplasmas and the minimal genome concept, p. 221-254. In Razin, S., and R. Herrmann (eds.), Molecular Biology and Pathogenicity of Mycoplasmas, Kluwer Academic/Plenum, New York.
- Johansson, K.-E., and B. Pettersson. 2002. Taxonomy of Mollicutes, p. 1-30. In Razin, S., and R. Herrmann (eds.), Molecular Biology and Pathogenicity of Mycoplasmas, Kluwer Academic/Plenum, New York.
- Maniloff, J. 2002. Phylogeny and Evolution, p. 31-44. In Razin, S., and R. Herrmann (eds.), Molecular Biology and Pathogenicity of Mycoplasmas, Kluwer Academic/Plenum, New York.
- Marmion, B. P. 1990. Eaton agent--science and scientific acceptance: a historical commentary. Rev Infect Dis 12:338-353.
- Marmion, B. P., and G. M. Goodburn. 1961. Effect of an organic gold salt on Eaton's primary atypical pneumonia agent and other observations. Nature 189:247-248.
- Nocard, Roux. 1990. The microbe of pleuropneumonia. 1896. Rev Infect Dis 12:354-358. English translation of original 1896 French article.
- Regula, J. T., B. Ueberle, G. Boguth, A. Gorg, M. Schnolzer, R. Herrmann, and R. Frank. 2000. Towards a two-dimensional proteome map of Mycoplasma pneumoniae. Electrophoresis 21:3765-3780.
- Ning, J.Y., Shou, C.C. 2004. Mycoplasma infection and cancer. Ai Zheng May;23(5):602-4, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Beijing Institute for Cancer Research, School of Oncology, Peking University, Beijing, China.
- Tsai S, Wear D.J., Shih J.W., Lo, S.C. 1995. Mycoplasmas and oncogenesis: persistent infection and multistage malignant transformation. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A; 92(22):10197-201
External links
- Compare the size of these small bacteria to the sizes of other cells and viruses.
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