Orientia and Rickettsia: different flowers from the same garden

<p>Recent discoveries of basal extracellular&nbsp;Rickettsiales&nbsp;have illuminated divergent evolutionary paths to host dependency in later-evolving&nbsp;lineages. Family&nbsp;Rickettsiaceae, primarily comprised of numerous protist- and invertebrate-associated species, also...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gillespie, JJ, Salje, J
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2023
Description
Summary:<p>Recent discoveries of basal extracellular&nbsp;Rickettsiales&nbsp;have illuminated divergent evolutionary paths to host dependency in later-evolving&nbsp;lineages. Family&nbsp;Rickettsiaceae, primarily comprised of numerous protist- and invertebrate-associated species, also includes&nbsp;human pathogens&nbsp;from two genera,&nbsp;<em>Orientia</em>&nbsp;and&nbsp;<em>Rickettsia</em>. Once considered sister taxa, these bacteria form distinct lineages with newly appreciated lifestyles and&nbsp;morphological traits. Contrasting other rickettsial human&nbsp;pathogens&nbsp;in Family&nbsp;Anaplasmataceae,&nbsp;<em>Orientia</em>&nbsp;and&nbsp;<em>Rickettsia</em>&nbsp;species do not reside in host-derived&nbsp;vacuoles&nbsp;and lack glycolytic potential. With only a few described mechanisms, strategies for commandeering host glycolysis to support cytosolic growth remain to be discovered. While regulatory systems for this unique mode of intracellular&nbsp;parasitism&nbsp;are unclear, conjugative&nbsp;transposons&nbsp;unique to&nbsp;<em>Orientia</em>&nbsp;and&nbsp;<em>Rickettsia</em>&nbsp;species provide insights that are critical for determining how these obligate intracellular pathogens overtake eukaryotic cytosol.</p>