Replication errors, transpositions and recombination events contribute to genetic alterations and drive genome evolution. For BCG various differences in morphology, growth rate, protein expression and genetic make-up have been noted among commercially available substrains [
16]. This is presumably a result of the numerous serial passages on natural (potato slices trenched in ox bile) and artificial media, which have led to the acquisition of genomic alterations and further attenuation. Of note, meta-analyses of BCG vaccination trials have indicated protective efficacies ranging from 0–80%. A correlation between the number of serial
in vitro passages and the decrease in protective efficacy has been observed [
17]. Several reasons have been put forward to explain the varying protective efficacies of BCG, among others genetic differences between vaccine substrains as well as within an individual substrain [
18]. More recently it has been suggested that the protective efficacy of ancient vaccine strains charcterized by few regions of difference (Figure ) may be superior to that of the later ones that are more widely used [
6]. We have added the newly identified single nucleotide polymorphism to an existent phylogenetic tree. It will be of interest to see whether
recA is functional in other ancient strains (e.g. BCG Moreau or Japan). Sequencing of
recA may also help to clarifiy the uncertain origin of the two subcultures of BCG Japan [
6].
The RecA-family recombinases have a central role in DNA repair, restoration of stalled replication forks, induction of SOS response, mutagenesis and homologous recombination [
19]. In
E. coli, RecA is involved in several homologous recombination pathways, where it promotes the central steps, i.e. aligning and pairing two DNA molecules, and then promoting a strand switch followed by branch migration [
19]. RecA is both ubiquitous and highly conserved among a range of organisms, but variations of the prototypic
E. coli paradigm exist.
recA of pathogenic mycobacteria (
M. tuberculosis complex,
M. leprae) but not of non-pathogenic mycobacteria (e.g.
M. smegmatis) is interrupted by an in-frame open reading frame encoding an intein [
20]. RecA intein is removed from the precursor RecA by an autocatalytic protein splicing reaction and active RecA, which can complement a
M. smegmatis recA mutant [
21,
22] is generated by ligation of amino- and carboxy terminal fragments mediated by intein.
M. tuberculosis RecA activity differs from
E. coli RecA activity with respect to single strand DNA-dependent ATP-hydrolysis, co-factor requirement and pH-optimum [
23]. Homologous recombination in
M. tuberculosis complex is sometimes masked by a high degree of illegitimate recombination in certain experiments [
24]. The high degree of illegitimate recombination has been attributed to the unusual structure of
recA [
25]. Alternatively, the high degree of illegitimate recombination may be due to the absence of a mismatch repair system [
26], which has anti-recombination activity [
27]. However, homologous recombination essentially depends on
recA as demonstrated in a gene conversion assay in a
M. bovis BCG
recA mutant [
28]. Of note a homologue of
E. coli RecT, a protein functionally overlapping RecA, is missing in
M. tuberculosis [
29]. Likewise, other recombination genes are also absent from the
M. tuberculosis genome (e.g.
recE,
recJ) [
26].
Comparative genomics indicate that recombination events are a major driving force of bacterial evolution [
12]. There is extensive evidence for large-scale rearrangements, duplications and deletions resulting from homologous recombination in
M. leprae [
30],
M. tuberculosis [
31] and
M. bovis BCG [
6]. Half of the proteins present in the tubercle bacillus originate from gene duplications [
32]. Tandem duplications are generally caused by unequal crossover between homologous sequences or by recombination of short DNA homologies. Homologous recombination between similar sequences may invert or delete genes. Several deletions in the
M. tuberculosis H37Rv genome resulted from recombination between adjacent repeats of IS6110 elements [
31,
33]. Sometimes, the molecular mechanisms underlying alterations at particular loci remain obscure and subsequent alterations may mask initial events, e.g. tandem duplication of the DU2 region in
M. bovis BCG Pasteur arose from duplication of a 100 kb genomic segment that subsequently incurred an internal deletion of 64 kb [
18].