Affiliation:
1. School of Life Sciences, Heriot Watt University, Edinburgh
2. Biological Defense Research Directorate, United States Navy Medical Research Center, Silver Spring, Maryland
3. Department of Zoology
4. Peter Medawar Building for Pathogen Research, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Representative strains of the
Bacillus cereus
group of bacteria, including
Bacillus anthracis
(11 isolates),
B. cereus
(38 isolates),
Bacillus mycoides
(1 isolate),
Bacillus thuringiensis
(53 isolates from 17 serovars), and
Bacillus weihenstephanensis
(2 isolates) were assigned to 59 sequence types (STs) derived from the nucleotide sequences of seven alleles,
glpF
,
gmk
,
ilvD
,
pta
,
pur
,
pycA
, and
tpi
. Comparisons of the maximum likelihood (ML) tree of the concatenated sequences with individual gene trees showed more congruence than expected by chance, indicating a generally clonal structure to the population. The STs followed two major lines of descent. Clade 1 comprised
B. anthracis
strains, numerous
B. cereus
strains, and rare
B. thuringiensis
strains, while clade 2 included the majority of the
B. thuringiensis
strains together with some
B. cereus
strains. Other species were allocated to a third, heterogeneous clade. The ML trees and split decomposition analysis were used to assign STs to eight lineages within clades 1 and 2. These lineages were defined by bootstrap analysis and by a preponderance of fixed differences over shared polymorphisms among the STs. Lineages were named with reference to existing designations: Anthracis, Cereus I, Cereus II, Cereus III, Kurstaki, Sotto, Thuringiensis, and Tolworthi. Strains from some
B. thuringiensis
serovars were wholly or largely assigned to a single ST, for example, serovar aizawai isolates were assigned to ST-15, serovar kenyae isolates were assigned to ST-13, and serovar tolworthi isolates were assigned to ST-23, while other serovars, such as serovar canadensis, were genetically heterogeneous. We suggest a revision of the nomenclature in which the lineage and clone are recognized through name and ST designations in accordance with the clonal structure of the population.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology