Affiliation:
1. Department of Pediatrics and Communicable Diseases1 and
2. Department of Biological Chemistry,2 University of Michigan School of Medicine, Ann Arbor, Michigan 49109-0656
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The
Escherichia coli
genome varies in size from 4.5 to 5.5 Mb. It is unclear whether this variation may be distributed finely throughout the genome or is concentrated at just a few chromosomal loci or on plasmids. Further, the functional correlates of size variation in different genome copies are largely unexplored. We carried out comparative macrorestriction mapping using rare-restriction-site alleles (made with the Tn
10
dRCP2 family of elements, containing the
Not
I,
Bln
I, I-
Ceu
I, and ultra-rare-cutting I-
Sce
I sites) among the chromosomes of laboratory
E. coli
K-12, newborn-sepsis-associated
E. coli
RS218, and uropathogenic
E. coli
J96. These comparisons showed just a few large accessory chromosomal segments accounting for nearly all strain-to-strain size differences. Of 10 sepsis-associated and urovirulence genes, previously isolated from the two pathogens by scoring for function, all were colocalized exclusively with one or more of the accessory chromosomal segments. The accessory chromosomal segments detected in the pathogenic strains from physical, macrorestriction comparisons may be a source of new virulence genes, not yet isolated by function.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
65 articles.
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