| Literature DB >> 18691421 |
Eduardo N Taboada1, Joanne M Mackinnon, Christian C Luebbert, Victor P J Gannon, John H E Nash, Kris Rahn.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Multi-Locus Sequence Typing (MLST) has emerged as a leading molecular typing method owing to its high ability to discriminate among bacterial isolates, the relative ease with which data acquisition and analysis can be standardized, and the high portability of the resulting sequence data. While MLST has been successfully applied to the study of the population structure for a number of different bacterial species, it has also provided compelling evidence for high rates of recombination in some species. We have analyzed a set of Campylobacter jejuni strains using MLST and Comparative Genomic Hybridization (CGH) on a full-genome microarray in order to determine whether recombination and high levels of genomic mosaicism adversely affect the inference of strain relationships based on the analysis of a restricted number of genetic loci.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18691421 PMCID: PMC2527321 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2148-8-229
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Evol Biol ISSN: 1471-2148 Impact factor: 3.260
Figure 1UPGMA-based clustering of MLST data for the 45 . Clusters representing clonal complexes (CC) are highlighted in red on the dendogram and their corresponding allelic profiles are also boxed in red. Allelic differences with respect to the central sequence type (ST) of the CC are highlighted in blue.
Figure 2Concordance between clustering of MLST and whole-genome CGH profiles for the 45 . Bootstrap support is shown for the statistically robust clusters (shown in red on the dendogram; CGH profiles boxed in blue). Log Ratio data has been colour-coded according to data interpretation thresholds described in Taboada et al. [31]. Strains showing discordant clustering results are boxed in green.
Figure 3Shared genomic attributes in strains from the same MLST clonal complex. The strains of ST-45 show significant differences in gene conservation rates at the loci shown in the first column with respect to all other strains in the dataset and differentiate this group of genetically related strains from other groups of strains.
Figure 4An examination of genomic mosaicism within clonal complex ST-45. Although strains within ST-45 have similar overall CGH profiles (A), significant genomic heterogeneity can be observed across various hyper-variable loci in the C. jejuni genome (B). Mosaicism observed in the CGH data is consistent with that observed in newly sequenced C. jejuni genomes (C). (note: Log Ratio data in (A) and (B) and sequence identity data in (C) were colour coded using a common scale reflecting the likelihood of gene presence/absence).
Figure 5An examination of genetic linkage in groups of genetically related strains. Although strains with identical tkt-gltA alleles can also share similar gene conservation profiles within the intervening genomic region, disruption of linkage is apparent among members the same CC that share the same tkt-gltA loci.
List of strains used for this study.
| Strain | Serotype3 | Source | MLST Sequence Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| ATCC29428 | O:1 | human | 50 |
| ATCC33560 | O:23 | cattle | 403 |
| ATCC43431 | O:3 | human | 5 |
| CCUG7800 | O:4 | human | 311 |
| CNET025 | O:58 | wild bird | 677 |
| CNET031 | O:1 | human | 262 |
| CNET043 | O:58 | human | 45 |
| CNET106 | O:2 | sheep | 21 |
| CNET109 | O:4,50 | canine | 475 |
| FM_C089 | n.d. | human | 262 |
| FM_F008 | n.d. | chicken | 45 |
| GBS_PG836 | n.d. | human | 56 |
| Ice11021 | n.d. | chicken | 45 |
| Ice18611 | n.d. | chicken | 45 |
| IceH211 | n.d. | human | 241 |
| IceH231 | n.d. | human | 53 |
| IceH401 | n.d. | human | 53 |
| IceH511 | n.d. | human | 184 |
| K569 | n.d. | chicken | 45 |
| MK104 | O:19 | human | 45 |
| NCTC11168 | O:2 | human | 43 |
| NCTC11351 | O:23 | cattle | 403 |
| NCTC13254 | O:50 | cattle | 21 |
| NCTC13255 | O:19 | human | 22 |
| NCTC13257 | O:57 | human | 45 |
| NCTC13258 | O:50 | ovine | 48 |
| NCTC13259 | O:18 | human | 49 |
| NCTC13260 | O:5 | ovine | 52 |
| NCTC13261 | O:50 | cattle | 61 |
| NCTC13262 | NT | environment (sand) | 177 |
| NCTC13264 | O:11 | human | 257 |
| NCTC13266 | O:41 | human | 362 |
| NZ_pst12 | n.d. | chicken | 354 |
| NZ_pstau2 | n.d. | chicken | 354 |
| NZ_pstt22 | n.d. | chicken | 354 |
| NZ_T10122 | n.d. | chicken | 474 |
| NZ_T10182 | n.d. | chicken | 45 |
| NZ_T1572 | n.d. | chicken | 474 |
| NZ_T346b2 | n.d. | chicken | 45 |
| NZ_T446b2 | n.d. | chicken | 45 |
| NZ_tau3302 | n.d. | chicken | 354 |
| PC69 | O:9 | human | 25 |
| PC72 | O:2 | human | 21 |
| RM1221 | n.d. | chicken | 354 |
| TGH9011 | O:3 | human | 5 |
1 strains collected as part of "Campy-On-Ice" consortium
2 strains collected as part of New Zealand study outlined in Pope et al. [43]