| Literature DB >> 29716659 |
K E Lekota1,2, A Hassim3, P Rogers4, E H Dekker5, R Last6, L de Klerk-Lorist5, H van Heerden3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Anthrax is a disease with an age old history in Africa caused by the Gram-positive endospore forming soil bacterium Bacillus anthracis. Epizootics of wild ungulates occur annually in the enzootic region of Pafuri, Kruger National Park (KNP) in the Limpopo Province of South Africa. Rigorous routine surveillance and diagnostics in KNP, has not revealed these rare isolates since the 1990s, despite unabated annual outbreaks. In 2011 a cheetah was diagnosed as anthrax positive from a private game reserve in Limpopo Province and reported to State Veterinary Services for further investigation. Isolation, molecular diagnostics, whole genome sequencing and comparative genomics were carried out for B. anthracis KC2011.Entities:
Keywords: Bacillus anthracis; Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs); Whole genome sequencing (WGS)
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29716659 PMCID: PMC5930959 DOI: 10.1186/s13104-018-3366-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Fig. 1A Cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus) demonstrating facial oedema in reaction to Bacillus anthracis toxins. B Dark un-clotted blood surrounding the kidney of a cheetah indicating infection by B. anthracis.C Impression smear of oedematous fluid from cheetah with typical square ended B. anthracis bacilli (purple bacilli indicated by the arrow). D Bacteriologic diagnostics on 5% sheep blood agar demonstrating typical B. anthracis colony morphology and structure
Genome features of the Bacillus anthracis KC2011
| Features | |
|---|---|
| Domain | Bacteria |
| Genome coverage (X) | 358 |
| Avg. length after trim | 118 |
| Genome size (bp) | 5 421 567 |
| Number of contigs | 45 |
| Maximum length | 500 750 |
| Minimum length | 9000 |
| G+C content (%) | 35.2 |
| Genes (total) | 6 047 |
| CDS (coding) | 5964 |
| Genes (RNA) | 83 |
| Complete rRNAS | 4, 1 (5S, 23S) |
| Number of tRNA | 73 |
| Number of ncRNAs | 5 |
| Pseudo genes (total) | 322 |
Fig. 2Whole genome SNP phylogeny of the global Bacillus anthracis strains indicating the placement of KC2011 strain. Maximum likelihood was constructed using 3 247 parsimony informative SNPs. The rare B. anthracis KC2011 (indicated with higher font) grouped in the B-clade separately from KrugerB strain