| Literature DB >> 31804685 |
Beatriz Souza Toscano de Melo1, Carina Lucena Mendes-Marques1, Túlio de Lima Campos1, Alzira Maria Paiva de Almeida1, Nilma Cintra Leal1, Danilo Elias Xavier1.
Abstract
Aeromonads are mainly opportunistic pathogens; however, many species are emerging as important human pathogens. Therefore, monitoring these bacteria and their accurate characterization of its species is highly important. Aeromonas Aer593 strain was recovered from a diarrhoea outbreak and did not group with any previously described Aeromonas species by housekeeping gene sequencing. To clarify the taxonomic position of Aer593, its genome was sequenced and analysed by multilocus phylogenetic analysis (MLPA), in silico DNA-DNA hybridization (isDDH), average nucleotide identity (ANI) and core genome-based phylogenetic analyzes. The MLPA with the housekeeping genes gyrB, rpoD, recA, dnaJ, gyrA and dnaX ranked the Aer593 isolate into an independent branch suggesting that it could represent a new species. However, the identity percentages of Aer593 to A. caviae strains using robust genomic analysis by isDDH and ANI were at least 81.3% and 97.8%, respectively, defining Aer593 as A. caviae. Multilocus sequence typing (MLST) presented an exact match against only a single allele (groL96) and the novel ST648 was assigned for this strain. The core genome-based phylogenetic analyses with a total of 863 orthologous genes also grouped the Aer593 isolate with A. caviae reference strains. These findings warn about the possibility of misidentification of some Aeromonas strains by MLPA and show that high-resolution genome-wide analysis is essential for the correct identification of ambiguous Aeromonas strains. © FEMS 2019.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990 Aeromonaszzm321990 ; MLPA; genomes; species identification; taxonomy
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31804685 DOI: 10.1093/femsle/fnz245
Source DB: PubMed Journal: FEMS Microbiol Lett ISSN: 0378-1097 Impact factor: 2.742