1. Two extremely divergent sequence forms of the genes that define Escherichia coli group 3 capsules suggest a very long history since their common ancestor
- Author
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Peter R. Reeves, Yaoqin Hong, and Monica M. Cunneen
- Subjects
Virulence Factors ,ATP-binding cassette transporter ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Serogroup ,Microbiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Group (periodic table) ,Gene cluster ,Genetics ,medicine ,Escherichia coli ,Molecular Biology ,Gene ,Bacterial Capsules ,030304 developmental biology ,Repeat unit ,Sequence (medicine) ,0303 health sciences ,030306 microbiology ,Escherichia coli Proteins ,Polysaccharides, Bacterial ,Genetic Variation ,Multigene Family ,ABC Transporter Pathway ,ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters - Abstract
Capsules are a critical virulence factor in many pathogenic Escherichia coli, of which groups 2 and 3 capsules are synthesised by the ABC transporter pathway. The well-studied forms are in group 2 and much of our knowledge of group 3 is inferred from our understanding of group 2. We analyse six group 3 gene clusters including representatives of K10, K11 and K96, and find unexpected diversity. Groups 2 and 3 both have gene clusters with terminal regions 1 and 3 containing mostly genes shared by all members of both groups, plus a central region 2, that in group 2 has the genes for synthesising the serotype-specific repeat unit. We find that in all but one case group 3 gene clusters include, in addition to serotype-specific genes, a previously unrecognised set of shared genes in region 2 that probably codes for an additional structural element. Also, the six shared genes in regions 1 and 3 of group 3 exist in two very different sequence forms. It appears that the E. coli ABC transporter capsules have a very long history, with more fundamental diversity present in group 3, but greater diversity in the exposed strongly antigenic serotype-specific component encoded by region 2.
- Published
- 2018