Back to Search Start Over

Single-Molecule Approach to Bacterial Genomic Comparisons via Optical Mapping†

Authors :
Wen Deng
Eileen T. Dimalanta
Jessica Severin
Valerie Burland
David C. Schwartz
Shiguo Zhou
Michael Place
Jun Wei
Dan Forrest
Casey Lamers
Christopher Churas
Michael Bechner
Erika Kvikstad
Frederick R. Blattner
Andrew C. Kile
Rodney Runnheim
Publication Year :
2004
Publisher :
American Society for Microbiology, 2004.

Abstract

Modern comparative genomics has been established, in part, by the sequencing and annotation of a broad range of microbial species. To gain further insights, new sequencing efforts are now dealing with the variety of strains or isolates that gives a species definition and range; however, this number vastly outstrips our ability to sequence them. Given the availability of a large number of microbial species, new whole genome approaches must be developed to fully leverage this information at the level of strain diversity that maximize discovery. Here, we describe how optical mapping, a single-molecule system, was used to identify and annotate chromosomal alterations between bacterial strains represented by several species. Since whole-genome optical maps are ordered restriction maps, sequenced strains ofShigella flexneriserotype 2a (2457T and 301),Yersinia pestis(CO 92 and KIM), andEscherichia coliwere aligned as maps to identify regions of homology and to further characterize them as possible insertions, deletions, inversions, or translocations. Importantly, an unsequencedShigella flexneristrain (serotype Y strain AMC[328Y]) was optically mapped and aligned with two sequenced ones to reveal one novel locus implicated in serotype conversion and several other loci containing insertion sequence elements or phage-related gene insertions. Our results suggest that genomic rearrangements and chromosomal breakpoints are readily identified and annotated against a prototypic sequenced strain by using the tools of optical mapping.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f7d3585ed052f1260aa8442a0ea99494