A comparative genomics approach reveals a local genetic signature of Leishmania tropica in Morocco
Microbial Genomics | Microbiology Society Journals
by Hasnaa Talimi, Othmane Daoui, Giovanni Bussotti, Idris Mhaidi, Anne Boland, Jean-François Deleuze, Rachida Fissoune, Meryem Lemrani and Gerald F. Späth
1w ago
In Morocco, cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) caused by Leishmania (L.) tropica is an important health problem. Despite the high incidence of CL in the country, the genomic heterogeneity of these parasites is still incompletely understood. In this study, we sequenced the genomes of 14 Moroccan isolates of L. tropica collected from confirmed cases of CL to investigate their genomic heterogeneity. Comparative genomics analyses were conducted by applying the recently established Genome Instability Pipeline (GIP), which allowed us to conduct phylogenomic and principal components analyses (PCA), and to ..read more
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Identifying the best PCR enzyme for library amplification in NGS
Microbial Genomics | Microbiology Society Journals
by Michael A. Quail, Craig Corton, James Uphill, Jacqueline Keane and Yong Gu
1w ago
Background. PCR amplification is a necessary step in many next-generation sequencing (NGS) library preparation methods [ 1, 2 ]. Whilst many PCR enzymes are developed to amplify single targets efficiently, accurately and with specificity, few are developed to meet the challenges imposed by NGS PCR, namely unbiased amplification of a wide range of different sizes and GC content. As a result PCR amplification during NGS library prep often results in bias toward GC neutral and smaller fragments. As NGS has matured, optimized NGS library prep kits and polymerase formulations have emerged and in t ..read more
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Investigating the impact of insertion sequences and transposons in the genomes of the most significant phytopathogenic bacteria
Microbial Genomics | Microbiology Society Journals
by Alexia Suellen Fernandes, Kiara França Campos, Jéssica Catarine Silva de Assis, Osiel Silva Gonçalves, Marisa Vieira de Queiroz, Denise Mara Soares Bazzolli and Mateus Ferreira Santana
2w ago
Genetic variability in phytopathogens is one of the main problems encountered for effective plant disease control. This fact may be related to the presence of transposable elements (TEs), but little is known about their role in host genomes. Here, we performed the most comprehensive analysis of insertion sequences (ISs) and transposons (Tns) in the genomes of the most important bacterial plant pathogens. A total of 35 692 ISs and 71 transposons were identified in 270 complete genomes. The level of pathogen–host specialization was found to be a significant determinant of the element distributi ..read more
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Unveiling genome plasticity and a novel phage in Mycoplasma felis: Genomic investigations of four feline isolates
Microbial Genomics | Microbiology Society Journals
by Sara M. Klose, Alistair R. Legione, Rhys N. Bushell, Glenn F. Browning and Paola K. Vaz
2w ago
Mycoplasma felis has been isolated from diseased cats and horses, but to date only a single fully assembled genome of this species, of an isolate from a horse, has been characterized. This study aimed to characterize and compare the completely assembled genomes of four clinical isolates of M. felis from three domestic cats, assembled with the aid of short- and long-read sequencing methods. The completed genomes encoded a median of 759 ORFs (range 743–777) and had a median average nucleotide identity of 98.2 % with the genome of the available equid origin reference strain. Comparative genomic ..read more
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Identifying the suite of genes central to swimming in the biocontrol bacterium Pseudomonas protegens Pf-5
Microbial Genomics | Microbiology Society Journals
by B.K. Fabian, C. Foster, A. Asher, K.A. Hassan, I.T. Paulsen and S.G. Tetu
2w ago
Swimming motility is a key bacterial trait, important to success in many niches. Biocontrol bacteria, such as Pseudomonas protegens Pf-5, are increasingly used in agriculture to control crop diseases, where motility is important for colonization of the plant rhizosphere. Swimming motility typically involves a suite of flagella and chemotaxis genes, but the specific gene set employed for both regulation and biogenesis can differ substantially between organisms. Here we used transposon-directed insertion site sequencing (TraDIS), a genome-wide approach, to identify 249 genes involved in P. prot ..read more
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Corrigendum: Lack of methoxy-mycolates characterizes the geographically restricted lineage 7 of Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex
Microbial Genomics | Microbiology Society Journals
by Elena Hailu, Daire Cantillon, Carlos Madrazo, Graham Rose, Paul R. Wheeler, Paul Golby, Bethlehem Adnew, Sebastien Gagneux, Abraham Aseffa, Stephen V. Gordon, Iñaki Comas, Douglas B. Young, Simon J. Waddell, Gerald Larrouy-Maumus and Stefan Berg
2w ago
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Optimising machine learning prediction of minimum inhibitory concentrations in Klebsiella pneumoniae
Microbial Genomics | Microbiology Society Journals
by Gherard Batisti Biffignandi, Leonid Chindelevitch, Marta Corbella, Edward J. Feil, Davide Sassera and John A. Lees
3w ago
Minimum Inhibitory Concentrations (MICs) are the gold standard for quantitatively measuring antibiotic resistance. However, lab-based MIC determination can be time-consuming and suffers from low reproducibility, and interpretation as sensitive or resistant relies on guidelines which change over time. Genome sequencing and machine learning promise to allow in silico MIC prediction as an alternative approach which overcomes some of these difficulties, albeit the interpretation of MIC is still needed. Nevertheless, precisely how we should handle MIC data when dealing with predictive models remai ..read more
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Assembly collapsing versus heterozygosity oversizing: detection of homokaryotic and heterokaryotic Laccaria trichodermophora strains by hybrid genome assembly
Microbial Genomics | Microbiology Society Journals
by Rodolfo Enrique Ángeles-Argáiz, Luis Fernando Lozano Aguirre-Beltrán, Diana Hernández-Oaxaca, Christian Quintero-Corrales, Mauricio A. Trujillo-Roldán, Santiago Castillo-Ramírez and Roberto Garibay-Orijel
3w ago
Genome assembly and annotation using short-paired reads is challenging for eukaryotic organisms due to their large size, variable ploidy and large number of repetitive elements. However, the use of single-molecule long reads improves assembly quality (completeness and contiguity), but haplotype duplications still pose assembly challenges. To address the effect of read length on genome assembly quality, gene prediction and annotation, we compared genome assemblers and sequencing technologies with four strains of the ectomycorrhizal fungus Laccaria trichodermophora. By analysing the predicted r ..read more
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The influence of flocculation upon global gene transcription in a yeast CYC8 mutant
Microbial Genomics | Microbiology Society Journals
by Brenda Lee, Karsten Hokamp, Mohamed M. Alhussain, Atif A. Bamagoos and Alastair B. Fleming
3w ago
The transcriptome from a Saccharomyces cerevisiae tup1 deletion mutant was one of the first comprehensive yeast transcriptomes published. Subsequent transcriptomes from tup1 and cyc8 mutants firmly established the Tup1-Cyc8 complex as predominantly acting as a repressor of gene transcription. However, transcriptomes from tup1/cyc8 gene deletion or conditional mutants would all have been influenced by the striking flocculation phenotypes that these mutants display. In this study, we have separated the impact of flocculation from the transcriptome in a cyc8 conditional mutant to reveal those ge ..read more
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Metagenomic sequencing sheds light on microbes putatively associated with pneumonia-related fatalities of white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus)
Microbial Genomics | Microbiology Society Journals
by Melanie B. Prentice, Marie L. J. Gilbertson, Daniel J. Storm, Wendy C. Turner, Daniel P. Walsh, Marie E. Pinkerton and Pauline L. Kamath
3w ago
With emerging infectious disease outbreaks in human, domestic and wild animal populations on the rise, improvements in pathogen characterization and surveillance are paramount for the protection of human and animal health, as well as the conservation of ecologically and economically important wildlife. Genomics offers a range of suitable tools to meet these goals, with metagenomic sequencing facilitating the characterization of whole microbial communities associated with emerging and endemic disease outbreaks. Here, we use metagenomic sequencing in a case-control study to identify microbes in ..read more
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