Title of article :
Genomic Rearrangements at rrn Operons in Salmonella
Author/Authors :
Maloy، Stanley نويسنده , , Helm، R. Allen نويسنده , , Lee، Alison G. نويسنده , , Christman، Harry D. نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Abstract :
Most Salmonella serovars are general pathogens that infect a variety of hosts. These "generalist" serovars cause disease in many animals from reptiles to mammals. In contrast, a few serovars cause disease only in a specific host. Hostspecific serovars can cause a systemic, often fatal disease in one species yet remain avirulent in other species. Hostspecific Salmonella frequently have large genomic rearrangements due to recombination at the ribosomal RNA (rrn) operons while the generalists consistently have a conserved chromosomal arrangement. To determine whether this is the result of an intrinsic difference in recombination frequency or a consequence of lifestyle difference between generalist and host-specific Salmonella, we determined the frequency of rearrangements in vitro. Using lacZ genes as portable regions of homology for inversion analysis, we found that both generalist and host-specific serovars of Salmonella have similar tolerances to chromosomal rearrangements in vitro. Using PCR and genetic selection, we found that generalist and host-specific serovars also undergo rearrangements at rrn operons at similar frequencies in vitro. These observations indicate that the observed difference in genomic stability between generalist and host-specific serovars is a consequence of their distinct lifestyles, not intrinsic differences in recombination frequencies.
Keywords :
Oligotrophic soils , Indicator species , Ectomycorrhizae , N deposition , Pine barrens