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Transcriptomics and adaptive genomics of the asymptomatic bacteriuria Escherichia coli strain 83972

Escherichia coli strains are the major cause of urinary tract infections in humans. Such strains can be divided into virulent, UPEC strains causing symptomatic infections, and asymptomatic, commensal-like strains causing asymptomatic bacteriuria, ABU. The best-characterized ABU strain is strain 8397...

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Autores principales: Hancock, Viktoria, Seshasayee, Aswin S., Ussery, David W., Luscombe, Nicholas M., Klemm, Per
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer-Verlag 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2329726/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18317809
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00438-008-0330-9
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author Hancock, Viktoria
Seshasayee, Aswin S.
Ussery, David W.
Luscombe, Nicholas M.
Klemm, Per
author_facet Hancock, Viktoria
Seshasayee, Aswin S.
Ussery, David W.
Luscombe, Nicholas M.
Klemm, Per
author_sort Hancock, Viktoria
collection PubMed
description Escherichia coli strains are the major cause of urinary tract infections in humans. Such strains can be divided into virulent, UPEC strains causing symptomatic infections, and asymptomatic, commensal-like strains causing asymptomatic bacteriuria, ABU. The best-characterized ABU strain is strain 83972. Global gene expression profiling of strain 83972 has been carried out under seven different sets of environmental conditions ranging from laboratory minimal medium to human bladders. The data reveal highly specific gene expression responses to different conditions. A number of potential fitness factors for the human urinary tract could be identified. Also, presence/absence data of the gene expression was used as an adaptive genomics tool to model the gene pool of 83972 using primarily UPEC strain CFT073 as a scaffold. In our analysis, 96% of the transcripts filtered present in strain 83972 can be found in CFT073, and genes on six of the seven pathogenicity islands were expressed in 83972. Despite the very different patient symptom profiles, the two strains seem to be very similar. Genes expressed in CFT073 but not in 83972 were identified and can be considered as virulence factor candidates. Strain 83972 is a deconstructed pathogen rather than a commensal strain that has acquired fitness properties.
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spelling pubmed-23297262008-04-24 Transcriptomics and adaptive genomics of the asymptomatic bacteriuria Escherichia coli strain 83972 Hancock, Viktoria Seshasayee, Aswin S. Ussery, David W. Luscombe, Nicholas M. Klemm, Per Mol Genet Genomics Original Paper Escherichia coli strains are the major cause of urinary tract infections in humans. Such strains can be divided into virulent, UPEC strains causing symptomatic infections, and asymptomatic, commensal-like strains causing asymptomatic bacteriuria, ABU. The best-characterized ABU strain is strain 83972. Global gene expression profiling of strain 83972 has been carried out under seven different sets of environmental conditions ranging from laboratory minimal medium to human bladders. The data reveal highly specific gene expression responses to different conditions. A number of potential fitness factors for the human urinary tract could be identified. Also, presence/absence data of the gene expression was used as an adaptive genomics tool to model the gene pool of 83972 using primarily UPEC strain CFT073 as a scaffold. In our analysis, 96% of the transcripts filtered present in strain 83972 can be found in CFT073, and genes on six of the seven pathogenicity islands were expressed in 83972. Despite the very different patient symptom profiles, the two strains seem to be very similar. Genes expressed in CFT073 but not in 83972 were identified and can be considered as virulence factor candidates. Strain 83972 is a deconstructed pathogen rather than a commensal strain that has acquired fitness properties. Springer-Verlag 2008-03-04 2008-05 /pmc/articles/PMC2329726/ /pubmed/18317809 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00438-008-0330-9 Text en © The Author(s) 2008
spellingShingle Original Paper
Hancock, Viktoria
Seshasayee, Aswin S.
Ussery, David W.
Luscombe, Nicholas M.
Klemm, Per
Transcriptomics and adaptive genomics of the asymptomatic bacteriuria Escherichia coli strain 83972
title Transcriptomics and adaptive genomics of the asymptomatic bacteriuria Escherichia coli strain 83972
title_full Transcriptomics and adaptive genomics of the asymptomatic bacteriuria Escherichia coli strain 83972
title_fullStr Transcriptomics and adaptive genomics of the asymptomatic bacteriuria Escherichia coli strain 83972
title_full_unstemmed Transcriptomics and adaptive genomics of the asymptomatic bacteriuria Escherichia coli strain 83972
title_short Transcriptomics and adaptive genomics of the asymptomatic bacteriuria Escherichia coli strain 83972
title_sort transcriptomics and adaptive genomics of the asymptomatic bacteriuria escherichia coli strain 83972
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2329726/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18317809
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00438-008-0330-9
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