The most important determinants of the gut microbiotic composition in infants were the mode of delivery, type of infant feeding, gestational age, infant hospitalization, and antibiotic use by the infant. Term infants who were born vaginally at home and were breastfed exclusively seemed to have the most "beneficial" gut microbiota (highest numbers of bifidobacteria and lowest numbers of C difficile and E coli).
Staphylococcus aureus is a potentially pathogenic bacterium that causes a broad spectrum of diseases. S. aureus can adapt rapidly to the selective pressure of antibiotics, and this has resulted in the emergence and spread of methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA). Resistance to methicillin and other beta-lactam antibiotics is caused by the mecA gene, which is situated on a mobile genetic element, the Staphylococcal Cassette Chromosome mec (SCCmec). To date, five SCCmec types (I-V) have been distinguished, and several variants of these SCCmec types have been described. All SCCmec elements carry genes for resistance to beta-lactam antibiotics, as well as genes for the regulation of expression of mecA. Additionally, SCCmec types II and III carry non-beta-lactam antibiotic resistance genes on integrated plasmids and a transposon. The epidemiology of MRSA has been investigated by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), multilocus sequence typing (MLST), spa typing and SCCmec typing. Numerous MRSA clones have emerged and disseminated worldwide. SCCmec has been acquired on at least 20 occasions by different lineages of methicillin-sensitive S. aureus. Although most MRSA strains are hospital-acquired (HA-MRSA), community-acquired MRSA (CA-MRSA) strains have now been recognised. CA-MRSA is both phenotypically and genotypically different from HA-MRSA. CA-MRSA harbours SCCmec types IV or V, and is associated with the genes encoding Panton-Valentine leukocidin. The prevalence of MRSA ranges from 0.6% in The Netherlands to 66.8% in Japan. This review describes the latest developments in knowledge concerning the structure of SCCmec, the molecular evolution of MRSA, the methods used to investigate the epidemiology of MRSA, and the risk-factors associated with CA-MRSA and HA-MRSA.
Spider: SPecies IDentity and Evolution in R is a new R package implementing a number of useful analyses for DNA barcoding studies and associated research into species delimitation and speciation. Included are functions essential for generating important summary statistics from DNA barcode data, assessing specimen identification efficacy, and for testing and optimizing divergence threshold limits. In terms of investigating evolutionary and taxonomic questions, techniques for assessing diagnostic nucleotides and probability of reciprocal monophyly are also provided. Additionally, a sliding window function offers opportunities to analyse information across a gene, essential for marker design in degraded DNA studies. Spider capitalizes on R's extensible ethos and offers an integrated platform ideal for the analysis of both nucleotide and morphological data. The program can be obtained from the comprehensive R archive network (CRAN, http://cran.r-project.org) and from the R-Forge package development site (http://spider.r-forge.r-project.org/).
The integrase (IN) protein of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is required for specific cleavage of the viral DNA termini, and subsequent integration of the viral DNA into target DNA. To identify the various domains of the IN protein we generated a series of IN deletion mutants as fusions to maltose-binding protein (MBP). The deletion mutants were tested for their ability to bind DNA, to mediate site-specific cleavage of the viral DNA ends, and to carry out integration and disintegration reactions. We found that the DNA-binding region resides between amino acids 200 and 270 of the 288-residues HIV-1 IN protein. The catalytic domain of the protein was mapped between amino acids 50 and 194. For the specific activities of IN, cleavage of the viral DNA and integration, both the DNA-binding domain and the conserved amino-terminal region of IN are required. These regions are dispensable however, for disintegration activity.
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