In 1999, the population of Vancouver Island, Canada, began to experience an outbreak of a fatal fungal disease caused by a highly virulent lineage of Cryptococcus gattii. This organism has recently spread to the Canadian mainland and Pacific Northwest, but the molecular cause of the outbreak remains unknown. Here we show that the Vancouver Island outbreak (VIO) isolates have dramatically increased their ability to replicate within macrophages of the mammalian immune system in comparison with other C. gattii strains. We further demonstrate that such enhanced intracellular parasitism is directly linked to virulence in a murine model of cryptococcosis, suggesting that this phenotype may be the cause of the outbreak. Finally, microarray studies on 24 C. gattii strains reveals that the hypervirulence of the VIO isolates is characterized by the up-regulation of a large group of genes, many of which are encoded by mitochondrial genome or associated with mitochondrial activities. This expression profile correlates with an unusual mitochondrial morphology exhibited by the VIO strains after phagocytosis. Our data thus demonstrate that the intracellular parasitism of macrophages is a key driver of a human disease outbreak, a finding that has significant implications for a wide range of other human pathogens.cryptococcus ͉ macrophage ͉ Vancouver Island outbreak ͉ virulence
Background: With advances in sequencing technology and decreasing costs, the number of phage genomes that have been sequenced has increased markedly in the past decade. Materials and Methods: We developed an automated retrieval and analysis system for phage genomes (https:// github.com/RyanCook94/inphared) to produce the INfrastructure for a PHAge REference Database (INPHARED) of phage genomes and associated metadata. Results: As of January 2021, 14,244 complete phage genomes have been sequenced. The INPHARED data set is dominated by phages that infect a small number of bacterial genera, with 75% of phages isolated on only 30 bacterial genera. There is further bias, with significantly more lytic phage genomes (*70%) than temperate (*30%) within our database. Collectively, this results in *54% of temperate phage genomes originating from just three host genera. With much debate on the carriage of antibiotic resistance genes and their potential safety in phage therapy, we searched for putative antibiotic resistance genes. Frequency of antibiotic resistance gene carriage was found to be higher in temperate phages than in lytic phages and again varied with host. Conclusions: Given the bias of currently sequenced phage genomes, we suggest to fully understand phage diversity, efforts should be made to isolate and sequence a larger number of phages, in particular temperate phages, from a greater diversity of hosts.
This book is a comprehensive guide to all of the mathematics, statistics and computing you will need to successfully operate DNA microarray experiments. It is written for researchers, clinicians, laboratory heads and managers, from both biology and bioinformatics backgrounds, who work with, or who intend to work with microarrays. The book covers all aspects of microarray bioinformatics, giving you the tools to design arrays and experiments, to analyze your data, and to share your results with your organisation or with the international community. There are chapters covering sequence databases, oligonucleotide design, experimental design, image processing, normalisation, identifying differentially expressed genes, clustering, classification and data standards. The book is based on the highly successful Microarray Bioinformatics course at Oxford University, and therefore is ideally suited for teaching the subject at postgraduate or professional level.
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