2006
DOI: 10.1101/gr.5674706
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Evolution ofChlamydia trachomatisdiversity occurs by widespread interstrain recombination involving hotspots

Abstract: Chlamydia trachomatis is an obligate intracellular bacterium of major public health significance, infecting over one-tenth of the world's population and causing blindness and infertility in millions. Mounting evidence supports recombination as a key source of genetic diversity among free-living bacteria. Previous research shows that intracellular bacteria such as Chlamydiaceae may also undergo recombination but whether this plays a significant evolutionary role has not been determined. Here, we examine multipl… Show more

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Cited by 115 publications
(146 citation statements)
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“…Since an exchange anywhere in the 143-kb region between the mutant sites would have conferred resistance to both Ofx and Rif to a recombinant, the nonrandomly high concentration of exchanges within the rpoB gene suggests that there is a mechanistic predisposition to recombination rather than selection for doubly resistant recombinants that have exchanges in rpoB. Below we show how this result obtained with our in vitro LGT methodology affects possible interpretations of nonrandomly high concentrations of crossovers ("hot spots") in clinical isolates (see Discussion) (10).…”
Section: Vol 190 2008 Interstrain Gene Transfer In Vitro In Chlamydmentioning
confidence: 76%
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“…Since an exchange anywhere in the 143-kb region between the mutant sites would have conferred resistance to both Ofx and Rif to a recombinant, the nonrandomly high concentration of exchanges within the rpoB gene suggests that there is a mechanistic predisposition to recombination rather than selection for doubly resistant recombinants that have exchanges in rpoB. Below we show how this result obtained with our in vitro LGT methodology affects possible interpretations of nonrandomly high concentrations of crossovers ("hot spots") in clinical isolates (see Discussion) (10).…”
Section: Vol 190 2008 Interstrain Gene Transfer In Vitro In Chlamydmentioning
confidence: 76%
“…The reported recombination data indicate that LGT can involve widely separated loci distributed over much or all of the 1.04-Mb C. trachomatis chromosome (10). Sequences resembling insertion sequences (9) and other sequences that were interpreted as recombination "hot spots" (10) have been reported, but LGT mechanisms were not definitely identified. The life cycle impediment to direct experimental investigation of LGT mechanisms was partially removed by our recent use of in vitro methodology to discover…”
mentioning
confidence: 94%
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“…As a homosexual male reference group, seven of the male strains obtained from rectums in the current study (Strain numbers: 70, 150, 2923, 6276, 9301, 9768, 11023, 11074, and 11222) that has been reported previously [18], were also used for the study. Furthermore, as female strain groups, eleven of the female strains used in the present study were previously isolated from Sapporo, Japan (Strain designations: nv266, nv283, nv287, nv307, nv381, nv399, nv441, nv417, nv437, nv443, and nv448), as previously reported [19] S-91, 537C-05, S-141, and CS-500-96) had also been previously reported [11,16] (Category: Ref-females). The origins and accession numbers of all of the strains are summarized in Table 1.…”
Section: Bacterial Strains and Pmpf Amino Acid Sequence Informationmentioning
confidence: 64%
“…Thus, the surface exposure of the PmpF molecule indicates that it could be strongly subjected to host-selective pressures such as microbial flora [15]. In fact, phylogenetic studies of pmp genes found that among them pmpF exhibited the greatest genetic diversity, both at the nucleotide and amino acid level, among C. trachomatis genital strains [13,16].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%