Artículos de revistas
Brucella abortus strain 2308 Wisconsin genome: Importance of the definition of reference strains
Fecha
2016-09Registro en:
Suárez Esquivel, Marcela; Ruiz Villalobos, Nazareth; Castillo Zeledón, Amanda; Jiménez Rojas, César; Roop II, R. Martin; et al.; Brucella abortus strain 2308 Wisconsin genome: Importance of the definition of reference strains; Frontiers Research Foundation; Frontiers in Microbiology; 7; 9-2016; 1-7
1664-302X
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Suárez Esquivel, Marcela
Ruiz Villalobos, Nazareth
Castillo Zeledón, Amanda
Jiménez Rojas, César
Roop II, R. Martin
Comerci, Diego José
Barquero Calvo, Elías
Chacón Díaz, Carlos
Caswell, Clayton C.
Baker, Kate S.
Chaves Olarte, Esteban
Thomson, Nicholas R.
Moreno, Edgardo
Letesson, Jean J.
De Bolle, Xavier
Guzmán Verri, Caterina
Resumen
Brucellosis is a bacterial infectious disease affecting a wide range of mammals and a neglected zoonosis caused by species of the genetically homogenous genus Brucella. As in most studies on bacterial diseases, research in brucellosis is carried out by using reference strains as canonical models to understand the mechanisms underlying host pathogen interactions. We performed whole genome sequencing analysis of the reference strain B. abortus 2308 routinely used in our laboratory, including manual curated annotation accessible as an editable version through a link at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brucella#Genomics. Comparison of this genome with two publically available 2308 genomes showed significant differences, particularly indels related to insertional elements, suggesting variability related to the transposition of these elements within the same strain. Considering the outcome of high resolution genomic techniques in the bacteriology field, the conventional concept of strain definition needs to be revised.