Journal article

Genome organization and the evolution of the virulence gene locus in Listeria species


Authors listChakraborty, T; Hain, T; Domann, E

Publication year2000

Pages167-174

JournalInternational Journal of Medical Microbiology

Volume number290

Issue number2

ISSN1438-4221

eISSN1618-0607

PublisherElsevier


Abstract
The chromosomal region of Listeria monocytogenes harboring the gene cluster prfA-plcA-hly-mpl-actA-plcB (virulence gene cluster; vgc) harbors virulence genes critical for the survival of the bacteria following infection. Previous studies have implicated it as an ancestral pathogenicity island, derivatives of which are present in the species L. ivanovii and L. seeligeri, but absent in nonpathogenic species such as L. innocua. We cloned the corresponding region from L. innocua and L. welshimeri and compared its sequences to those from L. monocytogenes, L. ivanovii and L. seeligeri. The analysis allowed exact determination of delineation and size of the vgc and suggests that these genes may have been acquired by bacteriophage transduction. Thus, here we present an alternative view of the evolution of Listeria spp. and suggest that L. monocytogenes may be the primordial species of this genus.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleChakraborty, T., Hain, T. and Domann, E. (2000) Genome organization and the evolution of the virulence gene locus in Listeria species, International Journal of Medical Microbiology, 290(2), pp. 167-174

APA Citation styleChakraborty, T., Hain, T., & Domann, E. (2000). Genome organization and the evolution of the virulence gene locus in Listeria species. International Journal of Medical Microbiology. 290(2), 167-174.



Keywords


Listeria genome organisationMONOCYTOGENESvirulence gene cluster

Last updated on 2025-02-04 at 04:30