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The threonine-tRNA ligase gene region is applicable in classification, typing, and phylogenetic analysis of bifidobacteria

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    0495892 - ÚŽFG 2019 RIV KR eng J - Journal Article
    Killer, Jiří - Mekadim, Chahrazed - Pechar, R. - Bunešová, V. - Vlková, E.
    The threonine-tRNA ligase gene region is applicable in classification, typing, and phylogenetic analysis of bifidobacteria.
    Journal of Microbiology. Roč. 56, č. 10 (2018), s. 713-721. ISSN 1225-8873. E-ISSN 1976-3794
    R&D Projects: GA MŠMT EF15_003/0000460; GA MZd(CZ) NV16-27449A
    Institutional support: RVO:67985904
    Keywords : Bifidobacterium * thrS gene * genetic marker
    OECD category: Microbiology
    Impact factor: 2.319, year: 2018
    Method of publishing: Limited access
    https://asep.lib.cas.cz/arl-cav/cs/csg/?repo=crepo1&key=34173440404

    In the modern era, molecular genetic techniques are crucial in ecological studies, as well as in the classification, typing, and phylogenetic analysis of prokaryotes. These techniques are mainly aimed at whole genome comparisons and PCR-derived experiments, including amplifying the 16S rRNA and other various housekeeping genes used in taxonomy, as well as MLST (multilocus sequence typing) and MLSA (multilocus sequence analysis) of different taxonomic bacterial groups. The gene encoding threonine-tRNA ligase (thrS) is a gene potentially applicable as an identification and phylogenetic marker in bacteria. It is widely distributed in bacterial genomes and is subject to evolutionary selection pressure due to its important function in protein synthesis. In this study, specific primers were used to amplify a thrS gene fragment (similar to 740 bp) in 36 type and 30 wild strains classified under family Bifidobacteriaceae. The full-length gene has not yet been considered as a possible identification, classification, and phylogenetic marker in bifidobacteria. The thrS sequences revealed higher sequence variability (82.7% of pairwise identities) among members of the family than that shown by 16S rRNA gene sequences (96.0%). Although discrepancies were found between the thrS-derived and previously reported whole genome phylogenetic analyses, the main phylogenetic groups of bifidobacteria were properly assigned. Most wild strains of bifidobacteria were better differentiated based on their thrS sequences than on their 16S rRNA gene identities. Phylogenetic confidence of the evaluated gene with respect to other alternative genetic markers widely used in taxonomy of bifidobacteria (fusA, GroELhsp60, pyrG, and rplB genes) was confirmed using the localized incongruence difference - Templeton analysis.
    Permanent Link: http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0288766

     
     
Number of the records: 1  

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