Picardeau_2008_PLoS.One_3_e1607

Reference

Title : Genome sequence of the saprophyte Leptospira biflexa provides insights into the evolution of Leptospira and the pathogenesis of leptospirosis - Picardeau_2008_PLoS.One_3_e1607
Author(s) : Picardeau M , Bulach DM , Bouchier C , Zuerner RL , Zidane N , Wilson PJ , Creno S , Kuczek ES , Bommezzadri S , Davis JC , McGrath A , Johnson MJ , Boursaux-Eude C , Seemann T , Rouy Z , Coppel RL , Rood JI , Lajus A , Davies JK , Medigue C , Adler B
Ref : PLoS ONE , 3 :e1607 , 2008
Abstract :

Leptospira biflexa is a free-living saprophytic spirochete present in aquatic environments. We determined the genome sequence of L. biflexa, making it the first saprophytic Leptospira to be sequenced. The L. biflexa genome has 3,590 protein-coding genes distributed across three circular replicons: the major 3,604 chromosome, a smaller 278-kb replicon that also carries essential genes, and a third 74-kb replicon. Comparative sequence analysis provides evidence that L. biflexa is an excellent model for the study of Leptospira evolution; we conclude that 2052 genes (61%) represent a progenitor genome that existed before divergence of pathogenic and saprophytic Leptospira species. Comparisons of the L. biflexa genome with two pathogenic Leptospira species reveal several major findings. Nearly one-third of the L. biflexa genes are absent in pathogenic Leptospira. We suggest that once incorporated into the L. biflexa genome, laterally transferred DNA undergoes minimal rearrangement due to physical restrictions imposed by high gene density and limited presence of transposable elements. In contrast, the genomes of pathogenic Leptospira species undergo frequent rearrangements, often involving recombination between insertion sequences. Identification of genes common to the two pathogenic species, L. borgpetersenii and L. interrogans, but absent in L. biflexa, is consistent with a role for these genes in pathogenesis. Differences in environmental sensing capacities of L. biflexa, L. borgpetersenii, and L. interrogans suggest a model which postulates that loss of signal transduction functions in L. borgpetersenii has impaired its survival outside a mammalian host, whereas L. interrogans has retained environmental sensory functions that facilitate disease transmission through water.

PubMedSearch : Picardeau_2008_PLoS.One_3_e1607
PubMedID: 18270594
Gene_locus related to this paper: lepba-b0s8t1 , lepba-b0s8u7 , lepba-b0s8y3 , lepba-b0s9i9 , lepba-b0sav1 , lepba-b0sbc1 , lepba-b0sc63 , lepba-b0scl1 , lepba-b0sct4 , lepba-b0sgs6 , lepba-b0sif1 , lepba-metx , lepbp-b0sju7 , lepbp-b0slj1 , lepbp-b0smw1 , lepbp-b0spz3 , lepbp-b0sqw9 , lepbp-b0ssy9 , lepbp-b0sui7

Related information

Gene_locus lepba-b0s8t1    lepba-b0s8u7    lepba-b0s8y3    lepba-b0s9i9    lepba-b0sav1    lepba-b0sbc1    lepba-b0sc63    lepba-b0scl1    lepba-b0sct4    lepba-b0sgs6    lepba-b0sif1    lepba-metx    lepbp-b0sju7    lepbp-b0slj1    lepbp-b0smw1    lepbp-b0spz3    lepbp-b0sqw9    lepbp-b0ssy9    lepbp-b0sui7

Citations formats

Picardeau M, Bulach DM, Bouchier C, Zuerner RL, Zidane N, Wilson PJ, Creno S, Kuczek ES, Bommezzadri S, Davis JC, McGrath A, Johnson MJ, Boursaux-Eude C, Seemann T, Rouy Z, Coppel RL, Rood JI, Lajus A, Davies JK, Medigue C, Adler B (2008)
Genome sequence of the saprophyte Leptospira biflexa provides insights into the evolution of Leptospira and the pathogenesis of leptospirosis
PLoS ONE 3 :e1607

Picardeau M, Bulach DM, Bouchier C, Zuerner RL, Zidane N, Wilson PJ, Creno S, Kuczek ES, Bommezzadri S, Davis JC, McGrath A, Johnson MJ, Boursaux-Eude C, Seemann T, Rouy Z, Coppel RL, Rood JI, Lajus A, Davies JK, Medigue C, Adler B (2008)
PLoS ONE 3 :e1607