64 research outputs found
Genome Sequence of Fusobacterium nucleatum Subspecies Polymorphum — a Genetically Tractable Fusobacterium
Fusobacterium nucleatum is a prominent member of the oral microbiota and is a common cause of human infection. F. nucleatum includes five subspecies: polymorphum, nucleatum, vincentii, fusiforme, and animalis. F. nucleatum subsp. polymorphum ATCC 10953 has been well characterized phenotypically and, in contrast to previously sequenced strains, is amenable to gene transfer. We sequenced and annotated the 2,429,698 bp genome of F. nucleatum subsp. polymorphum ATCC 10953. Plasmid pFN3 from the strain was also sequenced and analyzed. When compared to the other two available fusobacterial genomes (F. nucleatum subsp. nucleatum, and F. nucleatum subsp. vincentii) 627 open reading frames unique to F. nucleatum subsp. polymorphum ATCC 10953 were identified. A large percentage of these mapped within one of 28 regions or islands containing five or more genes. Seventeen percent of the clustered proteins that demonstrated similarity were most similar to proteins from the clostridia, with others being most similar to proteins from other gram-positive organisms such as Bacillus and Streptococcus. A ten kilobase region homologous to the Salmonella typhimurium propanediol utilization locus was identified, as was a prophage and integrated conjugal plasmid. The genome contains five composite ribozyme/transposons, similar to the CdISt IStrons described in Clostridium difficile. IStrons are not present in the other fusobacterial genomes. These findings indicate that F. nucleatum subsp. polymorphum is proficient at horizontal gene transfer and that exchange with the Firmicutes, particularly the Clostridia, is common
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French prisons: une humiliation pour la RĂ©publique?
In France in recent years, the spotlight has been on the state of French prisons. The incarceration of well-known figures who have chosen to publish details of the conditions of their detention, and prison doctor Véronique Vasseur’s revelations about the Paris prison La Santé shocked the nation, forcing politicians to act. Two major reports by the Assemble´e nationale and Senate concluded that France’s prisons were une humiliation pour la République. But the grande loi pénitentiaire envisaged by Jospin did not come to fruition. Several reports later (on non-custodial sentences, prison work and prison suicides), will the massive prison-building campaign aimed at tackling the overcrowding at the source of the crisis be the only solution implemented? The article commences with a brief historical overview of the origins of the French prison system, outlining the evolution in attitudes towards incarceration. We then review the state of France’s prisons today and examine recent attempts at prison reform
Reconceptualising employee silence: problems and prognosis
A growing literature has emerged on employee silence, located within the field of organisational behaviour. Scholars have investigated when and how employees articulate voice and when and how they will opt for silence. While offering many insights, this analysis is inherently one-sided in its interpretation of silence as a product of employee motivations. An alternative reading of silence is offered which focuses on the role of management. Using the non-union employee representation literature for illustrative purposes, the significance of management in structuring employee silence is considered. Highlighted are the ways in which management, through agenda-setting and institutional structures, can perpetuate silence over a range of issues, thereby organising employees out of the voice process.These considerations are redeployed to offer a dialectical interpretation of employee silence in a conceptual framework to assist further research and analysis
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