50 research outputs found
Complete genome sequence of <i>Vibrio anguillarum</i> phage CHOED successfully used for phage therapy in aquaculture
Vibrio anguillarum phage CHOED was isolated from Chilean mussels. It is a virulent phage showing effective inhibition of V. anguillarum. CHOED has potential in phage therapy, because it can protect fish from vibriosis in fish farms. Here, we announce the completely sequenced genome of V. anguillarum phage CHOED
Genome diversification within a clonal population of pandemic <i>Vibrio parahaemolyticus </i>seems to depend on the life circumstances of each individual bacteria
Artículo de publicación ISIBackground: New strains of Vibrio parahaemolyticus that cause diarrhea in humans by seafood ingestion
periodically emerge through continuous evolution in the ocean. Influx and expansion in the Southern Chilean
ocean of a highly clonal V. parahaemolyticus (serotype O3:K6) population from South East Asia caused one of the
largest seafood-related diarrhea outbreaks in the world. Here, genomics analyses of isolates from this rapidly
expanding clonal population offered an opportunity to observe the molecular evolutionary changes often
obscured in more diverse populations.
Results: Whole genome sequence comparison of eight independent isolates of this population from mussels or
clinical cases (from different years) was performed. Differences of 1366 to 217,729 bp genome length and 13 to
164 bp single nucleotide variants (SNVs) were found. Most genomic differences corresponded to the presence of
regions unique to only one or two isolates, and were probably acquired by horizontal gene transfer (HGT). Some
DNA gain was chromosomal but most was in plasmids. One isolate had a large region (8,644 bp) missing, which
was probably caused by excision of a prophage. Genome innovation by the presence of unique DNA, attributable
to HGT from related bacteria, varied greatly among the isolates, with values of 1,366 (ten times the number of
highest number of SNVs) to 217,729 (a thousand times more than the number of highest number of SNVs).
Conclusions: The evolutionary forces (SNVs, HGT) acting on each isolate of the same population were found to
differ to an extent that probably depended on the ecological scenario and life circumstances of each bacterium.FONDECYT 114073
Vibrio parahaemolyticus Diarrhea, Chile, 1998 and 2004
Analysis of clinical isolates of Vibrio parahaemolyticus from outbreaks in Chile in the cities of Puerto Montt in 2004 and in Antofagasta in 1998 indicated that 23 of 24 isolates from Puerto Montt and 19 of 20 from Antofagasta belonged to the pandemic clonal complex that emerged in Southeast Asia in 1996
Microevolution of Pandemic Vibrio parahaemolyticus Assessed by the Number of Repeat Units in Short Sequence Tandem Repeat Regions
The emergence of the pandemic strain Vibrio parahaemolyticus O3:K6 in 1996 caused a large increase of diarrhea outbreaks related to seafood consumption in Southeast Asia, and later worldwide. Isolates of this strain constitutes a clonal complex, and their effectual differentiation is possible by comparison of their variable number tandem repeats (VNTRs). The differentiation of the isolates by the differences in VNTRs will allow inferring the population dynamics and microevolution of this strain but this requires knowing the rate and mechanism of VNTRs' variation. Our study of mutants obtained after serial cultivation of clones showed that mutation rates of the six VNTRs examined are on the order of 10−4 mutant per generation and that difference increases by stepwise addition of single mutations. The single stepwise mutation (SSM) was deduced because mutants with 1, 2, 3, or more repeat unit deletions or insertions follow a geometric distribution. Plausible phylogenetic trees are obtained when, according to SSM, the genetic distance between clusters with different number of repeats is assessed by the absolute differences in repeats. Using this approach, mutants originated from different isolates of pandemic V. parahaemolyticus after serial cultivation are clustered with their parental isolates. Additionally, isolates of pandemic V. parahaemolyticus from Southeast Asia, Tokyo, and northern and southern Chile are clustered according their geographical origin. The deepest split in these four populations is observed between the Tokyo and southern Chile populations. We conclude that proper phylogenetic relations and successful tracing of pandemic V. parahaemolyticus requires measuring the differences between isolates by the absolute number of repeats in the VNTRs considered
Effect of Associated Bacteria on the Growth and Toxicity of Alexandrium catenella
Saprophytic bacteria in cultures of the marine dinoflagellate Alexandrium catenella were removed to assess their effect on growth and paralytic shellfish poisoning toxin production of this dinoflagellate. The actual axenic status was demonstrated by the lack of observable bacteria both immediately after treatment and following extended incubation in the absence of antibiotics. Bacteria were measured by counting CFU and also by epifluorescence microscopy and PCR amplification of bacterial 16S-23S spacer ribosomal DNA to detect noncultivable bacteria. Removal of bacteria did not have any effect on the growth of the dinoflagellate except for the inhibition of A. catenella disintegration after reaching the stationary phase. Toxicity was determined in dinoflagellate cell extracts by different methods: high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC); an electrophysiological test called the Electrotest, which measures the inhibition of saxitoxin-sensitive Na(+) channels expressed in a cell line; and a mouse bioassay, which measures the toxic effect on the whole mammal neuromuscular system. A lower toxicity of the dinoflagellates in axenic culture was observed by these three methods, though the difference was significant only by the mouse bioassay and HPLC methods. Altogether the results indicate that axenic cultures of A. catenella are able to produce toxin, though the total toxicity is probably diminished to about one-fifth of that in nonaxenic cultures