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1.
Clin Microbiol Infect ; 11(9): 704-12, 2005 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16104984

ABSTRACT

This study assessed the reproducibility and epidemiological concordance of double-enzyme fluorescent amplified fragment length polymorphism (fAFLP) analysis for genotyping of Legionella pneumophila serogroup (sg) 1. fAFLP fragment analysis was performed on three different sequencing platforms (one gel- and two capillary-based) in different laboratories with a well-characterised set of 50 strains of L. pneumophila sg 1. fAFLP data were analysed with the Pearson correlation similarity coefficient, using a range of parameters, and dendrogram outputs were converted to arbitrary types after selection of a specified percentage similarity threshold. The results obtained were compared with those obtained by the standard non-fluorescent AFLP method and were found to be broadly concordant. Using optimised settings for each fAFLP method to analyse the panel of 50 strains, epidemiological concordance (E) and reproducibility (R) values of 1.00 were obtained, and the number of types ranged from nine to 15, compared with E=1.00 and R=1.00, with 16 types, for the non-fluorescent AFLP protocol. The study demonstrated the potential of fAFLP for typing strains of L. pneumophila sg 1 on all three platforms; however, inter-platform comparison of fAFLP data was not achieved. fAFLP analysis may have a role in the fingerprinting of multiple isolates during Legionella outbreak investigations, but further work is required before type designations and identification libraries can be developed.


Subject(s)
DNA Fingerprinting/methods , Legionella pneumophila , Legionnaires' Disease/epidemiology , Molecular Epidemiology/methods , DNA, Bacterial/genetics , Europe/epidemiology , Fluorescence , Genotype , Humans , Legionella pneumophila/genetics , Reproducibility of Results
2.
Plant Mol Biol ; 42(5): 765-73, 2000 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10809448

ABSTRACT

Cryptochromes are blue light photoreceptors found in both plants and animals. They probably evolved from photolyases, which are blue/UV-light-absorbing photoreceptors involved in DNA repair. In seed plants, two different cryptochrome (CRY) genes have been found in Arabidopsis and one in Sinapis, while three genes have been found in the fern Adiantum. We report the characterisation of tomato CRY genes CRY1 and CRY2. They map to chromosomes 4 and 9, respectively, show relatively constitutive expression and encode proteins of 679 and 635 amino acids, respectively. These proteins show higher similarity to their Arabidopsis counterparts than to each other, suggesting that duplication between CRY1 and CRY2 is an ancient event in the evolution of seed plants. The seed plant cryptochromes form a group distinct from the fern cryptochromes, implying that only one gene was present in the common ancestor between these two groups of plants. Most intron positions in CRY genes from plants and ferns are highly conserved. Tomato cryl and cry2 proteins carry C-terminal domains 210 and 160 amino acids long, respectively. Several conserved motifs are found in these domains, some of which are common to both types of cryptochromes, while others are cryptochrome-type-specific.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis/genetics , Drosophila Proteins , Eye Proteins , Flavoproteins/genetics , Photoreceptor Cells, Invertebrate , Solanum lycopersicum/genetics , Amino Acid Sequence , Arabidopsis Proteins , Chromosome Mapping , Cryptochromes , DNA, Complementary/chemistry , DNA, Complementary/genetics , DNA, Plant/chemistry , DNA, Plant/genetics , Exons , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant/radiation effects , Genes, Plant/genetics , Introns , Light , Solanum lycopersicum/radiation effects , Molecular Sequence Data , Phylogeny , Plant Proteins/genetics , Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled , Sequence Alignment , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid
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