Results obtained could help to better

define strategies f

Results obtained could help to better

define strategies for pathogenicity studies and control strategies in C. perfringens and can moreover be used to design focused wet-lab experiments. Table 1 Genomes and plasmids analyzed C.p. Strain Type (name) Sequencing Status N Genes Length (nt) Str. 13 G Finished 2905 3085740 ATCC 13124 G Finished 3066 3256683 ATCC 3626 G Draft 3427 3896305 C JGS1495 G Draft 3254 3661329 CPE F4969 G Draft 3118 3510272 D JGS1721 G Draft 3485 4045016 E JGS1987 G Draft 3729 4127102 SM101 G Finished 2748 2921996 C. perfringens P (pBCNF5603) Finished 36 36695 C. perfringens P (pCP8533etx) Finished 63 64753 F4969 P (pCPF5603) Finished 73 75268 F5603 P (pCW3) Finished 51 47263 F5603 P (pCPF4969) Finished 62 70480 SM101 P (1) Finished Belinostat 10 12397 SM101 P (2) Finished 11 12206 Str. 13 P (pCP13) Finished 63 54310 List of genomes and plasmids used in

this study. The Type column indicates if a sequence is a genome (G) or a plasmid (P) in that case we also indicate the name of the plasmid within round parentheses. C.p. stands for Clostridium perfringens. Results and Discussion Comparisons of C. perfringens strains As a preliminary analysis we studied the variability of the selected genomes using both standard check details phylogenetic techniques and a comparison of all intergenic sequences. The alignment of rrnA operons for a total of 4719 nt was used to build a Neighbor-Joining tree revealing that these strains are closely related [Additional file 1: panel a]. In agreement with a low differentiation on ribosomal operon sequences, bootstrap support for the branching pattern was quite low; in fact, 32 variable sites only were found in the alignment,

which were evenly distributed between strains [Additional file 1: panel b]. However, the comparison of a large number of intergenic sequences extracted from the genomes revealed that some of them are quite variable between the different strains with respect to the very conserved rrnA operon (down to 82% with respect to C. perfringens Str. 13, [Additional file 1: panel Phosphoribosylglycinamide formyltransferase c]). Regulon prediction in sequenced C. perfringens strains The presence of VirR and VirS sequences was checked in all strains using blast and the functionally characterized sequences of Str. 13 as queries. We found that they are indeed both present in all strains and that they are moreover always organized in what resembles a bi-cistronic operon with the two genes often overlapped (data not shown). We scanned available C. perfringens genomes using the VirR position weight matrix (PWM) derived from experimental observations, following the procedure reported in figure 1 (see Methods for details). At the time we performed this analysis (April, 2009), the NCBI microbial genome database stored three different complete genomes for C.

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