An Appraisal of the Potential for Illegitimate Recombination in Bacterial Genomes and Its Consequences: From Duplications to Genome Reduction
Open Access
- 12 May 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in Genome Research
- Vol. 13 (6a) , 1123-1132
- https://doi.org/10.1101/gr.966203
Abstract
An exhaustive search for shortly spaced repeats in 74 bacterial chromosomes reveals that they are much more numerous than is usually acknowledged. These repeats were divided into five classes: close repeats (CRs), tandem repeats (TRs), simple sequence repeats (SSRs), spaced interspersed direct repeats, and “others.” CRs are widespread and constitute the most abundant class, particularly in coding sequences. The other classes are less frequent, but each individual element shows a higher potential for recombination, when the number of repeats and their distances are taken into account. SSRs and TRs are more frequent in pathogens, as expected given their role in contingency loci, but are also widespread in the other bacteria. The analysis of CRs shows that they have an important role in the evolution of genomes, namely by generating duplications and deletions. Several cases compatible with a significant role of small CRs in the formation of large repeats were detected. Also, gene deletion in Buchnera correlates with repeat density, suggesting that CRs may lead to sequence deletion in general and genome reductive evolution of obligatory intracellular bacteria in particular. The assembly of these results indicates that shortly spaced repeats are key players in the dynamics of genome evolution.Keywords
This publication has 51 references indexed in Scilit:
- Short-Sequence Tandem and Nontandem DNA Repeats and Endogenous Hydrogen Peroxide Production Contribute to Genetic Instability ofStreptococcus pneumoniaeJournal of Bacteriology, 2002
- Where are the pseudogenes in bacterial genomes?Trends in Microbiology, 2001
- Identifying Satellites and Periodic Repetitions in Biological SequencesJournal of Computational Biology, 1998
- Technical tips onlineTrends in Genetics, 1997
- A Replicational Model for DNA Recombination between Direct RepeatsJournal of Molecular Biology, 1996
- The stabilization of repetitive tracts of DNA by variant repeats requires a functional DNA mismatch repair systemCell, 1995
- SIMPLE34: an improved and enhanced implementation for VAX and Sun computers of the SIMPLE algorithm for analysis of clustered repetitive motifs in nucleotide sequencesBioinformatics, 1994
- Adaptive evolution of highly mutable loci in pathogenic bacteriaCurrent Biology, 1994
- Preferential DNA secondary structure mutagenesis in the lagging strand of replication in E. coliNature, 1991
- Deletion formation in bacteriophage T4Journal of Molecular Biology, 1988