Journal article
Are Escherichia coli pathotypes still relevant in the era of whole-genome sequencing?
RM Robins-Browne, KE Holt, DJ Ingle, DM Hocking, J Yang, M Tauschek
Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology | Published : 2016
Open access
Abstract
The empirical and pragmatic nature of diagnostic microbiology has given rise to several different schemes to subtype E.coli, including biotyping, serotyping, and pathotyping. These schemes have proved invaluable in identifying and tracking outbreaks, and for prognostication in individual cases of infection, but they are imprecise and potentially misleading due to the malleability and continuous evolution of E. coli. Whole genome sequencing can be used to accurately determine E. coli subtypes that are based on allelic variation or differences in gene content, such as serotyping and pathotyping. Whole genome sequencing also provides information about single nucleotide polymorphisms in the core..
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Funding Acknowledgements
Research in the authors' laboratories is funded by the Australian NHMRC.