Journal article
Being pathogenic, plastic, and sexual while living with a nearly minimal bacterial genome.
P Sirand-Pugnet, C Lartigue, M Marenda, D Jacob, A Barré, V Barbe, C Schenowitz, S Mangenot, A Couloux, B Segurens, A de Daruvar, A Blanchard, C Citti
PLoS genetics | Published : 2007
Abstract
Mycoplasmas are commonly described as the simplest self-replicating organisms, whose evolution was mainly characterized by genome downsizing with a proposed evolutionary scenario similar to that of obligate intracellular bacteria such as insect endosymbionts. Thus far, analysis of mycoplasma genomes indicates a low level of horizontal gene transfer (HGT) implying that DNA acquisition is strongly limited in these minimal bacteria. In this study, the genome of the ruminant pathogen Mycoplasma agalactiae was sequenced. Comparative genomic data and phylogenetic tree reconstruction revealed that approximately 18% of its small genome (877,438 bp) has undergone HGT with the phylogenetically distinc..
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