Complete Genome Sequence of Enterohemorrhagic Eschelichia coli O157:H7 and Genomic Comparison with a Laboratory Strain K-12

T Hayashi, K Makino, M Ohnishi, K Kurokawa… - DNA …, 2001 - academic.oup.com
T Hayashi, K Makino, M Ohnishi, K Kurokawa, K Ishii, K Yokoyama, CG Han, E Ohtsubo…
DNA research, 2001academic.oup.com
Escherichia coli O157: H7 is a major food-borne infectious pathogen that causes diarrhea,
hemorrhagic colitis, and hemolytic uremic syndrome. Here we report the complete
chromosome sequence of an O157: H7 strain isolated from the Sakai outbreak, and the
results of genomic comparison with a benign laboratory strain, K-12 MG1655. The
chromosome is 5.5 Mb in size, 859 Kb larger than that of K-12. We identified a 4.1-Mb
sequence highly conserved between the two strains, which may represent the fundamental …
Abstract
Escherichia coli O157:H7 is a major food-borne infectious pathogen that causes diarrhea, hemorrhagic colitis, and hemolytic uremic syndrome. Here we report the complete chromosome sequence of an O157:H7 strain isolated from the Sakai outbreak, and the results of genomic comparison with a benign laboratory strain, K-12 MG1655. The chromosome is 5.5 Mb in size, 859 Kb larger than that of K-12. We identified a 4.1-Mb sequence highly conserved between the two strains, which may represent the fundamental backbone of the E. coli chromosome. The remaining 1.4-Mb sequence comprises of O157:H7-specific sequences, most of which are horizontally transferred foreign DNAs. The predominant roles of bacteriophages in the emergence of O157:H7 is evident by the presence of 24 prophages and prophage-like elements that occupy more than half of the O157:H7-specific sequences. The O157:H7 chromosome encodes 1632 proteins and 20 tRNAs that are not present in K-12. Among these, at least 131 proteins are assumed to have virulence-related functions. Genome-wide codon usage analysis suggested that the O157:H7-specific tRNAs are involved in the efficient expression of the strain-specific genes. A complete set of the genes specific to O157:H7 presented here sheds new insight into the pathogenicity and the physiology of O157:H7, and will open a way to fully understand the molecular mechanisms underlying the O157:H7 infection.
Oxford University Press