Phylogeny of Streptomyces species and evidence for horizontal transfer of entire and partial antibiotic gene clusters

Antonie van Leeuwenhoek
2001.0

Abstract

The phylogenetic relationships of a collection of streptomycete soil isolates and type strains were resolved by sequence analysis of trpB, a housekeeping gene involved in tryptophan biosynthesis. The analysis confirmed that two isolates were recipients in a gene transfer event, demonstrated by phylogenetic incongruency between trpB and strB1 trees. One strain had acquired the entire streptomycin biosynthetic cluster, whilst the other contained only strRAB1, the resistance gene and two flanking genes from the cluster. Sequence analysis of trpB, as part of a polyphasic approach, was a useful tool in determining intra-generic relationships within the genus Streptomyces.

Knowledge Graph

Similar Paper

Phylogeny of Streptomyces species and evidence for horizontal transfer of entire and partial antibiotic gene clusters
Antonie van Leeuwenhoek 2001.0
Evidence for transfer of antibiotic‐resistance genes in soil populations of streptomycetes
Molecular Ecology 1998.0
Granaticins and their biosynthetic gene cluster from Streptomyces vietnamensis: evidence of horizontal gene transfer
Antonie van Leeuwenhoek 2011.0
Rhodostreptomycins, Antibiotics Biosynthesized Following Horizontal Gene Transfer from <i>Streptomyces padanus</i> to <i>Rhodococcus fascians</i>
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2008.0
Characterization of an Insertion Sequence Element Associated with Genetically Diverse Plant Pathogenic <i>Streptomyces</i> spp
Journal of Bacteriology 1999.0
Genetics of streptomycin production in Streptomyces griseus: molecular structure and putative function of genes strELMB2N
Molecular and General Genetics MGG 1991.0
The thiostrepton-resistance-encoding gene in Streptomyces laurentii is located within a cluster of ribosomal protein operons
Gene 1995.0
Cloning of antibiotic-resistance genes in Streptomyces.
The Journal of Antibiotics 1983.0
A putative antimicrobial peptide from Hymenoptera in the megaplasmid pSCL4 of <i>Streptomyces clavuligerus</i> ATCC 27064 reveals a singular case of horizontal gene transfer with potential applications
Ecology and Evolution 2019.0
A putative antimicrobial peptide from Hymenoptera in the megaplasmid pSCL4 of <i>Streptomyces clavuligerus</i> ATCC 27064 reveals a singular case of horizontal gene transfer with potential applications
Ecology and Evolution 2019.0