MICI 3119 Lecture Notes - Lecture 33: Pathogenicity Island, Integrase, Gc-Content

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Mici 3119 lecture 33 december 2, 2019 bacteria as pathogens. Virulence genes where do they come from: many virulence traits are acquired by lateral gene transfer (lgt). These mobile pieces of dna allow bacteria to exploit a new niche: plasmids, many pathogens carry their virulence genes on plasmids. These can be very large 200kb: example: shigella, yersinia, phage, usually smaller pieces of dna that encode a few factors, examples: cholera. A genus of bacteria can have species that are pathogenic or not. Bacteria can become virulent by picking up genes through lateral gene transfer, which allows them to exploit a new niche. Virulent factors are encoded by a large plasmid. The other way these virulent determinant gets spread around is through phage, which are usually smaller. Pathogenicity islands (pai: often associated with trna genes, sometimes have integrase or remnants of integrase genes, have a gc content that is different from the rest of the chromosome.

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