Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10969555 | Vaccine | 2010 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
Comparative genomic analysis of a wild-type strain of the ovine pathogen Chlamydophila abortus and its nitrosoguanidine-induced, temperature-sensitive and virulence-attenuated live vaccine derivative identified point mutations unique to the mutant (Burall et al. [1]). Here, we evaluate the capacity of some of these mutations to either create or eliminate restriction sites using the wild-type strain C. abortus S26/3 as a reference. Three of eight genomic sites with confirmed point mutations (CAB153, CAB636 and CAB648) were retained for analysis as each resulted in the loss of a restriction site in the genome sequence of the vaccine strain. PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis using restriction enzymes chosen to specifically target the three genomic sites was then applied to a large number of C. abortus field isolates and reference strains. Our results indicate that the three mutations are uniquely present in the vaccine strain, and as such provide easy-to-use markers for the differential identification of the vaccine strain and wild-type isolates.
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Authors
Karine Laroucau, Fabien Vorimore, Konrad Sachse, Evangelia Vretou, Victoria I. Siarkou, Hermann Willems, Simone Magnino, Annie Rodolakis, Patrik M. Bavoil,