Bacterial Genomic Islands: Organization,Function, and Evolutionary Role |
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Authors: | Ilyina T S Romanova Yu M |
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Institution: | (1) Gamaleya Institute of Epidemiology and Microbiology, Russian Academy of Medical Sciences, Moscow, Russia |
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Abstract: | Data on the structural organization and evolutionary role of specific bacterial DNA regions known as genomic islands are reviewed. Emphasis is placed on the most extensively studied genomic islands, pathogenicity islands (PAIs), which are present in the chromosome of Gram-negative and Gram-positive pathogenic bacteria and absent from related nonpathogenic strains. PAIs are long DNA regions that harbor virulence genes and often differ in GC content from the remainder of the bacterial genome. Many PAI occur in the tRNA gene loci, which provide a convenient target for foreign gene insertion. Some PAI are highly homologous to each other and contain sequences similar to ISs, phage att sites, and plasmid ori sites, along with functional or defective integrase and transposase genes, suggesting horizontal transfer of PAI among bacteria. |
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Keywords: | bacterial genomic islands organization function horizontal gene transfer pathogenicity islands bacterial evolution |
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