2017
DOI: 10.1128/jcm.00737-17
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Development of a Web Tool for Escherichia coli Subtyping Based on fimH Alleles

Abstract: The aim of this study was to construct a valid publicly available method for in silico fimH subtyping of Escherichia coli particularly suitable for differentiation of fine-resolution subgroups within clonal groups defined by standard multilocus sequence typing (MLST). FimTyper was constructed as a FASTA database containing all currently known fimH alleles. The software source code is publicly available at https://bitbucket.org/genomicepidemiology/fimtyper, the database is freely available at https://bitbucket.… Show more

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Cited by 149 publications
(124 citation statements)
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“…The ST was identified by uploading the assembled genomes in fasta format to the Center for Genomic Epidemiology (CGE) MLST finder website (version 1.7) (Larsen et al, 2012 ). Presence of antibiotic resistant genes was determined by uploading assembled genomes in fasta format to ResFinder 2.1 (Zankari et al, 2012 ), the serotyping by using the SerotypeFinder tool (Joensen et al, 2015 ), and the fimH type by uploading the genomes to FimTyper (version 1.0) (Roer et al, 2017 ) all present through the CGE website.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The ST was identified by uploading the assembled genomes in fasta format to the Center for Genomic Epidemiology (CGE) MLST finder website (version 1.7) (Larsen et al, 2012 ). Presence of antibiotic resistant genes was determined by uploading assembled genomes in fasta format to ResFinder 2.1 (Zankari et al, 2012 ), the serotyping by using the SerotypeFinder tool (Joensen et al, 2015 ), and the fimH type by uploading the genomes to FimTyper (version 1.0) (Roer et al, 2017 ) all present through the CGE website.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The fimH90 subtype was also an interesting finding as it appears to be rare among E. coli strains and was not found among 243 draft genomes of E. coli isolates in a study using the CGE FimTyper Web tool [ 42 ]. However, BLAST searches found an identical fimH gene in a sequence scaffold from a human aEPEC strain (702898_aEPEC) isolated in Pakistan (GenBank: CYBW01000017.1).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…fimH subtypes were identified with FimTyper 1.0 ( https://cge.cbs.dtu.dk/services/FimTyper/ ) ( 39 ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%