2010
DOI: 10.1128/aem.02954-09
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Partial Chromosome Sequence of Spiroplasma citri Reveals Extensive Viral Invasion and Important Gene Decay

Abstract: The assembly of 20,000 sequencing reads obtained from shotgun and chromosome-specific libraries of the Spiroplasma citri genome yielded 77 chromosomal contigs totaling 1,674 kbp (92%) of the 1,820-kbp chromosome. The largest chromosomal contigs were positioned on the physical and genetic maps constructed from pulsed-field gel electrophoresis and Southern blot hybridizations. Thirty-eight contigs were annotated, resulting in 1,908 predicted coding sequences (CDS) representing an overall coding density of only 7… Show more

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Cited by 58 publications
(74 citation statements)
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References 55 publications
(50 reference statements)
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“…Although at the nucleotide level, these contigs showed weak similarity to available Spiroplasma genomes, at the protein level their relationship with Mollicute (and mainly Spiroplasma) proteins was confirmed for 546 annotated genes (on contigs summing to 780 kb). Moreover, the assembly size, low GC content (24%) and the fragmented assembly were consistent with known Spiroplasma genome features: the genome size varies from 1.4 to 1.9 Mb, GC content is around 26%, and the genomes contain lots of repeated sequences and viral elements that make the assembly task harder (Carle et al, 2010;Lo et al, 2013). Additionally, a phylogenetic analysis of its 16S RNA gene confirmed its membership to the Spiroplasma genus and the absence of any close relative with a complete genome available in the databases (Supplementary Figure S2 in Supplementary Material).…”
Section: Unmapped Reads Contain Biologically Meaningful Informationmentioning
confidence: 81%
“…Although at the nucleotide level, these contigs showed weak similarity to available Spiroplasma genomes, at the protein level their relationship with Mollicute (and mainly Spiroplasma) proteins was confirmed for 546 annotated genes (on contigs summing to 780 kb). Moreover, the assembly size, low GC content (24%) and the fragmented assembly were consistent with known Spiroplasma genome features: the genome size varies from 1.4 to 1.9 Mb, GC content is around 26%, and the genomes contain lots of repeated sequences and viral elements that make the assembly task harder (Carle et al, 2010;Lo et al, 2013). Additionally, a phylogenetic analysis of its 16S RNA gene confirmed its membership to the Spiroplasma genus and the absence of any close relative with a complete genome available in the databases (Supplementary Figure S2 in Supplementary Material).…”
Section: Unmapped Reads Contain Biologically Meaningful Informationmentioning
confidence: 81%
“…Based on the results reported in the literature (Carle et al. 2010; Thiaucourt et al. 2011; Alexeev et al.…”
Section: Recent Progress In Facultative Insect Symbiontsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The unusually high copy number of the XerC/D genes, combined with the AT richness of MRE genomes, increases the likelihood of Xer recombinase target sites and suggests that Xer recombinase is important for the chromosome structure and plasticity of MRE genomes. In addition to mobile elements and recombination events as factors responsible for genome plasticity (SI Appendix, Table S2), the genomes of MRE-CE and MRE-RV display evidence of a historical invasion by plectrovirus, a phage known to infect Spiroplasma species (17). Although the MRE genomes harbor only partial plectroviral genes, some genomic rearrangements may be a result of past phage activity, as seen in the Spiroplasma genomes.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%