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    Genome. 2007 Nov;50(11):975-84.

    Ectopic gene conversions in bacterial genomes.

    Source

    Département de biologie et Centre de recherche avancée en génomique environnementale, Université d'Ottawa, 30 Marie Curie, Ottawa, ON K1N 6N5, Canada.

    Abstract

    We characterized the gene conversions found between the duplicated genes of 75 bacterial genomes from five species groups (archaea, nonpathogenic and pathogenic firmicutes, and nonpathogenic and pathogenic proteobacteria). The number of gene conversions is positively correlated with the size of multigene families and the size of multigene families is not significantly different between pathogenic and nonpathogenic taxa. However, gene conversions occur twice as frequently in pathogenic species as in nonpathogenic species. Comparisons between closely related species also indicate a trend towards increased gene conversion in pathogenic species. Whereas the length of the conversions is positively correlated with flanking sequence similarity in all five groups, these correlations are smaller for pathogenic firmicutes and proteobacteria than for nonpathogenic firmicutes and proteobacteria. These results are consistent with our previous work on E. coli genomes and suggest that pathogenic bacteria allow recombination between more divergent gene sequences. This higher permissiveness is likely adaptive because it allows them to generate more genetic variability.

    PMID:
    18059543
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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