Journal article

Mycobacterium leprae: genes, pseudogenes and genetic diversity.

  • Singh P Global Health Institute, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Station 19, CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland.
  • Cole ST
  • 2010-12-18
Published in:
  • Future microbiology. - 2011
English Leprosy, which has afflicted human populations for millenia, results from infection with Mycobacterium leprae, an unculturable pathogen with an exceptionally long generation time. Considerable insight into the biology and drug resistance of the leprosy bacillus has been obtained from genomics. M. leprae has undergone reductive evolution and pseudogenes now occupy half of its genome. Comparative genomics of four different strains revealed remarkable conservation of the genome (99.995% identity) yet uncovered 215 polymorphic sites, mainly single nucleotide polymorphisms, and a handful of new pseudogenes. Mapping these polymorphisms in a large panel of strains defined 16 single nucleotide polymorphism-subtypes that showed strong geographical associations and helped retrace the evolution of M. leprae.
Language
  • English
Open access status
green
Identifiers
Persistent URL
https://sonar.ch/global/documents/16213
Statistics

Document views: 47 File downloads:
  • Full-text: 0