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Series GSE3954 Query DataSets for GSE3954
Status Public on Dec 31, 2005
Title Genomotyping of 11168-GS vs. 11168-O
Organism Campylobacter jejuni
Experiment type Genome variation profiling by array
Summary DNA hybridizations to compare genomic content of 11168-gs (genome-sequenced) to 11168-o (original)
The genome sequence of the enteric bacterial pathogen Campylobacter jejuni NCTC 11168 (11168-GS) was published in 2000, providing a valuable resource for the identification of C. jejuni-specific colonization and virulence factors. Surprisingly, the 11168-GS clone was subsequently found to colonize 1-day-old chicks following oral challenge very poorly compared to other strains. In contrast, we have found that the original clinical isolate from which 11168-GS was derived, 11168-O, is an excellent colonizer of chicks. Other marked phenotypic differences were also identified: 11168-O invaded and translocated through tissue culture cells far more efficiently and rapidly than 11168-GS, was significantly more motile, and displayed a different morphology. Serotyping, multiple high-resolution molecular genotyping procedures, and subtractive hybridization did not yield observable genetic differences between the variants, suggesting that they are clonal. However, microarray transcriptional profiling of these strains under microaerobic and severely oxygen-limited conditions revealed dramatic expression differences for several gene families. Many of the differences were in respiration and metabolism genes and operons, suggesting that adaptation to different oxygen tensions may influence colonization potential. This correlates biologically with our observation that anaerobically priming 11168-GS or aerobically passaging 11168-O caused an increase or decrease, respectively, in colonization compared to the parent strain. Expression differences were also observed for several flagellar genes and other less well-characterized genes that may participate in motility. Targeted sequencing of the sigma factors revealed specific DNA differences undetected by the other genomic methods
An all pairs experiment design type is where all labeled extracts are compared to every other labeled extract.
Keywords: all_pairs
 
Overall design Computed
 
Contributor(s) Gaynor E
Citation(s) 14702320
Submission date Dec 30, 2005
Last update date Sep 05, 2013
Organization Stanford Microarray Database (SMD)
E-mail(s) array@genome.stanford.edu
Phone 650-498-6012
URL http://genome-www5.stanford.edu/
Department Stanford University, School of Medicine
Street address 300 Pasteur Drive
City Stanford
State/province CA
ZIP/Postal code 94305
Country USA
 
Platforms (1)
GPL2791 CJ1
Samples (4)
GSM90251 11168 orig vs. seq 2
GSM90252 11168 seq vs. seq 1
GSM90253 11168 seq vs. seq 2
This SubSeries is part of SuperSeries:
GSE4387 Comparison of the genome-sequenced variant of Campylobacter jejuni NCTC 11168 and the original clonal clinical isolate
Relations
BioProject PRJNA104869

Download family Format
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Supplementary data files not provided

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