Article

Comparative evaluation of sequence analysis of 16S rRNA and rpoB genes for identification of aquatic mycobacteria

Details

Citation

Pourahmad F & Richards R (2016) Comparative evaluation of sequence analysis of 16S rRNA and rpoB genes for identification of aquatic mycobacteria. Turkish Journal of Veterinary and Animal Sciences, 40 (4), pp. 406-416. https://doi.org/10.3906/vet-1505-74

Abstract
The nucleotide sequences of partial 16S rRNA and bacterial RNA polymerase ß-subunit (rpoB) genes for 57 mycobacterial strains were determined. Compared to the 16S rRNA gene sequences, variable regions were scattered along the whole fragment sequence, indicating that therpoBgene is more polymorphic. Unlike 16S rRNA sequences, species variation was observed within M. fortuitum strains. The topology of therpoB-based phylogenetic tree was almost the same as that of the 16S rRNA sequence analysis. These results suggest that therpoBgene is a highly conserved gene, and taxonomical studies based on this gene may be comparable with similar studies based on the 16S rRNA gene. The overall mean distance forrpoB-gene?based sequences was 2.5 times greater than that of the 16S rRNA gene for all 57 mycobacterial strains examined. However, some slowly growing mycobacteria could not be differentiated based onrpoBgene sequences. Moreover, a bootstrap value above 70% was observed for 13 nodes, while this value was 14 nodes in the case of 16S rRNA sequences. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first investigation evaluating the use of 16S rRNA andrpoBsequence analyses for identification of aquatic mycobacteria obtained from diverse geographical locations.

Keywords
Sequence analyses; 16S rRNA; rpoB; aquatic mycobacteria

Journal
Turkish Journal of Veterinary and Animal Sciences: Volume 40, Issue 4

StatusPublished
Publication date07/09/2016
Publication date online07/09/2015
Date accepted by journal07/09/2015
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/25357
PublisherTubitak
ISSN1300-0128

People (1)

People

Professor Randolph Richards

Professor Randolph Richards

Emeritus Professor, Institute of Aquaculture