Multidrug treatments are increasingly important in medicine and for probing biological systems. Although many studies have focused on interactions between specific drugs, little is known about the system properties of a full drug interaction network. Like their genetic counterparts, two drugs may have no interaction, or they may interact synergistically or antagonistically to increase or suppress their individual effects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecombination is a fundamental mechanism for the generation of genetic variation. Helicobacter pylori strains have different frequencies of intragenomic recombination, arising from deletions and duplications between DNA repeat sequences, as well as intergenomic recombination, facilitated by their natural competence. We identified a gene, hp1523, that influences recombination frequencies in this highly diverse bacterium and demonstrate its importance in maintaining genomic integrity by limiting recombination events.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
November 2003
Prokaryotic genomes are substantially diverse, even when from closely related species, with the resulting phenotypic diversity representing a repertoire of adaptations to specific constraints. Within the microbial population, genome content may not be fixed, as changing selective forces favor particular phenotypes; however, organisms well adapted to particular niches may have evolved mechanisms to facilitate such plasticity. The highly diverse Helicobacter pylori is a model for studying genome plasticity in the colonization of individual hosts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe sensitivity of Helicobacter pylori chromosomal DNA to MboI digestion was investigated in 208 strains from several continents. Only 11 (5%) of strains were sensitive to MboI, and it was hypothesized that HpyIII, a type II restriction/modification enzyme with sequence homology to MboI, mediated the protection. This was confirmed by PCR analysis of the gene locus of hpyIII, normally composed of hpyIIIR and hpyIIIM.
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