Publications by authors named "Robert Jeters"

The accumulation of bacteria in surface-attached biofilms can be detrimental to human health, dental hygiene, and many industrial processes. Natural biofilms are soft and often transparent, and they have heterogeneous biological composition and structure over micro- and macroscales. As a result, it is challenging to quantify the spatial distribution and overall intensity of biofilms.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A Bacteroides conjugative transposon (CTn), CTn12256, which has an estimated size of more than 150 kbp appeared to contain most or all of a previously discovered 65 kbp CTn, CTnDOT. To determine whether the integrated CTnDOT was still intact and to identify the element into which CTnDOT had integrated, large segments of CTn12256 were cloned and sequenced. Results of this analysis revealed that an intact CTnDOT type CTn had integrated into another CTn that was most closely related to a putative CTn found in the genome sequence of Bacteroides fragilis YCH46 (CTn3Bf).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Previous studies of resistance gene ecology have focused primarily on populations such as hospital patients and farm animals that are regularly exposed to antibiotics. Also, these studies have tended to focus on numerically minor populations such as enterics or enterococci. We report here a cultivation-independent approach that allowed us to assess the presence of antibiotic resistance genes in the numerically predominant populations of the vaginal microbiota of two populations of primates that are seldom or never exposed to antibiotics: baboons and mangabeys.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Many human colonic Bacteroides spp. harbor a conjugative transposon, CTnDOT, which carries two antibiotic resistance genes, tetQ and ermF. A distinctive feature of CTnDOT is that its excision and transfer are stimulated by tetracycline.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF