Background: Small interspersed repeats are commonly found in many bacterial chromosomes. Two families of repeats (BOX and RUP) have previously been identified in the genome of Streptococcus pneumoniae, a nasopharyngeal commensal and respiratory pathogen of humans. However, little is known about the role they play in pneumococcal genetics.
Results: Analysis of the genome of S. pneumoniae ATCC 700669 revealed the presence of a third repeat family, which we have named SPRITE. All three repeats are present at a reduced density in the genome of the closely related species S. mitis. However, they are almost entirely absent from all other streptococci, although a set of elements related to the pneumococcal BOX repeat was identified in the zoonotic pathogen S. suis. In conjunction with information regarding their distribution within the pneumococcal chromosome, this suggests that it is unlikely that these repeats are specialised sequences performing a particular role for the host, but rather that they constitute parasitic elements. However, comparing insertion sites between pneumococcal sequences indicates that they appear to transpose at a much lower rate than IS elements. Some large BOX elements in S. pneumoniae were found to encode open reading frames on both strands of the genome, whilst another was found to form a composite RNA structure with two T box riboswitches. In multiple cases, such BOX elements were demonstrated as being expressed using directional RNA-seq and RT-PCR.
Conclusions: BOX, RUP and SPRITE repeats appear to have proliferated extensively throughout the pneumococcal chromosome during the species' past, but novel insertions are currently occurring at a relatively slow rate. Through their extensive secondary structures, they seem likely to affect the expression of genes with which they are co-transcribed. Software for annotation of these repeats is freely available from ftp://ftp.sanger.ac.uk/pub/pathogens/strep_repeats/.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-12-120 | DOI Listing |
IUCrdata
December 2021
Department of Chemical Sciences, University of Johannesburg (APK Campus), PO Box 524, Auckland Park, Johannesburg, 2006, South Africa.
The title compound, [RuCl(CH)(CHOP)], crystallizes with two complex mol-ecules in the asymmetric unit. The Ru atom has a classical three-legged piano-stool environment being coordinated by a cymene ligand [Ru-centroid = 1.707 (2)/1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChem Asian J
November 2022
ISC Laboratory, Department of Chemistry, School of Chemical Sciences and Pharmacy, Central University of Rajasthan, NH-8, Bandarsindri, Ajmer, Rajasthan, 305817, India.
This report describes the synthesis of two ruthenium(II) ENE pincer complexes (E = S, C1 and E = Se, C2) by the reaction of bis(2-(phenylchalcogenyl)ethyl)amine (L1, L2) with RuCl (PPh ) . The complexes were characterized with the help of H and C{ H} NMR, FTIR, HRMS, cyclic voltammetry and elemental analysis techniques. The structure and bonding mode of ligand with ruthenium in C2 was established with the help of single crystal X-ray diffraction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAngew Chem Int Ed Engl
March 2018
Department of Chemistry, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Campus Box 3290, Chapel Hill, NC, 27599-3290, USA.
Light-driven water splitting was achieved using a dye-sensitized mesoporous oxide film and the oxidation of bromide (Br ) to bromine (Br ) or tribromide (Br ). The chemical oxidant (Br or Br ) is formed during illumination at the photoanode and used as a sacrificial oxidant to drive a water oxidation catalyst (WOC), here demonstrated using [Ru(bda)(pic) ], (1; pic=picoline, bda=2,2'-bipyridine-6,6'-dicarboxylate). The photochemical oxidation of bromide produces a chemical oxidant with a potential of 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenome Biol Evol
February 2017
Unidad de Genética Bacteriana, Centro Nacional de Microbiología, Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Madrid, Majadahonda, Spain.
The chromosome of Streptococcus pneumoniae is organized into topological domains based on its transcriptional response to DNA relaxation: Up-regulated (UP), down-regulated (DOWN), nonregulated (NR), and AT-rich. In the present work, NR genes found to have highly conserved chromosomal locations (17% of the genome) were categorized as members of position-conserved nonregulated (pcNR) domains, while NR genes with a variable position (36% of the genome) were classified as members of position-variable nonregulated (pvNR) domains. On average, pcNR domains showed high transcription rates, optimized codon usage, and were found to contain only a small number of RUP/BOX/SPLICE repeats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Crystallogr Sect E Struct Rep Online
December 2012
Research Centre for Synthesis and Catalysis, Department of Chemistry, University of Johannesburg (APK Campus), PO Box 524, Auckland Park, Johannesburg, 2006, South Africa.
The asymmetric unit of the title compound, [RuCl2(C6H6)(C18H27P)]·1.5C6H6, contains one mol-ecule of the Ru(II) complex and one and a half solvent molecules as one of these is located about a centre of inversion. The Ru(II) atom has a classical three-legged piano-stool environment being coordinated by an η(6)-benzene ligand [Ru-centroid = 1.
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