Frontiers in Microbiology (Jan 2015)

Current strategies for mobilome research

  • Tue Sparholt Jørgensen,
  • Anne Sofie Kiil,
  • Martin Asser Hansen,
  • Søren J Sørensen,
  • Lars Hestbjerg Hansen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2014.00750
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5

Abstract

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Mobile genetic elements (MGE) are pivotal for bacterial evolution and adaptation, allowing shuffling of genes even between distantly related bacterial species. The study of MGEs is biologically interesting as the mode of genetic propagation is kaleidoscopic and important, as MGEs are the main vehicles of the increasing bacterial antibiotic resistance that causes thousands of human deaths each year. The study of MGEs has previously focused on plasmids from individual isolates, but the revolution in sequencing technology has allowed the study of mobile genomic elements of entire communities using metagenomic approaches. The problem in using metagenomic sequencing for the study of MGEs is that plasmids and other mobile elements only comprise a small fraction of the total genetic content that are difficult to separate from chromosomal DNA based on sequence alone. Several different approaches have been proposed that specifically enrich plasmid DNA from community samples. Here, we review recent approaches used to study entire plasmid pools from complex environments, and point out possible future developments for and pitfalls of these approaches. Further, we discuss the use of the PacBio long-read sequencing technology for MGE discovery.

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