PLoS ONE (Feb 2007)

A North American Yersinia pestis draft genome sequence: SNPs and phylogenetic analysis.

  • Jeffrey W Touchman,
  • David M Wagner,
  • Jicheng Hao,
  • Stephen D Mastrian,
  • Maulik K Shah,
  • Amy J Vogler,
  • Christopher J Allender,
  • Erin A Clark,
  • Debbie S Benitez,
  • David J Youngkin,
  • Jessica M Girard,
  • Raymond K Auerbach,
  • Stephen M Beckstrom-Sternberg,
  • Paul Keim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000220
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 2
p. e220

Abstract

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BackgroundYersinia pestis, the causative agent of plague, is responsible for some of the greatest epidemic scourges of mankind. It is widespread in the western United States, although it has only been present there for just over 100 years. As a result, there has been very little time for diversity to accumulate in this region. Much of the diversity that has been detected among North American isolates is at loci that mutate too quickly to accurately reconstruct large-scale phylogenetic patterns. Slowly-evolving but stable markers such as SNPs could be useful for this purpose, but are difficult to identify due to the monomorphic nature of North American isolates.Methodology/principal findingsTo identify SNPs that are polymorphic among North American populations of Y. pestis, a gapped genome sequence of Y. pestis strain FV-1 was generated. Sequence comparison of FV-1 with another North American strain, CO92, identified 19 new SNP loci that differ among North American isolates.Conclusions/significanceThe 19 SNP loci identified in this study should facilitate additional studies of the genetic population structure of Y. pestis across North America.