National Repository of Grey Literature 1 records found  Search took 0.02 seconds. 
Genomic analysis of Paenibacillus larvae and its relation to virulence
Vlková, Kateřina ; Hrabák, Jaroslav (advisor) ; Fišer, Radovan (referee)
Paenibacillus larvae is a Gram-positive sporulating bacterium that causes American foulbrood (AFB). It is one of the most dangerous bacterial pathogens of the honeybee (Apis mellifera). P. larvae spores are highly infectious to bee larvae and resist physicochemical influences. P. larvae is subtyped using repPCR with ERIC primers (Enterobacterial Repetitive Integrance Consensus) into five genotypes (ERIC I-V), which possess different colony morphology, metabolism and especially virulence. There is a significant genetic variability among isolates of P. larvae, which may contribute to differences in virulence. P. larvae isolates used in this work were obtained from clinical cases of American foulbrood as well as from a debris collected from bee hives with no American foulbrood symptoms from all over the Czech Republic in cooperation with the Beekeeping Research Institute, s.r.o., Dol. The isolates were obtained from larvae and hive debris. Both virulet and avirulet strains were sequenced using the SMRT (single molecule real time) method on the Sequel platform (PacBio). This method is suitable for Whole Genome Sequencing (WGS), because it allows sequencing of long reads with high accuracy, eliminating the effect of a large number of repetitive sequences during the genome assembly. Furthermore,...

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