E. coli is an inhabitant of the gastrointestinal (GI) tracts of warm-blooded animals. It is conventionally believed that E. coli lacks the ability to survive in the external environment. In the previous study, a group of E. coli named UNISED was retrieved from the marine intertidal sediment in Hong Kong, which was demonstrated genetically distinct from the animal host associated E. coli. Similar to other findings of the "environmental" E. coli, it is not clear that to what extent UNISED is divergent from the animal host associated E. coli, and how different evolutionary forces contributed to the formation of UNISED. Hence, we investigated the genetic and phenotypic relation of isolates of UNISED and their animal host associated counterparts, and explored the population genetics of E. coli from the two sources. Our findings revealed the existence of the "Environment-specific" E. coli at both genetic and phenotypic level, suggesting that E. coli of UNISED may adapt to the marine sediment. It was found that mutation and purifying natural selection is important to the formation of the "Environment-specific" E. coli population. However, as current bacterial typing methods cannot totally fulfill our requirements on the resolution and the coverage of genomic information of research on E. coli at strain level, a novel shotgun proteomics-based method was developed for the bacterial strain level characterization. Totally, 73 E. coli isolates pertaining to four species of warm-blooded animals (i.e. human, cow, dog, and pig) were used as testing organisms for this prove-of-principle research. The results of the Jackknife analysis indicated that 72 out of 73 isolates were assigned to the correct sources (ARCC=98.6%), while the ARCC was only 80.8% using the traditional REP-PCR DNA fingerprinting. Moreover, the partial least squares discriminant analysis (PLS-DA) was employed to extract the potential host-specific spectra, which can be further developed as biomarkers. Our findings suggested that this shotgun proteomics-based method is potential to work as an effective tool for bacterial strain level characterization.
| Date of Award | 2014 |
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| Original language | English |
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| Awarding Institution | - The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
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Discovery of the "environment-specific" E. coli from the subtropical marine sediment and to develop a novel shotgun proteomics-based method for strain level characterization of E. coli
Zhang, M. (Author). 2014
Student thesis: Master's thesis