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© Melanie Blokesch, EPFL
Flagellated Vibrio cholerae
Publication : Current opinion in microbiology

Management of multipartite genomes: the Vibrio cholerae model.

Scientific Fields
Diseases
Organisms
Applications
Technique

Published in Current opinion in microbiology - 01 Dec 2014

Val ME, Soler-Bistué A, Bland MJ, Mazel D

Link to Pubmed [PMID] – 25460805

Link to DOI – 10.1016/j.mib.2014.10.003

Curr Opin Microbiol 2014 Dec; 22(): 120-6

A minority of bacterial species has been found to carry a genome divided among several chromosomes. Among these, all Vibrio species harbor a genome split into two chromosomes of uneven size, with distinctive replication origins whose replication firing involves common and specific factors. Most of our current knowledge on replication and segregation in multi-chromosome bacteria has come from the study of Vibrio cholerae, which is now the model organism for this field. It has been firmly established that replication of the two V. cholerae chromosomes is temporally regulated and coupled to the cell cycle, but the mediators of these processes are as yet mostly unknown. The two chromosomes are also organized along different patterns within the cell and occupy different subcellular domains. The selective advantages provided by this partitioning into two replicons are still unclear and are a key motivation for these studies.