Riboswitches encompass messenger ribonucleic acid transcripts that sense the concentration of small molecule metabolites through binding the target compound and then control the expression of metabolite-related genes in response to the metabolite concentration. While m ...
In this introductory chapter, I stress one more time the urgency to better connect molecular epidemiology and evolutionary biology. I show how much population genetics and phylogenetic analyses can confer a considerable added value to all attempts to characterize strains and species of ...
Salmonellosis is a common infection estimated to affect 3 billion people and to cause 200,000 deaths every year. Infections can appear as enteric fever, gastroenteritis, bacteremia, or extraintestinal focal infection. The course of the disease depends on a variety of factors, including ...
As the use of nucleotide sequence-based typing has become more widespread in the investigation of microbial epidemiology, there has been a natural requirement for curated Internet-based databases that can act as central authorities for nomenclature and type definitions. These fac ...
The molecular epidemiology of infectious diseases uses a variety of techniques to assay the relatedness of disease-causing organisms to identify strains responsible for outbreaks or associated with particular phenotypes of interest (such as antibiotic resistance) and, it is ho ...
In this chapter, I expose the main properties and theoretical background of a somewhat out-of-fashion technique, multilocus enzyme electrophoresis (MLEE). I show that the remarkable properties of this marker—clear Mendelian inheritance, codominance, strong phylogenetic si ...
To facilitate the study of plasmids and their roles in human and animal health, environmental processes, and microbial adaptation and evolution, plasmid classification has been an important focus of plasmid biologists over the years. Initial schemes were based on the ability of a plasmid to ...
The polymerase chain reaction (PCR) has essentially been designed to amplify specific regions within DNA molecules. This requires knowledge of the local nucleic acid sequence to design primer oligonucleotides. However, to generate DNA fingerprints, the PCR can be modified in a way that f ...
The use of defined primers for polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification of interspersed repetitive DNA elements present at distinct locations in prokaryotic genomes is referred to as repetitive element sequence based-polymerase chain reaction (rep-PCR). The initial dis ...
We describe a new technology for the molecular genotyping of microbes using a platform known commercially as the Ibis T5000. The technology couples multilocus polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to electrospray ionization/mass spectrometry (PCR/ESI-MS) and was developed to provide r ...
Foodborne diseases due to well-recognized pathogens have emerged as an important and growing public health problem with a significant impact on health. Molecular methods for subtyping these microorganisms have become a valid adjunct to the traditional techniques employed in most l ...
Amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) analysis is a universal polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based DNA fingerprinting technique comprising three main stages: (i) digestion of genomic DNA with restriction endonucleases and ligation to double-stranded adaptors ( ...
Clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPRs) are DNA sequences composed of a succession of repeats (23- to 47-bp long) separated by unique sequences called spacers. Polymorphism can be observed in different strains of a species and may be used for genotyping. We des ...
The use of molecular techniques in epidemiology gives a better understanding of viral transmission and diversity, and helps to define and characterizc outbreaks. By elucidating transmission patterns and defining outbreak parameters, appropriate preventive measures can be i ...
The spa typing method is based on sequencing of the polymorphic X region of the protein A gene (spa), present in all strains of Staphylococcus aureus. The X region is constituted of a variable number of 24-bp repeats flanked by well-conserved regions. This single-locus sequence-based typing meth ...
Nucleic acid sequencing is now commonplace in most research and diagnostic virology laboratories. The data generated can be used to compare novel strains with other viruses and allow the genetic basis of important phenotypic characteristics, such as antigenic determinants, to be elu ...
For over 30 yr, the Sanger method has been the standard for DNA sequencing. Instruments have been developed and improved over time to increase throughput, but they always relied on the same technology. Today, we are facing a revolution in DNA sequencing with many drastically different platforms ...
A number of phylogenetic studies of Mycobacterium tuberculosis have suggested a highly clonal population structure. Despite the extreme homogeneity of M. tuberculosis strains, the genome is punctuated by a number of polymorphic regions that give rise to sufficient diversity, thus f ...
Since the 1980s the epidemiology of Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) has been investigated by the application of many different typing or fingerprinting methods. To study the epidemiology of CDI, a typing method with a high discriminatory power, typeability, and reproducibil ...
Genotyping of bacteria through typing of loci containing a variable number of tandem repeats (VNTR) might become the gold standard for many pathogens. The development of genome sequencing has shown that such sequences were present in every species analyzed, and that polymorphism exists ...

