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The role of mobile genetic elements in bacterial adaptation to xenobiotic organic compounds

✍ Scribed by Eva M Top; Dirk Springael


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2003
Tongue
English
Weight
135 KB
Volume
14
Category
Article
ISSN
0958-1669

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✦ Synopsis


Retrospective studies clearly indicate that mobile genetic elements (MGEs) play a major role in the in situ spread and even de novo construction of catabolic pathways in bacteria, allowing bacterial communities to rapidly adapt to new xenobiotics. The construction of novel pathways seems to occur by an assembly process that involves horizontal gene transfer: different appropriate genes or gene modules that encode different parts of the novel pathway are recruited from phylogenetically related or distant hosts into one single host. Direct evidence for the importance of catabolic MGEs in bacterial adaptation to xenobiotics stems from observed correlations between catabolic gene transfer and accelerated biodegradation in several habitats and from studies that monitor catabolic MGEs in polluted sites.


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