Slipped-Strand Mispairing in the Gene Encoding Sialidase NanH3 in <i>Gardnerella</i> spp.
Shakya Kurukulasuriya, Mo H. Patterson, Janet E. Hill
Abstract
gene sequence includes a homopolymeric repeat of cytosines that varies in length within cell populations, indicating that this gene is subject to slipped-strand mispairing, a mechanism of phase variation in bacteria. Variation in the length of the homopolymer sequence results in production of either the full-length sialidase protein or truncated peptides lacking the sialidase domain due to introduction of reading-frame shifts and premature stop codons. Phase variation in NanH3 may be involved in immune evasion or modulation of adhesion to host epithelial cells and formation of biofilms characteristic of the vaginal dysbiosis known as bacterial vaginosis.
Topics & Concepts
BiologySialidaseMicrobiologyGardnerella vaginalisBiofilmGeneHaemophilusBacteriaEnzymeGeneticsBiochemistryBacterial vaginosisNeuraminidaseReproductive tract infections researchMilk Quality and Mastitis in Dairy CowsLegume Nitrogen Fixing Symbiosis