Clostridium botulinum other strains
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Other than the Sanger sequenced Hall strain A (ATCC 3502)
Summary:
~ 13 strains in NCBI Taxonomy 9 genome projects 4 complete genomes 3 assemblies in NCBI AA (all TIGR/JCVI) 6 trace sets (5 TIGR/JCVI , 1 Sanger)
Data sources
NCBI:
Genome projects:
1. A str. ATCC 19397 [LANL/JCVI/DOE] complete 2*: A str. ATCC 3502 [Sanger] complete 3: A str. Hall [LANL/JCVI/DOE] complete 4: Bf [JCVI/MSC] 70 contigs ; in AA 5: C str. Eklund [JCVI/MSC] 76 contigs ; in AA 6: F str. Langeland plasmid pCLI [LANL/JCVI/DOE] complete 7: G [JCVI/MSC] 64 contigs ; not in AA 8: NCTC 2916 [JCVI/MSC] 70 contigs ; in AA 9: str. Iwanei E [JCVI/MSC] 66 contigs ; not in AA
File locations:
/fs/szasmg2/Bacteria/C_botulinum/
NCBI AA assemblied:
qc stats
CBCB CA3 assemblies:
Placed Deg Total 4: Bf 52 12 64 better than AA(fewer, avg contig len is larger) 5: C str. Eklund 51 3 54 better than AA(fewer, avg contig len is larger) 7: G 47 7 54 fewer contigs than AA 8: NCTC 2916 55 11 66 better than AA(fewer, avg contig len is larger) 9: str. Iwanei E 44 10 55 fewer contigs than AA
qc stats
Other links:
* FDA "Clostridium botulinum is an anaerobic, Gram-positive, spore-forming rod that roduces a potent neurotoxin. The spores are heat-resistant and can survive in foods that are incorrectly or minimally processed. Seven types (A, B, C, D, E, F and G) of botulism are recognized, based on the antigenic specificity of the toxin produced by each strain. Types A, B, E and F cause human botulism. Types C and D cause most cases of botulism in animals. Animals most commonly affected are wild fowl and poultry, cattle, horses and some species of fish. Although type G has been isolated from soil in Argentina, no outbreaks involving it have been recognized."