Research Article

Pulsed-Field Gel Electrophoresis of Genomic Digests of Thermus Strains and Its Implications for Taxonomic and Evolutionary Studies

International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology 1994; 44(3):547 · https://doi.org/10.1099/00207713-44-3-547

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Abstract

Pulsed-field electrophoresis (PFGE) of the Ssp I genomic digests of 14 Thermus isolates showed that each one had a unique restriction enzyme digestion pattern. A group of New Zealand strains showed some shared bands, but each isolate gave essentially a unique fingerprint. In addition, evolutionary distances between Thermus strains estimated by using PFGE restriction fragment length polymorphisms (PFGE-RFLPs) correlate well with those based on small-subunit rRNA sequence data. As a consequence, the phylogenetic trees constructed on the basis of PFGE-RFLPs and those constructed by using small-subunit rRNA sequences generally agree. On the basis of the evolutionary distances estimated by using PFGE-RFLPs, the estimated average genomic rate of divergence for Thermus spp. is approximately 0.27% per million years.