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Query: UMLS:C0348321 (
Haemophilus
)
15,372
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The site-specific restriction endonucleases isolated from
Hemophilus
influenzae strains Rc (HincII) and Rd (HindII + III), and
Hemophilus
parainfluenzae (HpaI) were used to digest bacteriophage lambda DNA into 34, 40, and 15 specific fragments, respectively. The sites cleaved by each of these enzymes were localized on the lambda physical map and the fragments resulting from these cleavages were electrophoretically identified on gels by (1) analysis of the digestion profiles of deletion and transducing derivatives of lambda; and (2) digesting individual fragments produced by one restriction endonuclease with another restriction endonuclease. This paper presents the HindII, HindIII, and HpaI restriction fragment maps for the entire lambda genome, and the data used to derive these maps for the region of the lambda genome between the attachment site (at 57.3% lambda) and the right vegetative end (100% lambda). The data for mapping the left arm of lambda may be found in the accompanying paper (
Robinson
and Landy, 1977).
...
PMID:HindII, HindIII, and HpaI restriction fragment maps of bacteriophage lambda DNA. 59 4
The sites on the left arm of bacteriophage lambda DNA cleaved by the restriction endonucleases isolated from
Hemophilus
influenzae strain Rc (HincII) and Rd (HindII + III), and
Hemophilus
parainfluenzae (HpaI) were localized on the lambda physical map, and the fragments resulting from these cleavages were identified by gel electrophoresis. The restriction sites within the b2 region of lambda were mapped by analysis of the digestion profiles of deletion and substitution derivatives of lambda, as well as by digesting individual fragments produced by one restriction endonuclease with another restriction endonuclease. The restriction sites of the lambda genome between the left vegetative end and the b2 region were mapped entirely by succesive digestion experiments. The restriction fragment map for the right arm of lambda may be found in the accompanying paper (
Robinson
and Landy, 1977).
...
PMID:HindII, HindIII, and HpaI restriction fragment maps of the left arm of bacteriophage lambda DNA. 59 5
Brazilian purpuric fever (BPF) strains of
Haemophilus
influenzae biogroup aegyptius form a clone of organisms distinct from more innocuous, conjunctivitis-associated isolates. There has been controversy over whether the virulence of BPF strains might derive from the presence of a polysaccharide capsule analogous to that found in conventional invasive H. influenzae, a controversy fuelled by the observation (G. M. Carlone, L. Gorelkin, L. L. Gheesling, A. L. Erwin, S. K. Hoiseth, M. H. O. Mulks, S. P. Connor, R. S. Weyant, J. Myrick, L. Rubin, R. S. Mumford III, E. H. White, R. J. Arko, B. Swaminathan, L. M. Graves, L. W. Mayer, M. K.
Robinson
, S. P. Caudill, and the Brazilian Purpuric Fever Study Group, J. Clin, Microbiol. 27:609-614, 1989) that a capsulation DNA probe from H. influenzae type b hybridized uniquely to BPF strains. In this work, the basis for this hybridization has been established as the possession by BPF strains, but not by non-BPF strains, of the
Haemophilus
insertion element IS1016. Although IS1016 is associated with the capsulation locus in some
Haemophilus
spp., a Southern hybridization study suggests that in BPF strains there are no capsulation genes.
...
PMID:Insertion sequence IS1016 and absence of Haemophilus capsulation genes in the Brazilian purpuric fever clone of Haemophilus influenzae biogroup aegyptius. 130 21