Project description:Melioidosis is a neglected tropical disease caused by the Gram-negative bacterium Burkholderia pseudomallei. It is widespread in Southeast Asia and under-reported across tropical regions worldwide. Patients present with a range of clinical syndromes including sepsis, pneumonia and focal abscesses, with a mortality rate of 40% in hospitalized patients in Thailand. Up to two-thirds of patients with melioidosis have diabetes mellitus. In this experiment we sought to characterize pathways activated by whole killed B. pseudomallei bacteria and by three vaccine candidate proteins from B. pseudomallei, BPSL2520 (uncharacterized protein), BPSS1525 (BopE) and BPSL2096 (AhpC) in patients with diabetes and acute melioidosis.
Project description:To use whole genome microarrays to compare the differences in genome contents of 5 B. pseudomallei isolated from clinical specimens and environmental sample with B. pseudomallei K96243 reference strain and reveals variable patterns of Genomic Islands (GIs) Keywords: Comparative genomic hybridization DNA microarrays were used to compare genome of clinical and environmental B. pseudomallei isolates with B. pseudomallei K96243 reference strain (B. pseudomallei K96243 vs. B. pseudmallei isolates). Each hybridization was used for comparison between B. pseudomallei K96243 as a reference strain with environmental isolate BP45s, environmental isolate BP28L, clinical isolate H307, clinical isolate P54, clinical isolate P82. Two replicate per array. Multiple hits with 90-99.99 % identity correspond to other locus are replicate of their genes were averaged and analyzed.