Publication | Open Access
Close evolutionary relationship between the chromosomally encoded β lactamase gene of <i>Klebsiella</i><i>pneumoniae</i> and the TEM β‐lactamase gene mediated by R plasmids
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Citations
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References
1986
Year
K. Pneumoniae StrainsGeneticsKlebsiella PneumoniaeBacteriologySixty-three Percent HomologyBacterial PathogensDrug ResistanceAntimicrobial ResistanceHealth SciencesActive SiteMolecular MicrobiologyClinical MicrobiologyR PlasmidsAntimicrobial Resistance GeneAntibioticsPathogenesisTem β‐Lactamase GeneMicrobiologyβ Lactamase GeneMedicineMicrobial Genetics
Sixty-three percent homology of nucleotide sequence and 67% homology of deduced amino acid sequence were found between the chromosomally encoded beta-lactamase gene of Klebsiella pneumoniae and the TEM beta-lactamase of transposon Tn3. Moreover, 22 out of 24 amino acid residues are identical around the predicted active site. It is therefore suggested that these two kinds of beta-lactamases share a common evolutionary origin. The 0.5 kb DNA fragment of the cloned gene hybridized specifically with the chromosomal DNA of all the K. pneumoniae strains tested which had been isolated in Japan, USA and Europe.
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