Mannheimia haemolytica PHL213

About the Project

Image of Mannheimia haemolytica
Mannheimia haemolytica
P.I.: Sarah Highlander (BCM), George Weinstock (BCM-HGSC)
Collaborators:  
Funding: USDA/ NRICGP
Grant#: 00-35204-9229
Genome size: estimated 2.4 Mbp
Strain: PHL213

Current Status of the Project

Latest assembly date: 8-10-2006
Total number of reads: 42,347
Coverage: 8.4x (for 2.6 Mb gneome)
Number of contigs: 152
N50 contig size: 30605 bp
Number of scaffolds: 103
N50 scaffold size: 61309 bp

About the Project

P.I.: Sarah Highlander (BCM), George Weinstock (BCM-HGSC)
Collaborators:  
Funding: USDA/ NRICGP
Grant#: 00-35204-9229
Genome size: estimated 2.4 Mbp
Strain: PHL213

Current Status of the Project

Latest assembly date: 8-10-2006
Total number of reads: 42,347
Coverage: 8.4x (for 2.6 Mb gneome)
Number of contigs: 152
N50 contig size: 30605 bp
Number of scaffolds: 103
N50 scaffold size: 61309 bp

Search the Sequence

You can download the data from our FTP site.

Related Links

Policy on Data Release

Mannheimia haemolytica (previously known as Pasteurella haemolytica) is a weakly hemolytic, gram-negative coccobacillus that is an opportunistic pathogen of cattle, sheep and other ruminants. Pasteurellosis kills at least one percent of North American feedlot cattle and is responsible for morbidity, decreased weight gain and loss of performance in at least an additional ten percent of these animals. Consequently, the disease costs the United States cattle industry nearly a billion dollars annually. It is also a common disease of sheep, where outbreaks are also associated with management practices such as overcrowding and transport. M. haemolytica is also a prevalent cause of ovine mastitis in the United Kingdom. In addition, it can cause disease other ruminants, including goats, bison, and bighorn sheep.

Mannheimia haemolytica is a member of the gamma subdivision of the Proteobacteria in the family Pasteurelleaceae, commonly called the Haemophilus, Actinobacillus, and Pasteurella (HAP) family. Haemophilus ducreyii is most closely related to M. haemolytica based on 16S rRNA sequences. Eleven serotypes (1, 2, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 12, 13, 14, and 16), originally known as biotype A, are included in the species. Worldwide, ST1 and ST2 are the most prevalent serotypes found: ST1 is recognized as the most common cause of pasteurellosis in cattle, but other serotypes are occasionally associated with disease; ST2 causes disease in sheep, but it is also a predominant member of the upper respiratory tract (URT) flora of healthy calves. The strain being sequenced, strain PHL213, is an ST1 strain isolated from the lung of a pneumonic calf.

References for Mannheimia haemolytica

The Genome Sequence of Mannheimia haemolytica A1: Insights into Virulence, Natural Competence, and Pasteurellaceae Phylogeny. Gioia, J. et al. J. Bacteriol. 2006 188: 7257-7266.