conjugative transposons (ctns) abigail salyers, department of microbiology, university of illinois,...

32
Conjugative Transposons Conjugative Transposons (CTns) (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

Upload: melissa-emerald-cunningham

Post on 18-Dec-2015

222 views

Category:

Documents


3 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

Conjugative Transposons (CTns)Conjugative Transposons (CTns)

Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois,

Urbana, IL 61801

Page 2: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

What is a CTn?

• Integrated DNA segment that excises to form a circular intermediate which transfers by conjugation

• Also called ICEs (integrated conjugative elements)

• Vary widely in size (18 kbp – 500 kbp)

• Some carry genes not involved in transfer (eg, antibiotic resistance genes, nitrogen fixation genes)

• Usually able to mobilize plasmids in trans

Page 3: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

Steps in the transfer of a conjugative transposonSteps in the Transfer of a Conjugative TransposonSteps in the Transfer of a Conjugative Transposon

Page 4: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

Different levels of investigationDifferent levels of investigation

• Ecology: Movement of genes in the colonic Ecology: Movement of genes in the colonic ecosystem by CTnsecosystem by CTns

• Mechanisms of CTn integration and excision

• Regulation of CTn functions

• Effects of a CTn on the cell it enters

Page 5: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

Composition of the colonic Composition of the colonic microbiotamicrobiota

• Numerically predominant groups

– Bacteroides Bacteroides spp.spp.• Polysaccharide fermentationPolysaccharide fermentation• Opportunistic pathogen – resistance to antibioticsOpportunistic pathogen – resistance to antibiotics

– Gram positive anaerobes (e.g. Gram positive anaerobes (e.g. Clostridium Clostridium coccoides, Clostridium leptum, Eubacterium spp.)coccoides, Clostridium leptum, Eubacterium spp.)

Page 6: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

The Reservoir Hypothesis – Intestinal Bacteria As Reservoirs for Resistance

Genes

Resistant intestinal bacteria

Swallowed bacteriaSwallowed bacteriaOther intestinal

bacteria

Fecal-oral transmission

Genes Bacteria

Page 7: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

QuestionsQuestions

• How much transfer is actually occurring? How broad is the host range?– Approach: Find identical or near-identical

resistance genes (>95% DNA sequence identity) in different species or genera of bacteria

• How is transfer being mediated?– Approach: Establish genetic linkage between

resistance gene and some mobile element (CTn, plasmid) using Southern blot or PCR

Page 8: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801
Page 9: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

Widespread resistance genes in the human Widespread resistance genes in the human microbiotamicrobiota

Page 10: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

Elements responsible for Elements responsible for transfer eventstransfer events

• tetM, tetQ– Conjugative transposonConjugative transposon (Tn916, CTnDOT)– Tc-stimulated transfer

• ermF– Conjugative transposonConjugative transposon (CTnDOT family)– Self-transmissible plasmid, mobilizable plasmid

• ermG, ermB– Conjugative transposonsConjugative transposons (CTnGERM, CTnBST)

Page 11: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

Evidence from genome/metagenome Evidence from genome/metagenome sequencessequences

• Sequences being seen that are associated with conjugative transposons (transfer genes, integrase genes) found in

– Bacteroides group (Bacteroides, Porphyomonas, Prevotella)

– Gram positives

Page 12: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

CTnDOT – a widespread CTnDOT – a widespread Bacteroides Bacteroides CTnCTn

• In pre-1970s, found in about 20% of intestinal Bacteroides strains

• Post 1990, found in over 80% of strains

• Characteristics– 65 kbp– tetQ, ermF– Very stable in the absence of selection– Functions regulated by tetracyclineFunctions regulated by tetracycline

Page 13: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

Different levels of investigationDifferent levels of investigation

• Ecology: Movement of genes in the colonic ecosystem by CTns

• Mechanisms of CTn integration and excisionMechanisms of CTn integration and excision

• Regulation of CTn functions

• Effects of a CTn on the cell it enters

Page 14: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

Steps in the transfer of a conjugative transposonSteps in the Transfer of a Conjugative TransposonSteps in the Transfer of a Conjugative Transposon

Page 15: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801
Page 16: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

Excision and Integration of CTnDOTExcision and Integration of CTnDOT

Rajeev et al, MMBR, 2009

Page 17: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

Characterizing the CTnDOT Characterizing the CTnDOT Excision/Integration MechanismExcision/Integration Mechanism

• Construction of a miniature form of CTnDOT for in vivo assay of integration (suicide plasmid containing the integrase gene and the joined ends of the circular form)

• In vitro assays for integration, and steps in integration process (eg, DNA binding, cleavage, ligation)

Page 18: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

Alignment of the Carboxyl Terminal Alignment of the Carboxyl Terminal Domain of Some TyrosineRecombinasesDomain of Some TyrosineRecombinases

212 235

308 311 333 342

259 287

345 348 372 381

Lambda <199> R L A M E L A V V T G Q R . . . . V G D L C E M K W S D I V <9> . . . . K T G V K I A I P T A L H I D A L G I S M K E T L D

XerC <144> R A M L E V M Y G A G L R . . . . L S E L V G L D I K H L D <6> W V M G K G S K E R . . . . R L P I G R N A V A W I E H W L

XerD <136> K A M L E V L Y A T G L R . . . . V S E L V G L T M S D I S <6> R V I G K G N K E R . . . . L V P L G E E A V Y W L E T Y L

IntDOT <238> R D L Y L F C A F T G L S . . . . F S D M R N L T E E N I R <10> I N R Q K T G . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . V V S N I R L L

Tm5520 <237> K N A T H E L V . . . . R D L F V F S V F T G L A Y S D V K <18> T R R K K T N . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . T E S N I R L L

Tn916 <212> Y D E I L I L L K T G L R . . . . I S E F G G L T L P D L D <21> I E T P K T K S . . . G E R Q V P M V E E A Y Q A F K R V L

HP1 <195> G L I V R I C L A T G A R . . . . W S E A E T L T Q S Q V M <4> F T N T K S K K N R . . . . . . . . . . . T V P I S K E L F

CRE <160> L A F L G I A Y N T L L R . . . . I A E I A R I R V K D I S <14> . . . T K T L V S T A G V E K A L S L G V T K L V E R W I S

Lambda <39> F E G D P P T F H E L R . . . S L S A R L Y E K Q I S D K F A Q H L L G H K S D T M A S Q Y R D D R G R E W D K I E I K

XerC <41> N H V H P . . H K L R H . . S F A T H M L E S S G D L R G V Q E L L G H A N L S T T Q I Y T H L D Q H L A S V Y D A A <4>

XerD <44> S E K L S P . . H L V R H . . A F A T H L L N H G A D L R V V Q M L L G H S D L S T T Q I Y T H W A T R L R Q L H Q Q H <8>

IntDOT <42> K I T H W . . . H Q S R H T . A A T T V F L S N G V P I E T V S S M L G H K S I K T T Q I Y A K I T K E K L N Q D M E N <15>

Tn5520 <42> V R L T Y . . . H V A R H T . N A T T V L L S H G V I P E T V S R L L G H T N I K T T Q I Y A K I T A Q K I S Q D M E T <15>

Tn916 <49> D K L P H I T P H S L R H T . . F C T N Y A N A G M N P K A L Q Y I M G H A N I A M T L N Y Y A H A T F D S A M A E M K <11>

HP1 <29> P K G Q L T . . H V L R H T . . F A S H F M M N G G N I L V L K E I L G H S T I E M T M R Y A H F A P S H L E S A V K F <8>

CRE <49> Q R Y L A W S G H S A R V . G A A R D M A R A A G V S I P E I M Q A G G W T N V N I V M N Y I R N L D S E T G A M V R L <3>

Page 19: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

Predicted structure of IntDOTPredicted structure of IntDOT(Brian Swalla)(Brian Swalla)

Page 20: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

B

2

B

2

D

4

D

4

LL

FF

JJ

E

5

E

5

A

1

A

1

C

3

C

3

GG

II

NH2

HHKK

MM

NN

COOH

WT Recombination Frequency Decrease in activity No Detectable Recombination

Y381FY381F

H372AH372A

R348AR348A

H372AH372AR348AR348A

R247AR247AS259AS259A

Mutations in the CAT Domain of IntDOT and their affect on Recombination

-

Page 21: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

15 Mutations in the CB Domain of IntDOT and their affect on Recombination

H143AH143A

B

2

B

2

D

4

D

4

LL

FF

JJ

E

5

E

5

A

1

A

1

C

3

C

3

GG

II

NH2

HHKK

MM

NN

COOH

K129AK129A

T194AT194A

K131AK131A

W186AW186A

N183AN183A

C180AC180A

H179AH179A

K142AK142AT139AT139A

R138AR138A

Y137AY137A

K136AK136A

L135AL135A

T133AT133A

WT Recombination Frequency 103-105-fold Decrease No Detectable Recombination

Page 22: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

14

3

5

Y137A (no recomb.)Weak ligation

No cleavage

L135A (5x10-8)WT ligation

WT cleavage

R138A (10-6)WT ligation

WT cleavageH179A (3x10-6)WT cleavage

WT ligation

N183A (no recomb.)WT ligation

Weak cleavage

( ) = recombination freqency

K142A (6x10-7)Weak ligation

WT cleavage

2

Page 23: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

Different levels of investigationDifferent levels of investigation

• Ecology: Movement of genes in the colonic ecosystem by CTns

• Mechanisms of CTn integration and excision

• Regulation of CTn functionsRegulation of CTn functions

• Effects of a CTn on the cell it enters

Page 24: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

Steps in the transfer of a conjugative transposonSteps in the Transfer of a Conjugative Transposon

Page 25: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

Regulation of excision of CTnDOTRegulation of excision of CTnDOT

Page 26: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

How regulation of excision worksHow regulation of excision works

• Increased translation of TetQ, RteA, RteB proteins due to translational attenuation (Tc causing stalling of ribosomes on the leader region of operon)

– Transcriptional fusion constitutive, translation regulated– Site directed mutations in leader region showed that mRNA

structure involved

• RteA (sensor), RteB (DNA binding protein) is a two component regulatory system; activates transcription of rteC; RteC protein activates expression of excision operon (orf2c-orf2d-exc)

– RT-PCR to detect regulated transcription– RteB and RteC bind DNA in vitro– Site-directed mutations upstream of promoter region of rteC and

orf2c operon abolished transcription (activator)

Page 27: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

Regulation of transfer genesRegulation of transfer genes

Page 28: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

How regulationof transfer genes How regulationof transfer genes worksworks

• When transfer genes cloned away from rest of CTnDOT, expression of tra gene was constitutive but within CTnDOT expression was regulated from nearly zero to high level expression

• Activation: Excision proteins alone are sufficient to activate tra gene expression– Expression of excision operon from heterologous promoter (no

RteB, RteC necessary) caused activation of tra gene operon, but not repression (protein fusion to start codon of traA, RT-qPCR)

• Repression: Possible small RNA (RteR) causes repression– Furnishing rteR in trans with tra operon resulted in decreased

expression (no effect on traA fusion, but RT-qPCR showed reduced transcription of later genes)

– Stop codons in putative start codon had no effect on activity (probably regulatory RNA)

Page 29: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

Different levels of investigationDifferent levels of investigation

• Ecology: Movement of genes in the colonic ecosystem by CTns

• Mechanisms of CTn integration and excision

• Regulation of CTn functionsRegulation of CTn functions

• Effects of a CTn on the cell it entersEffects of a CTn on the cell it enters

Page 30: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

Effect of CTnDOT on a recipient Effect of CTnDOT on a recipient cellcell

• What is the effect on a Bacteroides cell of having CTnDOT enter its chromosome?

– No evidence for disruption of genes

– Could there be a global regulatory effectglobal regulatory effect?

Page 31: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

ApproachApproach

Microarrays to compare

No Tc, no CTnDOT

+Tc, +CTnDOT

Generate a “shopping list” of genes to be checked by qRT-PCR

(Moon and Salyers, Mol. Micro., 2007)

Page 32: Conjugative Transposons (CTns) Abigail Salyers, Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

ResultsResults

• Expression of nearly 60 chromosomal genes were up-regulated or down-regulated by more than 7-fold

• Most up-regulated genes were genes of unknown function – Some were associated with cryptic CTnscryptic CTns– Labeled with resistance gene to show transferLabeled with resistance gene to show transfer

• For one of these CTns, RteA and RteB plus Tc were sufficient. Others required intact CTnDOT

• Conjugative elements with regulatory genes may Conjugative elements with regulatory genes may have broad effects on chromosomal geneshave broad effects on chromosomal genes