Plasmid-encoded resistance to arsenic and antimony. - Related Documents




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18601.0000Plasmid-encoded resistance to arsenic and antimony. Resistance determinants to the toxic oxyanionic salts of arsenic and antimony are found on plasmids of both gram-negative and gram-positive organisms. In most cases these provide resistance to both the oxyanions of +III oxidation state, antimonite and arsenite, and the +V oxidation state, arsenate. In both gram-positive and -negative bacteria, resistance is correlated with efflux of the anions from cells. The determinant from the plasmid R773, isolated from a gram-negative organism, has been studied in detail. It encodes an oxyanion-translocating ATPase with three subunits, a catalytic subunit, the ArsA protein, a membrane subunit, the ArsB subunit, and a specificity factor, the ArsC protein. The first two form a membrane-bound complex with arsenite-stimulated ATPase activity. The determinants from gram-positive bacteria have only the arsB and arsC genes and encode an efflux system without the participation of an ArsA homologue.19921531541
13510.9997Resistance to arsenic compounds in microorganisms. Arsenic ions, frequently present as environmental pollutants, are very toxic for most microorganisms. Some microbial strains possess genetic determinants that confer resistance. In bacteria, these determinants are often found on plasmids, which has facilitated their study at the molecular level. Bacterial plasmids conferring arsenic resistance encode specific efflux pumps able to extrude arsenic from the cell cytoplasm thus lowering the intracellular concentration of the toxic ions. In Gram-negative bacteria, the efflux pump consists of a two-component ATPase complex. ArsA is the ATPase subunit and is associated with an integral membrane subunit, ArsB. Arsenate is enzymatically reduced to arsenite (the substrate of ArsB and the activator of ArsA) by the small cytoplasmic ArsC polypeptide. In Gram-positive bacteria, comparable arsB and arsC genes (and proteins) are found, but arsA is missing. In addition to the wide spread plasmid arsenic resistance determinant, a few bacteria confer resistance to arsenite with a separate determinant for enzymatic oxidation of more-toxic arsenite to less-toxic arsenate. In contrast to the detailed information on the mechanisms of arsenic resistance in bacteria, little work has been reported on this subject in algae and fungi.19947848659
18020.9997Bacterial resistances to inorganic mercury salts and organomercurials. Environmental and clinical isolates of mercury-resistant (resistant to inorganic mercury salts and organomercurials) bacteria have genes for the enzymes mercuric ion reductase and organomercurial lyase. These genes are often plasmid-encoded, although chromosomally encoded resistance determinants have been occasionally identified. Organomercurial lyase cleaves the C-Hg bond and releases Hg(II) in addition to the appropriate organic compound. Mercuric reductase reduces Hg(II) to Hg(O), which is nontoxic and volatilizes from the medium. Mercuric reductase is a FAD-containing oxidoreductase and requires NAD(P)H and thiol for in vitro activity. The crystal structure of mercuric ion reductase has been partially solved. The primary sequence and the three-dimensional structure of the mercuric reductase are significantly homologous to those of other flavin-containing oxidoreductases, e.g., glutathione reductase and lipoamide dehydrogenase. The active site sequences are the most conserved region among these flavin-containing enzymes. Genes encoding other functions have been identified on all mercury ion resistance determinants studied thus far. All mercury resistance genes are clustered into an operon. Hg(II) is transported into the cell by the products of one to three genes encoded on the resistance determinants. The expression of the operon is regulated and is inducible by Hg(II). In some systems, the operon is inducible by both Hg(II) and some organomercurials. In gram-negative bacteria, two regulatory genes (merR and merD) were identified. The (merR) regulatory gene is transcribed divergently from the other genes in gram-negative bacteria. The product of merR represses operon expression in the absence of the inducers and activates transcription in the presence of the inducers. The product of merD coregulates (modulates) the expression of the operon. Both merR and merD gene products bind to the same operator DNA. The primary sequence of the promoter for the polycistronic mer operon is not ideal for efficient transcription by the RNA polymerase. The -10 and -35 sequences are separated by 19 (gram-negative systems) or 20 (gram-positive systems) nucleotides, 2 or 3 nucleotides longer than the 17-nucleotide optimum distance for binding and efficient transcription by the Escherichia coli sigma 70-containing RNA polymerase. The binding site of MerR is not altered by the presence of Hg(II) (inducer). Experimental data suggest that the MerR-Hg(II) complex alters the local structure of the promoter region, facilitating initiation of transcription of the mer operon by the RNA polymerase. In gram-positive bacteria MerR also positively regulates expression of the mer operon in the presence of Hg(II).19921311113
17930.9997The genetics and biochemistry of mercury resistance. The ability of bacteria to detoxify mercurial compounds by reduction and volatilization is conferred by mer genes, which are usually plasmid located. The narrow spectrum (Hg2+ detoxifying) Tn501 and R100 determinants have been subjected to molecular genetic and DNA sequence analysis. Biochemical studies on the flavoprotein mercuric reductase have elucidated the mechanism of reduction of Hg2+ to Hg0. The mer genes have been mapped and sequenced and their protein products studied in minicells. Based on the deduced amino acid sequences, these proteins have been assigned a role in a mechanistic scheme for mercury flux in resistant bacteria. The mer genes are inducible, with regulatory control being exerted at the transcriptional level both positively and negatively. Attention is now focusing on broad-spectrum resistance involving detoxification of organomercurials by an additional enzyme, organomercurial lyase. Lyase genes have recently been cloned and sequencing studies are in progress.19872827958
18540.9996The chromosomal arsenic resistance genes of Thiobacillus ferrooxidans have an unusual arrangement and confer increased arsenic and antimony resistance to Escherichia coli. The chromosomal arsenic resistance genes of the acidophilic, chemolithoautotrophic, biomining bacterium Thiobacillus ferrooxidans were cloned and sequenced. Homologues of four arsenic resistance genes, arsB, arsC, arsH, and a putative arsR gene, were identified. The T. ferrooxidans arsB (arsenite export) and arsC (arsenate reductase) gene products were functional when they were cloned in an Escherichia coli ars deletion mutant and conferred increased resistance to arsenite, arsenate, and antimony. Therefore, despite the fact that the ars genes originated from an obligately acidophilic bacterium, they were functional in E. coli. Although T. ferrooxidans is gram negative, its ArsC was more closely related to the ArsC molecules of gram-positive bacteria. Furthermore, a functional trxA (thioredoxin) gene was required for ArsC-mediated arsenate resistance in E. coli; this finding confirmed the gram-positive ArsC-like status of this resistance and indicated that the division of ArsC molecules based on Gram staining results is artificial. Although arsH was expressed in an E. coli-derived in vitro transcription-translation system, ArsH was not required for and did not enhance arsenic resistance in E. coli. The T. ferrooxidans ars genes were arranged in an unusual manner, and the putative arsR and arsC genes and the arsBH genes were translated in opposite directions. This divergent orientation was conserved in the four T. ferrooxidans strains investigated.200010788346
13850.9996Resistance mechanisms to arsenicals and antimonials. Salts and organic derivatives of arsenic and antimony are quite toxic. Living organisms have adapted to this toxicity by the evolution of resistance mechanisms. Both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells develop resistance when exposed to arsenicals or antimonials. In the case of bacteria resistance is conferred by plasmid-encoded arsenical resistance (ars) operons. The genes and gene products of the ars operon of the clinically-isolated conjugative R-factor R773 have been identified and their mechanism of action elucidated. The operon encodes an ATP-driven pump that extrudes arsenite and antimonite from the cells. The lowering of their intracellular concentration results in resistance. Arsenate resistance results from the action of the plasmid-encoded arsenate reductase that reduces arsenate to arsenite, which is then pumped out of the cell.19958852270
18460.9996Plasmid chromate resistance and chromate reduction. Compounds of hexavalent chromium (chromates and dichromates) are highly toxic. Plasmid genetic determinants for chromate resistance have been described in several bacterial genera, most notably in Pseudomonas. Resistance to chromate is associated with decreased chromate transport by the resistant cells. The genes for a hydrophobic polypeptide, ChrA, were identified in chromate resistance plasmids of Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Alcaligenes eutrophus. ChrA is postulated to be responsible for the outward membrane translocation of chromate anions. Widespread bacterial reduction of hexavalent chromate to the less toxic trivalent chromic ions is also known. Chromate reduction determinants have not, however, been found on bacterial plasmids or transposons. In different bacteria, chromate reduction is either an aerobic or an anaerobic process (but not both) and is carried out either by soluble proteins or by cell membranes. Chromate reduction may also be a mechanism of resistance to chromate, but this has not been unequivocally shown.19921741461
44270.9995Mercuric reductase in environmental gram-positive bacteria sensitive to mercury. According to existing data, mercury resistance operons (mer operons) are in general thought to be rare in bacteria, other than those from mercury-contaminated sites. We have found that a high proportion of strains in environmental isolates of Gram-positive bacteria express mercuric reductase (MerA protein): the majority of these strains are apparently sensitive to mercury. The expression of MerA was also inducible in all cases. These results imply the presence of phenotypically cryptic mer resistance operons, with both the merA (mercuric reductase) and merR (regulatory) genes still present, but the possible absence of the transport function required to complete the resistance mechanism. This indicates that mer operons or parts thereof are more widely spread in nature than is suggested by the frequency of mercury-resistant bacteria.19921427009
13680.9995Operon mer: bacterial resistance to mercury and potential for bioremediation of contaminated environments. Mercury is present in the environment as a result of natural processes and from anthropogenic sources. The amount of mercury mobilized and released into the biosphere has increased since the beginning of the industrial age. Generally, mercury accumulates upwards through aquatic food chains, so that organisms at higher trophic levels have higher mercury concentrations. Some bacteria are able to resist heavy metal contamination through chemical transformation by reduction, oxidation, methylation and demethylation. One of the best understood biological systems for detoxifying organometallic or inorganic compounds involves the mer operon. The mer determinants, RTPCDAB, in these bacteria are often located in plasmids or transposons and can also be found in chromosomes. There are two classes of mercury resistance: narrow-spectrum specifies resistance to inorganic mercury, while broad-spectrum includes resistance to organomercurials, encoded by the gene merB. The regulatory gene merR is transcribed from a promoter that is divergently oriented from the promoter for the other mer genes. MerR regulates the expression of the structural genes of the operon in both a positive and a negative fashion. Resistance is due to Hg2+ being taken up into the cell and delivered to the NADPH-dependent flavoenzyme mercuric reductase, which catalyzes the two-electron reduction of Hg2+ to volatile, low-toxicity Hg0. The potential for bioremediation applications of the microbial mer operon has been long recognized; consequently, Escherichia coli and other wild and genetically engineered organisms for the bioremediation of Hg2+-contaminated environments have been assayed by several laboratories.200312917805
29290.9995Mechanisms underlying expression of Tn10 encoded tetracycline resistance. Tetracycline-resistance determinants encoding active efflux of the drug are widely distributed in gram-negative bacteria and unique with respect to genetic organization and regulation of expression. Each determinant consists of two genes called tetA and tetR, which are oriented with divergent polarity, and between them is a central regulatory region with overlapping promoters and operators. The amino acid sequences of the encoded proteins are 43-78% identical. The resistance protein TetA is a tetracycline/metal-proton antiporter located in the cytoplasmic membrane, while the regulatory protein TetR is a tetracycline inducible repressor. TetR binds via a helix-turn-helix motif to the two tet operators, resulting in repression of both genes. A detailed model of the repressor-operator complex has been proposed on the basis of biochemical and genetic data. The tet genes are differentially regulated so that repressor synthesis can occur before the resistance protein is expressed. This has been demonstrated for the Tn10-encoded tet genes and may be a common property of all tet determinants, as suggested by the similar locations of operators with respect to promoters. Induction is mediated by a tetracycline-metal complex and requires only nanomolar concentrations of the drug. This is the most sensitive effector-inducible system of transcriptional regulation known to date. The crystal structure of the TetR-tetracycline/metal complex shows the Tet repressor in the induced, non-DNA binding conformation. The structural interpretation of many noninducible TetR mutants has offered insight into the conformational changes associated with the switch between inducing and repressing structures of TetR. Tc is buried in the core of TetR, where it is held in place by multiple contacts to the protein.19947826010
167100.9995Ion efflux systems involved in bacterial metal resistances. Studying metal ion resistance gives us important insights into environmental processes and provides an understanding of basic living processes. This review concentrates on bacterial efflux systems for inorganic metal cations and anions, which have generally been found as resistance systems from bacteria isolated from metal-polluted environments. The protein products of the genes involved are sometimes prototypes of new families of proteins or of important new branches of known families. Sometimes, a group of related proteins (and presumedly the underlying physiological function) has still to be defined. For example, the efflux of the inorganic metal anion arsenite is mediated by a membrane protein which functions alone in Gram-positive bacteria, but which requires an additional ATPase subunit in some Gram-negative bacteria. Resistance to Cd2+ and Zn2+ in Gram-positive bacteria is the result of a P-type efflux ATPase which is related to the copper transport P-type ATPases of bacteria and humans (defective in the human hereditary diseases Menkes' syndrome and Wilson's disease). In contrast, resistance to Zn2+, Ni2+, Co2+ and Cd2+ in Gram-negative bacteria is based on the action of proton-cation antiporters, members of a newly-recognized protein family that has been implicated in diverse functions such as metal resistance/nodulation of legumes/cell division (therefore, the family is called RND). Another new protein family, named CDF for 'cation diffusion facilitator' has as prototype the protein CzcD, which is a regulatory component of a cobalt-zinc-cadmium resistance determinant in the Gram-negative bacterium Alcaligenes eutrophus. A family for the ChrA chromate resistance system in Gram-negative bacteria has still to be defined.19957766211
6324110.9995Genetic and biochemical basis of tetracycline resistance. Properties of several, well characterized, tetracycline resistance determinants were compared. The determinants in Tn1721 and Tn10 (both from Gram-negative bacteria) each contain two genes; one encodes a repressor that regulates both its own transcription and that of a membrane protein that confers resistance by promoting efflux of the drug. Determinants from Gram-positive bacteria also encode efflux proteins, but expression of resistance is probably regulated by translational attenuation. The likely tetracycline binding site (a common dipeptide) in each efflux protein was predicted. The presence of the common binding site is consistent with the ability of an efflux protein originating in Bacillus species to be expressed in Escherichia coli.19863542941
178120.9995Molecular basis of bacterial resistance to organomercurial and inorganic mercuric salts. Bacteria mediate resistance to organomercurial and inorganic mercuric salts by metabolic conversion to nontoxic elemental mercury, Hg(0). The genes responsible for mercury resistance are organized in the mer operon, and such operons are often found in plasmids that also bear drug resistance determinants. We have subcloned three of these mer genes, merR, merB, and merA, and have studied their protein products via protein overproduction and purification, and structural and functional characterization. MeR is a metalloregulatory DNA-binding protein that acts as a repressor of both its own and structural gene transcription in the absence of Hg(II); in addition it acts as a positive effector of structural gene transcription when Hg(II) is present. MerB, organomercury lyase, catalyzes the protonolytic fragmentation of organomercurials to the parent hydrocarbon and Hg(II) by an apparent SE2 mechanism. MerA, mercuric ion reductase, is an FAD-containing and redox-active disulfide-containing enzyme with homology to glutathione reductase. It has evolved the unique catalytic capacity to reduce Hg(II) to Hg(0) and thereby complete the detoxification scheme.19883277886
443130.9994Deletion mutant analysis of the Staphylococcus aureus plasmid pI258 mercury-resistance determinant. Deletion mutant analysis of the mercury-resistant determinant (mer operon) from the Staphylococcus aureus plasmid pI258 was used to verify the location of the merA and merB genes and to show the existence of mercuric ion transport gene(s). ORF5 was confirmed to be a transport gene and has an amino acid product sequence homologous to the merT gene products from several gram-negative bacteria and a Bacillus species. Deletion analysis established that inactivation of merA on a broad-spectrum mer resistance determinant resulted in a mercury-hypersensitive phenotype. Gene dosage had no apparent effect on the level of resistance conferred by the intact mer operon or on the expression of an inducible phenotype, except that when the intact pI258 mer operon was on a high copy number plasmid, uninduced cells possessed a volatilization rate that was at most only 3.5-fold less than that observed for induced cells. There was no need for mercury ion transport proteins for full resistance when the mer operon was expressed in a high copy number plasmid.19911954576
9327140.9994Detection of the merA gene and its expression in the environment. Bacterial transformation of mercury in the environment has received much attention owing to the toxicity of both the ionic form and organomercurial compounds. Bacterial resistance to mercury and the role of bacteria in mercury cycling have been widely studied. The genes specifying the required functions for resistance to mercury are organized on the mer operon. Gene probing methodologies have been used for several years to detect specific gene sequences in the environment that are homologous to cloned mer genes. While mer genes have been detected in a wide variety of environments, less is known about the expression of these genes under environmental conditions. We combined new methodologies for recovering specific gene mRNA transcripts and mercury detection with a previously described method for determining biological potential for mercury volatilization to examine the effect of mercury concentrations and nutrient availability on rates of mercury volatilization and merA transcription. Levels of merA-specific transcripts and Hg(II) volatilization were influenced more by microbial activity (as manipulated by nutrient additions) than by the concentration of total mercury. The detection of merA-specific transcripts in some samples that did not reduce Hg(II) suggests that rates of mercury volatilization in the environment may not always be proportional to merA transcription.19968849424
189150.9994Arsenate detoxification in a Pseudomonad hypertolerant to arsenic. Pseudomonas sp. strain As-1, obtained from an electroplating industrial effluent, was capable of growing aerobically in growth medium supplemented with up to 65 mM arsenate (As (V)), significantly higher concentrations than those tolerated by other reference arsenic resistant bacteria. The majority of the arsenic was detected in culture supernatants as arsenite (As (III)) and X-ray absorbance spectroscopy suggested that 30% of this cell-bound arsenic was As (V), 65% As (III) and 5% of arsenic was associated with sulphur. PCR analysis using primers designed against arsenic resistance genes of other Gram-negative bacteria confirmed the presence of an arsenic resistance operon comprising of three genes, arsR, arsB and arsC in order of predicted transcription, and consistent with a role in intracellular reduction of As (V) and efflux of As (III). In addition to this classical arsenic resistance mechanism, other biochemical responses to arsenic were implicated. Novel arsenic-binding proteins were purified from cellular fractions, while proteomic analysis of arsenic-induced cultures identified the upregulation of additional proteins not normally associated with the metabolism of arsenic. Cross-talk with a network of proteins involved in phosphate metabolism was suggested by these studies, consistent with the similarity between the phosphate and arsenate anions.200717160678
8218160.9994Mechanism of plasmic-mediated resistance to cadmium in Staphylococcus aureus. The mechanism of plasmid-mediated resistance to cadmium in Staphylococcus aureus was investigated. Protein synthesis in cell-free extracts from resistant or susceptible bacteria was equally susceptible to inhibition by Cd(2+), but spheroplasts from resistant bacteria retained their resistance. Resistant bacteria did not have a decreased affinity for cations in general, nor was active metabolism required for exclusion of Cd(2+). The kinetics of Cd(2+) uptake into susceptible and resistant bacteria suggested that the conformation of membrane proteins in resistant bacteria may be important in the exclusion of Cd(2+).19751137361
304170.9994Analysis of the carbapenem gene cluster of Erwinia carotovora: definition of the antibiotic biosynthetic genes and evidence for a novel beta-lactam resistance mechanism. Members of two genera of Gram-negative bacteria, Serratia and Erwinia, produce a beta-lactam antibiotic, 1-carbapen-2-em-3-carboxylic acid. We have reported previously the cloning and sequencing of the genes responsible for production of this carbapenem in Erwinia carotovora. These genes are organized as an operon, carA--H, and are controlled by a LuxR-type transcriptional activator, encoded by the linked carR gene. We report in this paper the genetic dissection of this putative operon to determine the function of each of the genes. We demonstrate by mutational analysis that the products of the first five genes of the operon are involved in the synthesis of the carbapenem molecule. Three of these, carABC, are absolutely required. In addition, we provide evidence for the existence of a novel carbapenem resistance mechanism, encoded by the CarF and carG genes. Both products of these overlapping and potentially translationally coupled genes have functional, N-terminal signal peptides. Removal of these genes from the Erwinia chromosome results in a carbapenem-sensitive phenotype. We assume that these novel beta-lactam resistance genes have evolved in concert with the biosynthetic genes to ensure 'self-resistance' in the Erwinia carbapenem producer.19979402024
188180.9993Resistance to ag(i) cations in bacteria: environments, genes and proteins. Bacterial resistance to Ag(I) has been reported periodically with isolates from many environments where toxic levels of silver might be expected to occur, but initial reports were limited to the occurrence of resistant bacteria. The availability of silver-resistance conferring DNA sequences now allow genetic and mechanistic studies that had basically been missing. The genes determining Ag(I) resistance were sequenced from a plasmid found in a burn ward isolate. The 14.2 kb determinant contains seven recognized genes, arranged in three mRNA transcriptional units. The silE gene determines an extracellular (periplasmic space) metal-binding protein of 123 amino acids, including ten histidine residues implicated in Ag(I) binding. SilE is homologous to PcoE, of copper resistance. The next two genes, silR and silS, determine a two protein, histidine-kinase membrane sensor and aspartyl phosphate transcriptional responder, similar to other two component systems such as CzcR and CzcS (for cadmium, zinc and cobalt resistance) and PcoR and PcoS (for copper resistance). The remaining four genes, silCBAP, are co-transcribed and appear to determine Ag(+) efflux, with SilCBA homologous to CzcCBA, a three component cation/proton antiporter, and SilP a novel P-type ATPase with a amino-terminal histidine-rich cation-specificity region. The effects of increasing Ag(+) concentrations and growth medium halides (Cl-, Br- and I-) have been characterized, with lower Cl- concentrations facilitating resistance and higher concentrations toxicity. The properties of this unique Ag(I)-binding SilE protein are being characterized. Sequences similar to the silver-resistance DNA are being characterized by Southern blot DNA/DNA hybridization, PCR in vitro DNA synthesis and DNA sequencing. More than 25 additional closely related sequences have been identified in bacteria from diverse sources. Initial DNA sequencing results shows approximately 5-20% differences in DNA sequences.199918475907
6325190.9993Repressed multidrug resistance genes in Streptomyces lividans. Multidrug resistance (MDR) systems are ubiquitously present in prokaryotes and eukaryotes and defend both types of organisms against toxic compounds in the environment. Four families of MDR systems have been described, each family removing a broad spectrum of compounds by a specific membrane-bound active efflux pump. In the present study, at least four MDR systems were identified genetically in the soil bacterium Streptomyces lividans. The resistance genes of three of these systems were cloned and sequenced. Two of them are accompanied by a repressor gene. These MDR gene sequences are found in most other Streptomyces species investigated. Unlike the constitutively expressed MDR genes in Escherichia coli and other gram-negative bacteria, all of the Streptomyces genes were repressed under laboratory conditions, and resistance arose by mutations in the repressor genes.200312937892