Expression of a transposable antibiotic resistance element in Saccharomyces. - Related Documents




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28401.0000Expression of a transposable antibiotic resistance element in Saccharomyces. Some eukaryotic genes can be expressed in bacteria but there are few examples of the expression of prokaryotic genes in eukaryotes. Antibiotic G418 is a 2-deoxystreptamine antibiotic that is structurally related to gentamicin but has inhibitory activity against a much wider variety of pro- and eukaryotic organisms. In bacteria, resistance to G418 can be determined by several plasmid-encoded modifiying enzymes and, in view of the broad spectrum of activity of G418, we considered that this antibiotic might be useful as a selective agent for the introduction of these antibiotic resistance genes into a eukaryotic organism such as Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Additional impetus for these experiments came from the knowledge that certain of the G418-resistance determinants in bacteria are carried on transposable elements; a study of the properties of these elements in eukaryotes would be intriguing.19806253817
935410.9997Chemical anatomy of antibiotic resistance: chloramphenicol acetyltransferase. The evolution of mechanisms of resistance to natural antimicrobial substances (antibiotics) was almost certainly concurrent with the development in microorganisms of the ability to synthesise such agents. Of the several general strategies adopted by bacteria for defence against antibiotics, one of the most pervasive is that of enzymic inactivation. The vast majority of eubacteria that are resistant to chloramphenicol, an inhibitor of prokaryotic protein synthesis, owe their resistance phenotype to genes for chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT), which catalyses O-acetylation of the antibiotic, using acetyl-CoA as the acyl donor. The structure of CAT is known, as are many of the properties of the enzyme which explain its remarkable specificity and catalytic efficiency. Less clear is the evolutionary pathway which has produced the different members of the CAT 'family' of enzymes. Hints come from other acetyltransferases which share structure and mechanistic features with CAT, while not being strictly 'homologous' at the level of amino acid sequence. The 'super-family' of trimeric acetyltransferases appears to have in common a chemical mechanism based on a shared architecture.19921364583
28520.9996Streptothricin resistance as a novel selectable marker for transgenic plant cells.  Streptothricins are known as antimicrobial agents produced by Streptomyces spp. Bacterial resistance to streptothricin is mediated by specific enzymes exhibiting an acetyltransferase activity which renders the drug non-toxic for bacteria. The nucleotide sequence of several streptothricin resistance genes from bacteria have been described. Certain cells of eukaryotic parasites (such as Ustilago maydis or Leishmania spp.) are sensitive to streptothricin and the introduction of the bacterial resistance gene sat2 renders them resistant. We show that numerous species of plants are sensitive to low concentrations of streptothricin. Moreover, introduction of the bacterial resistance gene sat3 under the control of the 35S cauliflower mosaic virus promoter protects these cells from the toxic action of streptothricin. Therefore, sat3-mediated streptothricin resistance appears to be a promising selective marker for genetic manipulation of plant cells.200030754912
443630.9996Bacterial resistance to vancomycin: five genes and one missing hydrogen bond tell the story. A plasmid-borne transposon encodes enzymes and regulator proteins that confer resistance of enterococcal bacteria to the antibiotic vancomycin. Purification and characterization of individual proteins encoded by this operon has helped to elucidate the molecular basis of vancomycin resistance. This new understanding provides opportunities for intervention to reverse resistance.19968807824
935340.9996rRNA Methylation and Antibiotic Resistance. Methylation of nucleotides in rRNA is one of the basic mechanisms of bacterial resistance to protein synthesis inhibitors. The genes for corresponding methyltransferases have been found in producer strains and clinical isolates of pathogenic bacteria. In some cases, rRNA methylation by housekeeping enzymes is, on the contrary, required for the action of antibiotics. The effects of rRNA modifications associated with antibiotic efficacy may be cooperative or mutually exclusive. Evolutionary relationships between the systems of rRNA modification by housekeeping enzymes and antibiotic resistance-related methyltransferases are of particular interest. In this review, we discuss the above topics in detail.202033280577
982650.9996Horizontal genetic exchange, evolution, and spread of antibiotic resistance in bacteria. Some transformable bacteria have acquired target-mediated antibiotic resistance by horizontal genetic exchange of fragments of chromosomal genes. The resistant strains express variants of the antibiotic target that are metabolically active but exhibit a lowered affinity for the antibiotic. The alleles encoding these resistant proteins are mosaics comprising DNA derived from the host and other bacteria, often members of a different species. Examples include penicillin-resistant penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs) in Streptococcus pneumoniae and the pathogenic Neisseria species and sulfonamide-resistant dihydropterate synthase in Neisseria meningitidis. Distinct mosaic alleles encoding antibiotic resistance have arisen on multiple occasions, indicating the mobility of chromosomal genes in these species. Mosaic genes can arise at any chromosomal locus, and S. pneumoniae organisms with high-level penicillin resistance have acquired mosaic PBP genes at three bacterial bpb loci. Furthermore, horizontal genetic exchange permits movement of alleles among bacterial lineages, increasing the opportunities for the spread of antibiotic resistance.19989710667
631260.9996D-serine deaminase is a stringent selective marker in genetic crosses. The presence of the locus for D-serine deaminase (dsd) renders bacteria resistant to growth inhibition by D-serine and enables them to grow with D-serine as the sole nitrogen source. The two properties permit stringent selection in genetic crosses and make the D-serine deaminase gene an excellent marker, especially in the construction of strains for which the use of antibiotic resistance genes as selective markers is not allowed.19957814336
929170.9996Highlights of Streptomyces genetics. Sixty years ago, the actinomycetes, which include members of the genus Streptomyces, with their bacterial cellular dimensions but a mycelial growth habit like fungi, were generally regarded as a possible intermediate group, and virtually nothing was known about their genetics. We now know that they are bacteria, but with many original features. Their genome is linear with a unique mode of replication, not circular like those of nearly all other bacteria. They transfer their chromosome from donor to recipient by a conjugation mechanism, but this is radically different from the E. coli paradigm. They have twice as many genes as a typical rod-shaped bacterium like Escherichia coli or Bacillus subtilis, and the genome typically carries 20 or more gene clusters encoding the biosynthesis of antibiotics and other specialised metabolites, only a small proportion of which are expressed under typical laboratory screening conditions. This means that there is a vast number of potentially valuable compounds to be discovered when these 'sleeping' genes are activated. Streptomyces genetics has revolutionised natural product chemistry by facilitating the analysis of novel biosynthetic steps and has led to the ability to engineer novel biosynthetic pathways and hence 'unnatural natural products', with potential to generate lead compounds for use in the struggle to combat the rise of antimicrobial resistance.201931189905
940880.9996Genomic evidence for antibiotic resistance genes of actinomycetes as origins of antibiotic resistance genes in pathogenic bacteria simply because actinomycetes are more ancestral than pathogenic bacteria. Although in silico analysis have suggested that the antibiotic resistance genes in actinomycetes appear to be the origins of some antibiotic resistance genes, we have shown that recent horizontal transfer of antibiotic resistance genes from actinomycetes to other medically important bacteria have not taken place. Although it has been speculated in Benveniste and Davies' attractive hypothesis that antibiotic resistance genes of actinomycetes are origins of antibiotic resistance genes in pathogenic bacteria because the actinomycetes require mechanisms such as metabolic enzymes (encoded by the antibiotic resistance genes) to degrade the antibiotics they produce or to transport the antibiotics outside the bacterial cells, this hypothesis has never been proven. Both the phylogenetic tree constructed using 16S rRNA gene sequences and that constructed using concatenated amino acid sequences of 15 housekeeping genes extracted from 90 bacterial genomes showed that the actinomycetes is more ancestral to most other bacteria, including the pathogenic Gram-negative bacteria, Gram-positive bacteria, and Chlamydia species. Furthermore, the tetracycline resistance gene of Bifidobacterium longum is more ancestral to those of other pathogenic bacteria and the actinomycetes, which is in line with the ancestral position of B. longum. These suggest that the evolution of antibiotic resistance genes of antibiotic-producing bacteria in general parallels the evolution of the corresponding bacteria. The ancestral position of the antibiotic resistance genes in actinomycetes is probably unrelated to the fact that they produce antibiotics, but simply because actinomycetes are more ancestral than pathogenic bacteria.200616824692
26090.9996Improved antibiotic resistance gene cassette for marker exchange mutagenesis in Ralstonia solanacearum and Burkholderia species. Marker exchange mutagenesis is a fundamental approach to understanding gene function at a molecular level in bacteria. New plasmids carrying a kanamycin resistance gene or a trimethoprim resistance gene were constructed to provide antibiotic resistance cassettes for marker exchange mutagenesis in Ralstonia solanacearum and many antibiotic-resistant Burkholderia spp. Insertion sequences present in the flanking sequences of the antibiotic resistance cassette were removed to prevent aberrant gene replacement and polar mutation during mutagenesis in wild-type bacteria. Plasmids provided in this study would be convenient for use in gene cassettes for gene replacement in other Gram-negative bacteria.201121538255
9357100.9996The bifunctional enzymes of antibiotic resistance. The evolutionary union of two genes--each encoding proteins of complementary enzymatic activity--into a single gene so as to allow the coordinated expression of these activities as a fusion polypeptide, is an increasingly recognized biological occurrence. The result of this genetic union is the bifunctional enzyme. This fusion of separate catalytic activities into a single protein, whose gene is regulated by a single promoter, is seen especially where the coordinated expression of the separate activities is highly desirable. Increasingly, a circumstance driving the evolution of the bifunctional enzyme in bacteria is the resistance response of bacteria to antibiotic chemotherapy. We summarize the knowledge on bifunctional antibiotic-resistance enzymes, as possible harbingers of clinically significant resistance mechanisms of the future.200919615931
9276110.9996In Vitro Assessment of the Fitness of Resistant M. tuberculosis Bacteria by Competition Assay. Bacteria become resistant by a number of different mechanisms, and these include mutation in chromosomal genes (1), acquisition of plasmids (2), insertion of bacteriophage, transposon or insertion sequence DNA (3-5), or gene mosaicism (6). There is a dogma that bacteria that become resistant pay a significant physiological price and that if antimicrobial prescribing is controlled it will result in the eradication of resistant organisms. There are only very few studies that investigate the physiology of resistance acquisition and these do show that a physiological price is paid for this change (7, 8). Once an organism acquires resistance through mutation, acquisition of resistance genes via plasmids, transposons and bacteriophages the initial physiological defect is compensated by the antibiotic selective pressure, which balances the physiological deficit imposed by the resistant mutation or additional DNA (8, 9).200121374423
4430120.9996βLactam Resistance Mediated by Changes in Penicillin-Binding Proteins. The widespread use, or perhaps overuse, of penicillin during the past 50 yr has driven the evolution of resistance to penicilling in numerous different species of bacteria.Typically, resistance has arisen as a result of the acquisition of β-lactamases that inactivate the antibiotic (see Chapter 25 . Alternatively, in some Gram-negative bacteria, resistance may have arisen by a reduction in the ability of the antibiotic to access its target. However, in a number of clinically important Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria, resistance has arisen by alteration of the targets for penicillin and other β-lactam antibiotics, namely, the penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs).199821390765
9417130.9995General aspects of virus drug resistance with special reference to herpes simplex virus. The features of virus drug resistance are reviewed with examples from studies of herpes simplex virus drug-resistant mutants. Virus drug resistance, compared with drug resistance of bacteria or eukaryotes, is distinguished by its ability to provide information on drug selectivity. Identification of genes in which mutations arise to confer drug resistance defines gene products which contribute to antiviral selectivity. The gene products can then be dissected functionally with the aid of these mutations. Laboratory studies of the frequency of mutation to drug resistance and the features of drug-resistant mutants may have predictive value for the clinic.19863025148
9339140.9995A functional genomics approach to identify and characterize oxidation resistance genes. In order to develop a more complete understanding of the genes required for resistance to oxidative DNA damage, we devised methods to identify genes that can prevent or repair oxidative DNA damage. These methods use the oxidative mutator phenotype of a repair deficient E. coli strain to measure the antimutator effect resulting from the expression of human cDNAs. The method can be adapted to characterize the function, and to determine the active site domains, of putative antimutator genes. Since bacteria do not contain subcellular compartments, genes that function in mitochondria, the cytoplasm, or the nucleus can be identified. Methods to determine the localization of genes in their normal host organism are also described.200819082958
9287150.9995Use of DNA probes and plasmid capture in a search for new interesting environmental genes. Adaptation to a stressed environment leads to organisms bearing DNA, encoding defense mechanisms. These mechanisms can be heavy metal resistance, catabolism of organic xenobiotics or stress reactions. Genes responsible for these mechanisms can be used for monitoring changing environments and therefore it can be important to store such bacteria in a bank. DNA-probing will be presented by the use of DNA fragments (of Alcaligenes eutrophus) coding for heavy metal resistance or xenobiotic degradation. Some strains do not grow on petri dishes and accordingly cannot be isolated from soils. In order to isolate plasmids from such strains, coding for heavy metal resistances or xenobiotic degradations, an exogenous plasmid isolation method was developed. In this method, the endogenous population is conjugated with Pseudomonas or Alcaligenes strains bearing a retrotransfer plasmid like RP4. In that way new plasmids from various sources including non-culturable strains could be obtained. With these methods, a large number of specimens adapted to stressed situations can be isolated or constructed (in the case of the exogenous plasmid isolation method). They form a source of interesting genetic material that can be used to restore polluted areas in natural areas, if necessary with the aid of genetic engineering (in vitro or in vivo techniques). Full knowledge of such bacteria and their resistance mechanisms or degradation pathways, can lead to new constructions able to attack recalcitrant mixtures of different organics and to resist heavy metals.19938272850
9310160.9995Bacterial resistance to antibiotics. Effective antibacterial drugs have been available for nearly 50 years. After the introduction of each new such drug, whether chemically synthesized or a naturally occurring antibiotic, bacterial resistance to it has emerged. The genetic mechanisms by which bacteria have acquired resistance were quite unexpected; a new evolutionary pathways has been revealed. Although some antibiotic resistance has resulted from mutational changes in structural proteins--targets for the drugs' action--most has resulted from the acquisition of new, ready-made genes from an external source--that is, from another bacterium. Vectors of the resistance genes are plasmids--heritable DNA molecules that are transmissible between bacterial cells. Plasmids without antibiotic-resistance genes are common in all kinds of bacteria. Resistance plasmids have resulted from the insertion of new DNA sequences into previously existing plasmids. Thus, the spread of antibiotic resistance is at three levels: bacteria between people or animals; plasmids between bacteria; and transposable genes between plasmids.19846319093
9829170.9995Promiscuous transfer of drug resistance in gram-negative bacteria. Bacterial conjugation is a major mechanism for the spread of antibiotic-resistance genes in pathogenic organisms. In gram-negative bacteria, broad-host-range drug-resistance plasmids mediate genetic exchange between many unrelated species. The mechanism of conjugation encoded by the broad-host-range IncP plasmid RK2 has been studied in detail. The location and sequence of the transfer origin of RK2 has been determined. Several barriers limit plasmid transfer between unrelated bacteria: interactions at the cell surface may prevent effective mating contact, restriction systems may degrade foreign DNA, or the plasmid may not replicate in the new host. RK2 has evolved specific mechanisms by which it overcomes these barriers; this plasmid can mediate the transfer of resistance to most gram-negative bacteria.19846143782
6313180.9995A Novel Nonantibiotic, lgt-Based Selection System for Stable Maintenance of Expression Vectors in Escherichia coli and Vibrio cholerae. Antibiotic selection for the maintenance of expression plasmids is discouraged in the production of recombinant proteins for pharmaceutical or other human uses due to the risks of antibiotic residue contamination of the final products and the release of DNA encoding antibiotic resistance into the environment. We describe the construction of expression plasmids that are instead maintained by complementation of the lgt gene encoding a (pro)lipoprotein glyceryl transferase essential for the biosynthesis of bacterial lipoprotein. Mutations in lgt are lethal in Escherichia coli and other Gram-negative organisms. The lgt gene was deleted from E. coli and complemented by the Vibrio cholerae-derived gene provided in trans on a temperature-sensitive plasmid, allowing cells to grow at 30°C but not at 37°C. A temperature-insensitive expression vector carrying the V. cholerae-derived lgt gene was constructed, whereby transformants were selected by growth at 39°C. The vector was successfully used to express two recombinant proteins, one soluble and one forming insoluble inclusion bodies. Reciprocal construction was done by deleting the lgt gene from V. cholerae and complementing the lesion with the corresponding gene from E. coli The resulting strain was used to produce the secreted recombinant cholera toxin B subunit (CTB) protein, a component of licensed as well as newly developed oral cholera vaccines. Overall, the lgt system described here confers extreme stability on expression plasmids, and this strategy can be easily transferred to other Gram-negative species using the E. coli-derived lgt gene for complementation.IMPORTANCE Many recombinant proteins are produced in bacteria from genes carried on autonomously replicating DNA elements called plasmids. These plasmids are usually inherently unstable and rapidly lost. This can be prevented by using genes encoding antibiotic resistance. Plasmids are thus maintained by allowing only plasmid-containing cells to survive when the bacteria are grown in medium supplemented with antibiotics. In the described antibiotic-free system for the production of recombinant proteins, an essential gene is deleted from the bacterial chromosome and instead provided on a plasmid. The loss of the plasmid becomes lethal for the bacteria. Such plasmids can be used for the expression of recombinant proteins. This broadly applicable system removes the need for antibiotics in recombinant protein production, thereby contributing to reducing the spread of genes encoding antibiotic resistance, reducing the release of antibiotics into the environment, and freeing the final products (often used in pharmaceuticals) from contamination with potentially harmful antibiotic residues.201829222103
9356190.9995The expression of antibiotic resistance genes in antibiotic-producing bacteria. Antibiotic-producing bacteria encode antibiotic resistance genes that protect them from the biologically active molecules that they produce. The expression of these genes needs to occur in a timely manner: either in advance of or concomitantly with biosynthesis. It appears that there have been at least two general solutions to this problem. In many cases, the expression of resistance genes is tightly linked to that of antibiotic biosynthetic genes. In others, the resistance genes can be induced by their cognate antibiotics or by intermediate molecules from their biosynthetic pathways. The regulatory mechanisms that couple resistance to antibiotic biosynthesis are mechanistically diverse and potentially relevant to the origins of clinical antibiotic resistance.201424964724