# | Rank | Similarity | Title + Abs. | Year | PMID |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
| 295 | 0 | 1.0000 | Large-scale chromosome flip-flop reversible inversion mediates phenotypic switching of expression of antibiotic resistance in lactococci. Bacteria can gain resistance to antimicrobials by acquiring and expressing genetic elements that encode resistance determinants such as efflux pumps and drug-modifying enzymes, thus hampering treatment of infection. Previously we showed that acquisition of spectinomycin resistance in a lactococcal strain was correlated with a reversible genomic inversion, but the precise location and the genes affected were unknown. Here we use long-read whole-genome sequencing to precisely define the genomic inversion and we use quantitative PCR to identify associated changes in gene expression levels. The boundaries of the inversion fall within two identical copies of a prophage-like sequence, located on the left and right replichores; this suggests possible mechanisms for inversion through homologous recombination or prophage activity. The inversion is asymmetrical in respect of the axis between the origin and terminus of the replication and modulates the expression of a SAM-dependent methyltransferase, whose heterologous expression confers resistance to spectinomycin in lactococci and that is up-regulated on exposure to spectinomycin. This study provides one of the first examples of phase variation via large-scale chromosomal inversions that confers a switch in antimicrobial resistance in bacteria and the first outside of Staphylococcus aureus. | 2020 | 32919223 |
| 9304 | 1 | 0.9997 | Variation of the flagellin gene locus of Campylobacter jejuni by recombination and horizontal gene transfer. The capacity of Campylobacter jejuni to generate genetic diversity was determined for its flagellar region. Recombination within a genome, as well as recombination after the uptake of exogenous DNA, could be demonstrated. The subunit of the flagellar filament of C. jejuni is encoded by two tandem genes, flaA and flaB, which are highly similar and therefore subject to recombination. A spontaneous recombination within this locus was demonstrated in a bacterial clone containing an antibiotic-resistance gene inserted in flaA. A recombinant was isolated in which the antibiotic-resistance gene had been repositioned into flaB, indicating that genetic information can be exchanged between the two flagellin genes of C. jejuni. The occurrence of recombinational events after the uptake of exogenous DNA by naturally competent bacteria was demonstrated with two mutants containing different antibiotic-resistance markers in their flagellin genes. Double-resistant transformants were formed when purified chromosomal donor DNA was added to a recipient strain, when the two bacterial cultures were mixed under conditions that induce natural competence, or when the two strains were cocultured. Both mechanisms of recombination may be used by the pathogenic organism to escape the immunological responses of the host or otherwise adapt to the environment. | 1995 | 7894725 |
| 9311 | 2 | 0.9997 | Various plasmid strategies limit the effect of bacterial restriction-modification systems against conjugation. In bacteria, genes conferring antibiotic resistance are mostly carried on conjugative plasmids, mobile genetic elements that spread horizontally between bacterial hosts. Bacteria carry defence systems that defend them against genetic parasites, but how effective these are against plasmid conjugation is poorly understood. Here, we study to what extent restriction-modification (RM) systems-by far the most prevalent bacterial defence systems-act as a barrier against plasmids. Using 10 different RM systems and 13 natural plasmids conferring antibiotic resistance in Escherichia coli, we uncovered variation in defence efficiency ranging from none to 105-fold protection. Further analysis revealed genetic features of plasmids that explain the observed variation in defence levels. First, the number of RM recognition sites present on the plasmids generally correlates with defence levels, with higher numbers of sites being associated with stronger defence. Second, some plasmids encode methylases that protect against restriction activity. Finally, we show that a high number of plasmids in our collection encode anti-restriction genes that provide protection against several types of RM systems. Overall, our results show that it is common for plasmids to encode anti-RM strategies, and that, as a consequence, RM systems form only a weak barrier for plasmid transfer by conjugation. | 2024 | 39413206 |
| 8995 | 3 | 0.9996 | Interaction between mutations and regulation of gene expression during development of de novo antibiotic resistance. Bacteria can become resistant not only by horizontal gene transfer or other forms of exchange of genetic information but also by de novo by adaptation at the gene expression level and through DNA mutations. The interrelationship between changes in gene expression and DNA mutations during acquisition of resistance is not well documented. In addition, it is not known whether the DNA mutations leading to resistance always occur in the same order and whether the final result is always identical. The expression of >4,000 genes in Escherichia coli was compared upon adaptation to amoxicillin, tetracycline, and enrofloxacin. During adaptation, known resistance genes were sequenced for mutations that cause resistance. The order of mutations varied within two sets of strains adapted in parallel to amoxicillin and enrofloxacin, respectively, whereas the buildup of resistance was very similar. No specific mutations were related to the rather modest increase in tetracycline resistance. Ribosome-sensed induction and efflux pump activation initially protected the cell through induction of expression and allowed it to survive low levels of antibiotics. Subsequently, mutations were promoted by the stress-induced SOS response that stimulated modulation of genetic instability, and these mutations resulted in resistance to even higher antibiotic concentrations. The initial adaptation at the expression level enabled a subsequent trial and error search for the optimal mutations. The quantitative adjustment of cellular processes at different levels accelerated the acquisition of antibiotic resistance. | 2014 | 24841263 |
| 9306 | 4 | 0.9996 | Establishment Genes Present on pLS20 Family of Conjugative Plasmids Are Regulated in Two Different Ways. During conjugation, a conjugative DNA element is transferred from a donor to a recipient cell via a connecting channel. Conjugation has clinical relevance because it is the major route for spreading antibiotic resistance and virulence genes. The conjugation process can be divided into different steps. The initial steps carried out in the donor cell culminate in the transfer of a single DNA strand (ssDNA) of the conjugative element into the recipient cell. However, stable settlement of the conjugative element in the new host requires at least two additional events: conversion of the transferred ssDNA into double-stranded DNA and inhibition of the hosts' defence mechanisms to prevent degradation of the transferred DNA. The genes involved in this late step are historically referred to as establishment genes. The defence mechanisms of the host must be inactivated rapidly and-importantly-transiently, because prolonged inactivation would make the cell vulnerable to the attack of other foreign DNA, such as those of phages. Therefore, expression of the establishment genes in the recipient cell has to be rapid but transient. Here, we studied regulation of the establishment genes present on the four clades of the pLS20 family of conjugative plasmids harboured by different Bacillus species. Evidence is presented that two fundamentally different mechanisms regulate the establishment genes present on these plasmids. Identification of the regulatory sequences were critical in revealing the establishment regulons. Remarkably, whereas the conjugation genes involved in the early steps of the conjugation process are conserved and are located in a single large operon, the establishment genes are highly variable and organised in multiple operons. We propose that the mosaical distribution of establishment genes in multiple operons is directly related to the variability of defence genes encoded by the host bacterial chromosomes. | 2021 | 34946067 |
| 9312 | 5 | 0.9996 | Why There Are No Essential Genes on Plasmids. Mobile genetic elements such as plasmids are important for the evolution of prokaryotes. It has been suggested that there are differences between functions coded for by mobile genes and those in the "core" genome and that these differences can be seen between plasmids and chromosomes. In particular, it has been suggested that essential genes, such as those involved in the formation of structural proteins or in basic metabolic functions, are rarely located on plasmids. We model competition between genotypically varying bacteria within a single population to investigate whether selection favors a chromosomal location for essential genes. We find that in general, chromosomal locations for essential genes are indeed favored. This is because the inheritance of chromosomes is more stable than that for plasmids. We define the "degradation" rate as the rate at which chance genetic processes, for example, mutation, deletion, or translocation, render essential genes nonfunctioning. The only way in which plasmids can be a location for functioning essential genes is if chromosomal genes degrade faster than plasmid genes. If the two degradation rates are equal, or if plasmid genes degrade faster than chromosomal genes, functioning essential genes will be found only on chromosomes. | 2015 | 25540453 |
| 9273 | 6 | 0.9996 | Temporal dynamics of bacteria-plasmid coevolution under antibiotic selection. Horizontally acquired genes can be costly to express even if they encode useful traits, such as antibiotic resistance. We previously showed that when selected with tetracycline, Escherichia coli carrying the tetracycline-resistance plasmid RK2 evolved mutations on both replicons that together provided increased tetracycline resistance at reduced cost. Here we investigate the temporal dynamics of this intragenomic coevolution. Using genome sequencing we show that the order of adaptive mutations was highly repeatable across three independently evolving populations. Each population first gained a chromosomal mutation in ompF which shortened lag phase and increased tetracycline resistance. This was followed by mutations impairing the plasmid-encoded tetracycline efflux pump, and finally, additional resistance-associated chromosomal mutations. Thus, reducing the cost of the horizontally acquired tetracycline resistance was contingent on first evolving a degree of chromosomally encoded resistance. We conclude therefore that the trajectory of bacteria-plasmid coevolution was constrained to a single repeatable path. | 2019 | 30209344 |
| 261 | 7 | 0.9996 | Suicide vectors for antibiotic marker exchange and rapid generation of multiple knockout mutants by allelic exchange in Gram-negative bacteria. Allelic exchange is frequently used in bacteria to generate knockout mutants in genes of interest, to carry out phenotypic analysis and learn about their function. Frequently, understanding of gene function in complex processes such as pathogenesis requires the generation of multiple mutant strains. In Pseudomonads and other non-Enterobacteriaceae, this is a time-consuming and laborious process based on the use of suicide vectors and allelic exchange of the appropriate mutant version of each gene, disrupted by a different antibiotic marker. This often implies the generation of a series of mutants for each gene, each disrupted by a different antibiotic marker, in order to obtain all possible double or multiple mutant combinations. In this work, we have modified this method by developing a set of 3 plasmid derivatives from the previously described suicide vector for allelic exchange, pKAS32, to make antibiotic marker exchange easier and thus accelerate the entire process. Briefly, the construction of each single gene knockout mutant is carried out by allelic exchange of the chromosomal gene with a mutant allele disrupted by the insertion of a kanamycin resistance cassette. When a double mutant strain is required, antibiotic marker exchange is performed in either one of the single mutants, using any of the three plasmid derivatives that carry the kanamycin resistance gene disrupted by either a chloramphenicol, gentamycin, or streptomycin resistance cassette. The single mutant strain, carrying now an antibiotic resistance marker other than kanamycin, can be used to introduce a second mutation using the original plasmid constructs, to generate a double mutant. The process can be repeated sequentially to generate multiple mutants. We have validated this method by generating strains carrying different combinations of mutations in genes encoding different transcriptional regulators of the Hrp type III secretion system in Pseudomonas syringae. We have also tested the genetic organisation and stability of the resulting mutant strains during growth in laboratory conditions as well as in planta. | 2006 | 16750581 |
| 9852 | 8 | 0.9996 | Transposase-DNA Complex Structures Reveal Mechanisms for Conjugative Transposition of Antibiotic Resistance. Conjugative transposition drives the emergence of multidrug resistance in diverse bacterial pathogens, yet the mechanisms are poorly characterized. The Tn1549 conjugative transposon propagates resistance to the antibiotic vancomycin used for severe drug-resistant infections. Here, we present four high-resolution structures of the conserved Y-transposase of Tn1549 complexed with circular transposon DNA intermediates. The structures reveal individual transposition steps and explain how specific DNA distortion and cleavage mechanisms enable DNA strand exchange with an absolute minimum homology requirement. This appears to uniquely allow Tn916-like conjugative transposons to bypass DNA homology and insert into diverse genomic sites, expanding gene transfer. We further uncover a structural regulatory mechanism that prevents premature cleavage of the transposon DNA before a suitable target DNA is found and generate a peptide antagonist that interferes with the transposase-DNA structure to block transposition. Our results reveal mechanistic principles of conjugative transposition that could help control the spread of antibiotic resistance genes. | 2018 | 29551265 |
| 9408 | 9 | 0.9996 | Genomic 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. | 2006 | 16824692 |
| 6334 | 10 | 0.9996 | Epigenetic inheritance based evolution of antibiotic resistance in bacteria. BACKGROUND: The evolution of antibiotic resistance in bacteria is a topic of major medical importance. Evolution is the result of natural selection acting on variant phenotypes. Both the rigid base sequence of DNA and the more plastic expression patterns of the genes present define phenotype. RESULTS: We investigated the evolution of resistant E. coli when exposed to low concentrations of antibiotic. We show that within an isogenic population there are heritable variations in gene expression patterns, providing phenotypic diversity for antibiotic selection to act on. We studied resistance to three different antibiotics, ampicillin, tetracycline and nalidixic acid, which act by inhibiting cell wall synthesis, protein synthesis and DNA synthesis, respectively. In each case survival rates were too high to be accounted for by spontaneous DNA mutation. In addition, resistance levels could be ramped higher by successive exposures to increasing antibiotic concentrations. Furthermore, reversion rates to antibiotic sensitivity were extremely high, generally over 50%, consistent with an epigenetic inheritance mode of resistance. The gene expression patterns of the antibiotic resistant E. coli were characterized with microarrays. Candidate genes, whose altered expression might confer survival, were tested by driving constitutive overexpression and determining antibiotic resistance. Three categories of resistance genes were identified. The endogenous beta-lactamase gene represented a cryptic gene, normally inactive, but when by chance expressed capable of providing potent ampicillin resistance. The glutamate decarboxylase gene, in contrast, is normally expressed, but when overexpressed has the incidental capacity to give an increase in ampicillin resistance. And the DAM methylase gene is capable of regulating the expression of other genes, including multidrug efflux pumps. CONCLUSION: In this report we describe the evolution of antibiotic resistance in bacteria mediated by the epigenetic inheritance of variant gene expression patterns. This provides proof in principle that epigenetic inheritance, as well as DNA mutation, can drive evolution. | 2008 | 18282299 |
| 8895 | 11 | 0.9996 | Loss of DNA mismatch repair genes leads to acquisition of antibiotic resistance independent of secondary mutations. Antibiotic resistant bacteria have been a rising clinical concern for decades. Beyond acquisition of alleles conferring resistance, bacteria under stress (e.g., from changing environmental conditions or mutations) can have higher intrinsic resistance to antibiotics than unstressed cells. This concern is expanded for gram-negative bacteria which have a protective outer membrane serving as an additional barrier against harmful molecules such as antibiotics. Here, we report a pathway which increases antibiotic resistance (i.e., minimum inhibitory concentration) in response to inactivation of the DNA Mismatch Repair pathway (MMR). This pathway led to increased intrinsic resistance and was independent of secondary mutations. Specifically, deletion of the DNA mismatch repair genes mutL or mutS caused resistance to various antibiotics spanning different classes, molecular sizes, and mechanisms of action in several different E. coli K-12 MG1655 strains, and in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium LT2. This pathway was independent of the SOS response (severe DNA damage response). However, the patterns of resistance correlated with previously reported increases in MMR mutants in rates of homoeologous recombination, homologous recombination between non-identical DNA strands. Mutations expected to lower rates of recombination in MMR mutants also decreased the resistance to most antibiotics. Finally, we found lysis occurs in MMR mutants and may contribute to resistance to other antibiotics. Our results have demonstrated a novel mechanism that increases antibiotic resistance in direct response to loss of MMR genes, and we propose this resistance involves increased rates of homoeologous recombination and cell lysis. The increased antibiotic resistance of MMR mutants provides a path for these cells to survive in antibiotics long enough to develop more specific resistance mutations and so may contribute to the development of new clinical resistance alleles. | 2025 | 40667202 |
| 6314 | 12 | 0.9996 | Identification of genes involved in the resistance of mycobacteria to killing by macrophages. The survival of M. leprae and M. tuberculosis in the human host is dependent upon their ability to produce gene products that counteract the bactericidal activities of macrophages. To identify such mycobacterial genes and gene products, recombinant DNA libraries of mycobacterial DNA in E. coli were passed through macrophages to enrich for clones carrying genes that endow the normally susceptible E. coli bacteria with an enhanced ability to survive within macrophages. Following three cycles of enrichment, 15 independent clones were isolated. Three recombinants were characterized in detail, and each confers significantly enhanced survival on E. coli cells carrying them. Two of the cloned genetic elements also confer enhanced survival onto M. smegmatis cells. Further characterization of these genes and gene products should provide insights into the survival of mycobacteria within macrophages and may identify new approaches of targets for combatting these important pathogens. | 1994 | 8080180 |
| 4383 | 13 | 0.9996 | Importance of Core Genome Functions for an Extreme Antibiotic Resistance Trait. Extreme antibiotic resistance in bacteria is associated with the expression of powerful inactivating enzymes and other functions encoded in accessory genomic elements. The contribution of core genome processes to high-level resistance in such bacteria has been unclear. In the work reported here, we evaluated the relative importance of core and accessory functions for high-level resistance to the aminoglycoside tobramycin in the nosocomial pathogen Acinetobacter baumannii Three lines of evidence establish the primacy of core functions in this resistance. First, in a genome scale mutant analysis using transposon sequencing and validation with 594 individual mutants, nearly all mutations reducing tobramycin resistance inactivated core genes, some with stronger phenotypes than those caused by the elimination of aminoglycoside-inactivating enzymes. Second, the core functions mediating resistance were nearly identical in the wild type and a deletion mutant lacking a genome resistance island that encodes the inactivating enzymes. Thus, most or all of the core resistance determinants important in the absence of the enzymes are also important in their presence. Third, reductions in tobramycin resistance caused by different core mutations were additive, and highly sensitive double and triple mutants (with 250-fold reductions in the MIC) that retained accessory resistance genes could be constructed. Core processes that contribute most strongly to intrinsic tobramycin resistance include phospholipid biosynthesis, phosphate regulation, and envelope homeostasis.IMPORTANCE The inexorable increase in bacterial antibiotic resistance threatens to undermine many of the procedures that transformed medicine in the last century. One strategy to meet the challenge antibiotic resistance poses is the development of drugs that undermine resistance. To identify potential targets for such adjuvants, we identified the functions underlying resistance to an important class of antibiotics for one of the most highly resistant pathogens known. | 2017 | 29233894 |
| 297 | 14 | 0.9996 | Directed evolution of the rRNA methylating enzyme Cfr reveals molecular basis of antibiotic resistance. Alteration of antibiotic binding sites through modification of ribosomal RNA (rRNA) is a common form of resistance to ribosome-targeting antibiotics. The rRNA-modifying enzyme Cfr methylates an adenosine nucleotide within the peptidyl transferase center, resulting in the C-8 methylation of A2503 (m(8)A2503). Acquisition of cfr results in resistance to eight classes of ribosome-targeting antibiotics. Despite the prevalence of this resistance mechanism, it is poorly understood whether and how bacteria modulate Cfr methylation to adapt to antibiotic pressure. Moreover, direct evidence for how m(8)A2503 alters antibiotic binding sites within the ribosome is lacking. In this study, we performed directed evolution of Cfr under antibiotic selection to generate Cfr variants that confer increased resistance by enhancing methylation of A2503 in cells. Increased rRNA methylation is achieved by improved expression and stability of Cfr through transcriptional and post-transcriptional mechanisms, which may be exploited by pathogens under antibiotic stress as suggested by natural isolates. Using a variant that achieves near-stoichiometric methylation of rRNA, we determined a 2.2 Å cryo-electron microscopy structure of the Cfr-modified ribosome. Our structure reveals the molecular basis for broad resistance to antibiotics and will inform the design of new antibiotics that overcome resistance mediated by Cfr. | 2022 | 35015630 |
| 6335 | 15 | 0.9996 | Gene Amplification Uncovers Large Previously Unrecognized Cryptic Antibiotic Resistance Potential in E. coli. The activation of unrecognized antibiotic resistance genes in the bacterial cell can give rise to antibiotic resistance without the need for major mutations or horizontal gene transfer. We hypothesize that bacteria harbor an extensive array of diverse cryptic genes that can be activated in response to antibiotics via adaptive resistance. To test this hypothesis, we developed a plasmid assay to randomly manipulate gene copy numbers in Escherichia coli cells and identify genes that conferred resistance when amplified. We then tested for cryptic resistance to 18 antibiotics and identified genes conferring resistance. E. coli could become resistant to 50% of the antibiotics tested, including chloramphenicol, d-cycloserine, polymyxin B, and 6 beta-lactam antibiotics, following this manipulation. Known antibiotic resistance genes comprised 13% of the total identified genes, where 87% were unclassified (cryptic) antibiotic resistance genes. These unclassified genes encoded cell membrane proteins, stress response/DNA repair proteins, transporters, and miscellaneous or hypothetical proteins. Stress response/DNA repair genes have a broad antibiotic resistance potential, as this gene class, in aggregate, conferred cryptic resistance to nearly all resistance-positive antibiotics. We found that antibiotics that are hydrophilic, those that are amphipathic, and those that inhibit the cytoplasmic membrane or cell wall biosynthesis were more likely to induce cryptic resistance in E. coli. This study reveals a diversity of cryptic genes that confer an antibiotic resistance phenotype when present in high copy number. Thus, our assay can identify potential novel resistance genes while also describing which antibiotics are prone to induce cryptic antibiotic resistance in E. coli. IMPORTANCE Predicting where new antibiotic resistance genes will rise is a challenge and is especially important when new antibiotics are developed. Adaptive resistance allows sensitive bacterial cells to become transiently resistant to antibiotics. This provides an opportune time for cells to develop more efficient resistance mechanisms, such as tolerance and permanent resistance to higher antibiotic concentrations. The biochemical diversity harbored within bacterial genomes may lead to the presence of genes that could confer resistance when timely activated. Therefore, it is crucial to understand adaptive resistance to identify potential resistance genes and prolong antibiotics. Here, we investigate cryptic resistance, an adaptive resistance mechanism, and identify unknown (cryptic) antibiotic resistance genes that confer resistance when amplified in a laboratory strain of E. coli. We also pinpoint antibiotic characteristics that are likely to induce cryptic resistance. This study may help detect novel antibiotic resistance genes and provide the foundation to help develop more effective antibiotics. | 2021 | 34756069 |
| 9350 | 16 | 0.9996 | Genome DNA Sequence Variation, Evolution, and Function in Bacteria and Archaea. Comparative genomics has revealed that variations in bacterial and archaeal genome DNA sequences cannot be explained by only neutral mutations. Virus resistance and plasmid distribution systems have resulted in changes in bacterial and archaeal genome sequences during evolution. The restriction-modification system, a virus resistance system, leads to avoidance of palindromic DNA sequences in genomes. Clustered, regularly interspaced, short palindromic repeats (CRISPRs) found in genomes represent yet another virus resistance system. Comparative genomics has shown that bacteria and archaea have failed to gain any DNA with GC content higher than the GC content of their chromosomes. Thus, horizontally transferred DNA regions have lower GC content than the host chromosomal DNA does. Some nucleoid-associated proteins bind DNA regions with low GC content and inhibit the expression of genes contained in those regions. This form of gene repression is another type of virus resistance system. On the other hand, bacteria and archaea have used plasmids to gain additional genes. Virus resistance systems influence plasmid distribution. Interestingly, the restriction-modification system and nucleoid-associated protein genes have been distributed via plasmids. Thus, GC content and genomic signatures do not reflect bacterial and archaeal evolutionary relationships. | 2013 | 22772895 |
| 8929 | 17 | 0.9996 | Interplay in the selection of fluoroquinolone resistance and bacterial fitness. Fluoroquinolones are antibacterial drugs that inhibit DNA Gyrase and Topoisomerase IV. These essential enzymes facilitate chromosome replication and RNA transcription by regulating chromosome supercoiling. High-level resistance to fluoroquinolones in E. coli requires the accumulation of multiple mutations, including those that alter target genes and genes regulating drug efflux. Previous studies have shown some drug-resistance mutations reduce bacterial fitness, leading to the selection of fitness-compensatory mutations. The impact of fluoroquinolone-resistance on bacterial fitness was analyzed in constructed isogenic strains carrying up to 5 resistance mutations. Some mutations significantly decreased bacterial fitness both in vitro and in vivo. We identified low-fitness triple-mutants where the acquisition of a fourth resistance mutation significantly increased fitness in vitro and in vivo while at the same time dramatically decreasing drug susceptibility. The largest effect occurred with the addition of a parC mutation (Topoisomerase IV) to a low-fitness strain carrying resistance mutations in gyrA (DNA Gyrase) and marR (drug efflux regulation). Increased fitness was accompanied by a significant change in the level of gyrA promoter activity as measured in an assay of DNA supercoiling. In selection and competition experiments made in the absence of drug, parC mutants that improved fitness and reduced susceptibility were selected. These data suggest that natural selection for improved growth in bacteria with low-level resistance to fluoroquinolones could in some cases select for further reductions in drug susceptibility. Thus, increased resistance to fluoroquinolones could be selected even in the absence of further exposure to the drug. | 2009 | 19662169 |
| 9355 | 18 | 0.9996 | Conjugative type IV secretion systems enable bacterial antagonism that operates independently of plasmid transfer. Bacterial cooperation and antagonism mediated by secretion systems are among the ways in which bacteria interact with one another. Here we report the discovery of an antagonistic property of a type IV secretion system (T4SS) sourced from a conjugative plasmid, RP4, using engineering approaches. We scrutinized the genetic determinants and suggested that this antagonistic activity is independent of molecular cargos, while we also elucidated the resistance genes. We further showed that a range of Gram-negative bacteria and a mixed bacterial population can be eliminated by this T4SS-dependent antagonism. Finally, we showed that such an antagonistic property is not limited to T4SS sourced from RP4, rather it can also be observed in a T4SS originated from another conjugative plasmid, namely R388. Our results are the first demonstration of conjugative T4SS-dependent antagonism between Gram-negative bacteria on the genetic level and provide the foundation for future mechanistic studies. | 2024 | 38664513 |
| 4374 | 19 | 0.9996 | Core genes can have higher recombination rates than accessory genes within global microbial populations. Recombination is essential to microbial evolution, and is involved in the spread of antibiotic resistance, antigenic variation, and adaptation to the host niche. However, assessing the impact of homologous recombination on accessory genes which are only present in a subset of strains of a given species remains challenging due to their complex phylogenetic relationships. Quantifying homologous recombination for accessory genes (which are important for niche-specific adaptations) in comparison to core genes (which are present in all strains and have essential functions) is critical to understanding how selection acts on variation to shape species diversity and genome structures of bacteria. Here, we apply a computationally efficient, non-phylogenetic approach to measure homologous recombination rates in the core and accessory genome using >100,000 whole genome sequences from Streptococcus pneumoniae and several additional species. By analyzing diverse sets of sequence clusters, we show that core genes often have higher recombination rates than accessory genes, and for some bacterial species the associated effect sizes for these differences are pronounced. In a subset of species, we find that gene frequency and homologous recombination rate are positively correlated. For S. pneumoniae and several additional species, we find that while the recombination rate is higher for the core genome, the mutational divergence is lower, indicating that divergence-based homologous recombination barriers could contribute to differences in recombination rates between the core and accessory genome. Homologous recombination may therefore play a key role in increasing the efficiency of selection in the most conserved parts of the genome. | 2022 | 35801696 |